Naughty Bits

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Naughty Bits

Naughty Bits was a

Fantagraphics Books. The series ran from March 1991 to July 2004, totalling 40 issues.[1][2]

Naughty Bits is the story of Midge McCracken, aka

Bitchy Bitch, an everyday woman angry at the world who frequently explodes with rage.[3] The character made her first appearance in the Fantagraphics anthology Graphic Story Monthly
#6 (June 1990). The comic has also appeared in animated form as Bitchy Bits and Life's a Bitch.

The stories in Naughty Bits are set in the present day. Bitchy Bitch has a lesbian counterpart named Bitchy Butch.

Collections

Reception

Paul Constant of The Stranger called Naughty Bits "one of the best comic series I've ever read. ... It's basically a biography of one normal—albeit kinda hateful—woman, and it's insightful, funny, and true."[4]

Naughy Bits was nominated for Best New Series in the 1992 Harvey Awards, and was nominated for Best Humor Publication in the 1992 Eisner Awards. "Hippie Bitch Gets Laid," in Naughty Bits #6, was nominated for Best Short Story in the 1993 Eisners. That same year, Gregory was nominated for the Best Writer and Best Writer/Artist Eisner Awards. Naughty Bits #6-8, the "Abortion Trilogy", was nominated for a 1994 Eisner for Best Serialized Story, and Gregory was again nominated in the Best Writer/Artist category. "Bye-Bye, Muffy," in Naughty Bits #28, was nominated for Best Short Story in the 2000 Eisner Awards.

In other media

Beginning in 2001, a series of shorts featuring Bitchy Bitch called Bitchy Bits was shown on the

Oxygen Network animated series X-Chromosome.[5]

Life's a Bitch, an animated series spun-off from the X-Chromosome shorts, aired from 2003–2004 on Oxygen in the U.S. and on

See also

References

  1. ^ "Fantagraphics.com". Archived from the original on 2014-12-17. Retrieved 2013-08-26.
  2. ^ Comicvine.com
  3. ^ Bitchy Bitch at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on March 6, 2015.
  4. ^ Constant, Paul. "SLOG: BOOKS: Reading Today: Women We Love," The Stranger website (May 15, 2010).
  5. ^ Beck, Jerry. "TV Review: X-Chromosome," ANIMATIONWorld (October 8, 2001).
  6. .

External links