ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jim Toomey - Cartoonist
For the past 13 years, Jim Toomey has been writing and drawing the daily comic strip Sherman’s Lagoon, about a daffy family of ocean dwellers.

Why you should listen

For the past 13 years Jim Toomey has been creating the daily comic strip Sherman's Lagoon, which appears in over 150 newspapers in North America. Toomey's latest book of comics (his fifteenth) is Discover Your Inner Hermit Crab, and the strip has recently become a musical.

Sherman's Lagoon is a combination of Toomey’s two lifelong passions: drawing and the sea. He’s been engaged in the former activity since he could hold a crayon, and his love affair with the sea dates back to his early childhood. The inspiration for the comic strip can be traced back to a family vacation in the Bahamas where he saw a real shark swimming in a remote lagoon. Toomey became a certified diver at the age of 12, and, as an adult, has logged dives all over the world, including Asia, Africa, the Mediterranean, Latin America, and extensively in the kelp forests of California

More profile about the speaker
Jim Toomey | Speaker | TED.com
Mission Blue Voyage

Jim Toomey: Learning from Sherman the shark

Filmed:
508,295 views

Cartoonist Jim Toomey created the comic strip Sherman's Lagoon, a wry look at underwater life starring Sherman the talking shark. As he sketches some of his favorite sea creatures live onstage, Toomey shares his love of the ocean and the stories it can tell.
- Cartoonist
For the past 13 years, Jim Toomey has been writing and drawing the daily comic strip Sherman’s Lagoon, about a daffy family of ocean dwellers. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:15
Cartoons are basically short stories.
0
0
3000
00:18
I tried to find one that didn't have a whole lot of words.
1
3000
3000
00:24
Not all of them have happy endings.
2
9000
2000
00:26
So how did I get started cartooning?
3
11000
2000
00:28
I doodled a lot as a kid,
4
13000
3000
00:31
and if you spend enough time doodling,
5
16000
3000
00:34
sooner or later, something happens:
6
19000
2000
00:36
all your career options run out.
7
21000
2000
00:38
So you have to make a living cartooning.
8
23000
2000
00:40
Actually, I fell in love with the ocean when I was a little boy,
9
25000
3000
00:43
when I was about eight or nine.
10
28000
2000
00:45
And I was particularly fascinated with sharks.
11
30000
3000
00:48
This is some of my early work.
12
33000
2000
00:50
Eventually, my mom took the red crayon away,
13
35000
2000
00:52
so it was [unclear].
14
37000
2000
00:54
But I'd like to relay to you a childhood experience of mine
15
39000
3000
00:57
that really made me see the ocean differently,
16
42000
3000
01:00
and it's become the foundation of my work
17
45000
2000
01:02
because, I feel like, if in a day,
18
47000
2000
01:04
I can see the ocean differently,
19
49000
2000
01:06
then I can evoke that same kind of change in others,
20
51000
2000
01:08
especially kids.
21
53000
2000
01:10
Before that day, this is how I saw the ocean.
22
55000
2000
01:12
It's just a big blue surface.
23
57000
2000
01:14
And this is how we've seen the ocean since the beginning of time.
24
59000
3000
01:17
It's a mystery.
25
62000
2000
01:19
There's been a lot of folklore
26
64000
2000
01:21
developed around the ocean,
27
66000
2000
01:23
mostly negative.
28
68000
2000
01:25
And that prompted people to make maps like this,
29
70000
2000
01:27
with all kinds of wonderful detail on the land,
30
72000
3000
01:30
but when you get to the waters edge,
31
75000
2000
01:32
the ocean looks like one giant puddle of blue paint.
32
77000
3000
01:35
And this is the way I saw the ocean at school --
33
80000
2000
01:37
as if to say, "All geography and science lessons
34
82000
2000
01:39
stop at water's edge.
35
84000
2000
01:41
This part's not going to be on the test."
36
86000
2000
01:43
But that day I flew low over the islands --
37
88000
2000
01:45
it was a family trip to the Caribbean,
38
90000
2000
01:47
and I flew in a small plane low over the islands.
39
92000
2000
01:49
This is what I saw. I saw hills and valleys.
40
94000
3000
01:53
I saw forests and meadows.
41
98000
2000
01:55
I saw grottoes and secret gardens
42
100000
2000
01:57
and places I'd love to hide as a kid,
43
102000
2000
01:59
if I could only breathe underwater.
44
104000
2000
02:01
And best of all, I saw the animals.
45
106000
2000
02:03
I saw a manta ray that looked as big as the plane I was flying in.
46
108000
3000
02:06
And I flew over a lagoon with a shark in it,
47
111000
3000
02:09
and that was the day that my comic strip about a shark was born.
48
114000
3000
02:13
So from that day on, I was an ordinary kid
49
118000
2000
02:15
walking around on dry land,
50
120000
2000
02:17
but my head was down there, underwater.
51
122000
2000
02:19
Up until that day,
52
124000
2000
02:21
these were the animals that were most common in my life.
53
126000
3000
02:24
These were the ones I'd like to draw --
54
129000
3000
02:27
all variations of four legs and fur.
55
132000
3000
02:34
But when you got to the ocean,
56
139000
2000
02:36
my imagination was no competition for nature.
57
141000
2000
02:38
Every time I'd come up with a crazy cartoon character on the drawing board,
58
143000
3000
02:41
I'd find a critter in the ocean that was even crazier.
59
146000
3000
02:44
And the differences in scale between this tiny sea dragon
60
149000
3000
02:47
and this enormous humpback whale
61
152000
2000
02:49
was like something out of a science-fiction movie.
62
154000
3000
02:52
Whenever I talk to kids, I always like to tell them,
63
157000
2000
02:54
the biggest animal that ever lived is still alive.
64
159000
3000
02:57
It's not a dinosaur; it's a whale,
65
162000
2000
02:59
animals as big as office buildings
66
164000
2000
03:01
still swimming around out there in our ocean.
67
166000
2000
03:03
Speaking of dinosaurs, sharks are basically
68
168000
2000
03:05
the same fish they were 300 million years ago.
69
170000
3000
03:08
So if you ever fantasize about going back in time
70
173000
2000
03:10
and seeing what a dinosaur looked like,
71
175000
2000
03:12
that's what a dinosaur looks like.
72
177000
2000
03:14
So you have living dinosaurs
73
179000
2000
03:16
and space aliens,
74
181000
2000
03:18
animals that evolved in zero gravity in harsh conditions.
75
183000
3000
03:21
It's just incredible; no Hollywood designer
76
186000
3000
03:24
could come up with something more interesting than that.
77
189000
3000
03:27
Or this fangtooth. The particles in the water
78
192000
2000
03:29
make it look like it's floating in outer space.
79
194000
2000
03:31
Could you image if we looked through the Hubble Telescope
80
196000
3000
03:34
and we saw that?
81
199000
2000
03:37
It would start a whole new space race.
82
202000
2000
03:39
But instead, we stick a camera in the deep ocean,
83
204000
3000
03:42
and we see a fish, and it doesn't capture our imagination
84
207000
3000
03:45
as a society.
85
210000
2000
03:47
We say to ourselves,
86
212000
2000
03:49
"Maybe we can make fish sticks with it or something."
87
214000
3000
03:52
So, what I'd like to do now
88
217000
3000
03:55
is try a little drawing.
89
220000
3000
03:58
So, I'm going to try to draw this fangtooth here.
90
223000
3000
04:03
I love to draw the deep sea fish,
91
228000
2000
04:05
because they are so ugly,
92
230000
2000
04:07
but beautiful in their own way.
93
232000
3000
04:21
Maybe we can give him a little bioluminescence here --
94
246000
2000
04:23
give him a headlight,
95
248000
2000
04:25
maybe a brake light,
96
250000
3000
04:28
turn signals.
97
253000
2000
04:32
But it's easy to see why these animals
98
257000
2000
04:34
make such great cartoon characters,
99
259000
2000
04:36
their shapes and sizes.
100
261000
2000
04:41
So some of them actually seem to have powers
101
266000
2000
04:43
like superheroes in a comic book.
102
268000
2000
04:45
For instance,
103
270000
2000
04:47
take these sea turtles.
104
272000
2000
04:49
They kind of have a sixth sense
105
274000
2000
04:51
like Superman's x-ray vision.
106
276000
2000
04:53
They can sense the magnetic fields of the earth.
107
278000
3000
04:56
And they can use that sense
108
281000
2000
04:58
to navigate hundreds of miles of open ocean.
109
283000
3000
05:03
I kind of give my turtle hands
110
288000
2000
05:05
just to make them an easier cartoon character to work with.
111
290000
3000
05:19
Or take this sea cucumber.
112
304000
2000
05:21
It's not an animal we draw cartoons of
113
306000
3000
05:24
or draw at all.
114
309000
2000
05:26
He's like an underwater Spiderman.
115
311000
2000
05:28
He shoots out these sticky webs
116
313000
3000
05:31
to entangle his enemy.
117
316000
3000
05:34
Of course, sea cucumbers shoot them out their rears,
118
319000
2000
05:36
which, in my opinion, makes them much more interesting a superhero.
119
321000
3000
05:39
(Laughter)
120
324000
2000
05:41
He can't spin a web anytime; he's got to pull his pants down first.
121
326000
3000
05:44
(Laughter)
122
329000
2000
05:46
Or the blowfish.
123
331000
2000
05:48
The blowfish is like the Incredible Hulk.
124
333000
2000
05:50
It can change its body
125
335000
2000
05:52
into a big, intimidating fish
126
337000
2000
05:54
in a matter of seconds.
127
339000
2000
05:56
I'm going to draw this blowfish uninflated.
128
341000
3000
06:04
And then I'm going to attempt
129
349000
3000
06:07
onscreen animation here.
130
352000
2000
06:09
Let's see.
131
354000
2000
06:11
Try and inflate it.
132
356000
3000
06:21
(Laughter)
133
366000
2000
06:23
"You talkin' to me?" See, he can inflate himself
134
368000
2000
06:25
when he wants to be intimidating.
135
370000
3000
06:28
Or take this swordfish.
136
373000
2000
06:33
Could you imagine being born with a tool for a nose?
137
378000
3000
06:36
Do you think he wakes up in the morning, looks in the mirror and says,
138
381000
2000
06:38
"Somebody's getting stabbed today."
139
383000
2000
06:43
Or this lionfish for instance.
140
388000
3000
06:46
Imagine trying to make friends
141
391000
2000
06:48
covered with razor-sharp poisonous barbs.
142
393000
3000
06:51
It's not something you want to put on your Facebook page, right?
143
396000
3000
07:04
My characters are --
144
409000
2000
07:06
my lead character's a shark named Sherman.
145
411000
2000
07:08
He's a great white shark.
146
413000
2000
07:10
And I kind of broke the mold with Sherman.
147
415000
2000
07:12
I didn't want to go with this ruthless
148
417000
3000
07:15
predator image.
149
420000
2000
07:17
He's kind of just out there making a living.
150
422000
2000
07:19
He's sort of a Homer Simpson with fins.
151
424000
2000
07:21
And then his sidekick
152
426000
2000
07:23
is a sea turtle, as I mentioned before, named Filmore.
153
428000
3000
07:26
He uses his wonderful skills at navigation
154
431000
3000
07:29
to wander the oceans, looking for a mate.
155
434000
3000
07:34
And he does manage to find them,
156
439000
2000
07:36
but great navigation skills, lousy pick-up lines.
157
441000
3000
07:39
He never seems
158
444000
2000
07:41
to settle on
159
446000
2000
07:43
any particular girl.
160
448000
3000
07:47
I have a hermit crab named Hawthorne,
161
452000
2000
07:49
who doesn't get a lot of respect as a hermit crab,
162
454000
3000
07:52
so he kind of wishes
163
457000
2000
07:54
he were a great white shark.
164
459000
2000
08:05
And then I'll introduce you to one more character,
165
470000
3000
08:08
this guy, Ernest,
166
473000
2000
08:10
who is basically a juvenile delinquent
167
475000
2000
08:12
in a fish body.
168
477000
2000
08:16
So with characters, you can make stories.
169
481000
3000
08:19
Sometimes making a story is as easy
170
484000
2000
08:21
as putting two characters in a room
171
486000
3000
08:24
and seeing what happens.
172
489000
2000
08:26
So, imagine a great white shark and a giant squid in the same bathroom.
173
491000
3000
08:29
(Laughter)
174
494000
2000
08:31
Or, sometimes I take them to places
175
496000
2000
08:33
that people have never heard of because they're underwater.
176
498000
2000
08:35
For instance, I took them skiing in the Mid-Atlantic Range,
177
500000
2000
08:37
which is this range of mountains in the middle of the Atlantic.
178
502000
3000
08:40
I've taken them to the Sea of Japan,
179
505000
2000
08:42
where they met giant jellyfish.
180
507000
2000
08:44
I've taken them camping in the kelp forests of California.
181
509000
3000
08:47
This next one here,
182
512000
2000
08:49
I did a story on the census of marine life.
183
514000
2000
08:51
And that was a lot of fun because, as most of you know,
184
516000
2000
08:53
it's a real project we've heard about.
185
518000
3000
08:57
But it was a chance for me to introduce readers
186
522000
2000
08:59
to a lot of crazy undersea characters.
187
524000
3000
09:02
So we start off the story with Ernest,
188
527000
2000
09:04
who volunteers as a census taker.
189
529000
2000
09:06
He goes down and he meets this famous anglerfish.
190
531000
3000
09:10
Then he meets the yeti crab,
191
535000
2000
09:12
the famous vampire squid -- elusive, hard to find --
192
537000
3000
09:15
and the Dumbo octopus, which looks so much like a cartoon in real life
193
540000
3000
09:18
that really didn't have to change a thing when I drew it.
194
543000
3000
09:21
I did another story on marine debris.
195
546000
3000
09:24
I was speaking to a lot of my friends
196
549000
2000
09:26
in the conservation business,
197
551000
2000
09:28
and they --
198
553000
2000
09:30
I asked them, "So what's one issue you would like everyone to know more about?"
199
555000
3000
09:33
And they said -- this one friend of mine said,
200
558000
3000
09:36
"I've got one word for you: plastic."
201
561000
3000
09:39
And I told him, "Well, I need something a little sexier than that.
202
564000
3000
09:42
Plastic just is not going to do it."
203
567000
2000
09:44
We sort of worked things out.
204
569000
2000
09:46
He wanted me to use words like polyvinyl chloride,
205
571000
2000
09:48
which doesn't really work in voice balloons very well.
206
573000
2000
09:50
I couldn't fit them in.
207
575000
2000
09:52
So what I did was I made an adventure strip.
208
577000
2000
09:54
Basically, this bottle travels a long way.
209
579000
2000
09:56
What I'm trying to tell readers
210
581000
2000
09:58
is that plastic doesn't really go away;
211
583000
2000
10:00
it just continues to wash downstream.
212
585000
2000
10:02
And a lot of it ends up washing into the ocean,
213
587000
3000
10:05
which is a great story if you attach a couple characters to it,
214
590000
3000
10:08
especially if they can't stand each other, like these two.
215
593000
3000
10:12
So, I sent them to Boise, Idaho,
216
597000
3000
10:15
where they dropped a plastic bottle
217
600000
3000
10:18
into the Boise sewer system.
218
603000
2000
10:20
And it ended up in the Boise River
219
605000
3000
10:23
and then on to the Columbia River
220
608000
2000
10:25
and then to the mouth of the Columbia
221
610000
2000
10:27
and to the Pacific Ocean
222
612000
2000
10:29
and then on to this place called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch --
223
614000
3000
10:32
which is this giant Pacific gyre in the North Pacific,
224
617000
2000
10:34
where a lot of this plastic ends up floating around --
225
619000
3000
10:38
and then back onto the lagoon.
226
623000
3000
10:41
So that was basically a buddy story
227
626000
2000
10:43
with a plastic bottle following along.
228
628000
3000
10:46
So a lot of people remember the plastic bottle anyway,
229
631000
3000
10:49
but we really talked about marine debris and plastic
230
634000
3000
10:52
in the course of that one.
231
637000
2000
10:54
The third storyline I did about a year and a half ago
232
639000
2000
10:56
was probably my most difficult.
233
641000
2000
10:58
It was on shark finning, and I felt really strongly
234
643000
2000
11:00
about this issue.
235
645000
2000
11:02
And I felt like, since my main character was a shark,
236
647000
3000
11:05
the comic strip was a perfect vehicle for telling the public about this.
237
650000
3000
11:08
Now, finning is the act
238
653000
2000
11:10
of taking a shark, cutting the valuable fins off
239
655000
3000
11:13
and throwing the live animal back in the water.
240
658000
3000
11:16
It's cruel, it's wasteful.
241
661000
2000
11:18
There's nothing funny or entertaining about it,
242
663000
2000
11:20
but I really wanted to take this issue on.
243
665000
2000
11:22
I had to kill my main character, who is a shark.
244
667000
3000
11:25
We start with Sherman in a Chinese restaurant,
245
670000
2000
11:27
who gets a fortune that he's about to get caught by a trawler,
246
672000
3000
11:30
which he does.
247
675000
2000
11:32
And then he dies.
248
677000
2000
11:34
He gets finned, and then he gets thrown overboard.
249
679000
2000
11:36
Ostensibly, he's dead now.
250
681000
2000
11:38
And so I killed a character that's been in the newspaper for 15 years.
251
683000
3000
11:41
So I got a lot of reader feedback on that one.
252
686000
2000
11:43
Meanwhile, the other characters are talking about shark fin soup.
253
688000
3000
11:46
I do three or four strips after that
254
691000
2000
11:48
where we explore the finning issue
255
693000
2000
11:50
and the shark fin soup issue.
256
695000
2000
11:52
Sherman's up in shark heaven.
257
697000
2000
11:54
This is what I love about comic strips, you know.
258
699000
2000
11:56
You really don't have to worry about the audience suspending its sense of disbelief
259
701000
3000
11:59
because, if you start with a talking shark,
260
704000
2000
12:01
readers pretty much check their disbelief at the door.
261
706000
3000
12:04
You can kind of do anything.
262
709000
2000
12:06
It becomes a near-death experience for Sherman.
263
711000
3000
12:09
Meanwhile, Ernest finds his fins on the internet.
264
714000
2000
12:11
There was a real website based in China
265
716000
2000
12:13
that actually sold shark fins,
266
718000
2000
12:15
so I kind of exposed that.
267
720000
3000
12:18
And he clicks the "buy now" button.
268
723000
3000
12:21
And voila, next-day air, they show up,
269
726000
2000
12:23
and they surgically reattach them.
270
728000
2000
12:25
I ended that series with a kind of a mail-in petition
271
730000
3000
12:28
that encouraged our National Marine Fishery Service,
272
733000
2000
12:30
to force other countries
273
735000
2000
12:32
to have a stronger stance with shark management.
274
737000
2000
12:34
(Applause)
275
739000
2000
12:36
Thanks.
276
741000
2000
12:38
I'd like to end with a little metaphor here.
277
743000
2000
12:40
I've been trying to think of a metaphor to represent Mission Blue,
278
745000
3000
12:43
and this is what I came up with.
279
748000
2000
12:45
Imagine you're in an enormous room,
280
750000
2000
12:47
and it's as dark as a cave.
281
752000
2000
12:49
And you can have anything in that room, anything you want,
282
754000
2000
12:51
but you can't see anything.
283
756000
2000
12:53
You've been given one tool, a hammer.
284
758000
3000
12:56
So you wander around in the darkness, and you bump into something,
285
761000
3000
12:59
and it feels like it's made of stone.
286
764000
2000
13:01
It's big, it's heavy. You can't carry it away,
287
766000
2000
13:03
so you bang it with your hammer, and you break off a piece.
288
768000
3000
13:06
And you take the piece out into the daylight.
289
771000
2000
13:08
And you see you have a beautiful piece of white alabaster.
290
773000
3000
13:11
So you say to yourself, "Well, that's worth something."
291
776000
2000
13:13
So you go back into the room,
292
778000
2000
13:15
and you break this thing to pieces, and you haul it away.
293
780000
3000
13:18
And you find other things, and you break that up, and you haul those away.
294
783000
2000
13:20
And you're getting all kinds of cool stuff.
295
785000
2000
13:22
And you hear other people doing the same thing.
296
787000
2000
13:24
So you get this sense of urgency,
297
789000
2000
13:26
like you need to find as much stuff as possible as soon as possible.
298
791000
3000
13:29
And then some yells, "Stop!"
299
794000
2000
13:31
And they turn up the lights.
300
796000
2000
13:33
And you realize where you are; you're in the Louvre.
301
798000
3000
13:38
And you've taken all this complexity and beauty,
302
803000
4000
13:42
and you've turned it into a cheap commodity.
303
807000
3000
13:45
And that's what we're doing with the ocean.
304
810000
3000
13:48
And part of what Mission Blue is about
305
813000
2000
13:50
is yelling, "Stop!"
306
815000
3000
13:53
so that each of us --
307
818000
2000
13:55
explorer, scientist, cartoonist, singer, chef --
308
820000
3000
13:58
can turn up the lights in their own way.
309
823000
2000
14:00
And that's what I hope my comic strip does in a small way.
310
825000
2000
14:02
That's why I like what I do.
311
827000
2000
14:04
Thanks for listening.
312
829000
2000
14:06
(Applause)
313
831000
2000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jim Toomey - Cartoonist
For the past 13 years, Jim Toomey has been writing and drawing the daily comic strip Sherman’s Lagoon, about a daffy family of ocean dwellers.

Why you should listen

For the past 13 years Jim Toomey has been creating the daily comic strip Sherman's Lagoon, which appears in over 150 newspapers in North America. Toomey's latest book of comics (his fifteenth) is Discover Your Inner Hermit Crab, and the strip has recently become a musical.

Sherman's Lagoon is a combination of Toomey’s two lifelong passions: drawing and the sea. He’s been engaged in the former activity since he could hold a crayon, and his love affair with the sea dates back to his early childhood. The inspiration for the comic strip can be traced back to a family vacation in the Bahamas where he saw a real shark swimming in a remote lagoon. Toomey became a certified diver at the age of 12, and, as an adult, has logged dives all over the world, including Asia, Africa, the Mediterranean, Latin America, and extensively in the kelp forests of California

More profile about the speaker
Jim Toomey | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee