24Voter.com is the brand
• The call goes out to all webmasters, bloggers, and podcasters. "Increase traffic on your websites, blogs an streams that accept HTML CODE"
"It's easy." Subscribe to DAILY Political Cartoons posted to your web page of your choice. 24Voter.com is created by cartoonist and caricature artist Dan Youra . Read reviews of Dan Youra art.
• Subscription is $1/day payable at $30 per month.
• 350 pixels wide by 500 pixels tall is the Standard Size of cartoon on your web page. Size can be customized.
Sign up to subscribe to Dan Youra's DAILY cartoons viewed on your web page by current fans of your web page and by new visitors. Your visitors discover Youra's professional cartoons on your web page and they keep returning day after day to enjoy the next day's cartoon.
A new cartoon appears on your web page daily –– one every 24 hrs.
$30 is the total cost per month.
Sign Up now for your subscription to offer this new, dynamic feature on your web page for your readers to enjoy. It keeps them coming back for more.
The 350 pixels wide X 500 pixels tall cartoons are automatically displayed on your site. The only thing you have to do to make it happen is to insert 2 lines of HTML CODE Only Once. You will receive instruction on how to change the size of the cartoon to fit your page's columns.
Very simple!
Your web page will display Dan Youra's political cartoons.
To make these political cartoons appear on your website:
That's it. That is all you have to do. ONCE. And, it keeps producing for you day after day, without you having to do anything with the CODE ever again.
The cartoons will automatically appear in the exact same spot on your web page where you insert the code.
You will receive your 2 lines of HTML CODE immediately upon making your payment for your subscription. Immediately upon payment, you will receive the invitation to DOWNLOAD a PDF file, which contains the 2 lines of HTML CODE.
You will receive instructions for inserting code and how to change the size of the cartoon to fit your page's columns and layout.
For more than two hundred years, publishers of newspapers have depended upon "the comics pages" to bring new readers to their papers and to keep them coming back to view the ongoing antics of the cartoon characters.
More Power of Political Cartoons
From Dick Tracy and Li'l Abner to Peanuts and Dilbert , comics sell newspapers. Spokane's Spokesman-Review newspaper claims that "the comic section is the most important part of the newspaper."
Today the Internet serves online readers. Digital comics now serve website owners by bringing in and keeping visitors just like the black and white, hand-drawn cartoons that appeared regularly in The New York Times and Atlantic Monthly , and all the rest of them.
To learn more about the history of political cartoons in the lives of newspapers and magazines, read the short monograph, The Art of Editorial Cartoons and Political Caricatures by Dan Youra.