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Jason Dunstan, Indianapolis, "Ardra"On getting the idea for his webcomic."Ardra sort of just came to me out of the blue, at least in her current form. The idea of a genius raising kids as a science experiment just struck me as funny, and rather unique. She's sort of loosely based on a friend of mine, who helps me write the comic and brings a much-needed woman's perspective to the writing. Some of Ardra's quirks are my own, though, like her disdain for the 'keeping up with the Joneses' mentality. Ardra was a side character in a sort of 'Charlie's Angels'/spy/superhero parody thing I was working on called 'D.I.N.G.B.A.T. Squad!,' but that never really got past the planning stage. Ardra, Gordie, and Della all came out of that comic, though."On collaborating with an artist to draw "Ardra.""After a while drawing the comic myself, I came to the conclusion that I just wasn't good enough to succeed at a professional level. My art was as good as it was going to get, and I couldn't afford the type of equipment and software it would take to make it look better. So I put out the call for an artist, and got an e-mail from Trevor Adams, who liked my comic and wanted to help me out. He really did a great job with the characters, plus he had a bit of recognition as the original artist of the hugely popular 'Least I Could Do.' Unfortunately, his day job really kept him busy, so the comic updates came rather sporadically during his tenure. In October 2006, he went on vacation. I never heard from him again. Not knowing exactly what to do, I asked some of my fellow comickers on The Webcomic List forums for some guest artist spots, and several of them helped me out. Around the new year, Fesworks from 'PSI' decided to join 'Ardra' as the new artist, and we've had regular updates since his first comic on Feb. 4. He's been great so far, really working hard on the comic."On his plans for "Ardra.""Well, I'd like to be able to live the ultimate webcomicker's dream -- quitting my real job! I'd like to be making enough from 'Ardra' to pay the bills, at least. Ultimately, I'd love to see this comic turned into an animated show, but that may be a pipe dream. As long as I've got a good, loyal base of readers, I'll be pretty happy. Storyline-wise, I'd like to delve into Ardra's past a bit, and introduce some more characters into the "Ardra" universe. Maybe Ardra will even manage to get a date -- or even find the high-IQ man of her dreams."
Ardra Renelsior may be the most brilliant woman in comics.A scientist by trade and temperament, Ardra is a whiz at quantum physics and manipulating DNA. To her, an IQ of 256 is a bit on the low side. Together with her equally brainy daughters Eileen and Lenore, whose upbringing Ardra regards as her grandest experiment, the Renelsiors make the women of "Blondie" and "Cathy" look like simpletons.But you can't read Ardra's adventures in any newspaper. That's because "Ardra" is a webcomic -- a comic strip published only on the Internet.The brainchild of 33-year-old Indianapolis resident Jason Dunstan, "Ardra" is part of an explosion of creativity that has a loyal fan base on the Web but is largely unknown to readers of traditional print comic strips. One source lists 8,300 webcomics that are updated regularly.They rang