Andy Mosier (born 1960) is an American cartoonist based in Tucson, Arizona. An aspiring animator in his youth, he was in 1977 awarded the prestigious Cine Eagle, for his film Insanicyle. He won admission to the Cinema School at the University of Southern California but left before graduating. While at USC, he drew a weekly comic strip for the Daily Trojan called Norman about a porcupine who was a student at the university. At the same time, he had another strip called Desert Dwellers that ran in a Phoenix alternative weekly. Starting in the early 1980s, Mosier produced several comic strips set in the southwest desert of the United States. These include Sirius (for the publication Coyote), which featured a deep-thinking coyote character, and (for Tucson Weekly), C.L. Dobbs (1984-1986; featured another philosophical coyote) and K. Rat (1987-present). Mosier also drew Entropede (1986-1987), wherein a sardonic centipede offered musings on foibles of human existence. K. Rat, whose title character is a perpetually unemployed kangaroo rat who in his idleness muses about local and national politics, the peculiarities of the desert climate, and the absurdities of life in general, has been a fixture in the pages of the Tucson Weekly for 20 years. Mosier has also worked as a grassroots organizer for the establishment of light rail in Tucson, Arizona ". Mosier works as a graphic designer for Madden Publishing. He is good friends with punk mocker Fish Karma.
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