Article:
Britain's Premier Comics Awards Initiates Facelift
At the Bristol Comics Expo last week the first hints of a relaunched Eagle awards were unveiled. If you weren't there, you're at the mercy of bloggers who were, and they're strangely quiet. 
Barry Renshaw (of RedEye and Engine Comics) was brought in to help relaunch the Eagles. Today Barry posted a link to The Eagles Initiative.
Ashcan version: it's basically a competition for non-commercially published professionals. There's a small entry fee, with three quality cash prizes and a short publication deal in a well-printed anthology book.
The Eagles have been a stagnant non-event for a few years, which is sad as they also have a prestigous sentiment with which old-timers and the 30s years generation fondly associate. By extending that association, the Eagles should function to serve the next lot of young cartoonists. Certainly, away from charges that awards are self-indulgent.
SIZE MATTERS

Kenny Penman (of the Forbidden Planet Blog and Blank Slate) sugested that he was unhappy with these restrictions, and I have to agree. Use of this size has increased in Britain but the dominant format (among an estimated four new print comics per day) is A5. Oh, we used to use A4 a lot, much like the Japanese.
Multiple approaches always work better than the singular.
And some of those points might need re-worded...

....For the purposes of auto-biography or documentary.
BleedingCool.com (up for a Website Award) has it confirmed that current judges are "Peter Bagge, Karen Berger, Tom Breevort, Chris Claremont, David Finch, Dave Gibbons, Geoff Johns, Gilbert Shelton, Jeff Smith, Bryan Talbo(t), Ethan Van Sciver, Mark Waid and Brian Wood."
