Todd Goldman

According to unverified data provided by Goldman to the Wall Street Journal during an interview, the sales volume of David and Goliath was 90 million USD in 2004.

Goldman achieved some notoriety for printing merchandise containing misandrous slogans, including "Boys are stupid, throw rocks at them!

In June 2007 Goldman began working with FOX on a show entitled The Uglies, about the ugliest family in the world.

[8] In 2009, Goldman released two children's books with Random House Publishing – The Zoo I Drew and Animal Soup.

[9][10] Goldman's work became the target of criticism: in 2004, Los Angeles based radio host and men's rights activist Glenn Sacks initiated a campaign against the "Boys are Stupid..." T-shirts saying that they were part of a general societal mood that stigmatized and victimized boys.

[11] The campaign led to the line of shirts being pulled from several thousand retailers across the United States in 2005, including Dapy, K-Mart, Disney Store, and Nordstrom.

"[15] In April 2007, Goldman was accused of plagiarism by webcartoonist Dave "Shmorky" Kelly, in a post on the Something Awful forums,[16] saying that Goldman's piece "Dear God Make Everyone Die" was traced directly from a 2001 Purple Pussy comic by Kelly.

Mike Tyndall maintains a page which summarizes the original Something Awful thread,[17] at which dozens of images are compared, with the claim that Goldman plagiarized many artists.

[19] In an interview with Sense magazine, Goldman said, "I guess what happened was this: I have a whole design team that works back in Florida creating t-shirts for me.

When I found out it wasn't our image, I apologized to the guy and gave him the full proceeds for the sale of the paintings.