hedwards: but realistically if things were as dire as you're suggesting, art colleges would have gone out of business decades ago and realistically probably wouldn't have been created in the first place.
MaximumBunny: You missed the point yet again. It's not that the resource you linked to is bad, it's that it's not where you START. You don't use something like that to learn how to draw, you use it to learn how to draw *better*. Just like art colleges, they're not going to start you at the beginning of drawing. They will start you at the beginning of art education, which is several steps beyond the basics.
And that's part of the gap artists have and don't know how to bridge. You make it sound like everyone should enroll into art college and online courses to go from stick man with scribbled hair to Pixar. If you have a course that actually does that, you're welcomed to suggest it but Udemy-Man (you?) is not it. I've seen many free resources that cover those exact same topics in the exact same manner, except more concise being text based. By the time you're there, you'll be able to learn it from anywhere.
Sigh, this is why I tend to be a rather condescending jerk.
That is a beginners course. There's a few things that are good to know ahead of time, but he starts with simple geometric shapes and works from there. The perspective drawing and figure drawing have a pretty damned low bar to entry. I mean, for god's sake, he starts you with straight lines and stick figures. OK, so he doesn't explicitly tell you how to draw a straight line and an oval, but that's something that most people learned in preschool.
I think you have a rather unfair view of what a beginner is, if starting with stick figures is too hard. I'm not even sure how you can get any more basic than a stick figure. At some point, the student has to actually put in some effort and work through the material. Perspective isn't hard, he works up to some rather complicated scenes using just a couple of vanishing points and straight lines. Again, there isn't really anything simpler than that.
Granted, the shading and lighting can be rather tricky, but by the time you're ready to start that, you've already got the basics of drawing down. I'm not sure where you got the idea that this is somehow complicated.
Sachys: I was about to post something helpful, instead I see a battle of virtual dick size.
MaximumBunny: Yeah, sorry about that. Didn't expect someone to go full rage on me randomly. If it's any consolation, my e-organs are tiny. Proof: that's what she said. ;<
Considering that you were picking a fight, you should really appreciate the fact that I was actually quite a bit nicer about it than you were.
hedwards: You should learn, it's not really that tough and it's quite rewarding.
ET3D: Thanks for the suggestion and the links. I don't think I'll do it right now. I think that it's better to have some predilection towards a subject in order to study it. There are lots of things I'd like to do before I learn to draw.
That's quite understandable. It's merely my position that anybody interested in doing so can learn to draw. One of the things about life is that we have to make priorities or we don't get to master anything. Some people may have to start out with Ed Emberely style, let's draw a house using only rectangles, squares and triangles, but everybody can learn.
Or, so I keep telling myself, but there's no way I could keep up with what I'm doing if I had any sort of social life.