His work regularly appears in many major U.S. newspapers, including
The New York Times,
Chicago Tribune,
USA Today,
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
The Washington Post and
CNN. He has also been featured in many magazines and high-profile websites. His cartoons regularly appear in the
Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year, and
Best Political Cartoons of the Year publications. Koterba also regularly appears on panels discussing his craft. In 2009, he was part of an editorial cartooning panel at
San Diego Comic-Con. He has appeared as a panelist discussing his cartooning on
Fox News and has been a featured guest on Public Radio International's
Michael Feldman's Whad'Ya Know?. Koterba has written for
The Huffington Post,
ABC News, and
The Daily Beast. In 2009, he was named a finalist in the Great Plains Journalism Awards for a three-part essay he wrote for the
Omaha World Herald titled "Ink and Ash". His fiction has appeared in Parcel, and his graphic nonfiction has appeared in Ecotone. Koterba has given two
TEDx talks where he's discussed
Tourette's syndrome, vulnerability, and cartooning. Koterba is the lead singer, guitarist and songwriter for the Omaha-based swing and jump-blues band the Prairie Cats, who have released three albums. The Prairie Cats have been featured at the
South by Southwest music festival, the Hudson River Festival, have toured nationally, and appears in the motion picture
Lucky featuring
Ann-Margret,
Colin Hanks, and
Ari Graynor. They have been included on several
Sony/BMG compilations in Europe alongside the likes of Tony Bennett, Natalie Cole, and Frank Sinatra. He has published three collections of his cartoons including a book on
Nebraska Cornhuskers football cartoons he drew while in college. In October 2009,
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt published Koterba's memoir,
Inklings, which deals with his dysfunctional childhood and his lifelong love of cartooning and music. Many of his original cartoon drawings are regularly available for sale on
eBay. On April 5, 2010, two original Koterba cartoons blasted off into space aboard
Space Shuttle Discovery compliments of astronaut
Clayton Anderson. Koterba was laid off by the Omaha World Herald on September 18, 2020, after 31 years of employment. ==Awards==