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CSotD: Dogs, Frogs and Demagogues

Harley Schwadron speaks for me, because there is a flood of topics being cartooned about at the moment and my desperation is in trying to cover the ones that won’t keep, combined with the prospects of a drought if I cover them all today and nothing surfaces for tomorrow. My desperation, though, is never quiet. […]

Wayback Whensday: Steve Canyon Extras

To paraphrase Eric Burdon: When I was young it was more important to get my comics as a half page. Yeah, when I was young. The half page Sundays of my youth were always the best version … except when they weren’t. One exception was Milton Caniff’s Steve Canyon. By the 1970s the third page […]

CSotD: More Humpday Humor

Not feeling all that political today, but I got a laff out of Tommy Siegel‘s piece because it coincides with a sudden deluge of similarly dismissive editorial cartoons explaining that, despite all evidence to the contrary, those darned college kids are all anti-Semites, including the Jewish demonstrators. I don’t mind it coming from the usual […]

May 4 is Free Comic Book Day

Saturday May 4, 2024 is Free Comic Book Day. Comic books are not just for superheroes anymore, a few comic strip related comic books will be available. Andrews McMeel Publishing is making comics of actual comic strip collections available to stores. Phoebe and Her Unicorn by Dana Simpson and Peanuts’ Snoopy by Charles M. Schulz. […]

CSotD: What did you learn in school today?

I’m tempted to say “So here we are,” between Swift and Moynihan, but we sure seem willing to slip even lower at any moment. Moynihan suggested a chance for things to improve, while Swift seemed resigned to the belief that they wouldn’t. In fact, Swift, who was advising a younger clergyman, extended the thought: Reasoning will […]

Meandering Through a Monday

William Hamilton and The New Yorker, the animated adventures of Prince Valiant, Bill Gallo, Romero’s Axa, Jay Stephens interview, the dark side of book publishing, Brian Fies, and why cartoons are still worthwhile. I may have some doubts about the cartoons that have appeared in The New Yorker for the past quarter century as to […]

CSotD: Monday Wrap-up

Peter Schrank notes the almost-too-late move by the Americans to resupply Ukraine, and it’s good to get an outside view, because our internal reasons for the delay don’t much matter to people facing conquest. That more pragmatic point of view makes “Better late than never” a dubious expression, which Schrank emphasizes by showing Ukraine on […]

2023 NCS Divisional Award Nominees for the 78th Annual NCS Reuben Awards!

The National Cartoonists Society has announced the finalists for their 2023 Reuben Divisional Awards. The nominees in the 12 categories are… Variety Entertainment = Kieran Castano; Chuck Dillon; Bob Weber, Jr. Advertising/Product Illustration = Chuck Dillon; Sam Grinberg; Pashur House Book Illustration = Landis Blair; Danesh Mohiuddin; Tom Richmond Online Comics: Short Form = Sarah […]

Buy Me Some Peanuts and Charlie Brown

A collection of some Peanuts/Snoopy/Charles Schulz items from April 2024. The 2024 Major League Baseball season brings with it Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and Woodstock bobbleheads in in team colors and names. Philadelphia Phillies, Los Angeles Dodgers, Baltimore Orioles, and St. Louis Cardinals have promoted their flavor of Peanuts bobbleheads. The images I chose are from […]

CSotD: Caesar’s wife and Ginni’s husband

Kevin Necessary’s cartoon must surely seem an exaggeration to anyone who hasn’t been following the real-world case, but this argument is not simply being advanced in earnest but appears to have some traction with a substantial portion of the Supreme Court. And about that court: As Ann Telnaes points out, even having his wife active […]

Rerunning Thru This Past Week’s Comics

And we’ll start with the For Better or For Worse rerun that went through the after effects this week of Farley’s death that was shown the week before (originally from April 1995). Even after occasional readings over the 30 years since it first happened it is still a touching story (start here). Touching enough for […]

70 Years of Texas Observer Cartoons

The Texas Observer is celebrating it 70th year and the most recent issue covers its skewering of Texas politicos by way of editorial cartooning. Gayle Reaves at The Texas Observer regales us with tales of Observer cartoonists from the first Don Bartlett cartoon to the current Loon Star State cartoons of Ben Sargent. At the […]

CSotD: The Whole World is (Still) Watching

Fiona Katauskas sets a familiar scene divided between old and young, which may be a stereotype, but putting the old fellow in a suit rather than Archie Bunker mode suggests another division, that between those who have and those who are still setting their goals. The parallels between the Student Strike of 1970 and the […]

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