Latest News

CSotD: The Coming Election (if you want one)

Jeff Koterba joins the ongoing theme of “Who cares?” with the by-now familiar message that it really doesn’t matter who wins the next election, that Trump and Biden have run against each other before and so why bother voting in November? However, the past 24 hours have seen a shift in other cartoons, following Biden’s […]

Daddy Daze Deals with Death

It is common knowledge that part of a baby’s healthy development is the new parents talking to them. The humor in Daddy Daze by John Kovaleski arises as the father explains to his infant son the circumstances surrounding them. That conversation is about to get very serious. Beginning March 11 and running for nearly two […]

CSotD: Freya’s Day Funnies

Cathy Wilcox marks International Women’s Day with a grim sense of purpose but a welcome lack of complaining: It’s a good day to recalibrate as the struggle continues. She makes a valuable list of things to challenge, and doesn’t waste a lot of time and energy on the small stuff: These are all major policies, […]

Chance Browne – RIP

Hi and Lois cartoonist Chance Browne has passed away. Robert David (Chance) (Bob) Browne June 17, 1948 – March 1, 1948 Chance Browne, the son of Dik Browne and older brother of Chris Browne, died earlier this month. From the Stamford Advocate: Chance Browne died [Friday] at his home at age 75 after being diagnosed […]

CSotD: On to November

The primaries are all but over, and now we’re off to the November elections, though, as Adam Zyglis notes, not before the Supreme Court has taken a good long look at things. It seems unlikely that SCOTUS would decide presidents are immune from prosecution for criminal conduct, but, as Zyglis notes, it seemed highly unlikely […]

Wayback Whensday – No Complacency

Radical Socialist Cartoonist William Gropper Since 1920 Cartoonist William Gropper has been busy as a beaver, trying to gnaw down the capitalist system. One day that year Manhattan’s Tribune rashly sent Gropper to caricature an I. W. W. rally. Instead,he became a convert. This week Manhattanites from Red to pink and some who just like […]

Todd Klein’s Comics History BlogBook

I own a lot of comics history books, most list the details of who created the comics and when they were published and the characters in those comic books and strips. And while I am always happy to see another well done comics history book being published, I am overjoyed when someone gives us a […]

CSotD: Perhaps the end of the beginning

I gather Joe Heller is taking no pride in the coming elections, but he seems terribly cynical. It’s true that few of our elections have united the nation, but they’re not supposed to. That sense of pride comes from our ability to hash out our differences and come up with workable solutions, and I’ll grant […]

The Meanderings of Miss Cellany

Miss Cellany calls on Bryn Durgin and Navied Mahdavian, Jonathan Lemon, Barbara Brandon-Croft, Drew Dernavich, Chuck Asay, and Terry (‘Aislin’) Mosher. Miss Cellany gets unstuck in time and pulls up this, what The Pulitzer Board would call Illustrated Reporting and Commentary. The Los Angeles Times calls it an “Op-Comic.” It’s a multi-panel opinion comic from […]

Cartoonist Steve Benson Hospitalized

Editorial cartoonist Steve Benson is under medical care after suffering a stroke last month. The Pulitzer Prize winner, who retired late last year after 44 years, was admitted to a hospital in Arizona. Steve’s wife Claire noted on Facebook: I thought you’d like to know Steve had a stroke on 21 February and is now […]

CSotD: Courting Disaster

Alan Moir boils down America’s political situation to the essentials: Trump racing for the election and the chance of a self-pardon, pursued by the Keystone Kops. There’s a lot to be argued with here. I’ve said in the past that I wanted the prosecution to move carefully, not to blow the case with hasty moves. […]

Judge Thorp? Gil Parker?

Is it murder in Milford? Will there be sports at the Spencer Spread? Amalgam Comics was a blending of DC and Marvel heroes in the 1990s and that was the feeling I got when I saw the early access look at the March 11, 2024 Judge Parker. Having seen Rod Whigham art on Gil Thorp […]

Search

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get a daily recap of the news posted each day.