Blog: christmas 2022

Laugh-in, December 24, 1968

Laugh-in, December 24, 1968

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I'm posting this one not because I find it particularly funny, but because I find the existence of the strip interesting. It was based on the hugely popular TV show Rowan and Martin's Laugh-in, which started in 1967. The strip started only a year afterwards in 1968, and ended in 1972, a year before the show did. The show was very Vaudevillian, with a lot of quick-fire gags and jokes, and a number of different sketches. The strip clearly tries to emulate that style, by packing a number of characters into each strip and having them each do their own joke.The art style is very fluid and dynamic, and certainly fits the feel of the show, and of the era. It doesn't seem to succeed at being funny, though, because the popularity of the show seemed to come from the audience's enjoyment of the delivery of the jokes and not necessarily the jokes themselves. The cartoonist, Roy Doty, was also told he was not allowed to use the likenesses of any of the cast members from the sho…

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Brother Juniper, December 19, 1968

Brother Juniper, December 19, 1968

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While the character of Brother Juniper was named after a historical figure, the St. Bernard shown here was not actually named after a Catholic saint. It was named after a hospice in Switzerland, where they were first bred to rescue people. The hospice itself was named after St. Bernard of Menthon (not the more famous Bernard of Clairvaux). In doing a little research on the dog breed, I was unfortunately unable to find anything about their ability to sing or harmonize with bells. I did find that the most recently the dog was used for rescues was 1955, years before this comic was published. This means that the dog pictured here is not a rescuer, and it's possible he is actually employed mainly as a singer. The barrel, therefore, must be where he keeps his sheet music.

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Brother Juniper, December 9, 1968

Brother Juniper, December 9, 1968

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Brother Juniper is a unique comic strip with a unique origin, and I don't say that lightly. The creator of the strip, Fred McCarthy, became a Franciscan friar in 1944. He had been drawing cartoons from a young age, and continued doing so while attending St. Bonaventure College in New York. He would often draw a short, stout friar that he originally called "Friar Sad Sack" for posters and signs around campus, though he eventually would name him "Brother Juniper." He was named after one of the first followers of St. Francis of Assisi, founder of the Franciscan order. Juniper was known among the Franciscans as the "renowned jester of the Lord," and of whom many humorous stories are told, so it seemed to fit as the name of a cartoon friar. At first Brother Juniper only appeared in the national Franciscan magazine Friar, but in 1958 it was picked up by Publishers Syndicate and nationally syndicated. It ran for an impressive 31 years, until it ended in 1989.

This is fas…

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Gordo, December 15, 1968

Gordo, December 15, 1968

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For more on Gordo, see my post on it from last year. Here's another absolutely beautiful Sunday strip from Gus Arriola. It's kind of gross when you really think about it, but it looks so nice that I choose not to.

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Elsworth, December 23, 1951

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Part of the magic of Santa Claus is that he sees you when you're sleeping and knows when you're awake, so it stands to reason that he should already know what you want for Christmas without you having to write him. Therefore, even if Elsworth can't read his own handwriting, Santa should be able to just read his mind and know what he meant to write.

Also, given that the top row of panels again appears to be unrelated to the bottom row of panels, I wonder if these Sunday strips are just two dailies smashed together. Thankfully, unlike the last one, the top row makes sense even if something has been removed (or whatever happened with that other one).

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