I’m not sure that Hector and Carlos took obsessive-compulsives like me into consideration with today’s Baldo.
© Baldo Partnership
I’m the kind of guy that will look up those issues of MAD and find that the back covers are wrong for issues #180 (January 1976) and #159 (June 1973). Then, of course, I had find where Castellanos grabbed those pages to create his faux back covers.
© EC Publications
The Don Martin page is from MAD #137 (September 1970) and the Sergio page is from #292 (January 1990).
On the occasion of The Portland Press Herald dropping Dilbert Soibhan Brett, the Press Herald’s opinion page editor, reads their comics section.
Melancholy about the slow demise of almost everything else old and handmade, I’m unmoved by what’s come of comic strips. Although the form is probably not past reviving for the 21st century, I can’t visualize it. Death can’t even unseat the most trite.
Not sure if the opinion piece says more about her, the paper’s comics page, or the comics themselves.
Dilbert Post Script – From Czechia Posts English:
“We will end distribution of the comic on March 12, 2023. Please contact us as soon as possible regarding a replacement comic,” Andrews McMeel Syndicate told subscribers via email.
This is first I’ve seen that puts a definite end to the comic strip. But will Dilbert dailies run next week?
How many remember the good old days.
© Bob Weber; King Features; Paws Inc.
The Tiger panel above comes from a 1970 rerun showing a garbage can from that time. But the Slylock Fox and Garfield panels come from this past week and today. I guess the Slylock Fox garbage can is still the comic image of one, but how old does one have to be to have actually seen and used one? Aren’t all garbage “cans” plastic and made to be grabbed by the claw now? And while the milk can in Garfield was a common site to some of us it is also a thing of past.
Reliable sources tell us that former Andrews McMeel president and editorial director John Glynn has accepted a position as consultant with King Features Syndicate.
Patrick McDonnell pays tribute to comics history in today’s Mutts.
© Patrick McDonnell
Not for the first time.
Late Filing.
Last November a new comic strip appeared that we overlooked.
© Lori Smith
Grayman Comix by Lori Smith first appeared the November 16-29, 2022 issue of Street Sense. The comic shares its space with the Weingartens and Clark (w/ Labadie) strip Barney & Clyde, when that comic features a homeless issue.
Comics DC gave us the notice.
Dilbert Post Post Script
Saturday Night Live’s Weekend Update had a couple Dilbert jokes, also an interview with Dilbert.
WTF
Peter Gallagher gets closer to edge in Saturday’s Heathcliff:
© Creators Syndicate