Why We’re Talking About Charles Schulz

This is the Classic Peanuts comic strip that was reprinted yesterday. It’s originally from December 7, 1960, and I think it’s very funny.

Peanuts - 7 Dec '60
©UFS

I don’t know which book first reprinted this installment, but the next day’s strip appeared in “It’s A Dog’s Life, Charlie Brown” in 1962. The overhead enlargement of what’s being done by the characters is a Schulz device that I particularly enjoy. All of Charlie Brown’s pen/pencil pal gags were done this way, as was Schroeder’s music and Snoopy’s “Dark and Stormy Night” typing.

Schulz not only completely ignored the clichés and conventions of previous comic strips, he created his own wide array of rich and unique cartoon expressions. For example, instead of having characters falling out of the last panel in reaction to the punchline and showing the heels of their shoes, he had the kids flip around in mid-air.

We take these images for granted, because they seem so natural, and there’s a certain comfortable “rightness” about them. Sparky Schulz worked very hard at making it all work so well, and he loved doing it.

Reading Peanuts books on Christmas Days while I was growing up was always an exquisitely enjoyable pleasure. As an adult, reading these same comic strips in The Complete Peanuts collections, I have a greater appreciation for the development of the drawing and the writing and the characters, and they don’t seem childish at all. I guess that’s why some would call it Art.

Dog Rat Speaks On Shokus Internet Radio

I did what I promised myself I wouldn’t do, and I called in to “Stu’s Show” on Shokus Internet Radio to talk to Monte Schulz and Mark Evanier about the David Michaelis biography, Schulz and Peanuts. To my amazement I think I didn’t completely blow it, but that’s only because of the topic and the fact I’ve already had some contact with these fine gentlemen.

Shokus Internet Radio

I will not be posting an audio excerpt from the show until it’s no longer being played on Shokus Internet Radio. The good news is, you have plenty of opportunities to hear it between now and next Tuesday. It will be repeated every evening at 7 PM ET.

I really want you to listen to the entire program, so I won’t even tell you where in it I make my appearance. In fact, I was going to hang up after Monte answered my question, but I was glued to the phone and as a result was able to sneak in an extra comment. Even after that, I was so engrossed in what I heard I again forgot to hang up for a little while!

To my embarrassment, I didn’t say thank you! Many thanks go to Stu Shostak, Mark Evanier, and Monte Schulz.

“Look, Iraq Iran is dangerous”

George Bush, Idiot-In-Chief

Bush isn’t even the boy who cried wolf, because unlike the children’s story it turns out there’s no wolf.

Bush said the new conclusion — contradicting earlier U.S. assessments — would not prompt him to take off the table the possibility of pre-emptive military action against Iran.

“Look, Iran was dangerous, Iran is dangerous and Iran will be dangerous if they have the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon.”

Bush was wrong about stem cells, tax cuts for the rich, Iraq, Terry Schiavo, and Social Security. So I’m sure as heck not going to start thinking he’s got it right this time.