After almost 20 years of print publication, six bound collections and two animated series, Tony Millionaire announced today that
MAAKIES -- the surreal pen-and-ink adventures of Drinky Crow & Uncle Gabby -- has been cancelled.
[more inside]
posted by overeducated_alligator
on Feb 23, 2012 -
58 comments
Frankenstein Defeats Evil Computer. Mysterious Grass-Roots Gal-Revolt Rocks Gotham! Are Hippies Slowing Down Space Progam in Protest? Headlines ripped from the pages of such great newspapers as the Daily Bugle and the Gotham Gazette await you at
Dateline: Silver Age.
posted by gamera
on Apr 30, 2010 -
16 comments
Barnacle Press : archive of mostly public domain newspaper comics. Loads of good stuff, but some highlights not previously mentioned include (especially)
Ella Cinders, an stylishly written flapper-Cinderella update; the less clever but still charming
Cinderella Suze; the appallingly cute
Diary of Snubs, Our Dog;
Foxy Grandpa, about a grandfather who outsmarts prank-happy kids;
The Hurry Up New Yorker, a kinetically drawn one-joke strip;
The Newlyweds' Baby, about a cartoon-sexually-dimorphic couple with a terrible baby;
Doesn't It Seem Strange, sort of a beautifully illustrated 'They'll Do It Every Time' for 1903-4;
Bringing Up Father, class comedy with lots of rolling pin violence; the freaky-deaky
Terrors of the Tiny Tads.
(Main link previously posted a couple of times in 2005, but new stuff has been added since then, and the site's been redesigned.)
posted by zusty
on Sep 2, 2008 -
22 comments
When I was a newspaper-slinger back as a youngster, I became acquainted with that odd funnypages subgenre-the
soap opera comic strip(i.e.
Winnie Winkle,
Rex Morgan, M.D. and the pinnacle of the genre
Gasoline Alley).
Moving at the brisk pace of 4 panels a day, these entertainments must have seemed quaint even in their early radio days infancy, yet they gained devoted followings and
Dr. Rex and
Skeezix and the Gang are actually still active. While the strips are published on the web, I'm surprised that there hasn't been a whole-hog revival of the genre. Heck,
Brenda Starr could be truly funky hip modern woman if the right person retooled her a bit and I imagine many web community administrators could relate to
Mary Worth at times.
posted by jonmc
on Apr 28, 2002 -
25 comments