To: Dr. Sivana
Yes. What’s odd is that FW started out as a gag strip, and then became a serial. “For Better or For Worse” was a strip that may have been created by a liberal who occasionally let her liberalism slip through, but at least was quality, and usually managed to both be serial AND funny. FW tried to upgrade bottom-of-the-barrel characters created for cheap gags into serious social commentary, and just can’t pull it off. I suspect editors keep it alive because leftists support it, but I wonder how many of its liberal supporters actually read it.
Someone once called Pogo, “the most beloved comic strip no-one actually ever read.” But my sense is that Pogo’s readership, even after several decades of decline, dwarfed FW’s.
22 posted on
04/26/2012 7:29:58 AM PDT by
dangus
To: dangus
(regarding Funky Winkerbeam) I suspect editors keep it alive because leftists support it, but I wonder how many of its liberal supporters actually read it.
It probably costs less than Hagar the Horrible, the artwork is tolerable. Most important . . . inertia.
Just think of the the comic strips that have recycled the same content for decades, and have neither interesting chacters nor artwork. "Tiger" comes to mind. There are others that seem to have worn out their welcome, but still have a loyal following despite running the same joke for eons. I have run into people, and not necessarily oldsters, who just LOVE the Lockhorns, They'll Do It Every Time and Cathy.
Some of course, lost "it" after the author died or retired. Al Capp, Charles Schulz, Bill Watterson and Gary Larson had it right. Not only did those strips (Li'l Abner, Peanuts, Calvin and Hobbes and The Far Side) benefit from ending gracefully, Abner and Peanuts were spared the indignity of being adapted to a time for which they were no longer suited.
In a sense, comic strips are the most conservative of all popular culture media. The truly iconic ones suffer with major plotline or even stylistic changes. Compare today's Blondie with Chic Young's, not even a pale imitation. (Dagwood acknowledging that his one big button is strange or that Blondie is unbelievably curvy undoes the whole joke of the strip.)
Even mundane comic strips that were never rip-roaring funny or engaging have a stake on venerability. Beetle Bailey and Andy Capp are eternal characters that we would miss if they changed noticeably. If "Bringing Up Father" were still around, could you even imagine Jiggs dressed in 21st century clothes?! He was wearing spats well into the '80s, for heaven's sake. Mutt and Jeff ditto (gloves instead of spats). Take off the spats and gloves, and they are unmade.
25 posted on
04/26/2012 8:16:33 AM PDT by
Dr. Sivana
(There is no salvation in politics.)
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