Hi I’m John Green.
Welcome to my fancy new salon, including my
totally real fireplace.
This is Mental Floss on YouTube and did you
know that Garry Trudeau, who created Doonesbury,
won a Pulitzer Prize in 1975?
That was the first comic strip ever to win
a Puh-litzer.
Or possibly Pew-litzer.
And that is the first of many facts about
newspaper comic strips that I’m going to
share with you today.
In 1945, conservative Harold Gray used his
comic to show just how much he despised FDR’s
New Deal policies.
He killed off a star in his strip, Little
Orphan Annie: Daddy Warbucks.
Eventually Warbucks came back to life, but
only after FDR died.
The character claimed, “Somehow I feel that
the climate here has changed since I went
away.”
The comic Katzenjammer Kids was the first
to use speech bubbles.
It’s also the oldest comic strip ever.
It started in 1897 and still puts out new
comics today.
In 2008, a tumblr by the name of “Garfield
Minus Garfield” was getting 300,000 views
a day.
All the creator did was remove Garfield from
Garfield comic strips, leaving a sad and slightly-insane-looking
Jon.
Jim Davis, who makes Garfield, was really
cool about it actually.
He claimed that some of the strips on the
blog actually worked better than his originals.
If I can make one recommendation, Internets:
Spiderman without Spiderman.
And we’ll stay here on the wall to discuss
Peanuts.
Charles Schulz originally called his comic
strip Li’l Folks, but that had to be changed
because there was already one titled Little
Folks.
Off-topic, I just want to say how grateful
I am that there’s no rapper named Little
Wayne.
Anyway, Schulz once admitted that he hated
the name Peanuts.
He said, “It’s totally ridiculous, has
no meaning, is simply confusing - and has
no dignity.
I think my humor has dignity.”
My humor has dignity too, Charles Schulz.
See my earlier Little Wayne joke.
And incidentally, Charlie Brown never did
kick that football in the fifty years that
Peanuts ran, which, by the way, was almost
18,000 strips from 1950 to 2000.
In a 1975 speech, Gerald Ford said, “There
are only three major vehicles to keep us informed
as to what is going on in Washington: the
electronic media, the print media, and Doonesbury...not
necessarily in that order.”
One of Mindy Kaling’s first forays into
comedy was a comic strip for Dartmouth College’s
daily newspaper titled “Badly Drawn Girl.”
In 2005, Blondie’s 75th anniversary was
celebrated in the comic strip with a huge
party that featured tons of other comic strip
characters with months of build-up and lots
of interaction.
The characters in the comic Pearls Before
Swine weren’t invited to the party, but
they still played out a story arc about their
plans to crash the party.
When Farley (the beloved sheepdog in For Better
or For Worse) died, creator Lynn Johnston
received 2,500 letters - some positive and
some angry.
The Ontario Veterinary Medical Association
even named a charity after him: The Farley
Foundation.
Seth MacFarlane also had a comic strip, but
a little earlier in life.
He was being paid to cartoon when he was nine-years-old.
His strip was called “Walter Crouton”
and it ran weekly in his local newspaper.
There’s a park in Monterey, California containing
a statue of Dennis the Menace.
But it isn’t the original.
In 2006, a bronze Dennis was stolen from the
park.
It was 3 feet tall, 125 pounds, and worth
$30,000.
It never turned back up so it had to be replaced.
So if you’re looking for some Dennis the
Menace style mischief, and you also want $30,000,
Monterey, California.
Though artist Mort Walker has since been given
the army’s highest civilian honor, Decoration
for Distinguished Civilian Service, the army
didn’t always love his comic Beetle Bailey.
In fact, the Pentagon had previously used
Walker’s comics as an army training guide
for how NOT to act.
Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert, decided
to start a food company in the late nineties.
They produced frozen vegetarian burritos using
his title character as the mascot.
They were of course called Dilberitos[a][b].
Calvin and Hobbes creator Bill Watterson is
famous for his refusal to let anyone adapt
his comic to another medium.
He has even turned down meetings with legends
like Steven Spielberg and George Lucas.
One more fact about Calvin and Hobbes because
the Internet loves Calvin and Hobbes.
In 2008, students at Washington University
in St. Louis organized a Calvinball club,
which attracted forty students.
The one rule of Calvinball, of course, is
that you can never play it the same way twice,
and the club has honored this, using everything
from hardhats to water balloons to footballs
in Calvinball games.
In 1996, when the mom on Family Circus (best
known as “Mommy”) got a drastic haircut,
it was big news.
And by that, I mean it was an actual, literal
news story.
The LA Times went above and beyond with their
coverage, getting quotes from famous stylists
about the look.
The Wizard of Id was a collaboration between
Brant Parker and Johnny Hart.
After getting the idea from a deck of cards,
they spent three days in a hotel room working
on it.
They scheduled a meeting with hotshots from
the syndicate, who showed up early.
They were greeted by Parker, Hart, and a hotel
room littered with food, booze, and scrap
paper.
The president of the comic syndicate reportedly
told them, “We think you guys are disgusting,
but we’ll take The Wizard of Id.”
Speaking of The Wizard of Id, it was one of
Jim Henson’s favorite comics.
He even considered adapting it into a TV show,
shooting a pilot in 1969.
He ended up too busy to pursue the project,
but you can watch some of it if you click
here[c].
If you’re ever at Islands of Adventure and
the line for everything at The Wizarding World
of Harry Potter is super long, which spoiler
alert: it will be, check out Toon Lagoon.
I mean, you can eat the favorite food of comic
characters, like a sandwich at Blondie’s
or ice cream at Cathy’s.
Speaking of Cathy, when it was announced that
Cathy would be ending in 2010, #WaysCathyShouldEnd
was a trending topic on Twitter.
By the way, I apologize for using the word
“hashtag,” but at least I didn’t follow
it with “yolo.”
Speaking of only living once, people often
wonder WHY Bill Murray agreed to voice Garfield,
given that he only has so much time on this
earth.
Well, he told GQ that he took the role because
the film was written by Joel Coen.
And he had already done a day of voice work
before learning that this was NOT the Joel
Coen of the famous Coen brothers, but rather,
a different Joel Coen.
Which is all fine and good, Bill Murray, but
how do you explain Garfield 2: A Tail of Two
Kitties...
But it’s not fair to throw Bill Murray under
the bus when it comes to comic strip adaptations,
because the real villains of that story are
Betty White and Don Rickles, who were in the
straight-to-VHS Dennis the Menace sequel.
Which also starred Carrot Top.
In news of a slightly better movie, Owen Wilson,
William H. Macy, Kiefer Sutherland, and tons
of other esteemed actors voiced animals in
the 2010 Marmaduke movie.
George Lopez was also in it, but his career
technically ended when he did the movie Balls
of Fury.
Anyway, you can’t blame any of these people
for being in the Marmaduke movie because 1.
paycheck and 2.
The premiere was a BEACH PARTY that featured
actual surfing dogs.
Comic strip character Zippy the Pinhead appeared
in graffiti form on the Berlin Wall.
When the wall was torn down, that piece sold
for $10,000 in an auction.
According to Rhymes with Orange cartoonist
Hilary Price, the word “crap” is still
considered inappropriate on the comics pages.
In January 2014, she had to give newspaper
editors an alternative strip to the one she’d
designed that contained the word “crap,”
just in case they’d rather use, you know,
a G-rated strip.
Well, I for one say that SUCKS.
Apparently you can’t use the word “sucks”
either.
What is this, Maoist China?
How does Garfield express his frustration
when he can’t have lasagna!
And lastly, I return to my fancy salon to
tell you about the unlikely friendship between
Far Side creator Gary Larson and primatologist
Jane Goodall.
One of Larson’s comics had one chimp asking
another “You conducting a little more ‘research’
with that Jane Goodall tramp?”
The Jane Goodall Institute was outraged, but
Jane herself stopped them from getting lawyers
involved because she thought the comic was
funny.
The chimps perhaps were not so amused - Gary
Larson later visited one of Goodall’s research
locations where a chimp named Frodo attacked
him.
Larson was only slightly injured.
Thanks for watching Mental Floss here on YouTube,
which is made with the help of all these nice
people.
Every week we endeavor to answer one of your
mind-blowing questions.
This week’s question comes from Nick who
asks “Where does Bill Clinton reside today?”
Well, Nick, not that I’m recommending that
you stalk the Clintons, but they live in Chappaqua,
New York.
If you have your own mind-blowing question,
please leave it in comments.
We’ll endeavor to answer as many as possible.
Thanks again for watching Mental Floss and
as we say in my hometown, don’t forget to
be awesome.
