- Presidential Data: Top Industries & Contributors to…
- Presidential Data: Selected Industries
- Death and Taxes: 2008
- Crack, 1940s-style
- Fans of Small Press Unite!
- Go, Read: Gary Panter Interview
- Sponsored Comics: Willis Barton, MD
- Why the shootings mean that we must support my politics
- All Star Comics #30 – Dreams of Madness
- The Truth About Men
- “It’s Jack Kirby’s Demon, Charlie Brown!”
- New Orleans: 1935
- Selma, Alabama: 1935
- All Suits Sterilized: 1910
- St. Louis Dispatch profiles webcomics
- Page Numbering Question
- Things to say BEFORE you die
- Souther Salazar drug-free spots
- Venice to Rome
- X-Ray Art
- Sparky, Meet Cloudy
- How-To Books – part one
- WFMU’s Old Codger with Courtney T. Edison from Jun…
- Clowes on Frankenstein
- SUTTON IMPACT ends
- WFMU’s Antique Phonograph Music Program from Apr 10,…
- We Pause For This Commercial Message, Pt. 2: Save…
- John Lennon Optical Illusion
- The Joker’s Hostess Ad & Effective Aquaman
- 365 Reasons to Love Comics #107
- Comics: Cliff Sterrett’s Polly And Her Pals Part Three
- WFMU’s Thomas Edison’s Attic from Apr 17, 2007
- 16 Panels That I Don’t Think Work All That Well
- Jay Kennedy Memorial
- Tips and Tricks: Desire
- Micropayments: the Second Shoe Drops
- Creator Q&A: Scott McCloud
- Jim Woodring’s pop-up Moleskine art
- Escaped chimp leads zookeepers on chase around Osaka…
- Study Shows Chimps Evolved More Than Humans
- USS Catastrophe Shop To Close
- Chapter on Metrorian Knights Completed
- I will miss Ho
- Internet Radio Rebellion Crushed: CRB Upholds Royalty…
- Sao Paulo goes advertising-free
- Roundup of No-Fly lists and other watchlists
- Wind In The Willows Part 3
- Sponsored Comics: Johnny Stardust
- I found this under a thrift store painting
- Study Names Orangutans As The Most Intelligent Primate
- Fear and Loathing in the Atomic Age
- Artists Museum Partnership Act Reintroduced
- Today’s show: All monsters attack! – Kong
- Is the pamphlet the future of comics?
Monthly Archives: April 2007
THE CARTOON CRYPT: Gumby on the Moon
Interesting Links April 14, 2007
- Why you should wear your seatbelt
- Rare Harvey Kurtzman art from 1964
- Bush administration renews push for expanded spying…
- Compulsory Spam
- Recycle Your Comics
- Andrew Brandou: Jonestown paintings
- The Kansas City Sheet Music Collection
- Rerun: Historical Information
- Everything Must Pass/Go
- Fun facts from libraries around the World
- More Animation Books
- Vonnegut’s rules for short stories
- What’s wrong with worldbuilding
- Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot Footage: CZ’s Zapruder Film
- I’m Vack Like A Voss Notherfuckers!
- After Imus: What You Can Do
- Sponsored Comics: Blaze Braden
- Friday Distractions: King Cat Classic
- LH Top 10: Free Computer System Recovery Tools
- Links Toward a Business Plan
- Influences: E.C. Segar
- Mark Hosler of Negativland Interviewed
- Jim David: Don Imus: He’s Not Alone
- ’Pataphysics, the science of imaginary solutions
- Webcomics Get Serious(ly Good)
- Prologue, Part 1
- Prologue, Part 2
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Wind In The Willows part deux
- Neil Gaiman interview
- The Webcomics killer app?
- Ray Cathode (aka George Martin)
- A Few Random Notes on Digital Comics
- Guest Strip: Tom Hart
- Still Krazy
- The Animated Bayeux Tapestry: A look at an early historical…
- Charles Mingus’ Guide to Cat Toilet Traning
- FOOTPRINTS IN THE SAND
- 365 Reasons to Love Comics #101
- Scanned-in 1929 novelties catalog
- Quack 19th cen. vamp-hunting kits for sale
- Twin Peaks Season 2 On DVD
- Drawn! Giveaway: The Animation Show on DVD
- Free Hogan’s Alley
- Scott McCloud Loves ‘Scott Pilgrim’!
- read bottom up
- More history books
- Queen of Lemons: 1920
- Royal Crown: 1941
- Awesome Cartoon Brew parody
- D&Q Unpacks New King-Cat Roll-Out
- A moment of banana tower zen…
- Novel and little-known accessories of 1923
- Free Coffee: 1908
- Complete scan of Johnson Smith’s Fun Catalog #792 (1979)
- Kurt Vonnegut MP3s
- Tony Millionaire’s Drinky Crow Show Preview #2
- THE WELL-RUBBED MOLESKINE
- “Play ball”
- Chapter 99: Alpha Danger Squad
- Gaiman gets Googled
- Time lapse video of Tim Biskup ocean mural
- Tarzan chimp celebrates 75th birthday
- Researchers Give Video Games To Orangutans
- Are They Brothers? Part 1
- Flight 4 preview
- HANDSOME RANDSON by Paul Pope
- part two
- The “Uncanny Valley”
- Chubby Checker’s Psychedelic Record
- Robot Chicken – You love it!
- Just Commercials… Really Old Ones.
- Illustration: Girlie Magazines’ Covers
- Free audio of Gaiman’s Hugo-nominated “How to Talk to Girls…”
- The Night my Mind Was Blown…
- Bathing Girl Revue: 1922
- Even More Pigs
- Walt Disney’s passport for sale
- Photos from our readers
- Fist-A-Cuffs: When the Streets Run Black with Ink
- Interview: Shannon Wheeler Pt. 2 (of 3)
- Onstad talks artisanal bacon and Achewood
Monkey of the Week, April 14, 2007: Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution
A particularly ridiculous clip from the 70’s chimpsploitation show Lancelot Link: Secret Chimp.
Crumbling Paper: The Katzenjammer Kids in Der Inspector Chumped! (1903) by Rudolph Dirks (strip #1)
A Katzenjammer Kids strip from 1903 by Rudolph Dirks. Click the image below to read the strip. The coloring on a lot of these early strips is pretty interesting. A lot of time they have areas of the line art appear in a solid color, rather than just leaving it black… note how the line art for the bricks in this strip is red and the other line work is blue. Note also you can see Happy Hooligan soaking through from the other side of the page. Click the below image to view the entire strip.
Here’s what Don Markstein’s Toonopedia has to say about the Katzenjammers.
I’ll have more Katzenjammer Kids cartoons coming in the near future.
Bill Blackbeard’s Grand Scheme for the Herriman Reprints
Going through some old email, I ran across this old post from comics historian Bill Blackbeard to the Yahoo PlatinumAgeComics group that I had missed previously… in it he deliniates his grand scheme for his George Herriman reprint projects. Here’s what he said (circa April 29, 2004… so some of this may have changed):
By George. the Komplete Daily Komic Strips of George Herriman, edited by the undersigned, is indeed up for sale at Andy Feigery’s Spec Productions, retailing at $24.95. It’s a whopper of a book, the extreme outsize dictated by the need to properly showcase the original daily strip episodes so that all of Herriman’s often miniscule (and very funny) detail can be seen clearly. The three complete strtps included are Herriman’s first newspaper dailies: Mr Proones, Baron Mooch, and Gooseberry Sprigg, the Duck Duke (where we get our first look at Coconino County). 54 gigantic pages on antique cream stock to catch the cachet of old newsprint, opening from the top to facilitate reading ease. The next volume, due in three months, will carry a large swatch of The Dingbat Family/The FamilyUpstairs daily, which followed these first three titles into newsprint, again to be printed in large format to catch the details previously crammed into (and sometimes lost) in the shabbily printed Hyperion title. More volumes will cover the rest of the Dingbat epic and — of course — all of the initial years of the Krazy and Ignatz opus underfoot, then include all of Stumble Inn and Baron Bean, to turn to the last great daily, Krazy Kat itself. (Fantagraphics will, as planned, publish all of the kolor kat tabs from 1935 thru 1944 in a fine series of volumes, and will fit the Sunday Stumble Inn pp into odd corners of these titles. The handful of little known dailies not yet mentioned will be included in the Spec volumes over time (such as Mary’s Home From College and the like). Herriman’s illustrations for the archy & mehitable titles will not, however, be included, since they are an integral part of the don marquis text, which is widely available in several editions in the used book market. The KK dailies now being published in odd volumes and magazines roundabout will all be eventually included in the By George series, needless to say. Introductions and commentary to upcoming volumes will be solicited from our old pal Allen Sundry, so get ready to get into line, guys and gals! (This includes our own too long Eclipsed kat, of course.)
Best,
Bill B.
Currently the first five volumes of By George! The Komplete Daily Komics of George Herriman are currently available from Spec Productions, as are Krazy & Ignatz volumes 1-8 from Fantagraphics. This takes the Sunday Kat reprints up to 1940, if you include the previous series from Eclipse (that Fantagraphics will be reprinting the contents of with additional material (Stumble Inn) after the next 2 volumes are complete).
THE CARTOON CRYPT: Monkey of the Week, March 30, 2007: Simon the Monk in Monkeydoodle
Whoops, I thought I had published this on March 30th, but I just saved it… here it is now. Our monkey of the week for two weeks ago!

I knew nothing about this cartoon previous to finding it on youtube, but finding it is like finding lost pirate treasure. It is awfully bizarre and interesting, and it stars a monkey in a fez, so it is right up my alley. It’s pretty amazingly raunchy for the time period, too… monkey boobies are prominently featured. It’s made by Les Elton and is from 1931.
I’ve never heard of Mr. Elton previous to this cartoon. Googling for Mr. Elton brought me some interesting information about him at the Stripper’s Guide blog, and, even better, more lost pirate treasure… a series of pretty amazing comic strips he did called “Jack Daw’s Adventures.” Comics historian Allan Holtz, who is the guy who does the wonderful Stripper’s Guide blog, believes this strip is the very first syndicated adventure strip featuring a continuing character… and he has reprinted about 50 of them on his site. A panel sample can be seen below.
THE CARTOON CRYPT: Ray Harryhausen’s Mother Goose
This is a fun, early Ray Harryhausen cartoon… it is clunky compared to much of his later work (Harryhausen is probably most famous for the stop motion animation in The Clash of the Titans and the Sinbad movies), but very charming nonetheless. You can already see what a talented animator he is… he puts a lot of subtle detail into the characters’ movements.
He has some pretty interesting verses I hadn’t heard in there for Old Mother Hubbard.
Crumbling Paper: Happy Hooligan Strips by Frederick Opper circa 1903 and 1904 (strips #1 and #2)
Here’s a Happy Hooligan strip by Frederick Opper from 1904… click the image to see the strip.
Pictured in the panel above we see (besides the gemsbock), from left to right, Happy Hooligan and his brothers Montmorency and Gloomy Gus.
In spite of being easily one of the most popular comic strips of its era, Happy Hooligan, as far as I know, has only been the subject of ONE modern reprint book.
As usual, esteemed comics historian Bill Blackbeard was the culprit… he had a Happy Hooligan volume in his wonderful Hyperion Library of Classic American Comic Strips book series from 1977.
I don’t believe Opper’s other strips (which were also quite popular… Alphonse and Gaston, and And Her Name Was Maud) have had modern reprint books at all. There were only books that came out while the strips were still running.
This is a pretty awful oversight, as besides his massive popularity in the early part of the last centrury, Opper is a very funny cartoonist and excellent artist. You can also see samples of Opper’s work in some comics history overviews, like The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics and 100 Years of Comic Strips (both wonderful books also edited by Blackbeard).
How funny is Opper? Happy Hooligan wears a tin can on his head for a hat. A tin can! That, my friend, is genius.
Here’s a fragment of the February 15th, 1903 Happy Hooligan strip… click the image to view it.
Here’s what Don Markstein’s Toonopedia has to say about Happy Hooligan.
I’ll be reprinting some more Opper stuff that I’ve scanned in the coming weeks, among other things.
Interesting Links: April 10, 2007
- This Idea Is Good – The 100 Artists Project
- The perils of owning too many records …
- WFMU’s Antique Phonograph Music Program from Apr 10,…
- area man completes large drawing, critics unimpressed
- Hanna-Barbera never did this.
- Bonobos join forces better than chimps
- Escaped Spider Monkey Alarms Oregon Neighbors
- Vomiting in Wild Bonnet Macaques
- On Johnny Hart and Legacy Strips
- Time Travel Musical Bazaar Podcast
- Tips and Tricks: Starting a Project
- where was i?
- Camp Fire GIrls candy box
- Treasury Dept’s 250-page list of bad names
- Gary Friedrich Sues Marvel and Related Companies Over…
- What MSN, Google, Yahoo and AOL Know About You
- 365 Reasons to Love Comics #99
- The Three Caballeros return… in Orlando
- 1932 Cartoon Contest
- Easy DIY 360 degree photos
- Pinups: Jack Cole And More Great 50s Playboy Cartoonists
- 365 Days #100 – Introducing The Unique Keyboard Sounds…
- Chris Ware at work
- North Korea’s 100,000-person pixelboard
- Return of the Wise Guys
- Woody Woodpecker on DVD
- Buddhist Sand Art
- Doug Marlette in Richmond
- Tuesday Morning This and That — Hmmm, what’s t…
- When they were Kings
- Animation History Books
- WFMU’s Old Codger with Courtney T. Edison from Jan…


