Well, it’s more like everything is strange and weird these days, but simply funny? Not so much at all anymore. Ask the current teenagers. They’re as depressed as Death Valley.
I’m old enough I can remember when newspapers had sports cartoons. Of course I remember when Manhattan had 10 daily newspapers, including one, the Journal-American that legend had it only stayed in business because of it’s comic section. (They had all the King Features strips)
Well, I for one am grateful to GoComics for providing a revenue source for cartoonists to replace the dwindling royalties provided by vanishing print media.
the jj story will probably continue tomorrow the original story line sunday comic back then was https://www.gocomics.com/doonesbury/1997/04/20 and was a duke and son comic so no one will miss anything. of course anyone can read original story line and black and white daily strips
Why look at a minor and less skilled local cartoonist? “Thanks” to the Internet, you can look at ALL of the best of them. Who needs 30 of ’em?
It’s a deep comic. Sad, too. I used to call it the “scale of competition”, but now I link it to Dunbar’s Number. When you were part of a small community of people and you knew all of them, then you were sure to have a personal relationship with the “best” in various categories. (Dunbar’s Number estimates 150 as the number you can know well.) Even more important, you were pretty sure to be the best, too, in at least some ways. Each of us has many traits and features.
But now you can be the fastest runner in your town and no one cares. You have to compete with the fastest runners in the district, then the state, then the country, and if you’re really fast, you go to the Olympics and there’s only one gold medalist in the end… Everyone else gets to be a loser. That includes you and me. And even Garry Trudeau. (Unless maybe he wants to claim he’s the best editorial cartoonist in the world?)
Ironically, when the paper here in Phoenix decided to shift some of its comics to other sections rather than discontinue them altogether, “Doonesbury” got moved to the editorial page. (“Peanuts” and, I think, “Andy Capp” were sent to the classifieds.)
In a world that has Global Warming, Putin, Trump, pandemic, and Trump followers, there is no better beacon of wisdom’s light than a well-written ’toon.
how many real papers are there now? The “city papers” near me are shadows of their former selves, and there is no longer a “local” paper. Even the Pennysaver (a free classified weekly) is shriveling.
I’ve seen the local paper here almost shut down…..they kept cutting staff, offering buyouts, and it’s survived, barely! It finally went online but still publish a small paper, but not everyday!
I’ve seen businesses that were over 100 years old close their doors.
Memories of yesteryear are slowing fading as times change. I don’t recognize a lot of “Used to be’s” anymore. Sad
With all the problems in the world this is the boring subject of this comic? Maybe there is a reason for the failure of the editorial cartoon and the newspaper. I live in a metropolitan area of 2.5 million, our newspaper used to be published in a morning and evening edition and now only a daily edition which is usually late in arrival as the company cannot find delivery personnel for over 40 percent of the routes as no one really wants a 365 day a year job which starts around midnight. The paper is no longer even printed here but trucked in from 3 hours away to only 76,000 dwindling subscribers, most of whom are much older and leaving the planet daily, who are constantly hounded with price increases for a paper which is not much more than 25 pages long for about $3 which you can read online in its entirety via our local library, lets cry for the demise of the horse and buggy while realizing so many Americans are not informed by much of anything anyway, Fox News anyone? I keep up with the news via 7 online sources a day. NY Times is stellar at a dollar a week online.
I love Trudeau. He attacked Nixon ruthlessly. He ignored Hunter Biden’s lap top connecting him to the Chinese Communist Party and money laundering in Ukraine.
Thanks you my loyal supporters. If it were not for double standards and the ignoring of corruption then “Let’s Go Brandon” would never be in office. It only cost you your honesty and soul.
BTW, just curious, does RalphKramden77 qualify as a “troll” yet? As mentioned in an earlier thread, I’m unclear on the parameters of that kind of thing.
Something about the last panel reminds me of the expression “dustbin of history “. The way the newsstand is tucked into the locked storage area is like how some places store their dumpsters. Excellent piece today, Mr. Trudeau, thanks!
Not on-topic (why start now?), but regarding Trump’s motto of “Make America Great Again” (emphasis added), I was never at all clear on when America supposedly stopped being great in the first place. Trump spent four years saying that American wasn’t currently great. Doesn’t sound very patriotic to me but that is, of course, as ever, just me.
I left working in the print industry 16 years ago when a new opportunity presented itself. I saw what was coming, and didn’t want to be around to bury the corpse. No regrets …
I remember the newspaper boxes. You put a dime in and opened the door to get your paper. It really was an honesty policy because there was nothing to stop you from taking ALL of the newspapers!
I remember Herblock years ago. What a fabulous job he did, especially during the Nixon era. I was a kid who would run out to pick up the St. Louis Post-Dispatch every day! Loved Herblock almost as much as Doonesbury, Jules Feiffer, and Claire Bretecher.
BE THIS GUY over 2 years ago
Interesting symbolism in the sixth frame, almost like a crucifixion.
Alexander the Good Enough over 2 years ago
Well, it’s more like everything is strange and weird these days, but simply funny? Not so much at all anymore. Ask the current teenagers. They’re as depressed as Death Valley.
DennisinSeattle over 2 years ago
I am really glad to have David Horsey doing editorial cartoons for the Seattle Times.
https://www.seattletimes.com/author/david-horsey/
sergioandrade Premium Member over 2 years ago
I’m old enough I can remember when newspapers had sports cartoons. Of course I remember when Manhattan had 10 daily newspapers, including one, the Journal-American that legend had it only stayed in business because of it’s comic section. (They had all the King Features strips)
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 2 years ago
Well, I for one am grateful to GoComics for providing a revenue source for cartoonists to replace the dwindling royalties provided by vanishing print media.
lalapalooza Premium Member over 2 years ago
this is not a happy sunday comic
tarnrider over 2 years ago
the jj story will probably continue tomorrow the original story line sunday comic back then was https://www.gocomics.com/doonesbury/1997/04/20 and was a duke and son comic so no one will miss anything. of course anyone can read original story line and black and white daily strips
nicka93 over 2 years ago
There is a big difference between the symbolism of past political satire, and out right hate that we have now
shanen0 over 2 years ago
Why look at a minor and less skilled local cartoonist? “Thanks” to the Internet, you can look at ALL of the best of them. Who needs 30 of ’em?
It’s a deep comic. Sad, too. I used to call it the “scale of competition”, but now I link it to Dunbar’s Number. When you were part of a small community of people and you knew all of them, then you were sure to have a personal relationship with the “best” in various categories. (Dunbar’s Number estimates 150 as the number you can know well.) Even more important, you were pretty sure to be the best, too, in at least some ways. Each of us has many traits and features.
But now you can be the fastest runner in your town and no one cares. You have to compete with the fastest runners in the district, then the state, then the country, and if you’re really fast, you go to the Olympics and there’s only one gold medalist in the end… Everyone else gets to be a loser. That includes you and me. And even Garry Trudeau. (Unless maybe he wants to claim he’s the best editorial cartoonist in the world?)
dadoctah over 2 years ago
Ironically, when the paper here in Phoenix decided to shift some of its comics to other sections rather than discontinue them altogether, “Doonesbury” got moved to the editorial page. (“Peanuts” and, I think, “Andy Capp” were sent to the classifieds.)
For a Just and Peaceful World over 2 years ago
In a world that has Global Warming, Putin, Trump, pandemic, and Trump followers, there is no better beacon of wisdom’s light than a well-written ’toon.
FionaMessenger1 over 2 years ago
Speaking of which, Trudeau, are you ever coming back properly?
ctb11365 over 2 years ago
how many real papers are there now? The “city papers” near me are shadows of their former selves, and there is no longer a “local” paper. Even the Pennysaver (a free classified weekly) is shriveling.
wetidlerjr over 2 years ago
Hmmm… Sad :(
Prey over 2 years ago
Our local library has started placing the newspapers in the Fiction section.
erik.vanthienen over 2 years ago
Remember folks: Support Your Local Independent Newspaper!
Zebrastripes over 2 years ago
I’ve seen the local paper here almost shut down…..they kept cutting staff, offering buyouts, and it’s survived, barely! It finally went online but still publish a small paper, but not everyday!
I’ve seen businesses that were over 100 years old close their doors.
Memories of yesteryear are slowing fading as times change. I don’t recognize a lot of “Used to be’s” anymore. Sad
Brockie over 2 years ago
With all the problems in the world this is the boring subject of this comic? Maybe there is a reason for the failure of the editorial cartoon and the newspaper. I live in a metropolitan area of 2.5 million, our newspaper used to be published in a morning and evening edition and now only a daily edition which is usually late in arrival as the company cannot find delivery personnel for over 40 percent of the routes as no one really wants a 365 day a year job which starts around midnight. The paper is no longer even printed here but trucked in from 3 hours away to only 76,000 dwindling subscribers, most of whom are much older and leaving the planet daily, who are constantly hounded with price increases for a paper which is not much more than 25 pages long for about $3 which you can read online in its entirety via our local library, lets cry for the demise of the horse and buggy while realizing so many Americans are not informed by much of anything anyway, Fox News anyone? I keep up with the news via 7 online sources a day. NY Times is stellar at a dollar a week online.
Gen.Flashman over 2 years ago
30??? I counted 53 current cartoonists on the “Political Cartoons” section for this site alone.
Liam Astle Premium Member over 2 years ago
Maybe someone should do comics seven days a week instead of one day a week.
Redd Panda over 2 years ago
‘’Everything changes, stand in the way and you’ll be mowed down.’’ A. Einstein.
candomarty Premium Member over 2 years ago
I miss Tom Toles in The Washington Post.
nurbz over 2 years ago
Satire “LOCK DOWN”
Lescoe Brandon over 2 years ago
I love Trudeau. He attacked Nixon ruthlessly. He ignored Hunter Biden’s lap top connecting him to the Chinese Communist Party and money laundering in Ukraine.
Thanks you my loyal supporters. If it were not for double standards and the ignoring of corruption then “Let’s Go Brandon” would never be in office. It only cost you your honesty and soul.
FassEddie over 2 years ago
Maybe Mike’s referring to Steve Sack from the Star Tribune. I’ve seen nothing new from him since February.
John Leonard Premium Member over 2 years ago
Unfortunately Kim, the political satire is now being provided by the politicians. Mostly by one party, but the other helps out where it can.
alexius23 over 2 years ago
I miss a new daily strip…but I welcome the Sunday strip..
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 2 years ago
I blame the end of the world on TV. All the rest is the results of the boob tube addiction of boomers.
mindjob over 2 years ago
The future doesn’t look bright for print media, but it was fun while it lasted, doing crossword puzzles on a park bench next to a Starbucks.
exitseven over 2 years ago
Over the last 14 months America is beginning to look like a Mad Max movie.
this is summerdog over 2 years ago
Why did Mike say, “She’s gone”? A she?
RonaldByrd over 2 years ago
BTW, just curious, does RalphKramden77 qualify as a “troll” yet? As mentioned in an earlier thread, I’m unclear on the parameters of that kind of thing.
jusdoitok13 over 2 years ago
Something about the last panel reminds me of the expression “dustbin of history “. The way the newsstand is tucked into the locked storage area is like how some places store their dumpsters. Excellent piece today, Mr. Trudeau, thanks!
moondog42 Premium Member over 2 years ago
All the best comics are on the web now, but you wouldn’t know that from the Pulitzer committee’s awards for editorial cartooning.
kauri44 over 2 years ago
I like the use of the last panel as an editorial cartoon.
nowellwisch Premium Member over 2 years ago
Just another industry transforming in the new age as so many have in the last decade.
RonaldByrd over 2 years ago
Not on-topic (why start now?), but regarding Trump’s motto of “Make America Great Again” (emphasis added), I was never at all clear on when America supposedly stopped being great in the first place. Trump spent four years saying that American wasn’t currently great. Doesn’t sound very patriotic to me but that is, of course, as ever, just me.
Back to Big Mike over 2 years ago
I miss reading the paper. I miss reading each section, when I wanted to, even if that meant not reading it. Damn, I’m old…
RonaldByrd over 2 years ago
Notice that the “future” is locked. The concept of not being “allowed” into the future is kind of bleak. :-|
KenDHoward1 over 2 years ago
I left working in the print industry 16 years ago when a new opportunity presented itself. I saw what was coming, and didn’t want to be around to bury the corpse. No regrets …
j.l.farmer over 2 years ago
I remember the newspaper boxes. You put a dime in and opened the door to get your paper. It really was an honesty policy because there was nothing to stop you from taking ALL of the newspapers!
Avacadostab over 2 years ago
Wow! A real-life Neanderthal!
montessoriteacher over 2 years ago
I remember Herblock years ago. What a fabulous job he did, especially during the Nixon era. I was a kid who would run out to pick up the St. Louis Post-Dispatch every day! Loved Herblock almost as much as Doonesbury, Jules Feiffer, and Claire Bretecher.
Wizard of Ahz-no relation over 2 years ago
Maybe Gary could take up the slack and go back to dailys
198.23.5.11 over 2 years ago
Considering how many papers still run this strip on the Editorial page,Gary can count himself multiple times.