LizzieMaine
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Here's something that isn't quite dead but has essentially disappeared as anything of any particular cultural relevance -- newspaper comics.
If you've ever seen an original Sunday newspaper from the Era, you'll instantly see how important "the funny papers" were -- most Sunday editions had the comic section wrapped around the outside of the folded paper, so it was the first thing you saw on the newsstand.
Even into the seventies it was a big deal for us to get the New York Sunday News at the drugstore, and the comic section was the main attraction since it carried many strips our local paper didn't -- I followed "Gasoline Alley" for years in the Sunday News. Comics were something that everybody read and everybody followed. Newspaper comics were enormously important and influential in the Era, and remained so right up into the 80s.
When Bloom County, The Far Side, and Calvin and Hobbes all ended within a few years of each other in the '90s, that marked the beginning of the end for newspaper comics as a relevant artistic force in America. Now, while there are still some decent strips out there, they are all but completely irrelevant as a mainstream cultural influence. I guess I should be happy I never achieved my teenage ambition to be a syndicated cartoonist.
If you've ever seen an original Sunday newspaper from the Era, you'll instantly see how important "the funny papers" were -- most Sunday editions had the comic section wrapped around the outside of the folded paper, so it was the first thing you saw on the newsstand.
Even into the seventies it was a big deal for us to get the New York Sunday News at the drugstore, and the comic section was the main attraction since it carried many strips our local paper didn't -- I followed "Gasoline Alley" for years in the Sunday News. Comics were something that everybody read and everybody followed. Newspaper comics were enormously important and influential in the Era, and remained so right up into the 80s.
When Bloom County, The Far Side, and Calvin and Hobbes all ended within a few years of each other in the '90s, that marked the beginning of the end for newspaper comics as a relevant artistic force in America. Now, while there are still some decent strips out there, they are all but completely irrelevant as a mainstream cultural influence. I guess I should be happy I never achieved my teenage ambition to be a syndicated cartoonist.