Stan and Schroeder Jam
Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
I knew Stan Getz had style, but this album cover from 1978 kind of suprised me.
(Peanuts © United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

I knew Stan Getz had style, but this album cover from 1978 kind of suprised me.
(Peanuts © United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

In my pantheon of comic strip artists, Bill Watterson is way up high in the lonely clouds. He’ll probably be in the company of other insanely great cartoonists (Charles Schulz, Patrick McDonnell, Winsor McCay, George Herriman), but his chair will still be a little higher than the others.
Calvin And Hobbes, when I first read it, had already been running for a few years, and its universe and philosophy was fairly well established. It immediately struck me how original and solipsistic this strip was, how unlike any other. It may well have existed on a world of its own, like the Little Prince or, indeed, Spaceman Spiff.
The best part about the cartoon was the obvious self-evidence with which Calvin takes his view on the world as the real one. His teachers are aliens, and he is Godzilla, barging through downtown Tokyo. At the risk of sounding narcissistic, it helped me come to terms with my own feeling that the way I saw the world differed immensely from other people’s views.
And I’m not alone – ten years after Watterson decided to end Calvin and Hobbes with the most beautiful page of white ever (except for the “Where to look for him” scene in Tintin in Tibet, perhaps), four young filmmakers have created “Dear Mr Watterson“, a letter from fans to Calvin’s dad, thanking him for what he did, and expressing why his work was so important for them. Among them many “ordinary” fans, but also cartoonists like Keith Knight, amazed at how Watterson got everything right.
And that’s the thing – Calvin and Hobbes may only have ran for about ten years, not one strip was below par. That’s why Watterson’s chair will always be that little bit higher than the thrones my other heroes are sitting on. Thank you, Mr. Watterson.

Lea Hernandez updates Peanuts for the 21st century. I like the fact that she didn’t make Linus a Linux Geek. After all, Linus is, essentially, a Mac. He was even a Mac before Macs were invented…

(from Neatorama)

This is my favourite of this year’s superbowl ads – Underdog and Stevie fighting over a bottle of Coke, and good old Charlie Brown getting the upper hand. The image of Charlie’s head rising over the buildings like the good humored moon that he is, is priceless.
(via Brainstorm #9)
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