Panel Discussion - The ILX Comic Strip Poll Results

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this next one is specially for you whiney

Ettamogah Pub by Ken Maynard – 1 vote
On The Web

The Ettamogah Pub is a cartoon pub that was featured in the now defunct Australasian Post magazine. The cartoonist Ken Maynard, loving empty spaces and having nothing around him, enjoyed an area just outside of Albury at Table Top, named Ettamogah, thus christening the name of his now famous pub the "Ettamogah Pub".

http://visualhumor.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/kenmaynard01.jpg
http://www.ettamogah.com/images/04.jpg
http://www.ausreprints.com/content/pages/images/42234.jpg

Ooh, when's Snake Tales going to show up?

pplains, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 05:29 (nine years ago) link

prob my favorite wikipedia description yet coming up here

Frank and Ernest by Bob Thaves – 1 vote
On The Web

In a non-sequential story, the main characters are seen not just as humans but as animals, vegetables, minerals and more. A constant element has been word play, including the characters' names. Frank is both a name and a synonym for honest. The name Ernest is a homophone of the word earnest, which is a synonym for serious.
Weekday strips are laid out in one long panel with one joke or pun; the Sunday strip is similarly in one large block, with a series of rapid-fire puns pertaining to the characters (usually in character as various characters including, but not limited to, the planets, "Robotics Department," or "Malaprop Man"). Example: U.S. Postal Dept. Stamp Design Office: "The department decided to have a religious message on our next stamp. How about: 'Lord, deliver us'?"
Unlike most syndicated comic strip cartoonists, Bob Thaves did not write all of the gags for the strip (nor maintain a pretense that he did) and openly solicited for gags in publications such as Writer's Market. Thaves won the National Cartoonists Society's Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for 1983, 1984, and 1986, as well as The Mencken Award for Free Speech and designation as a Champion of Creativity by the American Creativity Association in 2006.

http://media.aphelis.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/THAVES_1998_Paradigm_Shift.jpg
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DVDxybr-48w/UWgnqeofK7I/AAAAAAAAjjQ/7w-xqqghgSs/s1600/cb16.gif
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_QMuDihPPyPA/RjZ8SQwA7fI/AAAAAAAABJo/eB_tdbw28og/s1600-h/blog_thaves.jpg

if you can't laugh at "Wiki Leeks" what can you laugh at

Funky Winkerbean by Tom Batiuk – 1 vote
On The Web

Distributed by North America Syndicate, a division of King Features Syndicate, Funky Winkerbean appears in more than 400 newspapers worldwide. Since its inception on March 27, 1972, the strip has gone through several format changes. For the first 20 years of its run, the characters did not age, and the strip was nominally episodic as opposed to a serial, with humor derived from visual gags and the eccentricity of the characters. In 1992, Batiuk rebooted the strip, establishing that the characters had graduated from high-school in 1988, and the series began progressing in real time. In 2007, a second "time warp" occurred, this time taking the strip ten years into the future, ostensibly to 2017, although the events of the strip still reflect a contemporary setting. Since the 1992 reboot and especially since the 2007 time jump, the strip has been recast as a drama, featuring story arcs revolving around such topics as terminal cancer, adoption, prisoners of war, drug abuse, post traumatic stress, same sex couples attending the senior prom, and interracial marriage.

These are pretty amazing out of context.
http://wac.450f.edgecastcdn.net/80450F/comicsalliance.com/files/2010/07/funkyjune20.jpg
http://www.funkywinkerbean.com/images-funky/landmine/Funky-20050807.jpg
http://cidutest.files.wordpress.com/2007/10/waitingforfunky.gif
http://comicsidontunderstand.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/flu.png
http://cidutest.files.wordpress.com/2007/11/creepywinkerbean.gif
http://wac.450f.edgecastcdn.net/80450F/comicsalliance.com/files/2013/02/funkyfeb10.jpg

FUCK WEIGHTED RESULTS. JUST ROLL THIS SHIT OUT.

sci-fi looking, chubby-leafed, delicately bizarre (contenderizer), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 06:11 (nine years ago) link

um, perhaps you've noticed that's what's happening? or did funky winkerbean break yr brain?

yeah no i no. it is just an opiniom.

plus lol @ "suit yourself, creepy."

sci-fi looking, chubby-leafed, delicately bizarre (contenderizer), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 06:18 (nine years ago) link

This could be the ilx thread of 2014. I can't wait for xkcd to place.

(The two Aussie entries that have been listed so far were me btw.)

Vernon Locke, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 10:43 (nine years ago) link

I had no idea under this very morning that the Funky Winkerbean strip had gone that insane. Been reading it all morning.

Three Word Username, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 11:11 (nine years ago) link

the transformation of Funky Winkerbean is one of the most amazing things

also that second Death to the Extremist strip cracked me the fuck up, I may need help

Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 13:38 (nine years ago) link

Ginger Meggs / Us Fellers by Jimmy Bancks – 1 vote
On The Web

James Charles Bancks was born in Enmore, New South Wales, Australia on 10 May 1889, the son of an Irish railway worker, John Spencer Bancks. Bancks left school at the age of 14 and found employment with a finance company. His first illustrations were accepted and published by The Comic Australian in 1913, followed by The Arrow in 1914. This encouraged Bancks to submit work to The Bulletin, where he was offered a permanent position, which he accepted and remained until 1922. Ginger Meggs follows the escapades of a red-haired prepubescent mischief-maker who lives in an inner suburban working-class household. Ginger first appeared in Us Fellers on 13 November 1921, drawn by Bancks. When Bancks died on 1 July 1952 from a heart attack, Ron Vivian took over the strip (1953-1973), followed by Lloyd Piper (1973-1982), James Kemsley (1983-2007) and since 2007, Jason Chatfield.

http://stwallskull.com/blog/images/crumbling_paper/crumblingpaper_gingermeggs1951.jpg
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-l5MgUsmdvPI/TpaUYaHceUI/AAAAAAAAJho/HcIpyc4VLts/s1600/GingerMeggs1934-CAF.jpg
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-cN8_SaptLGI/UteDJkML1mI/AAAAAAAA9xo/mPkAoN81gl0/s1600/jcb5.jpg

LOL at the Winkerbean vote.

Frobisher, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:00 (nine years ago) link

Girl Mountain by Simon Hanselmann – 1 vote
On The Web

Hanselmann’s Tumblr, Girl Mountain, is a textbook example of that platform’s reach, provided you’ve got something other people want to look at. Turns out tons of people in the alternative-comics world worldwide want to look at a strange stoner dramedy drawn by a Ben Jones-influenced Australian. Hanselmann’s comics-as-criticism series Truth Zone, which appears on Frank Santoro’s Comics Workbook Tumblr, stars Megg, Mogg, Owl, and Werewolf Jones as well, and positions them (and by extension Hanselmann) as the no-bullshit friends with the same interests in obscure alt/art/ underground comics as you – quite a feat, given his location a world away from most of the figures covered in the comics. But it’s the range of these characters’ emotional register, and the beauty of Hanselmann’s renderings of same, that make his work sting and stick. These characters struggle, and fail, to come to grips with their depression, drug use, sexuality, poverty, lack of work, lack of ambition, and their complex and often negative feelings about each other. Watching these themes emerge from a funny-animal gag strip with weed jokes is a bit like seeing the Locas saga spring forth from the brow of Jaime Hernandez’s old sci-fi stuff.
(via Comics Journal interview)

http://assets.vice.com/content-images/contentimage/160193/MMOvice6a.jpg
http://24.media.tumblr.com/9338edf0c02f97dfe1fb6ff28091ecde/tumblr_mry1qjFbvG1rzbt9wo1_1280.jpg
http://31.media.tumblr.com/115cf9b4cbdaa4229e995dff2b9ebbdd/tumblr_mkqm2k7pgm1ru22woo3_1280.jpg

Gunshow by KC Green – 1 vote
On The Web

Gunshow and its predecessor, Horribleville aren’t for everyone. They’re vulgar and crass; the fart jokes of webcomics. Still, anyone can make a poop joke. What make’s KC Green’s webcomics so special is his unique brand of rubbery and hyperkinetic artwork. KC’s drawings — in some ways reminiscent of Looney Tunes and Spumco — is goddamned hilarious. It’s great to know that in a webcomic world where everything seems to rely on sterile Flash drawings, there’s someone out there who can make you laugh the old-fashioned way: by drawing someone with a smile that’s goofy as hell.
(Via “Webcomic Overlook”)

http://i.imgur.com/8i9fB4M.png
http://wac.450f.edgecastcdn.net/80450F/comicsalliance.com/files/2009/12/gunshowtopten.jpg
http://kcgreendotcom.com/CC/comics/cc-coolfrog.gif

http://i47.tinypic.com/fu6j3d.gif

pplains, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:16 (nine years ago) link

Feel like we could also be adding some of these to What's the worst online comic strip? .

pplains, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:16 (nine years ago) link

omg @ Gunshow

Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:17 (nine years ago) link

I love a lot of the Gunshow one-off strips, but I swear, every time the dude tries to do a longer story the results are just unbearable.

JRN, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:21 (nine years ago) link

Hi and Lois by Mort Walker and Dik Browne – 1 vote
On The Web

Hi and Lois is a comic strip about a suburban family. Created by Mort Walker and illustrated by Dik Browne, it debuted on October 18, 1954, distributed by King Features Syndicate. The Flagstons first appeared in Walker's Beetle Bailey. They spun off into their own strip, written by Walker and drawn by Browne. Lois Flagston (née Bailey) is Beetle Bailey's sister, and the two strips make occasional crossovers. One of these occurred on the strip's 40th anniversary in 1994, when Beetle visited his sister Lois and her family. Chip resembles his Uncle Beetle in attitude and appearance, especially the eyes. The strip made efforts to keep up with the times, such as housewife Lois Flagston taking a career in real estate in 1980. In previous decades the strip was acclaimed; in 1962 it earned Browne a Reuben Award from the National Cartoonists Society. The strip faced some controversy given the changes in content restrictions since its debut in the 1950s. Once, editors insisted that belly buttons could not appear; in protest, Browne included a box of dimpled navel oranges. Now produced by the sons of the original creative team, the strip is written by Brian and Greg Walker and drawn by Robert "Chance" Brown

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-fn_ZYblWrus/URI1yTghp5I/AAAAAAAA-mg/OAEzoUbIhKA/s1600/Hi-and-Lois-1959-09-27.jpg
http://hiandlois.com/files/2013/04/4.17.60.gif
http://hiandlois.com/files/2013/04/hiandlois17april1966.jpg
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-RxwZHEpaNpY/Ua4p7hjPydI/AAAAAAABDOY/aBQvGJOVF94/s1600/Hi+and+Lois+1962-01-28.jpg

Hi and Lois had some great years!

Ha, I was the one that voted for Gunshow! Really guys? All the horrible shit that's shown up in this thread so far and that's the one that strikes you as especially bad?

Dan I., Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:23 (nine years ago) link

my favorite hi and lois fact is that they're related to beetle bailey

Mordy, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:23 (nine years ago) link

I fucking loved those three Gunshow strips

Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:24 (nine years ago) link

I'm surprised to see Hi and Lois get only one vote.

Frobisher, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:27 (nine years ago) link

Yeah, Hi & Lois is all right.

http://comicskingdom.com/system/characters/avatars/4469/website-Chip.jpg?1307485653

Guess we know from where Chip gets it.

pplains, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:28 (nine years ago) link

All the horrible shit that's shown up in this thread so far and that's the one that strikes you as especially bad?

I'll be honest, I wrote my post after the Girl Mountain post, but it took awhile to find just. the. right. gif.

pplains, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:29 (nine years ago) link

Hi and Lois shaming Alannis Morrissette years in advance.

Three Word Username, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 18:40 (nine years ago) link

Hogan’s Alley by Richard F Outcault – 1 vote
On The Web

The Yellow Kid was the name of a lead comic strip character that ran from 1895 to 1898 in Joseph Pulitzer's New York World, and later William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal. Created and drawn by Richard F. Outcault in the comic strip Hogan's Alley (and later under other names as well), it was one of the first Sunday supplement comic strips in an American newspaper, although its graphical layout had already been thoroughly established in political and other, purely-for-entertainment cartoons. The Yellow Kid is also famous for its connection to the coining of the term Yellow Journalism. Mickey Dugan, better known as The Yellow Kid, was a bald, snaggle-toothed boy who wore an oversized yellow nightshirt and hung around in a slum alley typical of certain areas of squalor that existed in late 19th-century New York City. Hogan's Alley was filled with equally odd characters, mostly other children. With a goofy grin, the Kid habitually spoke in a ragged, peculiar slang, which was printed on his shirt, a device meant to lampoon advertising billboards.

http://www.museumofplay.org/blog/play-stuff/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Hogans-Alley-Baseball-OSU.jpg
http://people.virginia.edu/~mmw3v/html/ykid/images/comicartists/yk_racingseasonLG.jpg
http://comicsareliteraturetoo.weebly.com/uploads/1/1/6/1/11617007/990935418_orig.jpg?550

for shame none of us voting buster brown. i shoulda.

wow, ginger & meggs is great, another i'd never heard of. and i love girl mountain, but can see as how it might (would, should) annoy.

sci-fi looking, chubby-leafed, delicately bizarre (contenderizer), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 19:59 (nine years ago) link

Howard the Duck by Steve Gerber and Gene Colan – 1 vote
On The Web

Between June 1977 and October 1978, Howard the Duck appeared in a daily comic strip that comic strip historian Allan Holtz has described as having low distribution and that was eventually replaced by the Hulk strip. Among the handful of newspapers it appeared in were the Toronto Star and Spokane Daily Chronicle. A total of eleven story arcs, as well as a number of single-joke strips, constitute the 511 individual strips that were printed. The strip started with original stories written by Steve Gerber and illustrated by Gene Colan: "Pop Syke", "The Cult of the Entropy" and "The Self Made Man". The latter was started by Colan and completed by Val Mayerik, who stayed on to do two additional Gerber scripted stories: "The Sleigh Jacking" and "In Search of the Good Life". These were followed by an adaptation of the "Sleep of the Just" story from issue 4 of the Marvel comic, scripted by Gerber and illustrated by Alan Kupperberg. Gerber was replaced by Marv Wolfman as writer while Alan Kupperberg continued as artist. The remaining stories were: "Close Encounters of the Fowl Kind", "The Tuesday Ruby", "The Clone Ranger", "The Mystery of the Maltese Human" and "Howard Heads Home". As the series drew to an end, its already meager list of client papers shrank, making copies of these last post-Gerber stories particularly hard to find. In November 1978, the first of a projected eight-issue series reprinting the entire strip was published by John Zawadzki. Titled It's Adventure Time with Howard the Duck, only the initial issue was published.

http://www.hoodedutilitarian.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/gerberhgc2.jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GzK5LKF6JFU/UV2StyuEezI/AAAAAAABA7I/Jk4mQdpZcp0/s1600/Howard-the-Duck-1977-08-28.jpg
http://cdn.comicartfans.com/Images/Category_3563/subcat_146341/Thumbs/sdHoward10261977.jpg
http://nemsworld.com/howard/tor_star_77-08-13.jpg

If… by Steve Bell – 1 vote
On The Web

If... is a sharp and cynical satire of British politics and current affairs from a left-wing perspective. It's named after the famous Rudyard Kipling poem. Suiting both Bell's anarchic artistic style and the paper's political stance, it consists of a short (usually three-panel) daily episode in each Monday to Thursday edition of the paper, with subjects usually covered in these 4-day-long segments. If... occasionally utilizes wordplay and coarse humor; Bell is fond of using the pejorative British word "wanker" and its euphemistic variants, for example. With the Guardian's move to new presses, If... started to appear in full color in September 2005. Initially, the title was reflected in the concept, with each week presenting a separate stand-alone story such as 'If... Dinosaurs roamed Fleet Street,' or 'If the Bash Street Kids ran the country'. This shifted into a different approach during the 1982 Falklands/Mavinas war, when Bell started to concentrate on two central characters: Royal Navy officer Kipling and the Penguin he befriends.

http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2008/06/03/20080603_If620.jpg
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2008/11/17/steve-bell-if.jpg
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2009/11/25/1259142754262/Steve-Bells-If-...-25.11.-004.jpg

Jeff Hawke by Sydney Jordan – 1 vote
On The Web

Jeff Hawke was a British science fiction comic strip created by Sydney Jordan. It was published in the Daily Express from 15 February 1955 to 18 April 1974, by which point Jordan had "written or co-written and drawn 6,474 episodes." Despite its obscurity in English-speaking countries, it is often regarded as one of the most important science fiction comics ever released, especially in Italy and Scandinavian countries. At first Jeff Hawke, presented as an ex-R.A.F. pilot (just like Jordan) was a rather ordinary, Flash Gordon-like heroic character. The plots were centered around ordinary adventure and science fiction themes common in pulp comics and fiction of the age, and at this stage the drawings were only of average quality. Nevertheless the strip was good enough to be published daily in the Daily Express.
In 1956 William Patterson joined his childhood friend Jordan, at first writing only the dialogue. Prior to this he did work on the Children's Encyclopedia for Amalgamated Press, also doing stories for Dan Dare and war comics. However after a few years he began to produce plot lines and stories as well. This led to a dramatic improvement in the quality of the comic. Patterson made Jeff Hawke the first science fiction comic strip for adults, not just children or adolescents. Jordan, now concentrating entirely on drawing, improved his style to a highly suggestive, realistic, contrasted black-and-white mark. The Patterson-Jordan period is considered the "true" Jeff Hawke by most.

http://calculating.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/jeff-hawke-science-fiction-strip-04.jpg
http://www.jeffhawkeclub.com/image/bob_strips.jpg
http://calculating.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/jeff-hawke-science-fiction-strip-06.jpg

JL8 by Yale Stewart – 1 vote
On The Web

JL8 puts the likes of Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman up against birthday parties, an evil gym teacher from the planet Apokolips, and a playground full of bullies that look an awful lot like the Legion of Doom. Most of the strips are funny, but don’t be surprised if you find yourself getting choked up one every once in a while. They can be surprisingly touching.
(via “Geekosystem”. Also, no they can’t.)

http://fc06.deviantart.net/fs71/i/2013/052/d/a/jl8__63_by_yalestewart-d5anb3w.jpg
http://static.squarespace.com/static/51b3dc8ee4b051b96ceb10de/t/521cdecee4b0f4851546bb21/1377623760141/JL8%23140.jpg
http://static.squarespace.com/static/51b3dc8ee4b051b96ceb10de/t/521ce00ee4b055779d545990/1377624079161/JL8%23137.jpg

this thread is great, thx so much for doing this forks. and i consider the presence of haters in this thread to be ideal. isn't hating comics a really important part of interacting w/ the medium? they're generally so bad!

Mordy, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 20:51 (nine years ago) link

Oh I'm a hater all right.

http://a3.ec-images.myspacecdn.com/images01/79/cee5770e5312e472eab550d7f4051073/l.jpg

pplains, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 21:12 (nine years ago) link

I think Jeff Hawke was me? If not then it must have just missed out.

Daniwa, guys! Daniwa! (aldo), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 21:16 (nine years ago) link

Is that second Hi & Lois really Browne? Is it just the shitty recolouring that’s throwing me off?

I'll be honest, I wrote my post after the Girl Mountain post, but it took awhile to find just. the. right. gif.

FP’d you for this, Hanselmann is 19x the cartoonist most of these web cunts are

wow, ginger & meggs is great, another i'd never heard of.

Ginger Meggs, not &

If should have had B&W strips as the example, ideally from the Falklands-ish era

rage against martin sheen (sic), Thursday, 12 June 2014 00:26 (nine years ago) link

^^ not grumping at heroic poll-rescuer forks, just saying in case I can't find any to post later

rage against martin sheen (sic), Thursday, 12 June 2014 00:27 (nine years ago) link

nu-meggs always looks like he's taking a slash off-panel

doctrine the house (electricsound), Thursday, 12 June 2014 00:44 (nine years ago) link

post-Bancks doesn't count obv

rage against martin sheen (sic), Thursday, 12 June 2014 01:19 (nine years ago) link

not great but

rage against martin sheen (sic), Thursday, 12 June 2014 01:23 (nine years ago) link

post-Bancks doesn't count obv

Truth. I voted only for Bancks - Meggs today is Snake Tales-level awful.

Vernon Locke, Thursday, 12 June 2014 01:32 (nine years ago) link

Johnny Hazard by Frank Robbins – 1 vote
On The Web

Johnny Hazard was an action-adventure comic strip published from 1944 until 1977 with separate storylines for the daily strip and the Sunday strip. After work in advertising, Robbins took over the daily strip Scorchy Smith from Noel Sickles in 1939 with a Sunday page added in 1940. King Features then asked Robbins to do Secret Agent X-9, but Robbins instead chose to devise an aviation comic for the syndicate, and Johnny Hazard was launched on Monday, June 5, 1944, one day before D-Day. While working on the strip during the 1940s, Robbins contributed illustrations to Life, Look, The Saturday Evening Post and other magazines. Robbins stopped drawing Johnny Hazard in 1977 and retired to Mexico in order to devote himself to painting full time.
The strip followed the globe-trotting adventures of aviator Johnny Hazard, initially as a member of the United States Army Air Corps in World War II, later as a Cold War secret agent. Comics historian Don Markstein described the transition: As the story opened, Johnny, like most American men of his generation, was fighting World War II. But his gig with the Army Air Corps didn't last long, as D-Day came when the strip was only a day old. But the only effect civilian life had on him was to enlarge the scope of his adventures—as a freelance pilot, Johnny ranged throughout the entire world. (An early focus, though, was China, putting him head-to-head with the rival Chicago Tribune Syndicate's Terry and the Pirates.) Johnny dealt with spies, beautiful women, smugglers, gorgeous dames, sci-fi style menaces, fabulous chicks and all the other kinds of folks a two-fisted adventurer of his caliber would be expected to deal with. As he did, unlike many fictional two-fisted adventurers, he matured—not as quickly as real people, but after a third of a century or so, he was quite gray at the temples. And a third of a century was as long as the strip ran. It was popular enough at first, and ran far longer than most post-war adventure strips, but the times were against it. Newspaper editors were more interested in daily gags than continuous stories, and Johnny Hazard succumbed to the trend in 1977.

http://www.thrillmer.com/comics/jhaz022755.jpg
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-u12x0zmIOHA/Uixnlbz1UPI/AAAAAAAACcA/KsOPUUmkz4k/s1600/Johnny+Hazard+1955+01+16+sunday.jpg
http://cdn.comicartfans.com/Images/Category_4398/subcat_25825/Robbins%20JH%201966-08-07.jpg


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