Cool News
Charles Schulz, father of the PEANUTS, has retired
Folks... this is a sad day. I met Charles at an Aggiecon when I was just a wee little boy. He was doing demonstrations in cartooning on great big 3ft by 2ft paper. Doing real quick Charlie Browns and Snoopys and Woodstocks... I sat on the front row watching him... it was like magic. I think we have all grown up with The Peanuts. All wanted to see Charlie Brown take a baseball bat to Lucy's head if she pulled the football away one more dang time. When Schulz retires, I imagine this means the end of Peanuts in our papers. He has been quoted as saying that when he stops... so does the strip. And... it's fitting that way to me. Having someone else come in and try to bring up the WWI Flying Ace... just wouldn't be the same. Or the Kite-Eating Tree. Or the Great Pumpkin. Instead, we will have gigantic volumes of reprinted PEANUTS... Trade paperbacks to raise generations on. Sharing the same stories as we have, by the same master storyteller. Charles... best of luck and thanks... The last strip will appear January 3rd, 2000...
Hi Harry,
Just heard this sad news on TV and had to share, Charles Schulz, the legend
behind "Peanuts" has retired due to health reasons (he has colon cancer),
but I had high hopes that he would pull through. It's the end of an era.
Steve
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+ Expand All
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Thanks for all your hard work, Charles.
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I knew this day would come eventually. I saw a piece about Mr. Shultz just a few weeks ago and I knew that when he had to retire, that would be the end of Peanuts. I will miss them. They've been my friends all my life. One of my nicknames was "Lucy" because of my childhood tendency to boss my little brothers around. I always hoped that one day, Lucy would let Charlie Brown kick that stupid football. But I guess it's better that she never did. We will miss you, Mr. Shultz.
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There is nothing else to say, a comics legend is coming to an end. The Sunday Funnies just will not be the same. The child inside has just been forced to grow up a little bit more. Take care, Mr. Schultz, and know that your creation affected millions. I'll miss them, and you.
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This is a shame. And Mr. Schultz has cancer? This is just an awful shame.
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I just got on the computer and went over to ACIN and saw the article under Coxial News.
At first I thought it meant Charles M. Schulz had died and when I heard he hadn't I was grateful. But I am just as sad and near tears to learn that he is retiring his comic strip.
I've always read the strip in
my newspaper for as long as I can
remember and to see it end after all these years is a shock and
breaks my heart. I know all
the characters and remember many of their memorable lines and adventures, mishaps, triumphs.
Peanuts is one the greatest most
influential comic strips ever
created and changed the face of
childhood and popular culture and
my life, forever.
I've seen all the movies and
TV specials and plan to get the
Golden Celebration Peanuts book
for Christmas.
It just ain't fair. I know come
2000, the world will not end but
with news like this coming just about every day (first Joseph Heller, author of Catch-22 dies and now Charles M. Schulz announces he's retiring from
the Peanuts comic strip), I feel as if the world really is coming
to a close with so many of people
who have defined our century either not longer alive or
no longer creating.
Simply put, one of the greatest
artists of the 20th century has
announced his retirement and as such we will no longer be able to read and enjoy his artistry.
I wish Charles M. Schulz all
the best and hope he recovers.
May Charlie Brown, Snoopy and
the rest of the Peanuts gang live on forever in our heart and souls.
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I never got to meet you, but your work has been a part of my life since my folks bought me my first trade paperback back in the late 50's... You helped me learn to draw, and your stories and gentle humor have always made me smile... For me, "Peanuts" will always be about dreams... dreams of the little redhaired girl, of the Great Pumpkin, of being a WWI flying ace, of emulating Beethoven or getting that certain piano-playing someone to notice you... It will be about missed footballs and lost games and the enduring spirit of the dreamer... And of Lucy the psychiatrist showing Charlie Brown all his faults in a slide show... Or Linus deciding after much debate that he wants to be the 43rd man on the moon... Of Snoopy as Captain Kirk... Woodstock, Peppermint Patty, Rerun... Charles Schulz, I never met you, but it doesn't matter - you are part of my family and I love you. God bless you.
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Well maybe he'll end it nicely with Charlie Brown finally kissing the little red haired girl .....and kicking Lucy's ass.
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Dec 14, 1999 5:41:37 PM CST
There's no such thing as a wishy-washy goodbye, Charlie Brown.
by all thumbs
I don't know what to say except that I will miss the Peanuts and will now treasure more than ever the Peanuts books I have (and know by heart). I hope all goes well and a recovery is in the future for the true Flying Ace.
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I just read that the last strip will be on Feb. 6, but Schultz will stop drawing on Jan. 3. I'll have my scissors out that day and will maybe even frame it.
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I, too, have grown up with Peanuts. Charlie Brown was the first (and only) comic strip character that I could truly identify with. I wrote a fan letter when I was maybe in the third grade and got a letter back from Schulz, which I still have in a scrapbook. Even though I've read it less in the last few years, it's always been a comfort to open the paper and see Peanuts on the comics page. I will surely shed a tear on the day that last strip appears.
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What's with putting "the" in front of it? You all sound like my grandfather. :)
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Lucy: "Charlie Brown, how does it feel to know that you'll never be a hero?" Charlie Brown: "You don't know. Some day I might rescue a baby from a burning building, or save a drowning child, or..." Lucy: "Charlie Brown, deep down in your deepest heart of hearts, how does it feel to know that you'll never be a hero?" CB: "Terrible." Pretty much somes him up, don't it?
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Few things pull at my heart but peanuts was my childhood, I grew up on it. I feel a great sense of lose but at the same time I'm thankful for all the good memories he has gave us. I really hope he pulls threw. I think I can say he has a nation pulling for him!
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Is it just me? or does anyone else think that he was getting senile during these last years? I mean, I love the characters and the strip, but the jokes he wrote were not making any sense....
(though I did read them and laugh because they were so out there...)
I don't know. maybe just me... -
Peanuts is long overdue for retirement. I wish C. S. had had the good sense to realize when the steam ran out. Nonetheless, I will very much miss Peanuts. I especially miss it being relevant. Maybe Jim Davis will follow suit (yawn).
What I really hate is that CBS doesn't air many of the animations. After the first few specials the scripts got really lame, though. -
I'll concede that "Peanuts" was not as laugh-out-loud-funny as it once was, but we're talking about something near 50 years of work for Chrissakes. Look, "Peanuts" transcended "funny." I'll even go so far as to claim it was social commentary without the pretentiousness.
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Wa wan wahh wah wah wan wahh waahh.
Wah wa wahnw waugh wag wa!! -
so long farewell averdsan(sp?) good night
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Dec 14, 1999 11:37:15 PM CST
"I love Mankind, it's people I can't stand" -- Linus Van Pelt
by abu ben-shalom
For all those of you who buy the nasty line that says Sparky lost his greatness or his edge in later years, go to
http://www.snoopy.com
and check out two "Little Red Haired Girl" Sunday strips from the last year & a half. Look for the strips dated 4.26.'98
and 12.20.'98. They are freshest, most *priceless* and I feel sorry for your kids if you miss them. The first is of Charlie Brown & Linus on the lunch playground & is IHMO the best spoof of a classic movie ever.
The most recent is Charlie Brown drawing her a Christmas Card while Linus watches & contains IMNSHO simply the best "sweet babboo"
line ever. I won't spoil them for you, but go there & do that! I own
irreplaceable original dog-eared clipped copies of them both
and you must find a way to get them soonest.
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I've been reading Peanuts since before memory, when my now deceased father would put me on his lap and read me the Sunday Comics. When I was first learning to read, some of the first books I read were the Peanuts Collections. Well, I'm 21 now, and I am still reading Peanuts. Make it a point to read it everyday, along with a few other comics. I even have a Joe Cool doll sitting on my dresser in my bedroom. It'll be a sad day when Peanuts is gone, something that has been a daily part of my life since practically day one will have just become like many other things that have come and gone, a memory. Thank you Charles, for giving us so many years of Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus, and the rest of the gang. They will all be sorely missed.
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As soon as this guy passes, you can count on Hollywood making the live-action version. Kevin Smith(w/ shaved head) as Charlie Brown, Rosie O'Donnell as Lucy, Nicolas Cage as Linus, Carrot Top as Peppermint Patty, Janeane Garofalo as Marci, Chris Rock as Franklin, with Matt Damon & Ben Affleck voicing CGI versions of Snoopy & Woodstock.
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The news, in the words of Huey Lewis, hit me like a hammer... I was, and still am, in shock. "Peanuts" has been an integral part of all our lives; it's entrenched itself so deeply in the national (and world) consciousness that I think we're going to feel its absence even more than we now realize. "Calvin and Hobbes", "The Far Side", "Bloom County" - I was sad when these great strips met their end, but it was nothing compared to the grief I feel now. I grew up with Charlie Brown and Snoopy; I wore through countless paperback editions of strip reprints. I cherished each and every one of Snoopy's World War I adventures, be they in the air, the trenches, or the small French cafes; every one of Pepperment Patty's anguished struggles of identity; every one of Charlie Brown's heroic rises from the ashes of crushing defeat. Some of my happiest childhood memories were sitting in a large tree in front of my house, poring through the latest volume of "Peanuts" reprints I'd borrowed from the school library. My teachers worried that the only books I took out of the library were the "Peanuts" books, but I didn't care - and looking back now I know that I was right not to, for even though I have long since moved from that house; even though that tree has long since been cut down; even though "Peanuts" itself is now poised on the brink of oblivion, I have those wonderful memories. That will be the strip's ultimate legacy for so many. I want only one thing this Christmas - and that is for Charles Schulz to beat his cancer, and to reconsider - at least reconsider - his decision to end this national treasure, which has brought such joy into the lives of so many. I realize it's unlikely he'll change his mind, but even if "Peanuts" never sees the light of print again, may the man who created it live, healthy, for another thirty years. God bless him.
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The truth has been told! I loved reading PEANUTS in the last few years because you were often hard pressed to even find the humor. I mean, I suppose, traditionally it would be found in the last panel, but old Charlie Brown wasn't even in the same neighborhood as a punchline in many strips. PEANUTS, lately, was an enigma, almost a Dadaist experiment. I am sorry that Mr. Schultz has cancer and I wish him well. However, I am not sorry that I have been laughing at PEANUTS, for all the wrong reasons. And for those of you who might call me a jaded asshole, it was I that argued Peppermint Patty and Marcy were NOT lesbians. So there!
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If you folks think that the Peanuts has gone stale in recent years, look at that piece of shit Beetle Bailey. Stupid. Moronic. Waste of ink. Its about time for Mort Walker to hang it up, doncha think?
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Not that Peanuts is finishing. Even down in NZ, we get Peanuts, and I love reading it. But today, when I was in the car, and the news was on, and they said the words "Charles Shultz", my heart jumped. Oh my gosh, is he dead? No, please God, no! And then they said it - he is retiring. It is sad that we will get no more new Peanuts, but with 50 years worth of work, I think there is enough to do re-run cartoons for a long time yet. Anyway, I realise it is most unlikely that Mr Schultz reads this site, but I would stil;l like to say "Thank you, Mr Schultz, for giving us so much enjoyment over the years. I know that my prayers will be with you and pray that you overcome your illness." Incidentally, immediately after that news item, I heard for the first time this year, Snoopy's Christmas - still my favourite Christmas song. ***** www.homestead.com/vertigofilm/
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Actually, the last Peanuts Strip will be on Sunday, Febraury 13. Schultz will stop drawing the strip on January 4, but since he has to do a month ahead of time, we will have all of January to savor the gang one last time.
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I haven't read Peanuts in several years, probably because the Journal doesn't have a comics page, (although i have asked), but it was nice to know it was out there. There was a great deal of backlash against Watterson and Larson and Trudeau and Breathed when each took there sabaticals. Mort Walker, Dik Browne and the rest all complained that you should never take a break. Shulz was asked for comment and simply said he felt if they wanted a vacation they should take one. i liked that sentiment. the rest had to shut up because Schulz didn't support them. i found that entertaining. I do wish him the best.
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If you want nothing but fantastic, bittersweet memories of "Peanuts", do yourself a favor and delve into the catalogue of Jazz pianist Vince Guaraldi. Not only did he create ALL the memorable themes for Charlie Brown and Co., but he was also a gifted jazz musician with a flair for melody. He created the most recognizable jazz music of the 20th century, and still only a handful of people know who he his. Finding his albums is difficult, but always worthwhile. I recommend the soundtrack to "A Charlie Brown Christmas" and "Charlie Brown's Holiday Hits" for Peanuts music. For non-Peanuts, try "The Vince Guaraldi Trio" from '55 or "Jazz Impressions of Black Orpheus". Buy them now... You Blockhead.
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In 2nd grade I played Charlie Brown in our school's Valentines play. It was cold, and I was wearing shorts and a short sleeved shirt. But I got to play Charlie Brown. And at the end of the play I got a kiss on the cheek and a valentine.
I've always identified with Chuck, and the Peanuts gang has been special to me for as long as I can remember.
They will be missed.
I don't envy Mr. Shultz, most importantly for his cancer, but also for the daunting task of creating that last strip. How do you cap off 50 years of cartooning history?
Thank you Mr. Shultz, thank you and good luck.
--Grey -
Cancer fight forces abrupt end to 50-year-old strip
SR cartoonist says, "I have no choice'
Dec. 15, 1999
By MEG McCONAHEY
Press Democrat Staff Writer
"Peanuts'' creator Charles M. Schulz, acknowledging he can't battle cancer and keep up the professional demands of a daily comic strip, announced Tuesday he's retiring from cartooning but promised to keep the gang alive through TV and video.
"Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus...I'll never forget them,'' the 77-year-old cartoonist said, frail but in a fighting spirit as he recovers at his Santa Rosa home from emergency surgery last month. "But it's a shame to end the whole thing without Charlie Brown ever kicking the ball. It's not fair.''
The 77-year-old cartoonist's voice wavered between tears and laughter as he contemplated an abrupt end to a nearly 50-year career. The final daily column will run Jan. 3 and the last Sunday strip on Feb. 13, without the ever-hopeful Charlie Brown finding a mailbox brimming with Valentines.
"All of a sudden, I'm in an ambulance, going to town and here I am,'' Schulz said, recalling Nov. 16 when he was taken ill. "It's all over. I didn't mean for it to end like this, but it is. I have no choice, no choice whatsoever. I don't know what to do. So I decided I might as well call it now.''
The saddened cartoonist said he will use the space in his final daily strip to bid farewell to the friends and readers, whose unconditional love for the luckless Charlie Brown, his delusional beagle Snoopy and a schoolyard full of friends, made "Peanuts'' not only one of the most followed comic strips of all time, but one of the most recognized images of 20th-Century pop culture, right up there with Elvis Presley, Mickey Mouse and the Golden Arches.
"They've got to know that this is it,'' said Schulz, who has always insisted, and had written into his contract, that "Peanuts'' will come from his pencil alone and that the strip will end with his death. The last chapter will be in words, with a single drawing of Snoopy at his typewriter in the final panel.
But "Peanuts'' will not vanish from the comics page. On Jan. 3, United Media will begin rerunning old "Peanuts,'' starting with strips that first ran in 1974, and continuing indefinitely. The Press Democrat will carry the reprints.
The year 1974 was chosen because, by that time, all the familiar characters had been introduced. And yet the style is different enough, that "it will be obvious to readers that Sparky is not doing the strip,'' said Paige Braddock, senior vice president for Charles Schulz Creative Associates, who oversees how his characters are rendered commercially.
"Every artist loves his most recent work and tends to want to put away the earlier stuff. But this is a man who is head and shoulders above the rest,'' said Amy Lago, Schulz's editor at United Media, which licenses and distributes "Peanuts'' to 2,600 newspapers in 75 countries. "His body of work is absolutely incredible and if people haven't seen it, they need to. And if they've seen it, they need to see it again.''
Schulz lamented that he blithely figured he had another 10 years to contemplate the end of his creation. Fate dictated a different timetable when he was diagnosed with colon cancer and last month underwent emergency surgery for a blocked aorta, at the same time suffering a series of small strokes from which he is slowly recovering.
He still looks like the old Sparky, with a full shock of gray hair. But his vision behind the familiar glasses has been compromised. His mind is as engaged as ever, but he struggles sometimes to find the right word to finish a thought. And beneath the yellow Polo shirt and red sweater that have been his trademark work uniform, a box and tube provides a continuous drip of chemotherapy.
Schulz was under the gun to make a decision. His final packet of strips, which he completed before he was stricken Nov. 16 at his studio near his Redwood Empire Ice Arena, are slated to go out this week.
When he finally made up his mind Monday to call it quits and placed a call to his editor, he had to quickly come up with the words that could bring a close to a comic strip of iconic proportions that has provided an unbroken line of storytelling since it debuted Oct. 2, 1950.
For the strong-willed, workaholic Schulz, who in 50 years took off only one month -- a "'vacation'' he called "a disaster'' -- the decision was inevitable. He did not have the physical stamina for the grueling schedule of putting out a comic strip seven days a week.
And while Lago said the syndicate leaves the door open for Schulz to return, the cartoonist feels certain there will be no revival, at least not in the daily newspaper format.
"I can't start it over. It's just too hard. After all, I'll be 78, and do I want to start all over again?...Why don't I just go down to Santa Barbara and take a walk on the beach?''
Schulz is now contemplating the unfamiliar prospect of filling his days in other ways, keenly aware that he can't take his time for granted. "Good grief. I've got 18 grandchildren. I should see them.''
He said this sitting in a room comfortably lived in, with papers scattered about. A Snoopy pull toy was parked by the kitchen table. Outside, the yard of his ridgetop home is his playground, with a treehouse and climbing bars.
The job for Schulz has always been all-consuming. He does play on a senior hockey league and unwinds with tennis and golf but producing "Peanuts'' has proven not just a seven-day-a-week job. It's really a 24-hour preoccupation. He said his imagination is always spinning story lines, from the time he drives to work in the morning, to the time he goes to bed at night.
And yet, he said, since his hospitalization, for the first time his mind has been strangely silent.
"All the time it never stops. Now, all of a sudden,'' he said, "It stopped.''
Schulz said all he's thinking about now is tomorrow.
"I don't care anything about the cartoon or anything like that. All I want is to get better.''
Schulz may be retiring the daily strip, but he said there's juice left in the exploits of Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus, Snoopy and Schroeder. He plans to continue working with animator Bill Melendez and producer Charlie Lee Mendelson, with whom he has collaborated on more than 50 TV specials and four films, to keep "Peanuts,'' fresh through animation.
Schulz's association with comic strips began in infancy when he was nicknamed "Sparky" after Sparkplug, the horse in the Barney Google cartoon. The name stuck, Schulz was called "Sparky'' by friends and family throughout his life.
Schulz grew up in St. Paul, Minn., the son of a barber. He graduated from Central High School there in 1940. And the news drew wistful reactions from those who remember him from his early life in Minnesota.
"He deserves to have a rest," said Donna Wold, Schulz's teen-age love who was the inspiration for the Little Red-Haired Girl who keeps popping up in the musings and dreams of the strip's main character, Charlie Brown.
Although Schulz always said none of the "Peanuts" characters was based on himself or acquaintances, he did acknowledge that Charlie Brown was named after a very good friend from St. Paul.
"We worked together for five years after World War II at an artist correspondence school. He died several years ago in his mid- or late 50s, and I miss him very much," Schulz told the St. Paul Pioneer Press in a mid-1990s interview.
Minneapolis artist Frieda Mae Rich, who worked with Schulz at the same art school and was the inspiration for the curly-haired Frieda character introduced in the strip in 1961, died in November 1994.
Schulz moved to Sonoma County in 1958, eight years after United Feature Syndicate acquired his 3-year-old strip called "Li l Folks'' and renamed it "Peanuts'' -- a name Schulz forever despised for its lack of dignity.
The dean of daily comics said Tuesday he takes the most satisfaction in having helped elevate the art form of the comic and in being the first comic strip to portray kids in philosophical contemplation, to portray the "almost human dog'' and to introduce what over half a century have become archetypal phrases and images, from the security blanket to the now poignantly benign curse, "Good Grief!''
In 1967, Snoopy and Charlie Brown were on the cover of Life magazine; in 1969, the "Peanuts" stars became NASA mascots, and astronauts wore Snoopy pins into space.
The Comics Journal rated "Peanuts'' No. 2 strip, second only to George Herriman's "Krazy Kat,'' in the top 100 comics of all time.
Schulz, whose "Peanuts'' is the most widely syndicated strip in history, doesn't mind. The comic genius whose signature character, Charlie Brown, was never a winner, said he's in good company.
""Casablanca' came in second to "Citizen Kane,''' he said with a laugh. "And somebody said to Willie Mays, "Well, you came in second to Babe Ruth.' That's not so bad. So I don't mind coming in second.''
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Big deal - peanuts hasnt been funny in *YEARS*. Hell - peanuts hasnt made *SENSE* in years. I think he was slowly going insane - the only way to explain why the strip turned into such a piece of crap in the last decade.
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Obviously never really read the strip in the first place.
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Sounds like some of you are too cynical or ignorant or don't know the meaning of "tact". Just because you didn't like how its been turning out the last several years, you ignore the profound impact its had on several generations of American culture. My mom read it as a child and I read it, its an unmistakable part of so many people's childhoods. They will be missed...
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Zelig - dude, of course I've read the strip. That's why I know that it's gotten LAME over the last 10 years. Hell - I used to like it when I was a kid. However, now as the ideas run dry, and the same setting gets beaten into the ground over and over again - as the comic begins not to even MAKE ANY FREAKIN' SENSE, then it's time to move on. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Is this an attack on CS? No - hardly, I think that Oliver Stone cant direct his way out of a paper bag, but I dont hate the man. Same thing here - I dont have any anamosity to Charles, but it was becoming obivous that the only reason that the strip continued to exist was because of the brand name. -
Let Charlie Brown kick the football after all this time, kiss the little Red Hair girl, and win a baseball game. He can then wake up with Snoopy standing on his bed dropping his food dish on his face. "Good grief! Leave it to mans best friend to interrupt man's greatest dream."
Or maybe they will introduce a new character. A nice old man who lived next door, who will just move away....
"50 Years is a long time"
I don't know. Maybe snoopy will get a chainsaw and cut down that kite eating tree.
Let us all join the famous world war I flying ace and drink a toast to him....
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As much as I don't want to admit it, yes, Desslok has a point. Over the last year or so, CS has gone off on tangents that went nowhere. Need proof? Just look at the strips with Snoopy's Dad and brother Olaf. They make you just want to ask what was Sparky thinking. In particular, the whole series with Snoopy's dad trying to find Snoopy. Huh? They made absolutely little sense and were 180 degrees out from the whole philosophy of Peanuts.
It will be refreshing to see the strip from 1974 and see how it progresses through the years. -
I feel that in the past 5 or so years Peanuts as really picked up. In fact it reads almost like an underground comic. A lot of fans had problems since the slight change because it wasn't funny. Most of the strips weren't suppose to be funny. They were thoughtful and complex. The month long break he had a few years ago really help start a new direction. I will give you that the art isn't as good as it use to be. However the art on my strip is far worse so until I'm better than he, I will not critize. The late 80s, early 90s run of the Peanuts were quite horrible. Everything was forced. I really wish he could have continued because the strip was truely going into interesting unexplored areas. I'm glad he is ending it his way.
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A couple of other comic strips in addition to Dilber (IMO) that mike make you laugh are Sherman's Lagoon (which reminds me of Bloom County) and Foxtrot.
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May you recover fully and have a long and happy retirement. What do you guys wanna bet that on the day the last strip appears, all of the other comics on the comics page have only one subject?
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