Showing posts with label winningstreak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winningstreak. Show all posts

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Sunday, November 22, 1953: Yes, Lucy is still beating Charlie Brown at checkers


Read this comic at gocomics.com.

8,000 games now.  So, Lucy plays because Charlie Brown takes losing personally, eh?  She does make it to an even 10,000.  That day isn't very far off even.

The background grass seen back when Charlie Brown lost 7,000 games is seen here again, this time behind Lucy in the next-to-last panel.

Nice abstract drawing in the lead panel, although it looks like Schulz is cheating Charlie Brown's arm a little.

Looks like a chagrimace in panel 7.

Friday, December 24, 2010

August 21, 1953: 6,000 games now

Peanuts

6,000 games now.

If we accept that Lucy is by now maybe five years old, and assume that she was somehow playing from birth, that makes for 100 games a day month. Somehow I think they might have counted wrong.

August 19 is a duplicate. Anyone with access to the Fantagraphics collections able to fill us in on it?

EDIT: Joshua Probert mentions in the comments that "day" is way off. He's correct, it's more like per month. Still, considering the ostensible amount of time these kinds have been alive (which already looks silly compared to the time the strip's been running), 6,000 games is still fairly ludicrous, you must admit.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

June 16-17, 1953: We Love Lucy: WINNAR FOREVAR

June 16, 1953
Peanuts

This is a brilliant strip. Lucy's ludicrous winning streak inflates bizarrely into megalomania, and all Charlie Brown can do is close his eyes in dismay. Sublimely silly!

June 17, 1953
Peanuts

Well at least he's charitable about it. Why should he deny Lucy the experience of winning another game of checkers?

Thursday, July 1, 2010

December 20, 1952: 4,000 games

Peanuts

The key difference between this strip and prior "Oh Those Kids" strips is the expression on Charlie Brown's face in the last two panels. Before, if Schulz did a strip like this, Charlie Brown would have a neutral expression at the end. Here, he's speaking sarcastically. With just a lowered eyebrow drawn over the eye, the entire point of the joke has changed.

The Peanuts characters are unusually difficult to draw in complex poses, due to their short arms and legs, but Schulz does a good job with CB's legs in the last panel.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

November 22, 1952: Lucy shows pity

Peanuts

This is far from the end of the gag; evidently they don't consider this to be a real win on Charlie Brown's part.

Monday, June 14, 2010

November 19-21, 1952: Lucy's winning streak

Peanuts

Peanuts

Peanuts

Lucy's winning streak continues. If you think that's an unlikely number of wins, wait until you see what it gets up to.