Wednesday, June 9, 2010

November 10, 1952: Charlie Brown is easy to convince

Peanuts

Last strip featured some strife between CB and the girls, here things seem to have been patched up fairly well. Well, at least that's what the girls want him to think.

Note the look on Charlie Brown's face in the first panel! That slanted, straight-mouthed expression. It hasn't been used much up to here, but it'll start getting fairly common in upcoming strips.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Sunday, November 9, 1952: Not mad anymore

Peanuts

This joke has been made before, and I don't think it's the last time it will be made. Patty and Violet's antipathy towards Charlie Brown are built off of moments like this one, but again, it doesn't last for the length of the strip.

Monday, June 7, 2010

November 7, 1952: Fussbudget

Peanuts

This is the first time the word "fussbudget" has been used in the strip. Now this word is almost impossible to separate from Peanuts. It is always, or nearly always at least, connected with Lucy.

Lucy hasn't been extremely fussy up to this point, but in Peanuts, when another character makes explicit reference to some trait supposedly possessed by another character, that tends to be the point where that other character begins exhibiting that trait as a defining characteristic. In other words, when someone is labeled, the label becomes indelibly part of them.

This is how most Peanuts characters evolved over time, and especially how they gained the traits for which they became memorable.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

November 6, 1952: Snoopy follows the trail

Peanuts

I'm linking this one because there's been a running gag for a little while now, one that intensifies a bit in the months to come, about Snoopy's ability to infallibly seek out someone with some kind of snack treat and beg. He carries this skill to great heights in upcoming strips.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

November 5, 1952: Charlie Brown is a budding cartoonist

Peanuts

The most interesting thing about this, beside the metahumor and Schulz playfully mocking his own pretensions, is that Charlie Brown's work on the comic is rather large. Of course, most cartoonists work at a scale we would consider to be very large, and artists for realistic strips are known to work larger still. But unless Charlie Brown were a serious comics groupie, he wouldn't know that. (Schulz may have been such a groupie himself; he might have known as a kid.)

Friday, June 4, 2010

November 4, 1952: Linus' head is too big, #1

Peanuts

There are a number of these strips that deal with baby Linus' head weighing him down. This is but the first.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Sunday, November 2, 1952: I've been tricked!!

Peanuts

A favorite strip of mine! Also a chase, this time after Lucy who is beginning to show her true colors.

November 1, 1952: Happy Day After Halloween

Peanuts

Early Peanuts has a number of day-after-holiday strips. One of my favorites, still to come, is a day after April 1 strip.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Halloween, 1952: Do your worst!

Peanuts

Remarkably cocky of Patty here, but then maybe she knows her opponents.

Scribble of ire!

Monday, May 31, 2010

October 30, 1952: Punkin

Peanuts

Compared to other comics, Peanuts characters are unusually poker-faced. The only hint of the kid's slow burn leading up to the last panel, perhaps, is that Charlie Brown is a little too happy in repeating Lucy's mispronounced line.

It's difficult to imagine him getting away with this later on.