Follow the Leader/Newspaper Comics: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(clean up)
(clean up)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work}}
{{trope}}
* Gary Larson's one-panel comic ''[[The Far Side]]'' spawned quite a few one-panel gag comics without recurring cast members, such as ''Close to Home'', ''Real Life Adventures'' and ''The Argyle Sweater''. ''[[Mother Goose and Grimm]]'' sometimes engages in ''Far Side''-style humor as well.
* Gary Larson's one-panel comic ''[[The Far Side]]'' spawned quite a few one-panel gag comics without recurring cast members, such as ''Close to Home'', ''Real Life Adventures'' and ''The Argyle Sweater''. ''[[Mother Goose and Grimm]]'' sometimes engages in ''Far Side''-style humor as well.
* For the first ''[[Garfield]]'' compilation, Jim Davis came up with a new long-page book design to accomodate the three-panel strip most legibly. Once the "Garfield format" of books became popular, many other comic strip trade books began using it as well, including ''[[FoxTrot (Comic Strip)|FoxTrot]]'' and the aforementioned ''Far Side''. (Ironically, ''Garfield'' itself no longer does.)
* For the first ''[[Garfield]]'' compilation, Jim Davis came up with a new long-page book design to accomodate the three-panel strip most legibly. Once the "Garfield format" of books became popular, many other comic strip trade books began using it as well, including ''[[FoxTrot (Comic Strip)|FoxTrot]]'' and the aforementioned ''Far Side''. (Ironically, ''Garfield'' itself no longer does.)

Revision as of 21:21, 10 December 2013


  • Gary Larson's one-panel comic The Far Side spawned quite a few one-panel gag comics without recurring cast members, such as Close to Home, Real Life Adventures and The Argyle Sweater. Mother Goose and Grimm sometimes engages in Far Side-style humor as well.
  • For the first Garfield compilation, Jim Davis came up with a new long-page book design to accomodate the three-panel strip most legibly. Once the "Garfield format" of books became popular, many other comic strip trade books began using it as well, including FoxTrot and the aforementioned Far Side. (Ironically, Garfield itself no longer does.)
    • Interestingly, Marvin seems to have aped a lot of the stylistic traits from early Garfield.
    • Incidentally, Garfield himself is this, debuting five years after another orange fat cat, Heathcliff.
  • Doonesbury was one of the first comic strips to use a One Two Punchline, now seen in countless comics. It's also the Trope Maker for every strip that even so much as dabbles in political/topical humor.
    • And if Doonesbury didn't do it first, chances are the more off-the-wall Bloom County did. Interestingly, Berke Breathed admits that he cribbed Doonesbury a lot in the early years.