Sunday, June 21, 2026

The New Yorker covers: August 31, 1940

Over the years, there have been many magazines whose covers have featured the work of highly talented artists and illustrators. But probably no magazine has had more varied and memorable covers, over a longer period of time, than The New Yorker, which was founded in 1925.


Ilonka Karasz
(covers untitled until February 1993)

And now, a few words from . . . Jack Kerouac


Because in the end you won't remember the time you spent working in the office or mowing the lawn. Climb that goddamn mountain.

"What is art but a way of seeing?" Saul Bellow

“The Head of the Virgin in Three-Quarter View Facing Right,” 1510-13, Leonardo da Vinci

Movie Posters, 1962: Two adults, please, and a large popcorn!

Today in the history of the American comic strip: June 21


American cartoonists and writers may not have invented the comic strip, but some argue that the comics, as we know them today, are an American creation. Clearly, the United States has played an outsize role in the development of this underappreciated art form.

6.21.1916: Jack Sparling, the creator of Claire Voyant, is born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The strip ran for a mere five years in the 1940s.

6.21.1936: Gene Ahern introduces Room and Board after he discontinued Our Boarding House to make more money with a different syndicate. The new strip, which ran until 1953, shared some similarities with the old one.

6.21.1936: The Squirrel Cage makes its first appearance as a topper above Gene Ahern’s Room and Board. The Squirrel Cage is notable for the lead character’s frequent repetition of the seemingly nonsensical question “Nov shmoz ka pop?” The question was never translated in the strip, but it became a national catch phrase nonetheless.

6.21.1954: Pogo Possum, the title character in Walt Kelly’s Pogo, appears on the cover of Newsweek magazine.

6.21.1957:
The cartoonist behind Bloom County, Outland, and OpusBerkeley Breathed — is born in Los Angeles, California. He won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning.

6.21.1981: Doug Marlette’s Kudzu adds a Sunday strip to its lineup. The comic ran from 1981 to 2007, when Marlette was killed in a car accident.


6.21.2020: Cartoonist Jan Eliot, appearing as a cartoon version of herself in her comic strip, Stone Soup, announces that she is retiring the comic, which went into syndication in 1995.
 
Kudzu

Most of the information listed here from one day to the next comes from two online sites -- Wikipedia, and Don Markstein's Toonopedia -- as well as 100 Years of American Newspaper Comics, edited by Maurice Horn. Note that my focus is on American newspaper comic strips (and the occasional foreign strip that gained popularity in the United States). Thus, comic books and exclusively online comics are not included here.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

The New Yorker covers: February 13, 1932

Valentine's Day (aka, Saint Valentine's Day) is both a secular holiday and, in its religious context, a holy day as well. Celebrated on February 14, it originated as “a Christian feast day honoring a martyr named Valentine,” according to Wikipedia. It later became a celebration of  love, which is how many of us know it today.


S. Liam Dunne
(covers untitled until February 1993)

And now, a few words from . . . Nelson Mandela


As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn't leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I'd still be in prison.

Movie Posters, 2019: Two adults, please, and a large popcorn!

"What is art but a way of seeing?" Saul Bellow

“Lady in a Green Jacket,” 1913, August Macke