The strip Mallard Fillmore has been going off all week about how evil it was for Jon Stewart to "fake" a Mallard Fillmore strip in the book "America".

Tinsley is apparently SO thick he can't recognize parody. Does he REALLY think that the writers of America were trying to make people think it was a genuine Mallard Fillmore strip? Especially since it was part of a set of pretty blatant parodies of other strips, like Doonesbury and (IIRC, my book is at the office) Peanuts.

What a humorless political hack.

Edit: For completeness, here's the other strips.

1) The original "JOIN, or DIE." snake, the only genuine one in the batch.

2) A buttcrack joke about Lincoln and a "divide in the Union".

3) A Tammany Tiger cartoon in which the tiger is real and eats the gentlemen, parodying Nast.

4) A Peanuts strip where Lucy red-baits Pigpen.

5) A riff on the "talking White House" Doonesbury strips.

6) A fake Mad Magazine folding page.

BTW, there were no signatures on any of the parody strips, but the Mad fold-in was actually done by Al Jaffee, so he signed it.

The credits in the back say who did each piece. R. Sikoryak did the Mallard Fillmore strip, as well as the Doonesbury and Peanuts ones.

From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com


I've seldom seen it, and am uninterested in ever seeing it.

From: [identity profile] polkatrip.livejournal.com


No understanding of parody and - what? - almost a year out of date? Yeah, that's pretty much what we've come to expect from Mallard Fillmore.

It's not for nothing that the topic of MF's singular lack of humor has come up *so* often in the rec.arts.comics.strips group that it's got its own shorthand ("DS Alert!").

From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com


I looked at it once or twice when it was running in the newspaper, over 20 years ago, and found it less interesting that three-times-reruns of Peanuts strips. Political commentary ought to resonate, not thud, or anaesthetize.

From: [identity profile] dvandom.livejournal.com


It's been around that long? Sheesh. I guess it was just its sudden addition to most of the papers I have access to that was zeitgeist driven. "Hm, we need more right-wing strips than just BC...hey, here's this rabidly Republican duck, we can use that."
aberrantangels: (political poo)

From: [personal profile] aberrantangels


It's been around that long? Sheesh.

Happily, no. According to Don Markstein's Toonopedia page, the strip wasn't even created until 1991, and wasn't nationally syndicated until '94.

I guess it was just its sudden addition to most of the papers I have access to that was zeitgeist driven.

Only if by "zeitgeist" you mean "a demographic that's either been duped by, or is part of, the Powell Manifesto-created media infrastructure".

From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com


Apparently not that long. It just feels that long ago.
aberrantangels: (I don't trust you dogfuckers)

From: [personal profile] aberrantangels


Political commentary ought to resonate, not thud, or anaesthetize.

For me, it resonates because it thuds, thuds in a way that makes the ground shake like the tread of a zombie army. And it doesn't anaesthetize me; it alternates between leaving me boiling mad at the way he misrepresents everything his opponents actually believe, or dumbfounded by the possibility that he himself might believe the shit he spews.

From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com


To me, it thuds the way an elephant dropping thuds when it hits the ground from the source. I avoid it for much the same reason. :)
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