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Apr 24, 2026
Apr 24, 2026

Your local cartoonist, just hangin’ out. Normal day. You know how it goes.

Actually, that’s a fib. This is me at the Wondermark book launch party: They had a pretty sweet dress-up photo booth.

Wondermark, for the uninitiated, is created by fellow Los Angeleno cartoonist David Malki, and brilliantly uses Victorian-era illustrations in a Monty Pythonesque mashup with modern-day themes. It’s pretty awesome.

Anyhoo, Dave’s second book just launched, and I couldn’t recommend it more. It’s beautifully hard-bound, beautifullly printed, and beautifully funny. (Bam: What a turn of phrase, right there.)

Also: Let’s not discuss it at great length, but check out the quadruple (quintuple?) chins I was able to generate.


Winsor McCay

If you’re not a cartooning buff, you may not have heard of early 20th-Century cartoonist Winsor McCay. But to every cartoonist from Charles Schulz to Walt Disney to yours truly, he’s held up as one of the true, pioneering greats of his (or any) time. His strips “Little Nemo” and “Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend” are among the most gorgeous, fantastical creations you’ll ever see. Spend 10 minutes with a Google Image search: You’ll see what I mean.

His hometown held a “Winsor McCay Day” yesterday…and in honor of that I thought I’d share another one of the hallmark works he was known for pioneering: Animation. (Each one of these 4,000+ panels, keep in mind, were drawn by him and hand-colored by him.)



First-Ever Sheldon Painting

Those of you who follow Twitter know I’ve jumped back into oil painting, after ten years away from it. And I thought I’d offer up this painting to someone who might like it: It’s the first-ever Sheldon-themed painting!

Painted in oils on a 12″ x 12″ canvas, this first one is a Flaco portrait, showing everyone’s favorite lizard in full-on, super-excited “Squee”-mode. And what wall couldn’t benefit from a little extra “squee”? We’ve tested it in 6 or 7 rooms, and it turns out that yeah, totally, *any* wall could benefit from it. 🙂

Ready for framing, this painting is also edged in red, in case you prefer frameless wall-hangings.

Will be packed safe within protective paper, sealed plastic, and cushioning…and will be shipped via U.S. Priority Mail or International Priority Mail.

The proud owner can request a personalized inscription on the back, should they choose.

If you’d like to see a larger shot of it, click HERE. And if you’d like to throw your name in the hat for it, click HERE.



Attention, GMail Users!

I’m getting a lot of e-mails from GMail users, saying they’re not getting their daily Sheldon-by-Email delivery in their inbox.

For some reason, GMail’s filters are handling Sheldon like spam. (Boo, GMail!) To fix that, just do this:

Go into your GMail account, click on “Contacts” (should be on the lower-left side of the screen), and add this e-mail address as one of your “new” contacts:

[email protected]

Even Google can be lame, sometimes…but this should fix it.


Observation o’ the Day

You’ve boarded your plane, you’ve found your seat, and you’re waiting for everyone else to board. Awesome.

You look out the window, down at all the utility vehicles drivin’ around the plane, and that’s where things get weird:

These trucks aren’t just modified Fords and Chevys: They’re weird, squished, alternate-universe permutations of normal road vehicles. Ain’t nobody at an airport driving anything approximating a “car” or a “truck”: These are vehicles that look like they should be drivin’ around the town of Stumpyville. Like they should be driven by Gimli, son of Gloin.

The dwarves fled the fires of Smaug, my friends, and are now baggage handlers.

YOU CAN NOT UNLEARN THIS FACT.



On Bad Surnames

There’ve been a few funny e-mails regarding the recent strips. Mostly stories of local businesses in their town, such as “Crapo Insurance” or “Crapo Transmission Repair”….stuff like that. But Sheldon reader Ginger S. wrote in with one of my favorites:

“Just wanted to say I’ve been laughing really hard at the Crapo storyline right now, mainly because I have a Crapo story, too. The Crapo family donated money to my undergrad university to remodel a building into a theatre. Normally the school would have named the theatre building after the family but the idea of the Crapo Theatre made them change their minds. Over 20 years later the theatre is still called the New Theatre. There’s a lovely plaque in their honor…but the idea of the Crapo Theatre always made me laugh. “

Ha! I love it. “Crapo Theatre” particularly cracks me up.