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Dec 17, 2025
Dec 17, 2025

Sarbanes-Oxley Act

Today’s oblique reference to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act is completely random, I know. But it did generate one funny e-mail from a Sheldonista:

“Today I want to thank you for some cool synchronicity. My fiancee just started her bachelors classes…and one of her first assignments is to research the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Since I work in the reference department of a library, I thought I’d help her a bit, but I’d forgotten to ask her to write it down this morning. I had, in fact, just about forgotten the whole thing, when I read today’s comic and recognized the name. 😀 I thank you, sir, for a very timely reference.”

Sheldon: helping couples remember their “honey-do” lists since 1998.


Bringing Up Father — Followup

Thanks to everyone who kindly e-mailed me about George McManus’ work. Though very few folks had heard of him or the strip before, I had a lot of folks tell me they’d seek out his pre-war collections in their library — which is wonderful!

There were enough similarities in enough e-mails, though, that I thought I should recap on some points.

1.) Lots of kind Sheldonistas sent me links (such as this, this, this, this, this, and this)….but you just have to trust me that none of these shows the apex of his genius, in the 1930’s and 40’s, when he was at the height of his game. It’s like looking at early Monets or lesser works from Picasso: you get a taste of the genius, but not really.

2.) A few of you pointed out that the strip can be seen over in the “Vintage” area of dailyink.com. But, it’s buried behind a paid subscription wall, thus ensuring that 99.9999999% of people will never see it, hear of it, or choose to pay for it to find out what it is they’re missing.

Subscription walls: old media’s answer to the question,”Hey, what’s this internet thing? Bob, type up a memo on carbon copy paper and have it on my desk by morning.”

3.) After McManus died in 1954, the strip was continued by other artists, hired by the syndicate. So if you’re a Sheldonista that remembers the strip in your paper…it probably wasn’t McManus. And as a lover of comics, I can tell you that that most definitely makes a difference. When a different artist takes over the same strip…it’s never the same. It’s like reading “The Grapes of Wrath, Part 2”, by Bobby-Joe Padoluski…who the publishers hired to keep the series going.

4.) If copyrights weren’t an issue, I’d scan the best images from my “Bringing Up Father” books to share with you in the blog. But since that’s not possible, I’d suggest perusing your larger regional or metro libraries — you may get lucky and find a few yellowed book collections from the the 30’s and 40’s. I hope you do: they’re well worth the effort.


Bringing Up Father

Are you familiar with the pre-war comic strip, “Bringing Up Father”? If you’re not, you’re not alone. It’s one of those strips that’s largely been lost to history. People remember other pre-war strips, like Popeye, Blondie, The Katzenjammer Kids, Buster Brown, or even The Yellow Kid, but almost no one remembers “Bringing Up Father”. Sadly, there’s not even good links I could point you to, online — the really good stuff isn’t on the web. It’s sitting in crumbly, 70-year old books that no one reads.

A fact which bums me out, as a cartoonist. Because George McManus, the artist behind the strip, may have been the finest draughtsman to ever sit at a cartoonist’s desk. And I say that with Bill Watterson and David Low books sitting not two feet from me. George McManus…could draw. Like the wind. He could craft images in ways few cartoonists — alive or dead — ever could. He was, simply put, one of the best that ever lived.

And now, in 2007, so few folks have even heard his name in passing. It’s such a bummer. SUCH A BUMMER.

It’s a reminder of the fleeting, passing imprint we leave on this world, perhaps. That he could be so huge, so immensely huge, in the 30’s and 40’s, and now be forgotten. That he could be a millionaire at a time when that meant wealth beyond wealth, that he could have three films made from his strip, and now is found utterly forgotten. Dust in the wind, I suppose. A shade of Kubla Khan.

But! To my point!

I have a secret passion for collecting original cartoon art — with pieces going back to 18th-Century Hogarth and Gillray prints. I have Bloom Countys and Doonesburys and Beetle Baileys and Dennis the Menaces and a whole bunch more. They’re my secret, nerdy love.

It’s why I get so excited whenever anyone chooses to buy a Sheldon original. I know what it means to want a piece so badly you put it up on your wall…in your home…as an expression of you. I do it myself, with the originals I’ve loved. So, when someone chooses to put my stuff on *their* wall….well, I’m on cloud nine.

But still! I am stepping away from my point!

Which is, original art. Specifically, George McManus’ original art.

Though I’ve tried, numerous times over the past decade, to buy this or that McManus original, for various reasons and at various times it’s never worked out. But this weekend, I was able to look at another collector’s extensive gathering of McManus original Sundays…and it was amazing.

Humbling, and awe-inspiring, and amazing.

There were minute-long stretches where I was literally dumbstruck, looking at his line-work up close.

It was so amazing that’s it’s taken me a couple of days to process it all. And now, shaking off the awed silence that comes from seeing the work of a true, true master up close, I want to do this:

I want to publicly thank George MacManus — as stupid as this sounds — for being so utterly and fantastically brilliant in life. I look at your work, and it makes me want to pick up a pen immediately. I look at your work, and I want to dash to a drawing board, as though having just held your artwork will somehow — dear Lord, somehow — imbue me with a tenth of your skill. I look at your work, and it makes me want to dive back in time to your studio, to stand quietly by your side and see how you did what you did. To see the amazing techniques that you developed…techniques I’ve never seen in any other work since.

I want to thank you, long-dead, long-forgotten George McManus. You work continues to live on, and continues to inspire me, 53 years after your death. May you rest in peace, you genius of the craft.


Web 3.0

I woke up with a revelation this morning: Do you know what Web 3.0 is going to be? It’s going to be *everything* Web 2.0 currently is, but with the added bonus that everyone will stop saying “Web 2.0” all the time.

I look forward to Web 3.0.

In other news, a Sheldonista e-mailed me with the funniest Sheldonsoft-related link that I had overlooked….namely, when Sheldon meets the guys from Google. The frame where they’re doing quadratic equations still makes me laugh.

Also! And for no particular reason, here is the best Smurf strip I ever created. Because every day should include a random Smurf joke of some kind.

(…also, linking to a smurf strip helps balance out my “pop culture nerd” / “history nerd” scale. After Sunday’s Benjamin Disraeli toon, it was tipping pretty heavily one way.



10 Years of ‘Toonin

1997. The term “weblog” is coined. Netscape is the browser of choice for 72% of users. Titanic crashes into theaters. And David Willis posts his first “Roomies!” comic.

2007. It’s now called a blog. Netscape hit an iceberg of its own. And our hearts are still going on for “Shortpacked!” — the popular daily comic that arose from Willis’ first comic production.

On the Web, ten years of regularly-updated entertainment is a significant achievement that precious few can boast. Blank Label Comics is proud to salute David Willis as he celebrates his tenth anniversary in webcomics.

Shortpacked! is ringing in this occasion with two special events. First, its first book collection, Shortpacked! Brings Back the Eighties, has arrived and is ready for order! Second, Roomies!, It’s Walky!, Joyce and Walky! and Shortpacked! are commemorated with a limited print, seen on the left. See The Shortpacked! Blog for details!

To help celebrate close to 3000 strips, here’s a Top 10 List of the all-time favorite storylines year-by-year from David Willis: 1997: “Obligatory Flashback Sequence” 1998: “Liberation and the Modern Joyce” 1999: “Beer Necessities/No Regrets” 2000: “Puppy” 2001: “Guess Who’s Coming to Denver” 2002: “Round Two” 2003: “The Best I Could Do” 2004: “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” 2005: “Mrs. Greg Killmaster” 2006: “The Drama Tag”


Benjamin Disraeli

People often ask me, “Dave, what’s the secret to writing comic strips that people will enjoy?”

And I always answer the same way: “Make sure you include as many random references to Benjamin Disraeli as possible. If there’s one thing the world is clamoring for…it’s more random references to Benjamin Disraeli.”


“Fin”

Today we wrap up the Saturday-Only Storyline as all good stories should end: with a Grand Slam breakfast at Denny’s.

If you’d like to read through the series again — or missed it the first time around — here are all the installments for the Saturday-Only Storyline. Click them open in new tabs are read ’em 1-2-3:

1 , 2 , 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11.


Whoops!

My apologies for the late strip on Saturday…that was my error in uploading the file incorrectly.

And by “incorrectly”, I mean “forgetting to do so”.


Webcomics Weekly

In case you haven’t checked it out yet, Scott Kurtz, Brad Guigar, Kris Straub, and myself have launched an ambitious weekly podcast filled with comics shop talk — the how-to and pro-tip stuff you can’t find anyplace else.

Every cartooning instruction book and how-to out there is focused on “getting your strip into the whiz-bang world of newspapers”, which is great, if you live in 1975. But the future of comic strip cartooning is online, and there’s a scarcity of information out there on how to make the art and business aspects work.

So this weekly podcast will be our answer to that void: shop talk and tips from four cartoonists making their living online.

You can follow the RSS here.

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So far, we’ve recorded three episodes. Check ’em out:

Episode Three: How to legally protect your work, picking the appropriate resolution for your scanned work and more tips and tricks.

Episode Two: What happens when someone doesn’t “get” your joke. How to get new readers. Tips and Tricks.

Episode One: Brad Guigar, Dave Kellett, Kris Straub and Scott Kurtz outline their new weekly podcast about the ins-and-outs of making comics for the web.