Short Subjects & Feature Funnies
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Hat tip to Nancy and Ernie Bushmiller for today’s headline.
So is Lois now just an ersatz Ed McMahon, a second banana to the rest of the Flagston family?
You youngsters can ask the elders in your family about Ed and the all-knowing Carnac.
While you’re at it ask your grandparents what the movie experience shown in Nancy was about.
The Big Picture by Lennie Peterson was a syndicated newspaper comic strip from November 1999 to August 2004. In 2010 it began reruns on GoComics with occasional new material thrown into the mix. Now Lennie is announcing the return of The Big Picture to all-new status. (Truth be told it has been original material for all of August 2025.) We hope this is the first step for a return of The Big Picture to newspaper syndication.
Speaking of Calvin and Hobbes (see that August 2004 The Big Picture link)…

Doesn’t that Calvin and Hobbes from 30 years ago remind you of the infamous billionaires of today.
Also note the original date of the reprint. That means GoComics is in the last four months of Calvin and Hobbes’ original run and around the turning of 2025 to 2026 the reprints will begin anew with the first strips.
World’s Greatest Comics Quiz
Okay, it’s not the world’s greatest comics quiz but Bob Scott asks if you can name all the guests:
Perhaps this Family Circus from 45 years ago by Bil Keane will prove more of a challenge.


The Tournaments of Mongo
Dan Schkade is returning Flash Gordon to one of the highlights of the original run – “The Tournaments of Mongo.” Less than a year since the Sunday comic began in January of 1934 writer Don Moore and artist Alex Raymond staged a battle royale from November 1934 to February 1935. The highlight of this episode is Alex Raymond giving up on the static nine grid arrangement and begins experimenting with panel sizes and layouts. Unfortunately by the end of the story Flash has become a full-page comic strip. This would be a cause for joy except that transformation brings with it a boring eight panel grid – wonderfully large Raymond panels of art, but the layout now is monotonously repetitive.

The Ominous Octopus posts Raymond’s The Tournaments of Mongo sequence in color in two parts:
November 25, 1934 – February 3, 1935 and December 28, 1934 – (the first half of) February 24, 1935.





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