Showing posts with label Yogi Bear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yogi Bear. Show all posts

Friday, August 08, 2025

Yellow Streak

Friday Yellowstone Day. 

Yesterday I shared a vouple of later Beetle Bailey Sunday I have cleaned over de last few weeks. As with Beetle I have mostly showed many of the early ones (and a couple more to go) and decided to started on the later side.

 

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Bear With Me

Saturday Leftover Day. I have been looking at Yogi Bear these weeks, which means I have a couple or to share. To go with the selfscanned Sundays (the black and white one is from a week when the newspaper collorists striked) I have some more of the daily panels the Yogi Bear team did in 1963. If you use the link you will find more of these. They ran for less than a year and were continued a couple of years later in some sort of comic book by Harvey Eisenberg's son (which lead many to believe there must have been more in between, but there weren't).

 

Friday, March 04, 2022

Bear MInimum

Saturday Leftover Day. I am going to a comic gatheirng with new Dutch comic talent today, so I have to leave early. Only a Yogi Bear Sunday today. And off we go!

Sunday, September 08, 2019

All You Can Bear

Sunday Nostalgia Day.

Since Sunday is the day to show you stuff from strips I coveered before, here are all of the 1964 Yogi Bear gags I haven't yet shown. And yes, there is more to come. As I said before, Yogi Bear was published in one of the magazines I read as a kid and it has a special appeal to me.


Sunday, August 18, 2019

Let's Go On A Pic-A-Nic

Sunday Crowdpleaser Day.

The Yogi Bear Sunday gags have always been some of the most visited and commented upon posts. I think a book collection of these would sell very well, but I guess there are rights issues that prevent this. Most of the Sundays here (and indeed most of them anyway) were drawn by Harvey Eisenberg. He had been doing a lot of funny and well respected work in the fifties, mostly for the Hanna- Babera Dell comics, but also for other kid's books both at Dell and outside of that. The 'modernisation' of the Hanna-Barbera style had a great effect on the sometimes a bit too cute Eisenberg style. He keeps his flair for composition and comedic action, but it as all just that little bit better designed. The gags themselves, I may have said before, are to me what solid one page gags should be. B.C. may have the upper hand as far as slapstick goes, Peanuts may be the most soulful and Beeetle Bailey may have the best character gags, in Yogi Bear the gag is always king. I remember reading some of the later ones in the Dutch kid's weekly Taptoe in the mid sixties and this may have formed my appreciation of this genre.