Showing posts with label BERNARD WISEMAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BERNARD WISEMAN. Show all posts

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Cartoons I don't get #26

New Yorker December 13, 1952
Bernard Wiseman
New Yorker December 14, 1957
Frank Modell
Playboy, December 1962
John Dempsey
I know it's about his penis. But since it's at a nudist colony I'd think everyone would recognize his penis, not just those two women. The real question, though. is why some people wear flip-flops and some don't.
Playboy, December 1965
Eldon Dedini
The punchline is that what he does is have sex, but I only know that because the cartoon is from Playboy. I'd have no idea what they were talking about otherwise.
New Yorker December 16, 1961
James Stevenson
This only makes sense in some states. There's been a gift counselor gag in almost every batch of cartoons I've posted, so it's been established that was once a mainstay at most stores, but in some states wine and liquors only at their own store is something completely unknown.
New Yorker December 4, 1954
Hello Buddies, Winter 1950
New Yorker December 5, 1953
New Yorker December 6, 1952
Robert Day
New Yorker December 6, 1958
New Yorker December 10, 1955
Claude Smith
New Yorker December 12, 1959
Saul Steinberg is one of those cartoonists you don't get because there's nothing you're supposed to get. Just cool drawings. I'll be devoting a couple posts exclusively to his cartoons after I'm done with this holiday stuff.
New Yorker December 16, 1961

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Cartoons I don't get 24

This first one's not one to not get, but I included it because although it's sold as wish-fulfillment it's actually surprisingly progressive for the fifties.
Hello Buddies, May 1955
Monsieur, September 1965
The poor reproduction doesn't help.
I have disks of the complete New Yorker cartoons from 1925 to 2000. It's a good thing to have except in order to fit 75 years worth of cartoons onto two disks, they're not the highest resolution so you can't always tell what's going on. I don't even know where this is. A beach?
Rea Irvin
New Yorker August 15, 1925
Cavalcade, August 1942
Is this supposed to be a caricature of someone? I guess it's like if 100 years from now someone was trying to decipher a cartoon about Anthony Scarmucci. Who? Exactly.
Judge October 9, 1909
E, G. Lutz
Life February 16, 1905 Either they published a really small edition of the magazine or there were really big spiders then.
Charles E. Martin
Playboy, May 1968
I've mentioned before that views and humor about race have changed over time but here's a case where it looks like a stereotype has disappeared altogether. Is this what people supposedly wore in Hong Kong?
Playboy, December 1953
Punch September 26, 1915
Same issue of Punch
Punch December 8, 1915
Henry Boltinoff
Real, January 1953
Donald Reilly
Playboy, April 1968

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Cartoons I don't get 21

Another cartoon, just like last week, I think about the Republican convention in Chicago, where having a third term was either something they were for or against. Whatever the case, I guess it was a big issue then. I think Grant was trying to get one. I don't know who all these people are either.

Considering even well-read people can barely keep track of what happened in the news earlier this year, it can be forgiven if anyone isn't clear on the most explicit political details of 135 years ago.

Puck June 16, 1880
“numphO-mania”? I guess if people were buying the magazines for the photos, there was no need for a proofreader for the text.

Fun House, February 1979
Hello Buddies. May 1955
Jest, circa 1942
Must have been the issues of that week. And if the legend about President Taft is true, I don't think he was this physically fit, , whether the story of his bathtub is true or not.

Judge October 9, 1909
Next two from Life February 16, 1905

Yes, I know this is a parody of the quote from Alfred Lord Tennyson relating it to these new motorcars, but is this supposed to be a caricature of anyone?

James Montgomery Flagg
Bernard Wiseman

Pic, November 1952
Buck Brown

If there was turbulence this bad, wouldn't everyone else notice and wouldn't the rest of the food also slide down?

This cartoon is fifty years old. See how many mistakes you can spot that wouldn't be possible in air travel today, even in first class.

Playboy, December 1967
Punch September 29, 1915
The Dude, March 1957
For those old enough to have been around during payphones, has anyone ever actually seen a number written on the wall near one? And even if so, did anyone ever actually call it? And even if so, have there ever actually been any successful hookups because of it? Was it the Tinder of the time?

Sid Harris

Playboy, January 1968
I wonder how many cartoons there have been where the punchline is that a newly married couple is checking into a hotel room solely for the purpose of screwing. Another cartoon where you'd get the joke now and look at it and think “So what? What's the big deal?”

The reason for a lot of repetition of so many gags is that the cartoonists probably didn't know that decades later, some guy would collect moldy old magazines just for the cartoons and put them on his blog.

He, March 1955

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Gags: The Legend of Curly's Gold

You see, because I've been using the names of all kinds of sequels.

Bachelor, March 1963
Cad, May 1969
I know most middle aged men at the time fantasized and/or cheated on their wives or behaved piggishly in some way but did a lot go to prostitutes or was it just wish fulfillment?

Jem, January 1962
Jem, March 1959
Bernard Wiseman
Jem, October 1965
Lo Linkert
Knight, September 1966
Laff, July 1952
Sir Knight, June 1958
Sir!, February 1954
Hi-Life, July 1963
Hi-Life, March 1958
Slim Johnson
Male, June 1971
Man, April 1966
Man to Man, November 1965