Showing posts with label LEE LORENZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LEE LORENZ. Show all posts

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Cartoons I Don't Get 11

Adam, May 1973
Bo Brown
Oh, I see, because of the nursery rhyme. Duh.
Hello Buddies, Summer 1954
Escapade, December 1964
Jan Van Wessum
Punch October 27, 1915
The Gent, January 1965
Sam Gross
Hello Buddies, May 1955
Playboy, March 1970
Lee Lorenz
Punch October 27, 1915
Man, October 1971
Is she pregnant and that's part of the joke or does she just have large hips and the idea is the implication that because it's after work they're going to have sex? Is that a sheet she has with her or just a jacket?
Playboy, December 1967
Alphonse Normandia
High, November 1958
Punch October 6, 1915
Punch November 9, 1927

Thursday, May 25, 2017

cartoons explained 2

This man was fed up with working, and has now taken up begging, which he explains on his sign. Though it is the reason one actually would beg.
Caper, May 1960
She is trying to make her husband jealous by being with another man, but he seems to be used to it by now and doesn't care.
Bluebook, August 1963
A beatnik, taking a phone survey, is on some kind of drug, giving a double meaning to the term “turned on”
Donald Reilly
Hi-Life, August 1964
The scientists are nervous creating the bomb and being very precise so as not to cause an explosion, while a third scientist is playing a practical joke by making a sound to simulate the explosion.
The Dude, November 1956
The wife of the artist is rightfully upset that he is spending too much time with a younger model.
Lee Lorenz
Playboy, December 1968
The couple is divorced, but still having sex nonetheless.
The Dude, July 1957
This woman is most likely a prostitute or possibly trying to snag a husband (pre-marital sex, though possibly practiced secretly, was not out in the open then to the extent it is now. In sleazier circles, it was common for the male to spread his seed anywhere anytime) by way of welcome mat.
Charles Dennis
Monsieur, September 1957
At a party, a man was attempting to only make small talk but was unable to resist his carnal urges and met his comeuppance.
Mr., March 1952
The man is either blind or pretending to be and is using the handicap as an excuse to feel the woman's breast.
Nugget, February 1956
A fish is attempting the next step in evolution becoming a land animal, much to the annoyance of its companion.
Charles Barsotti
Nugget, August 1963
A boxer is challenging another while already in the ring, using the school yard cliché of starting a fight by daring the opponent to knock a chip off his shoulder.
Sir!, May 1953
A young man is trying to attract the attention of a potential mate by grabbing her dress.
Bill Wenzel
Sir!, May 1953
Apparently this is a non-union shoot, since an actor is concerned that the powder kegs might be real.
Ace, January 1964

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Great Cartoons of the World Series 7, part 9

More from Great Cartoons of the World, Series 7. There are probably links to previous ones at the bottom of this post in the LinkWithin boxes.

The first three here were by John Glashan.
Michael Ffolkes
Miroslav Barták for Dikobraz
Jules Stauber doing a motif Virgil Partch was most famous for.
Mischa Richter for the New Yorker
Frank Modell also for The New Yorker.
Lee Lorenz for the New Yorker.
Edward Koren, now Vermont's cartoonist laureate for... see if you can guess.
Terrence “Larry” Parkes in a series of gags for Punch