Today is May Day, which is International Workers Day, aka Labour Day, marking the Haymarket Square Riots, which began May 1, 1886, and culminated in the explosion four days later.Whamond notes the calls this year for a general strike, but I donβt think America is a general-striking sort of country. I recall that the Mai-Juin [β¦]
Iβve often observed here that itβs tough to do multi-panel political cartoons because the news rarely cooperates by producing enough examples to fit the format. Granted, Tom Tomorrow generally does better than average at it anyway, but hereβs an example of the subject matter cooperating with plenty of material that only needed a clever twist [β¦]
The monster at the start of this Humpday is Ulysses, and Ruben Bolling provides a chance for me to link to my classic examination of books everybody references and nobody has read. Twain wrote that a classic is βsomething that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read,β which I would modify to [β¦]
Nancy Beiman gave us a three week notice of the annual βholy day.β The others mostly waited until today. Today comic strips transition from World Press Freedom Day (not mentioned at all) and National Star Wars Day (many references yesterday) to National Cartoonist Day/Cinco de Mayo. Or Inko de Mayo.Lalo Alcaraz and Chip Sansom werenβt [β¦]
With a post title like that we gots to start off with some weirdness. For some reason my first thought on seeing the art style in todayβs Baldo was Kim Deitch. Big Daddy Roth came up second. I can only account for that order because of David DeGrandβs bald Baldo. While yesterdayβs Palurdeando brought to [β¦]