Charles Schulz wasn't the first cartoonist to draw little kids talking like adults, but he was the first to use a daily comic strip to locate and express the peculiar neuroses of childhood. The cast ...
Charles Schulz's Peanuts syndicated comic strip began its 17897 strip, 50-year run on October 2, 1950. Snoopy first appeared just two days later on October 4, 1950. An earliest-days Peanuts comic ...
Charlie Brown is nearly unrecognizable in the first strip, having a big oval head and no zig-zag on his shirt, but that would ...
Charlie Brown glares out from the cover of The Complete Peanuts: 1950-1952, the first installment in Fantagraphics’ much-heralded 25-volume collection of the most famous comic strip ever. His scowl is ...
Seven daily strips of “Hagemeyer,” an unsold comic from the 1950s by “Peanuts” creator Charles Schulz, will be displayed publicly for the first time later this month at the Charles M. Schulz Museum in ...
The Peanuts gang has found a streaming home for the next five years, and here's where you can watch Snoopy's classic holiday specials.
America has always had a strong regional and local press. At the peak of the newspaper industry in the early 1950s there were nearly 1,800 separate papers. To avoid wasteful duplication, and ensure ...
SERVING UP comfort food boosted the cinema business considerably this weekend. Not the popcorn and nacho concessions, mind you, but rather the heaps of half-century-old nostalgia that moved into ...
With its ambitious plan to reprint all of "Peanuts" in chronological order over the next 12 years, Fantagraphics is making this comics masterpiece available for everyone. The real surprise of this ...
The Complete Peanuts: 1950-1952 runs every strip from these years chronologically and includes an introduction by Garrison Keillor, a profile of Schulz by David Michaelis (whose own biography of the ...