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The first Saturday Evening Post of 1959 gives us an ice skating gag. "Artist
Alajalov, who depicts the Wollman Rink in New York's Central Park (give or take a few details), could never make ice skates behave, but he was a whiz on roller skates," reveals an interior blurb.
So nice to see an actual gag on the cover; especially a racy Moms-I'd-Like-to-Double-Lutz sorta gag. Let's take a look at the interior gag cartoons.
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Ted Key gives us a great gag. Bounce! Bounce! Bounce! Big Brother Boss is watching you!
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Vahan Shirvanian still sells to top markets like Reader's Digest. This same year, he won the National Cartoonists Society Gag Cartoon Division Award.
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It's New Year's and it's 1959. Drunks were fodder for humor back then. This was, after all, the era of Thirsty Thurston!
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Al Johns gives us an Inuit (they used to be called "Eskimo") gag that is becoming less funny what with the ol' globe warming up and all.
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Above: some things change, some don't.
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Above: a wordless cartoon that still reads. Although in-line skates are the way most go today, the design of the sleigh is unchanged.
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Barney Tobey is a master of the inky wash. Look at those breezy lines!
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Dahl shows, without using any words, that the only thing that you should not resist is temptation.
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Are there still hurdy gurdy monkeys?
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Around here, in the frozen Northern New England area, a lot of the pasty white teenagers go to tanning booths so as to look a Hollywoody, trendy toasty brown. I found the above cartoon by Gene Carr pretty relevant.
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Chon Day gives us a great gag expertly depicted in simple line and wash.
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And, of course, Ted Key's Hazel panel ends this issue.
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