Monday, June 01, 2026

Adrian Sinnott Receives Tim Rosenthal Award

 

Top row: Francis Bonnet, Joe Vissichelli, Sam Viviano, Andy Eng

Bottom: Mike Lynch, Adrian Sinnott, John Reiner, Ray Alma


I was in Long Island last week for a special event.

A grand time at May's Berndt Toast Gang luncheon where chapter chair Adrian Sinnott received the Tim Rosenthal award for his outstanding contribution to the group. My thanks to Karen Evans, Johnny Sampson, and Ray Alma for their decision to give the award to him. They asked me if I would, as former BTG Chair, come down from New England and present it to him. It was my honor. This was all a surprise to Adrian and I’m so glad we all kept the secret.

 






 

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Have a Wonderful Week

 

 

Have a wonderful week. I'll be out of the studio for a time; out and about in the real world. I will return to the blog soon.

Friday, May 22, 2026

Video: Cartoonist Bill Holbrook Interview

Bill Holbrook draws 3 daily comic strips, On The Fastrack, Safe Havens and Kevin and Kell. Join Bill as he details how he creates so much work every week. Brought to you by the Southeast Chapter of the NCS, the National Cartoonists Society. 

 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Jeff Parker on Leslie Turner's Captain Easy Newspaper Comic Strip

 


I haven't seen the new Captain Easy newspaper strip reprint book with never-before reprinted dailies by Leslie Turner, but it just came out and it sparked this remembrance from cartoonist Jeff Parker:

 

"This looks jaw-droppingly good!
 
"My wife and I were friends with Les and his wife, Bethel, during the final years of his life.
But first, a little Les Turner trivia— You might or might not know, but his daughter Anne’s face is world famous, we all have known her all our lives...
 
"In 1984, when we were buying our first home in Orlando. Our realtor was a little 70-something lady named Bethel Turner. On our first drive around, she asked what we each did for a living, after my Pat replied she was a writer/journalist, I piped in saying I was a City Planner but I really wanted to be a comic strip cartoonist. Bethel said, 'Then you need to meet my husband— he’s Les Turner, the creator of ‘Captain Easy.'' I was floored, a huge fan all my life. Bethel and Les were the nicest people, and invited us to their big, lakeside home on Delaney St. for dinner a short while later. After some drinks and chit chat, Les, then in his mid 80s, asked if I would like to see his studio upstairs over their garage. At the top of the staircase, there was a small photo and an 8” x 6” pencil drawing of the Gerber baby nicely framed. I gasped, 'I-is that the *original* Gerber baby drawing?!!' Came the reply, 'Yep, our then next door neighbor was the renown advertising illustrator, Dorothy Hope Smith. She had seen this photo we took of our baby daughter Anne in her high chair. Dorothy copied it in pencil, and submitted it with some other baby-faced drawings. Our daughter is the Gerber baby!'
 
"It was like looking at the Mona Lisa! 
 
"BTW, Les's large, windowed, lake view studio was exactly as you might imagine, big ink dappled drawing board, tons of books, ancient well-worn art supplies, weapons hanging on the walls, and model aircraft, vehicles, ships of all kinds perched on shelves brimming with souvenirs and awards… And then there were the STACKS of decades of original 'Captain Easy' art! It was like visiting the Count of Monte Cristo’s treasure cave! Les had been retired for a number of years when we’d met. But he was constantly script writing new Captain Easy adventures whenever a story popped into his head— don’t know if he ever pitched them to the syndicate or not.
 
"Bethel and Les were wonderful friends to us fledgling 26-year-olds.
 
"I’ve been a full-time cartoonist since 1992, ever inspired by this legend.
 
"I’m gonna seek out this book!"
 

 

 

Monday, May 18, 2026

The Garden As of Mid-May


Here are a few pics of the garden as of now. This is the second year that there's had to be fence up around the garden thanks to the deer. 

 We put in a half-dozen tomato plants last night. All of the boxes were refreshed with a mixture of alfalfa meal, bone meal, kelp meal and garden lime last month. 

The buried metal colanders have decomposing compost that will leave nutrients in the soil.  I placed a small mound of mulch where every tomato was planted to help resist the brown leaf disease that's common with tomatoes. It's in most soil and it's in ours. It turns the leaves brown and then they become brittle and fall off just as the tomatoes are beginning to ripen. Not good. 

More vegetables to be planted. Not sure what. Contenders: cucumbers, peppers, scarlet runner beans. 

The owl house is, so far as I can tell, still vacant. 








Friday, May 15, 2026

Comic Book Legend Jack Kirby Honored with NYC Street Renaming

Jack Kirby Way was unveiled on the corner of Essex and Delancey Streets on the Lower East Side, where he grew up. CBS News New York's Cindy Hsu reports.