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Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee

John Hambrock

The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee offers a contemporary view of family life from the perspective of a precocious 10-year-old boy, his middle-class parents, innocent cousin and absent-minded grandfather. Edison’s well-informed opinions on everything from bureaucratic waste to the high cost of gas are often illustrated by the elaborate inventions he creates with his lab rat pal, Joules.

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DailyINK Blog

Talking with Margaret Shulock of APARTMENT 3-G

This week, The Supporting Case took a break from eyeing our favorite supporting characters to talk to Margaret Shulock, the writer of APARTMENT 3-G.  Here’s what she has to say about inheriting the classic “soap opera” story strip, and what it’s like to write for Margo, Tommie, and Lu Ann. Wow. I just did the [...]   read more »

Ask The Archivist: Another Tip of The Hatlo

Hello Readers, Today’s post is a follow up entry on Jimmy Hatlo’s comic strip, THEY’LL DO IT EVERY TIME,  featuring an original sales brochure from 1949. This was intended for newspaper editors only, so I guess it qualifies as a rare item. The nice color is about what the “art” proofs had. Below are the [...]   read more »

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  • Love it, Rina!
  • The apron IS a nice touch on him, though.
    rgcviper on Blondie,
  • Because it is changing faster than it has ever changed before and we won't be able to adapt fast enough. It's hard to understand geological time because it is just so long. This is a change that is happening over decades, not over thousands of years! That is why it scares me.
  • Dude! My name's Don!
  • Another meaning for jazz is "nonsense", so we have Nonsense Pickers, Shake for Two Weeks before using is nonsense. I am sure if you read this comic, you have found that the little numbers around the date are an indication of how many hidden symbols there are in the cartoon. I enjoy finding those.