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POPSSitemasher's Web of pain Fun comic about the entire website development process and what a painful ordeal it can be. The Web of Pain comic tells the story of Ned, Vinny, Sam, and Zoe as they go about their daily lives. New ones are posted every second Monday.
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POPSA Children’s Treasury Of Poverty Iconography The Comics Curmudgeon is Josh Fruhlinger, whose daily blog at http://joshreads.com/ offers snarly commentary from Josh and his readers on the comic strips you love to hate. He also comments on editorial and political cartoons at Wonkette, the DC Gossip.
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POPSDaily Comic Aggregator For someone like me, who loves his comics, this is a great resource! There's a lot of these sites online, but this one particularly caught my eye. Has some of my favourite strips (which aren't as common as Garfield, Hagar) like Zits, Foxtrot, Ctrl+Alt+Del... Updated daily, so keep going back!
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POPSMoJo's Riff Blog on Garfield Minus Garfield Several folks have already clipped Garfield Minus Garfield (http://snipr.com/22bo5). Here's a review of the site from Mother Jones's "Riff Blog" -- I can't tell how tongue-in-cheek it is. It's great though.
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POPSGarfield Minus Garfield Who would have guessed that when you remove Garfield from the Garfield comic strips, the result is an even better comic about schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and the empty desperation of modern life? Friends, meet Jon Arbuckle. Let’s laugh and learn with him on a journey deep into the tortured mind of an isolated young everyman as he fights a losing battle against loneliness in a quiet American suburb.
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POPSGarfield minus Garfield Jon Arbuckle sans Garfield. Yes, it's the Garfield strip with all the pictures of Garfield removed. Very weird and trippy.
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POPSAre you hap-py in your work? How long are we going to keep saying to ourselves, "We all have to do things we don't like to get ahead in life"? Is that really supposed to be the way it works? And if so, why do we even have morals?
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POPSMickey Mouse Suicide The strips are from mid-October 1930. At that time, suicide jokes were common in cartoons and comic strips. These would never go over today, which makes you wonder - were they more callous back then or are we too sensitive today?
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POPSTed Rall is America's BS detector (he's got his hands full) Ted Rall (born 1963 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) is a liberal columnist and syndicated editorial cartoonist whose political cartoons often appear in a multi-panel comic-strip format. Ted Rall's Work Style Rall is one of a new breed of editorial cartoonists who began in the alternative weeklies during the 1980s and early 1990s with wordy, abstractly drawn strips about politics and social issues. His abstract drawing style reflects a distinct break from the cross-hatched style developed by Jeff MacNelly during the 1960s, a house style that had become virtually synonymous with American editorial cartooning. CLICK THIS LINK http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/19/Rallcartn.png To see a Ted Rall cartoon depicting John Kerry and George W. Bush. Bush is always portrayed as Generalissimo El Busho - a vicious military dictator - in Rall's comics.