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Morning Funnies
Morning Funnies is a fruit-flavored breakfast cereal produced by Ralston Cereals in 1988 and 1989. The name of the cereal was based on the assortment of newspaper comic strips featured on the box. Innovative packaging allowed the back flap of the box to be opened revealing additional comic strips, different on each edition of the cereal box. Poor sales and negative consumer reaction led to the cereal being discontinued in 1989. Morning Funnies was just one of several Ralston cereals based on licensed characters introduced in 1988 and 1989. Others included Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Cereal, Breakfast With Barbie, the video-game themed Nintendo Cereal System, and a Batman cereal based on the 1989 film. Appearance The cereal, made with four grains and heavily sweetened, was brightly colored and shaped like smiling faces but not any specific comic strip character. The front cover of each 14-ounce box featured an assortment of popular newspaper comic strip characters in colo ...
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Morning Funnies Cereal Box
Morning is the period from sunrise to noon. There are no exact times for when morning begins (also true of evening and night) because it can vary according to one's lifestyle and the hours of daylight at each time of year. However, morning strictly ends at noon, which is when afternoon starts. Morning can also be defined as starting from midnight to noon. Morning precedes afternoon, evening, and night in the sequence of a day. Originally, the term referred to sunrise. Etymology The Modern English words "morning" and "tomorrow" began in Middle English as , developing into , then , and eventually . English, unlike some other languages, has separate terms for "morning" and "tomorrow", despite their common root. Other languages, like Dutch, Scots and German, may use a single wordto signify both "morning" and "tomorrow". Significance Greeting Some languages that use the time of day in greeting have a special greeting for morning, such as the English good morning. The appro ...
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Hägar The Horrible
''Hägar the Horrible'' is the title and main character of an American comic strip created by cartoonist Dik Browne and syndicated by King Features Syndicate. It first appeared in February 1973 and was an immediate success. Since Browne's retirement in 1988 (and subsequent death), his son Chris Browne has continued the strip with artwork by Gary Hallgren.William B. Jones, ''Classics illustrated: a cultural history, with illustrations'', McFarland: 2002, , 267 pages, pp:171, 229–230 , ''Hägar'' is distributed to 1,900 newspapers in 56 countries and translated into 12 languages.King Features Syndicate: ''Hägar the Horrible''
access date Mars 2, 2017
The strip is a caricature commenting on modern-d ...
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What A Guy!
''What a Guy!'' is an American comic strip created by Bill Hoest and Bunny Hoest, the team responsible for ''The Lockhorns'' and ''Agatha Crumm''. It began in March 1987, just over a year before Hoest's death in 1988. The ''What a Guy!'' daily strip was a single-panel gag cartoon which was also formatted as a rectangular comic strip. The Sunday strip grouped together an assortment of three different cartoons with no connecting theme or continuity. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, the strip was continued by Hoest's widow, Bunny Hoest and Bill's assistant, John Reiner, until they decided to end it in 1996. Characters and story ''What a Guy!'' was created when Bill and Bunny were visiting with Bunny's daughter and her family. Bunny's grandson was an early "latchkey" child. Bill and Bunny were amazed at his very "grown-up" comments and used him as the prototype for Guy Wellington Frothmore, who became the focus of a comic strip. ''What a Guy!'' cartoons featured a young ...
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Tom Batiuk
Thomas Martin Batiuk (born March 14, 1947) is an American comic strip creator, best known for his long-running newspaper strip ''Funky Winkerbean''. Career Born in Akron, Ohio, Batiuk attended Kent State University, from which he graduated in 1969 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, majoring in painting. He went on to teach art in junior high school. He put his experiences to use in his gag-a-day ''Funky Winkerbean'', which first appeared in print on March 27, 1972. With the success of the strip, he abandoned his teaching career, occasionally returning to the classroom to refresh his sources. He authored two spinoff strips, ''John Darling (comic strip), John Darling,'' which ran from 1979 through 1990, ending with the death of the title character, and ''Crankshaft (comic strip), Crankshaft'', which began syndication in 1987. These strips sometimes experience fictional crossover, crossovers. Over the years, Batiuk's strips have taken on an increasing narrative continuity.Cavna, ...
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Funky Winkerbean
''Funky Winkerbean'' is an American comic strip by Tom Batiuk. Distributed by North America Syndicate, a division of King Features Syndicate, it appears in more than 400 newspapers worldwide. While Batiuk was a 23-year-old middle school art teacher in Elyria, Ohio, he began drawing cartoons while supervising study hall. In 1970, his characters first appeared as a weekly panel, ''Rapping Around'', on the teenage page of the ''Elyria-Lorain Broadcasting Co., Elyria Chronicle Telegram''. In 1972, Batiuk reworked some of the characters into a daily strip, which he sold to Publishers-Hall Syndicate. Since its inception on March 27, 1972, the strip has gone through several format changes. For the first 20 years of its run, the characters did not age, and the strip was nominally Episode, episodic as opposed to a serial (fiction), serial, with humor derived from visual gags and the eccentricity of the characters. In 1992, Batiuk rebooted the strip, establishing that the characters had g ...
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Tom Armstrong (cartoonist)
Tom Armstrong (born 1950, Evansville, Indiana) is an American cartoonist and the creator of the daily newspaper comic strip '' Marvin'', which he has written and drawn continuously since its creation in 1982. He was also the original artist on Tom Batiuk's newspaper comic strip '' John Darling'', which he drew from 1979 through 1985; he left the strip in 1985 to concentrate on ''Marvin'', with Gerry Shamray replacing Armstrong on the ''John Darling'' strip. He received the Elzie Segar Elzie Crisler Segar (; December 8, 1894 – October 13, 1938), known by the pen name E. C. Segar, was an American cartoonist best known as the creator of Popeye, a pop culture character who first appeared in 1929 in Segar's comic strip ''Thimbl ... Award in 1996. Armstrong graduated from the University of Evansville.Profile
marvincomics.com; accessed June 22, 2015.

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Marvin (comic Strip)
''Marvin'', later called ''Marvin & Family'' (and ''Marvin and Staff'' on Sundays in October 2020), is a daily newspaper comic strip created by cartoonist Tom Armstrong and distributed in the U.S. by Hearst's King Features Syndicate. Debuting in 1982, it revolves around the life and times of a young baby boy named Marvin, along with his parents, Jeff and Jenny Miller, and their dog Bitsy. In 1989, CBS aired a special, "Marvin, Baby of the Year." Publication history Cartoonist Tom Armstrong debuted the seven-days-weekly comic strip ''Marvin'' on Sunday, August 1, 1982.''Marvin''
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Greg Evans (cartoonist)
Greg Evans (born November 13, 1947) is an American cartoonist and the creator of the syndicated comic strip '' Luann''. He received the 2003 National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award for the strip. He has been nominated four other times for the same award. Career In ''100 Years of American Newspaper Comics'', Dennis Wepman wrote that Evans "taught junior and senior high school art in his native California, worked as promotion manager and graphic artist for a TV station in Colorado, and entertained with a robot at trade shows and fairs before he sold ''Luann'' to News America Syndicate in 1984." Evans wrote a musical based on Luann, ''Luann: Scenes in a Teen's Life'', which debuted March 2008 at Palomar College in San Marcos, California. It was directed by Dana Case. Prior to ''Luann'', Evans published the comic strip ''Fogarty'', distributed free to high school newspapers. It featured the character Mr. Fogarty, who continues in the same role as a character in ''Luann''. In 200 ...
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Luann (comic Strip)
''Luann'' is a syndicated newspaper comic strip written and drawn by Greg Evans and launched by North America Syndicate on March 17, 1985. The strip is currently syndicated by Andrews McMeel Syndication. In 2012, Greg Evans' daughter Karen Evans began co-authoring the strip. ''Luann'' takes place in an unnamed suburban setting, and primarily focuses on young adult Luann DeGroot dealing with school, her love interests, family, and friends. Some storylines center on other characters, including her older brother Brad. The strip is particularly notable in that the characters age over time, albeit not in real time. In 2003, Evans won the Reuben Award for Cartoonist of the Year for his work on ''Luann.'' Characters and story Main characters ;Luann C. DeGroot: The comic strip's titular protagonist. Luann often suffers from a poor self-assessment of her popularity and attractiveness, especially of her large feet. She can also be shallow, self-centered, and very immature. Luann atte ...
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Bud Blake
Julian W. BlakeSocial Security Death Index
listing for Blake, Julian W., Social Security Number 111-12-0357
(February 13, 1918 – December 26, 2005) was an American cartoonist who created the popular, long-running comic strip '''', about a group of suburban boyhood pals. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, ''Tiger'' began May 3, 1965. At its ...
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Tiger (comic Strip)
''Tiger'' was an American comic strip created by cartoonist Bud Blake. It ran from May 3, 1965 until 2004. Publication history Launched May 3, 1965, the strip about a group of suburban boyhood pals was distributed by King Features Syndicate to 400 newspapers worldwide at its peak. Blake drew the strip until he was 85, two years before his death on December 26, 2005. Asked if he could continue to produce the strip, Blake told an interviewer, "Sure, I could keep doing it. But I can’t. I’ve had enough." After Blake retired, the strip continued to appear as reprints, and as of December 2005, according to the syndicate, ''Tiger'' was running in more than 100 newspapers in 11 countries. Characters and story ''Tiger'' followed a gag-a-day format and was designed to appeal to both adults and children. It centered on a scrappy group of school-aged kids in an unidentified, middle-class neighborhood. Parents and teachers were occasionally referred to, but no adult was ever pictured. ...
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Bil Keane
William Aloysius "Bil" Keane (October 5, 1922 – November 8, 2011) was an American cartoonist most notable for his work on the newspaper comic ''The Family Circus''. It began in 1960 and continues in syndication, drawn by his son Jeff Keane. Early life and education Keane was born in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania neighborhood of Crescentville, and attended parochial school at St. William Parish and Northeast Catholic High School. While a schoolboy, he taught himself to draw by mimicking the style of the cartoons published in ''The New Yorker''. His first cartoon was published on May 21, 1936, on the amateur page of the ''Philadelphia Daily News''. While in high school, his in-comic signature was spelled "Bill Keane", but early in his career, he omitted the second L from his first name "to be distinctive". Career Keane served in the U.S. Army from 1942 to 1945, drawing for '' Yank'' and creating the "At Ease with the Japanese" feature for the Pacific edition of '' St ...
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