Showing posts with label DOROTHY MCKAY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DOROTHY MCKAY. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2019

cartoon themes:dogs

Cavalcade, December 1944
Cavalcade, October 1945
Club, September 1987
Adam Annual, circa 1961
Chon Day
Adam, July 1973
Dorothy McKay
Esquire, June 1934
Saturday Evening Post May 6, 1944
George Sixta
Saturday Evening Post January 6, 1951
Fling, November 1959
Mal Hancock
Playboy, March 1972
Punch November 12, 1975
Punch November 12, 1975

Thursday, December 20, 2018

I want one-panel gag cartoons for Christmas

Dorothy McKay
Esquire, January 1934
Esquire, January 1934
Charles Rodrigues
Hi-Life, August 1964
Chon Day
The New Yorker December 12, 1964
Charles Addams
The New Yorker December 15, 1962
Robert Day
The New Yorker December 19, 1964
Alan Dunn
The New Yorker December 19, 1964
Eldon Dedini
Playboy, January 1967
Phil Hahn and Paul Coker, Jr.
Playboy, December 1964
Douglas Sneyd
Playboy, December 1967
Punch December 22, 1915

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Cartoon themes: boxing and wrestling

Hello Buddies, Winter 1950
Man, April 1966
Man to Man, December 1949
Bill Wenzel
Monsieur, May 1964
Bill Lee
Penthouse, October 1978
Playboy, October 1980
Sir!, May 1953
Playboy, February 1954
Playboy, September 1956
Adam, July 1973
Army/Navy Fun Parade, April 1953
Dorothy McKay
Esquire, January 1934
For Laughing Out Loud, March 1960

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Cartoons I don't get 6

Punch October 27, 1915
Playboy, January 1961
John Dempsey
I guess the joke here is that she's out of his league? Or that he has a boner? What?
Nugget, February 1956
Army/Navy Fun Parade, April 1953
Frank Beaven
Esquire, January 1934
This wouldn't be unusual now, with the iPhone meant to be brought into the bathroom.
Good Humor, circa 1964
Jim Lindensmith
I get some of these cartoons. I don't know if I have enough for a post called “cartoons that don't age well”. The idea of cooking being in a woman's DNA is so foreign to me but I guess it wasn't to people reading Hello Buddies in June 1952.
by Gregory D'Alessio, who apparently was so proud of this cartoon, he signed it twice.
Punch October 6, 1915
Same issue.
This is almost 20 years before the Hindenburg disaster, so I have no idea what they're referring to. Or who either.
Punch October 27, 1915
Playboy, July 1968
Buck Brown
Is this a man or a woman? Another one to file under “cartoons that don't age well”
Esquire, June 1934
Dorothy McKay
Hello Buddies, c. 1951