Punch February 4, 1920
Playboy, July 1955
Al Ross
Playboy, September 1963
Sex to Sexty, 1970s
Esquire, January 1934
Harry Mace
For Laughing Out Loud, March 1960
Jaguar, May 1970
Judge October 9, 1909
Eugene Zimmerman
Judge October 9, 1909
Laff, July 1952
Life February 16, 1905
James Montgomery Flagg
Life January 5, 1905
Showing posts with label EUGENE ZIMMERMAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EUGENE ZIMMERMAN. Show all posts
Thursday, November 15, 2018
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Cartoons I don't get 33
Dale McFeatters
Hello Buddies, circa 1951
Why is a child working for the company? Is it that his mother or father work there and they're off-camera? Gilbert Wilkinson
The New Yorker May 16, 1925 This Is It, 1960s
Is the circus family his family, and if so, why would he have to beg in the street unless the circus doesn't pay anything? Or is the joke that the way he's sitting in front of the poster it looks like they're growing out of his head? Erich Sokol
Playboy, October 1962
Another creepy cartoon nobody would publish today. I wonder if I should even be posting it in the context of "can you believe people thought this would be funny once?". If it's any consolation, I think after the cartoon he immediately put his clothes back on and brought her back home before anything could happen, never saw her again for at least a few more years, and went into counseling. He'd be in his seventies or eighties now. For Laughing Out Loud, February 1960 Bill Ward
Fun House, February 1979
I think the joke has something to do with his bald head and her breasts, but like most other Humorama titles, they came up with captions for the same drawings over and over (this looks like at least a third-generation printing), and it looks like they didn't think the joke through this time. Judge October 9, 1909
You just had to be there. Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman
same issue of Judge Life January 5, 1905 Frederick Opper
Puck June 15, 1880 Ship-Bored Punch January 28, 1920 Punch November 9, 1927
Hello Buddies, circa 1951
Why is a child working for the company? Is it that his mother or father work there and they're off-camera? Gilbert Wilkinson
The New Yorker May 16, 1925 This Is It, 1960s
Is the circus family his family, and if so, why would he have to beg in the street unless the circus doesn't pay anything? Or is the joke that the way he's sitting in front of the poster it looks like they're growing out of his head? Erich Sokol
Playboy, October 1962
Another creepy cartoon nobody would publish today. I wonder if I should even be posting it in the context of "can you believe people thought this would be funny once?". If it's any consolation, I think after the cartoon he immediately put his clothes back on and brought her back home before anything could happen, never saw her again for at least a few more years, and went into counseling. He'd be in his seventies or eighties now. For Laughing Out Loud, February 1960 Bill Ward
Fun House, February 1979
I think the joke has something to do with his bald head and her breasts, but like most other Humorama titles, they came up with captions for the same drawings over and over (this looks like at least a third-generation printing), and it looks like they didn't think the joke through this time. Judge October 9, 1909
You just had to be there. Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman
same issue of Judge Life January 5, 1905 Frederick Opper
Puck June 15, 1880 Ship-Bored Punch January 28, 1920 Punch November 9, 1927
Thursday, January 25, 2018
cartoons I don't get #32
Salo Roth
For Laughing Out Loud, March 1960 Punch January 28, 1920 Is this supposed to be someone from the temperance movement? This cartoon must have been done a ling time before it was printed.
Jem, July 1963 This looks like a set-up for a joke rather than the joke itself.
Eugene Zimmerman
Judge October 9, 1909 Are the skyscrapers distracting from the boats or vice-versa?
Reginald Marsh
New Yorker September 19, 1925 Cavalcade, March 1942 Erich Sokol
Playboy, October 1959 For Laughing Out Loud, March 1960 Hello Buddies, May 1955 Punch, April 1984 Punch November 17, 1915 Stag, July 1964 Charles Rodrigues
Playboy, December 1968
For Laughing Out Loud, March 1960 Punch January 28, 1920 Is this supposed to be someone from the temperance movement? This cartoon must have been done a ling time before it was printed.
Jem, July 1963 This looks like a set-up for a joke rather than the joke itself.
Eugene Zimmerman
Judge October 9, 1909 Are the skyscrapers distracting from the boats or vice-versa?
Reginald Marsh
New Yorker September 19, 1925 Cavalcade, March 1942 Erich Sokol
Playboy, October 1959 For Laughing Out Loud, March 1960 Hello Buddies, May 1955 Punch, April 1984 Punch November 17, 1915 Stag, July 1964 Charles Rodrigues
Playboy, December 1968
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