“All life is a blur of Republicans and meat!” — Zippy.

§ July 19th, 2024 § Filed under obituary, original art, undergrounds § 3 Comments


Whelp, I suppose I’m an original art collector now, having followed up my Nancy strip purchases with this, an original pen-and-ink drawing of Zippy the Pinhead by his creator, Bill Griffith.

This is via the official Zippy the Pinhead webpage, though the actual arranging of the purchase had to be done via email (since the site’s payment processing is not working at the moment). This particular item allows you to pick either from a list of pre-selected “Zippy-isms” (like the ol’ standby “Yow! Are we having fun yet?”) to fill in the word balloon, or you can enter your own, if it’s not too long.

In my case I picked a Zippy quote from a published newspaper strip that probably baffled the squares but the real heads know:

And now here it is, an original Zippy pic in my very own home, bringing me inspiration and hope in this fallen world.

And I of course encourage you to get your own, or avail yourself of the many other goodies on the site. From the main page you can use a PayPal link to get yourself a signed copy of Griffith’s latest book, Three Rocks! Am I thinking really hard about doing so, even though I already have a copy? The answer is not “no.”

• • •

I want to note the passing of the great Bob Newhart, who escaped this world at the too-young age of 94. And I say “too young” because frankly, we could’ve used him around these parts for at least a couple more decades.

The comic book connection here is, of course, his short-lived sitcom Bob from the early ’90s, where he played a comic book artist. I watched most of these, and…well, Bob was always great even if the material wasn’t up to snuff. The one episode aimed directly at us nerds was the one where Bob’s character, “Bob McKay,” was accepting a comics award, with Jim Lee, Marc Silvestri, Jack Kirby, and for some reason Bob Kane, along with the always telegenic Sergio Aragones.

There was a six-issue run of Mad-Dog as a tie-in, supposedly the comic book McKay had worked on:

It was a flip book, featuring the “classic” version on one side (by Ty Templeton) and the “modern” dark, gritty version on the other (by Evan Dorkin and Gordon Purcell). The two different takes being a plot point on the show itself, you see. Haven’t read probably since it came out, couldn’t tell you a thing about it at this point, but…the creative teams give me at least some hope this is better than it should be.

So long, Bob.

3 Responses to ““All life is a blur of Republicans and meat!” — Zippy.”

  • Thom H. says:

    That Mad-Dog issue’s emphasis on “TEETH!” is pretty funny.

    I honestly had no idea that there was a Bob Newhart show where his character drew comics. I wonder if that was an influence on Alan Moore’s version of Supreme?

  • Bat Masterson says:

    Look at the “MAD” in the logo. Genius. Always trust Ty and Evan, even if one of them is Canadian.

  • Snark Shark says:

    “and for some reason Bob Kane”

    Because he was a bigger self-promoter than anyone except Stan Lee?

    “Jim Lee, Marc Silvestri”

    My Gawd! I had no idea Marc Silvestri was a giant, and Jim Lee was so small.

    “Jack Kirby.. Bob Kane”

    No mention of the co-creators of their characters in those intros! AHEM! Joe Simon & Bill Finger!