Author Topic: Funniest Gasrfield comic 1978  (Read 2570 times)


Love the Gardf.
Keep up the good work




lmao, i just couldnt resist laughing.
😂👌

this isn't funny, it is pure genius and it's social commentary on tobacco companies is phenomenal



When I was 18, 18 years old, I saw for the first time in my life.. I saw a vision of clarity. I saw a comic strip, a three-panel comic strip that as simple as it seemed, changed me. Changed my being. Changed who I am. Made me who I am. Enlightened me. The strip, Garfield. The comic strip was new, no more than maybe a month and a half since it's inception, since coming into existence, and there it was before me.. I saw it. A comic strip. What was it called? Garfield. The story here is of a man, a plain man, he is Jon. (But he is more than that, I will get to this later, but first, let us just say he is Jon, a plain man.) And then there is a cat, Garfield. This is the nature of the world here. When I see the role, the politics, the future, the satellites in space, and the people who put them there, you can look at everything as a man and a cat. Two beings in harmony, and at war. So the strip I saw about this man, Jon, and the cat, Garfield, you see.. Yes, it's about everything. This little comic is oh, low and behold not so little anymore. So yes, when I was 18, I saw this comic. And it hit me all at once. It's power, I clipped it and everyday I looked at it and I said.. Okay, let me look at this here. What is this doing to me? Why is this so powerful? Jon Arbuckle, he sits here, legs crossed, comfortable in his home, and he reads his newspaper. News of the world, perhaps. And then he extends his fingers, lightly, delicately, he taps his fingers on the end table and he feels something.. What is it? It is something he needs.. But it is not there. And then he looks up, slightly rooster-eyed, and he thinks.. His newspaper at his lap, now, and he thinks this; "Now where could my pipe be?"

This.. I always come to this, because, I was a young man (I'm older now) and I still don't have the secrets, the answers, so this.. Question still rings true, Jon looks up and he thinks.. "Now where could my pipe be?" And it happens. You see it. You see.. It's almost like divine intervention, suddenly it is there, and it overpowers you. A cat is smoking a pipe. It is the man's pipe, it's Jon's pipe, but the cat.. This cat, Garfield, is smoking the pipe. And from afar and someplace near but.. Not clear, near but not clear, the man calls out, Jon calls out, he is shocked.. "Garfield!" He shouts. Garfield, the cat's name. But.. Let's take a step back. Let us examine this from all sides, all perspectives. When I first came across this comic strip, I was at my father's house. The newspaper had arrived and I picked it up for him and brought it inside. I organized his sections for him, and then, yes, the comic strip section fell out from somewhere in the middle. Landed on the kitchen floor. I picked up the paper pages and saw up somewhere near the top of this strip, and just like Jon I too was wearing an aqua marine shirt. So I thought, "Huh, interesting. I'll have to see to this later."

I snipped out the little comic and held onto it. And five days later I re-examined, and it gripped me. I needed to find out more about this. The information I had was minimal, but enough. An orange cat named Garfield. Okay. That seemed to be the linchpin of this whole operation. Yes, another clue, a signature in the bottom-right corner, a man's name.. 'Jim Davis'. Yes, I am onto it for sure. So, one, Garfield, orange cat, and two, Jim Davis, the creator of this cat. And that curiously plain man. I did not know at the time that his name was Jon, the strip you see had no mention of this man's name and I'd never seen it before. But I had these clues. Jim Davis, Garfield. And then I saw more, I spotted the tiny copyright mark in the upper left corner, Copyright 1978 to.. What is this? Copyright belongs to a 'PAWS, INC.' I used the local librarian mail services to track down the information I was looking for. Jim Davis, a cartoonist, had created a comic strip about a cat, Garfield. And a man. Jon Arbuckle. Well, from that point on I made sure I read the Garfield comic strips. But as I read each one, as each day passed.. The strips seemed to resonate with me less and less. I sent letters to PAWS, INC., long letters, pages upon pages, asking if Mister Jim Davis could somehow publish just the one comic, over and over again. It would be meditative, I wrote, the strength of that. Could you imagine? But no response. The strips lost their power, and eventually I stopped reading, but.. I did not want my perceptions diluted so I vowed to read the pipe strip, over and over again.

That is what I called it. The pipe strip.

The pipe strip.

Everything about it is perfect. I can only describe it as a miracle creation, something came together, the elements aligned.. It's like the comets, the cosmic orchestra that.. Is up there over your head. The immense enormous void is working all for one thing, to tell you one thing.

GAS, ROCK, AND PURITY, AND NOTHING

I will say this. When I see the pipe strip, and I mean every single time I look at the lines, the colors, the shapes that make up the three-panel comic.. I see perfection. Do I find perfection in many things? Some things, I would say. Some things are perfect. And this is one of them. I can look at the little tuft of hair on Jon Arbuckle's head, it is the perfect shade, the purple pipe in Garfield's mouth, how could a mere mortal even make this..?

I have a theory about Jim Davis. After copious research, and yes of course now we have the internet and this information is all readily available, but..  Jim Davis, He used his life experiences to influence his comic. Like I mentioned before, none of them seem to have the weight of the pipe strip. But you have to wonder about the man who is able to even just once create the perfect form, a literally flawless execution of art, brilliance, just as an award.. I think there is a spiritual element at work. I have seen my share of bad times, and when you have something, well it's just.. Emotions and neurons in your brain, but something tells you it's the truth, truth's radiant light. Garfield the Cat? Neurons in my brain, it's.. It's harmony, you see, it.. Jon and Garfield, it's truly harmony, like a continuous, looping, ever-lasting harmony. The lavender chair, the brown end table, the salmon-colored wall, the forest-green carpeting, Garfield's hunch, perched, perhaps with the pipe stuck firmly between his jowls. His tail curls around. It's more than shapes, too, because.. I..

Okay, stay with me, I've done this experiment several times.

You take the strip. You trace only the basic elements. You can do anything. You can simplify the shapes down to just.. Blobs, just outlines, but it still makes sense. You can replace the blobs with magazine cutouts of other things, replace Jon Arbuckle with a car parked in a driveway sideways. Cut that out of a magazine, stick it in, replace him there in the second panel with a.. A food processor, okay? And then we put a picture of the planet in the third panel over Garfield.

It still works.

These are universal proportions, I don't know.. The best to explain why it works, I have studied the pipe strip and brown townyzed Jon and Garfield's proportions against several universal mathematical constants. e, pi, the Golden Ratio, the Feigenbaum constants, and so on.. And it's surprising. Scary.. how things align. You can take just tiny pieces of the pipe strip, for instance, take Jon's elbow from the second panel. And take that and project it back over Jon's entire shape in the second panel and you'll see a near perfect Fibonacci constants sequence emerge. It's.. Eerie to me. And it makes you wonder if you're in the presence of a deity, if there is some larger hand at work.

That Funny Feline Is At It Again Lol






And it makes you wonder if you're in the presence of a deity, if there is some larger hand at work.

There is no doubt in my mind that Jim Davis is a smart man. Jim Davis is.. Capable of.. Anything, to me. He is remarkable. But this is so far beyond that, I think we might see that this work of art is revered and respected in years to come. Jim Davis is possibly a new master of the craft, a genius of the eye, they very well may say the same things about Jim Davis in 500 years that we say about the great philosophical and artistic masters from centuries ago. Jim Davis is a modern day Socrates or da Vinci, mixing both striking visual beauty with classical, daring, unheard of intellect. Look, he combines these things to make profoundly simple expressions.

This strip is his masterpiece, the pipe strip, is his masterpiece. And it is a masterpiece and a marvel. I often look at.. Garfield's.. Particular pose in this strip. He is poised and statuesque, and his cat stare is reminiscent of the fiery gazes often found in religious iconography. But still his eyes are playful, lying somewhere between the solemn father's expression in Rembrant's Return of the Prodigal Son, and the coy smirk of da Vinci's St. John the Baptist. His ears stick up, signifying a peak readiness. It's as if he could at any moment pounce. He is, after all, the close relative and descendant of the mighty jungle cats of Africa, that could leap after prey.. You can see the power drawn into Garfield's hind quarters, powerful haunches indeed.

The third panel.. Now, just saying this now, this is just coming to me, now.. The third panel of the pipe strip is essentially a microcosm for the entire strip itself. All the power dynamics, the struggle for superiority, right?

WHO has the pipe? WHERE is the pipe?

All of that is drawn, built, layered into Garfield's iconic pose here. You can see it in the curl of his tail.. Garfield's ear whiskers stick up on-end, the smoke billows upwards, drawing the eye upward. The increasing scope, I'm just.. Amazed, really, that after 33 years of reading and brown townyzing the same comic strip, I'm able to find new dimensions, it's a testament to the work. For 6 years I delved into tobacco research, because.. Can a cat smoke? This is a metaphysical question, yes, can any cat smoke? Do we know? Can just Garfield smoke? The research says no, nicotine poisoning can kill animals, especially household pets. All it takes is the nicotine found in as little as a single cigarette. Surely Jon's pipe holds a substantial amount of tobacco. It is true that pets living in the homes of smokers are nearly 25% more likely to develop some form of cancer, most likely due to second-hand smoke. But these are facts of smoking and it's tolls on our world. But, after visiting two tobacco processing plants in Virginia, in the Phillip Morris cigarette manufacturing facility I came no closer to cracking the meaning. I was looking for any insight.

A detective of a homicide case has to look at every angle, so I'm always taking apart the pipe strip. I have focused on every minute, every detail of this strip. Jon Arbuckle's clothing, I have replicas. I am an expert in textiles. See, the smoking thing was a hang-up for me, but it was the statement here, until..

This is key, this is the breakthrough. The pipe is not a pipe, really. Obviously there is symbolism at work, here. I saw that from the beginning and I looked at the literal aspects of the strip to gain insight onto the metaphors at play. I worked at a newspaper printing press for 18 months in the late 1980s, I was learning the Literal to inform the Gestural, the.. Subliteral, the In Between. Jon reading the newspaper means so much more than just.. 'Jon reading a newspaper.' But how could you ever hope to decipher the puzzle without knowing everything there is to know about newspapers?

Okay, for example, Jon holds his paper up with his left hand, thumb gripping the interior. I learned that this particular grip here is the newspaper grip of 19th century aristocrats, and this aristocrat grip was a point of contention that influenced the decision to move forward to prohibition, in the United States in the early 20th century. So Jon's hand position is much more than that, it is a comment on class war and the resulting reactionary culture, but I didn't know about the aristocratic newspaper grip until I came across some microfiche archives at the printing press.  It's about information, you have to take it apart, and the breakthrough on the smoking cat came late. It was.. 8 years ago, actually.

"smoking cat" is an industry term, it's what the smoking industry calls a tattletale teenager who tells on his friends after they've all tried smoking for the first time, and it is actually a foreign translation, bastardization of the term "smoking rat". But the phrase was confused when secret documents went back and forth between China and America. These documents are still secret, and the only reason I know about the term is because I know a man, and my friend, let's call him Timothy. Yeah, yes, it's.. A fake name, for his own protection.

Timothy worked for Phillip Morris for 16 years, and he had seen the documents, and then he told me.. It was an 'aha moment', and he said.. "But how? How could this cartoonist, Jim Davis, know about this obscure term from the mid-70s used exclusively by a few cigarette companies?" This is still a mystery to me, but I connected dots and noted.. Jim Davis' child experiences on a farm. He must've seen something.. What could it be?

Timothy went on to tell me there was one particular "smoking cat", a boy, from.. Yes, Indiana. A boy named Ernie Barguckle, who became a thorn in the side of the tobacco companies for a couple years. He did more than tattle to his parents, he and his family took legal action, and they eventually received a huge settlement payout. But that name is too similar. "Ernie Barguckle", Jon Arbuckle. Jim Davis must've used this, but there's more here. Ernie Barguckle spent nearly half that settlement money on experimental medical procedures to cure his.. Impotence. He was impotent.

So.. He was a smoking cat with a.. A metaphorical 'pipe' that did not work. But are you starting to see the layers here? This is exciting stuff, you start to get a whole picture here, and it informs the work, it.. It's just remarkable. Jim Davis took these raw ideas, these.. Pieces, and he transformed them into smart social commentary that is also ravishingly beautiful.

I have cried. I have cried, I have cried, I've cried, CRIED over this piece. It just.. Gets into my soul.. I try to explain this to people, I have the newspaper articles about Ernie Barguckle. People have fought me on this. They don't see it, or they are close minded. "How can a comic strip about a cat smoking a pipe mean anything more than that?" But it is more. And when I feel spiritual, or start to think existentially, I still see this comic.