1993 Part 1 - Nobody Told Me Life Was Going To Be This Hard - podcast episode cover

1993 Part 1 - Nobody Told Me Life Was Going To Be This Hard

Jan 07, 20251 hr 1 minSeason 10Ep. 140
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Episode description

Sally has to butter her toast with chunky butter. Snoopy is attending school with Charlie Brown, and even the local mailbox is rejecting Chuck now. Also, Michael shares the story of the first ever comic book price guide. Plus: Cheesy teeth

Transcript available at UnpackingPeanuts.com

Unpacking Peanuts is copyright Jimmy Gownley, Michael Cohen, Harold Buchholz, and Liz Sumner. Produced and edited by Liz Sumner. Music by Michael Cohen. Additional voiceover by Aziza Shukralla Clark. 

For more from the show follow @unpackpeanuts on Instagram and Threads, and @unpackingpeanuts on Facebook, Blue Sky, and YouTube. For more about Jimmy, Michael, and Harold, visit unpackingpeanuts.com.  

Thanks for listening.

Transcript

VO

Welcome to Unpacking Peanuts, the podcast where three cartoonists take an in-depth look at the greatest comic strip of all time, Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz.

Jimmy

Hey, everybody. Welcome back to the show. This is Unpacking Peanuts. We are starting another year today. We're in good old 1993, and I'll be your host for the proceedings. My name is Jimmy Gownley. I'm also a cartoonist. I did things like Amelia Ruehl's Seven Good Reasons Not to Grow Up, The Dumbest Idea Ever, and you can read my new comics right now at gvillcomics.substack.com, and it's for free. Joining me as always are my pals, co-hosts, and fellow cartoonists.

He's a playwright and a composer both for the band Complicated People as well as for this very podcast. He's the co-creator of the original Comic Book Prize Guide, the original editor for Amelia Ruehl's, and the creator of such great strips as Strange Attractors, A Gathering of Spells and Tangled River. It's Michael Cohen.

Michael

Say hey.

Jimmy

And he's the executive producer and writer for Mystery Science Theatre 3000, a former vice president for Archie Comics, and the creator of the Instagram sensation Sweetest Beasts. And he's currently in my dining room.

Michael

Hello.

Jimmy

Harold Buchholz.

Harold

Hi.

Michael

Call the police.

Jimmy

And of course, we're joined by our producer and editor, Liz Sumner.

Liz

Greetings.

Jimmy

Well, guys, we're here. We're ready to start another year. Does anyone have any sort of preamble, anything that they need to get off their chest before we get into it?

Michael

I thought it's fairly interesting that the strips we picked this week, there were no duplicates, which is very odd. There's usually at least one.

Jimmy

Oh, wow.

Michael

So everybody has a completely different sense of what makes a good strip.

Jimmy

Well, that's pretty interesting. We'll get a real portrait of what each of us like. We should fess up maybe to some of the ones who picked what.

Michael

Okay.

Jimmy

People will know whose taste is whose.

Harold

Right. That's a good idea.

Jimmy

One thing I thought that was interesting is that he starts the year the same way as he started last year with Snoopy going to Charlie Brown's school.

Harold

Yeah. There's a lot of non-sequitur in this first four months. Kind of silly non-sequitur stuff. I think more so than I've seen at any other time. But that's one thing I noticed.

Michael

I found that generally the quality of the strips seems to be decreasing slightly. But the amount of good ones seems to be going up.

Harold

That's interesting.

Michael

So I found I was picking more, but the ones that I didn't pick, a lot of them I actually didn't get. Which is rare.

Jimmy

I do sort of understand what you're saying there. I think there is a wider gap between the really good ones and the ones that are head scratchers. Yeah.

Michael

But the head scratchers are more fun to talk about.

Liz

Yeah.

Jimmy

He can fill up a whole podcast with just head scratchers. Maybe that's another episode. It won't be the weirdest, just the ones we didn't quite get.

Michael

There's a few here which I don't know. They might be obscurities, but I have no idea what he's getting at.

Jimmy

Well, this will be fun. Maybe we could get at it together.

Michael

All right.

Jimmy

If you guys out there want to follow along with us, well, there's a couple of things you should do. The first thing is you want to go over to our website unpackingpeanuts.com and there you sign up for the great Peanuts reread and that will get you one email a month from us letting you know what strips we're going to be covering in every single episode.

And then if you just want to follow along with us, because these are all free on gocomics.com, you could just go over there, type the date in and follow along with us. Or of course, the fan of graphics volumes are also available if you want to order those. But the nice thing about living here in the 21st century is that we have lots of access to art. So once you do all that, come on back and away we go.

January 2nd, Charlie Brown is sitting in the beanbag chair, watching some TV and Sally comes from behind and says to him, I'm thinking maybe when I grow up, I'll be a beauty queen. Then she asked him, do you have to be really beautiful? Charlie Brown, without taking his eyes off the TV says, probably, to which Sally replies, do they have a sort of fairly kind of cute queen?

Michael

I'll fess up to picking this one. Generally, I like Sally Strips the best. And I really like the fact that he's using this lingo in that last panel. Which is the kind of thing you'll hear from a little kid.

Harold

In the 90s, he seems to have his ear attuned to some things that are happening around him.

Jimmy

Yeah. Yep, it's good. And she is such a consistent character. He really knows her.

Harold

Yeah, she seems... It's weird, even though she kind of has a strange way of seeing things, as a character, she seems really grounded. He is doing some more kind of interesting, surreal things with the other characters. But Sally, you know, Sally just has the crazy way of seeing things, but she really feels like a kid you might run into. He's just got a unique perspective on life.

Jimmy

Her hair really got out of control over the years. Right? If you look at her in profile, that is a wild, wild haircut. I really feel there's some Rhonda energy. Yeah, where it starts kind of silly and ends up being just bizarre in a lot of ways.

Harold

Yeah. Or is this like the end of the 80s, early 90s, crazy hair as well?

Jimmy

Yeah. I'm not even thinking so much about those bangs in the front, that ball in the front. I'm thinking about the weird, you know, 57 Chevy style fin that comes off the back of her head.

Harold

Yeah, that is pretty unique. You know, you look at it a while, your head starts to hurt. He's like, wow, that is a pretty wild look she's got going.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Harold

Maybe it's because she has the big poof in the front, she can't see what she's doing in the back. No one's going to tell her.

Liz

A lot of us had that poof in the early 90s.

Jimmy

Oh, absolutely. January 8th. This is part of a little sequence that Charlie Brown has taken Snoopy into class with him. And Snoopy slowly is becoming more involved with the class. And at this point, he's actually just for fun, in quotes, taking a true false test with Charlie Brown. Charlie Brown sitting there going, true, false, true, false. And Snoopy, next to him, taking the same test, thinks, true, true, false, true. And Charlie Brown then looks over and asks him, how are you doing?

To which Snoopy slyly takes away his paper from Charlie Brown's eyes and says, no peeking. I picked this one. This made me laugh because of, I just thought Snoopy in the last panel was funny. That was a great drawing. But this is the first, Harold always points out that these kids cheat in school regularly. And this is the one kid, the dog, that won't stand for it.

Harold

Yeah, he's got his standards.

Jimmy

Especially as it turns out that as the sequence goes on, he gets a perfect hundred on the test.

Liz

I don't think Charlie Brown is actually cheating. He's just asking.

Jimmy

Well, yeah, but now you know.

Harold

He's trying to help out his little dog.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Harold

I like the look of this one. Yeah. He has four different setups. If you look at it from a camera perspective, there's like an initial side view, which is so classic for Peanuts, with Snoopy in front of Charlie Brown at the seat, which looks unique. And then you see what might be the edge of a blackboard on the side or a window with the curtains down. They're taking the test at midnight, I'm not sure. And then you have black on the base of the desk, and then you zoom in on Snoopy.

And this is one of those things as a cartoonist where you make choices, right? Where you decide there's a character behind another character, but you're just focusing on the character in the front. So Charlie Brown disappears, you're just zooming in on the shot where we would have absolutely see Charlie Brown, just like we did in the first panel. But Schulz decides that we're not going to see Charlie Brown at all, just Snoopy. And that works really, really nice, nicely here.

And the little black on the bottom of the desk looks really nice too. You're talking about spotting blacks. I think this one is kind of an appealing look to it. And then we, on the third panel, we move around to toward the front favoring Snoopy. And you barely just see Snoopy's head over the top of the desk. But I think it's a great composition. Charlie Brown talking to Snoopy.

And then we go back to where we were originally, except with that really unique side shot of Snoopy taking his paper away from Charlie Brown so he can't peek.

Jimmy

It's so smart to do that second panel without including Charlie Brown. Because I would have tried to, I would have made it a mess of it. I think it would have been really difficult to do. But the other thing, if you included the figure behind him, but the other thing that makes this work is black and white. Because if you had to select the color, you would, now it's not just...

Harold

You'd have to make it an abstract color, right?

Jimmy

Yeah, you would have to, or leave it white or something like that.

Harold

And then you're kind of in Snoopy's world, and accept that there's whatever was in the first panel.

Jimmy

But if you did it the same color as the wall, Charlie Brown would disappear.

Harold

Right, so if, say, it was a pale yellow, you'd have to go to a pale green or...

Jimmy

Right.

Michael

I'd deal with that problem. Usually, I would draw the other character in there, no matter how terrible it looked. Something that sort of goes into the abstract, I'd leave the panel borders out. That would be a nice solution.

Harold

That's a good...

Jimmy

Yep, that's a great idea.

Harold

Did Schulz ever do that?

Jimmy

I don't think so.

Harold

I mean, I think he did in the Sundays, maybe.

Jimmy

I don't think even in the Sundays.

Harold

Not even in the Sundays. That's interesting. It's one of the things that maybe never dawned on him, or he's like, that's not what I do, or I have rules, or... It's interesting.

Jimmy

Yeah, that's a real smart way to handle it, though, if you could take away the panel borders entirely. I like that idea.

Harold

What's also interesting, just from the perspective of looking at the strip today, I'm looking at the way it would have been seen in the newspaper with the copyright notice right in the middle, running up in the gutter between panels two and three. Schulz actually puts more space between panels two and three than he does between one and two and three and four, I guess, to make room for the syndicate copyright.

But I'd be interested to know if I would go back and look at the FanaGraphics version, it's super rare that, just like we say, he's a formalist in keeping the panel borders, there would be this odd gap that's a little bit wider without that. Once FanaGraphics, they take out the copyright notice, so you'd have this little weird extra space between the two panels.

Jimmy

Very interesting. January 10th. We start off with one of those symbolic panels, I guess. It's a snowman, but the snowman's head is replaced by a giant baseball, and he's also wearing a baseball glove. And then we cut to Lucy, who's out in what used to be the outfield, but is now covered with snow, and she says, now what's he doing?

And we see that she goes into the infield, and Charlie Brown's standing there reminiscing on top of the pitcher's mound, and he's talking, and he says, I love to come out here to my snow-covered pitcher's mound, and relive all those good memories. To which Lucy says, what good memories? And Charlie Brown says, the games we played, some we won, some we lost. To which Lucy says, we lost them all. Charlie Brown continues, there were some close ones, all right. Lucy says, like, 54 to nothing?

And Charlie Brown now is like, mimicking the pose of a pitcher on the mound, and says, and all the perfect strikes I pitched. And Lucy walks away saying, and the time you walked, 24 hitters in a row. Charlie Brown then bends over, scoops up some snow, makes it into a snowball, and whap, smacks Lucy right in the back of the head with it. And then Charlie Brown on the pitcher's mound with a smile on his face says, that's the best pitch I threw all year.

Michael

Well, he's totally delusional.

Jimmy

Totally, right?

Harold

Except for the last panel, he was probably right about that.

Jimmy

Oh, that part, yeah, yes.

Michael

Oh, he can't face the truth.

Harold

But that is really satisfying at the end. He's got the big smile and it's not the wishy-washy smile. So that's a full, unbroken, wide smile.

Michael

But she didn't do anything wrong.

Liz

She deserved it. No, she was just having a good...

Michael

Too bad. Get down to Earth, kid.

Harold

But isn't it funny that he's delusional and she keeps taking him back to reality and then that last panel, when he throws it and says, it's the best pitch you threw all year, he's probably right. So he's been brought back to reality by Lucy. She's doing them favors.

Jimmy

I guess. Boy, you can pretzel, twist your way into making anyone nice.

Harold

But this is this thing about Lucy that we've been talking about in the past, where the relationship between Lucy and Charlie Brown is complex. She enjoys engaging with him. She set up that psychiatric booth pretty much for Charlie Brown. Here she is coming out in the snow into the empty lot where they play the games, and she's choosing to engage with him. She doesn't ignore him.

It's like she likes Charlie Brown, or she likes at least hanging out with Charlie Brown and what comes out of interacting with him, right?

Jimmy

Yeah, I think she likes torturing him. I think that's what she comes out interacting with him. But yeah, I mean.

Harold

But here is she, I don't know, it's complex because she is speaking the truth back to him. It's not an unpleasant truth. But maybe that is doing some favors because she seems to put herself in that role.

Jimmy

Well, that's the thing.

Harold

I set people straight. I'm that person.

Jimmy

She puts herself in that role. Who asked her to? That's the issue.

Liz

Yeah.

Jimmy

Nobody asked. He's just standing there. He was not engaging with anyone.

Harold

Right. But she knows that he comes to her all the time for her perspective. So, you know, there's that relationship. It is pretty complex.

Michael

He deserves it.

Jimmy

January 18th. So, Peppermint Patty and Franklin are walking out to enjoy their lunch at lunchtime at school. They got their brown bags. And Peppermint Patty says to Franklin, Martin Luther King said, I have a dream. And they sit down on a bench together and they're eating their lunch. And Peppermint Patty continues, Before that, we wouldn't be sitting here. And then Franklin says, And I wouldn't be trading you a carrot stick for a French fry.

But to which Peppermint Patty replies, That's not an even trade, Franklin.

Michael

I was very surprised that you guys didn't pick this, because this gave me a lot to think about. I think this is actually an important strip. And it's also, I think Schulz tiptoeing into something and then deciding he wasn't going to do that. To clarify, I mean, Franklin's been around, what, since 68 or something?

Jimmy

I think, yeah.

Michael

So doing the math, like 25 years. This is the first time, I think, anybody's made a reference about him being an African American.

Jimmy

Right.

Harold

There was one when she was skating and talking to him and I can't remember the person. It was hard.

Jimmy

The NHL, Franklin. Yeah, that was a really hard.

Michael

All right. So there was one. He's really addressing it for the first time. Because the first two panels are topical and could go in many, many directions. But it seems like you have to, once you bring up that subject, you've got to follow through on the thought. But he doesn't. He just totally drops that and goes for this joke, which I don't even really get, about trading stuff, trading snacks at lunchtime.

Harold

You didn't trade snacks at lunchtime?

Michael

No, I ate alone.

Jimmy

That's the saddest thing I've ever heard.

Michael

But that has nothing to do with dead opening panel. I don't think you can open that door and then just ignore it.

Jimmy

Well, first off, this is Martin Luther King Day that this strip appeared on. And that was pretty new at the time. This would only have been like the seventh year for it. Could it possibly be that Franklin is changing the subject because maybe Franklin doesn't feel like he wants to discuss this? Is that possibly it? And he's just like, changes the subject too. And he's also trying to get a French fry rather than his carrot stick.

Because of course, you know, he comes from a stable home with normal food habits. And Peppermint Patty probably got something that had drive through.

Harold

Well, I find it interesting that and this feels very Schulz to me, that as they're walking to the bench to have their lunches, it's not Franklin who says it.

Jimmy

Yeah, it's Peppermint Patty.

Harold

And that says a whole lot too, right? You know, it's Peppermint Patty who's bringing it up, and then he's listening, and then it's not like he's really changing the subject, because the next thing he says, and I wouldn't be trading you a carrot stick for a French fry after she said we wouldn't be sitting here.

Jimmy

Well, that's just a very clever way of changing the subject.

Harold

Well, and here's the other thing that maybe adds to the confusion of this strip is if Peppermint Patty has been walking to school four hours ago with some hot French fries. Four hours later, I think the carrots looks probably better.

Jimmy

Yeah, French fries, cold French fries, they're no good. But are they better than a carrot stick? See, that's actually a carrot stick.

Harold

Yeah, that's a tough one. The list is still crisp, you know?

Liz

Well, the reason Michael doesn't understand it is because he really likes carrot sticks.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Michael

I do like French fries too.

Harold

Four-hour-old French fries.

Jimmy

You can't even really reheat a French fry.

Harold

It's hard, yeah. You need a good toaster oven.

Jimmy

Yeah, by that point, it's just easier to go get more French fries. February 6th, Charlie Brown is lying in his bed at night, tucked in up to his neck in the covers, and he says to himself, Sometimes I lie awake at night and I ask, is it all worth it? He rolls over and says to himself, then a voice says, who are you talking to? Then another voice says, you mean to whom are you talking? And he rolls back over towards us and says, no wonder I lie awake at night.

Yeah, I just relate to that one totally.

Harold

Yeah, that's a that's a thinker. You know, who else in comics is putting something like this out there?

Jimmy

Yeah, and this Charlie Brown lying awake at night in bed contemplating the mysteries of the universe really becomes a bit of a thing in the 90s. Yeah, I like the way, I like the scratchiness of the pen on the pillows and the blanket and stuff like that. It's like a thicker and like there's more variation in the line than a lot of times and...

Harold

Yeah, again, it looks, it really looks nice. The blacks are really nice. The little window panes in the third panel are great. And there is something very unsettling that you get pulled into Charlie Brown's world because it's not like he's talking to one, there's one voice in his head. There are two different voices in his head. That one's really... And you start wondering about who are these voices? What's going on? And then it's like, yeah, I maybe lay away too.

Jimmy

It's really cute. I like the one little hint of window in panel three. So it's not just a black void, you know, you know, he's in his room. February 14th, it's a Sunday and we start with the symbolic panel of a US mailbox talking to just a regular at home mailbox, because that's a normal thing. And they've been chatting and apparently the at home mailbox says to the US mailbox, I've been thinking the same thing for years.

Charlie Brown walks up to the US mailbox, the most basic simple drawing of a mailbox in the history of drawings of mailboxes. And he puts his valentine into the US mailbox and the mailbox rejects it, sends it flying out at Charlie Brown and the mailbox thinks to itself, keep your valentine, kid. But undaunted, Charlie Brown bends over, picks it up, puts it back in the mailbox and sure enough, it gets shot out again. And the mailbox thinks, if she doesn't love you already, a valentine won't help.

Charlie Brown puts it back in yet again because this kid doesn't quit. It's rejected yet again and the mailbox says, I've been around a long time, kid. I know how these things go. But still Charlie Brown shoves it back in the mailbox. It comes ejected out once more with the mailbox saying, take it from me, kid. They'll break your heart. Keep your valentine. But Charlie Brown is not one to give up, so he puts the valentine back in the mailbox.

Then the US mailbox finally resigns, says to itself, oh well, what do I care? Then Charlie Brown arrives back home. Sally is sitting there watching TV in her bean bag and Charlie Brown says, there's a strange new mailbox down in the corner.

Harold

This is that surreal world that he's really playing around with around this time that stood out to me. I made a note when I was reading the strips, and the way I put it was there's a lot of surreality, a lot of non-sequiturs mixed with things that are really on the nose, which makes it a strange year.

Michael

Yeah. Well, let's think about all the objects that have consciousness in this world. There's the school wall.

Harold

Yeah.

Michael

Wasn't there a rock?

Jimmy

Probably, yeah.

Michael

I think in the desert, I think one of the rocks thought something. Yeah.

Jimmy

I got the mailbox now.

Harold

Yeah. Which is weird because it leans into Spike's world if they actually are sentient. Yeah.

Michael

Spike's world is like Carlos Castelleda, where everything is alive in the desert.

Harold

Well, he treats it like that and usually the gag is that it's not, right? But every once in a while, he can't help but give it its own thought. Or at least it's not responding back in a way to Spike in here, right?

Jimmy

He's really confident in that first panel, drawing that mailbox with no details whatsoever. I mean, there's nothing that says US Mail on it. There's not the little box with the hour, the times of pickup on it or anything like that.

Harold

And then the fact that the mailbox, the home mailbox is open with the flag down, and it looks like it's facing directly at the other mailbox, as if it's moved to have a conversation, because an extra level.

Liz

With its mouth open.

Jimmy

With its mouth open.

Harold

Yeah, yes, because there would never be a mailbox right in front of an open mailbox. So it really does feel like one of them has gone to visit the other one and talk.

Liz

It's nuts.

Michael

I just had the amusing thought of wondering what Carlos Scott's in the audiobooks would be like with the Peanuts characters in it. Charlie Brown would be Carlos, of course. Who'd be Don Juan? Would it be Linus?

Jimmy

I've only ever listened to one on audiobook once, so I can't help you.

Michael

Oh, OK.

Liz

You'll have to report to us.

Jimmy

You'll have to report to us.

Liz

Yeah.

Harold

Maybe we have a listener who's...

Michael

Yeah. OK, listeners, who would be Don Juan?

Jimmy

Josh Lobotnik. March 5th, Linus and Franklin are hanging out at the thinking wall, and Franklin says to Linus, My grandpa says that after all these years, he still doesn't understand life. For instance, last week, he bought a new car. And then Franklin concludes with, but he got the flu anyway.

Michael

OK, here's one I don't get. Yeah. We don't understand this one.

Harold

Head scratcher. Was there an ad that somehow was referencing this?

Michael

No.

Harold

Otherwise, I have no idea what this might have been referring to.

Jimmy

I think what he's just saying is that you can have objects and you can have material possessions. You could even look forward to them buying them, but it's not going to change the fact that you could get the flu.

Michael

But Creopie must know this.

Harold

I would think so. Yeah. I'd never met anybody who's thought it's somehow. I mean, we know obviously people, you'll buy material possessions and hope it fulfills you, but.

Jimmy

Well, that's all I think it is. That's all that's all he's saying. They're not going to protect you.

Harold

So grandpa thought if you bought a new car, you'd never get the flu again. That yeah, that's.

Jimmy

Those well, okay. I mean, I think there's layers to that. I think, you know, look, here's how I would imagine that. Grandpa is happy because he bought a new car, right? But then he gets the flu. And then he says to his grandson calls him, Hey, grandpa, how's your new car? And the guy goes, Oh, it's great, Franklin. You know, I was really happy. But you know what? Didn't stop me from getting the flu.

And then the kid relays the story, OK, not telling the dad joke as a part of it, just telling the dad joke part of it as if it's straight. And that's what gets to this.

Michael

OK, so you're making excuses for a bad peanut skirt.

Jimmy

I don't think it's a great strip. I'm just explaining it.

Harold

Well, another thing, just looking visually here, there's something I didn't notice him doing before with Franklin. Now that he's using Zip-A-Tone instead of, which I think does look better than him doing those straight lines for shading on Franklin. He's cutting out here and there around Franklin's eye.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Harold

And it's so in inexact because you're cutting around a dot, being there or a part of a dot. At least the version I'm looking at here, again, which is the version that would have been seen in the newspaper with the copyright symbol and all of that. It just looks kind of weird to me, to my eye.

Jimmy

Yeah. I think it's because he didn't want it all to, he was worried that it would mush together with Inkbleed or DotGain in the printing. And that's why he was hedging his bets.

Harold

Maybe he saw something wasn't working so well. And he's trying to experiment.

Jimmy

Yeah. What you would do the way to, if that was the problem, though, the way to fix it would be to go to fewer dots per inch. March 7th. It's a Sunday strip. It starts off with a symbolic panel. Charlie Brown is asleep on top of a drawing of his kite in much the same way that Snoopy sleeps atop the doghouse, if you can imagine such a thing. And then we cut to Lucy, who's at her psychiatry booth, just chilling, waiting for a patient to show up. And Charlie Brown comes flying by with the kite.

He's running towards the psychiatric booth. Lucy sees him coming and is shocked by this. He runs right past it, knocks over the stool. Then the kite gets caught between the psychiatric booth and Lucy, pulling Lucy out of the booth, sending the two of them flying, but over tea kettle. And then they both land, just a mess of string and a broken kite. And Lucy says to Charlie Brown, you're a blockhead, five cents, please.

Michael

Yeah, I did pick this one. I just like the fact that he took two of his most popular tropes.

Jimmy

Put them together.

Michael

And did a mix tape, did not a mix tape, did what? A mashup. Mashup of two of his most popular gags.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Harold

Yeah. Well, we know now for sure that Lucy does accept walk-ins.

Jimmy

Yeah, she's just sitting there waiting. Charlie Brown, man, that's a big butt you got there in that next to last panel. You got to watch that, buddy.

Harold

So he's literally leaping through from the behind, through the opening in her psychiatric booth with his kite string. That's amazing.

Michael

Reminds me of the time that we were at Comic Con. Me and Jimmy are sitting near an old Rob Liefield. The image guys are playing some kind of chase game. Liefield just jumped over our table. Am I remembering that right?

Jimmy

That wasn't me.

Michael

It wasn't you?

Jimmy

No.

Michael

No. Maybe it was Mark.

Jimmy

It must have been.

Michael

Yeah. Yeah. We're just sitting stunned. He just ignored us and knocked over all our stuff.

Harold

Really? He didn't even say sorry?

Jimmy

No. No, because if I was there, it would have ended with the police getting caught. So you know I wasn't there. I could you imagine. Oh, boy.

Harold

Wow. He probably could have afforded to pay you for a few of the damage books.

Jimmy

Yeah, he probably could have.

Harold

Made everything whole.

Jimmy

March 8th, Linus, or is it rerun?

Michael

It's Linus.

Jimmy

Linus is building a tower of blocks. It looks actually like they're playing Jenga, because it's possible that he's trying to remove a block. It's hard to say. It's Linus and Snoopy. Then Snoopy sneezes directly on the Jenga tower, and Linus is shocked by this, holds on for a second. But then it turns out the tower doesn't fall, and then Linus says, bless you, and the tower falls to pieces, sending them both flying. A little delayed reaction.

Michael

Yeah, this is weird. I mean, I think Linus is getting infantilized in a lot of these strips. Going back to the early days when he was a little kid, this is what he'd do. He'd build these incredible towers of blocks. We see a lot of them this year. You know, he's sitting on the floor playing with stuff. And I don't think we've seen a lot of that since the 50s.

Liz

Well, maybe it is rerun.

Michael

Yeah, except then he wouldn't do the striped shirt.

Jimmy

No, he does do the striped shirt, doesn't he?

Harold

At this point. And the hair does look Linus here, not rerun here. But this is something that rerun would have taken over in a couple of years. It's like maybe Schulz made the decision to really let Linus be a certain thing and let rerun take over with that, particularly with the relationship with Snoopy, right?

Jimmy

Right.

Harold

But I picked this one. I was just surprised by the fourth panel that after the fact, after Linus says, bless you to Snoopy for his sneeze, that the blocks go flying. I just thought it was funny. And again, it's just kind of part of this surreality of some of the gags he's doing now. It's got a different feel to me than previous strips. We know we've certainly gone into the surreal a lot with this strip, but this is...

They're just, I don't know, they're silly and surprising in a way that seems different to me. Absolutely.

Jimmy

All right. So let's take a break right there. Come back on the other side. I will answer the mail and discuss some more strips.

Liz

All right. Hi, everyone. Have you seen the latest Anger and Happiness Index? Have you admired the photo of Jimmy as Luke Skywalker, or read the details of how Michael co-created the first comic book price guide? Just about every little known subject we mention is referenced on the Unpacking Peanuts website. Peanuts' obscurities are explained further, and other stories are expanded more than you ever wanted to know. From Albert Pason Terhune to Zipitone, Annette Funicello to Zorba the Greek.

Check it all out at unpackingpeanuts.com/obscurities.

Jimmy

All right, and we're back. Liz, I'm hanging out in the mailbox. Do we got anything?

Liz

We do. We got a couple of things. Tim Young writes, I'm listening to you talk about 1992, and I've been reading the strips each year, and I was disappointed that you missed a peanut's obscurity on May 2nd of 1992, when Snoopy's golf game is interrupted by someone shouting, you the dog. I did read a paper in the 90s, the Japan Times, which carried syndicated columnist Mike Royko. I remember him writing about a golf event where some guy kept shouting, you the man.

I can't seem to find a lot about it online, but I do get the impression that this became a kind of meme with people regularly shouting at golf events in 1992. Apparently, this was particularly aimed at the then teenage Tiger Woods, to whom at least one crowd in February of 92 chanted, you the kid.

Michael

Well, I believe that.

Jimmy

I totally believe it, yeah.

Michael

The reason we didn't pick it and we didn't discuss it is we didn't pick the strip, probably because we didn't understand it.

Liz

Because we hate golf strips.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Harold

I hadn't heard that story. That's fascinating. I was thinking on a much broader level. That was obviously a saying that was showing up in the mid-90s. Early 90s. For some reason, when I thought of it, I thought of Arsenio Hall.

Jimmy

Oh, the dog pound?

Harold

The dog pound, yeah.

Jimmy

Yeah, but you would never say you the dog. You would say to someone, yo, dog, you the dog.

Harold

But anyway, this explanation makes a hundred times more sense and is more plausible than me just making random TV connections.

Jimmy

Yeah. The thing about golf drives me crazy. It's like everything you need to know about class in America. If you're playing baseball, they're throwing that ball a hundred miles an hour within inches of your face. And 40,000 people are screaming at you, you suck, you can't hit, right? Golf, the ball is sitting there on a tee, on a beautiful green field. Shh, shh, the rich white guy is playing a game. Shh, drives me nuts. Go ahead, Jack Nicholas, let's see what you can do.

Harold

That is interesting. Yeah, that the decorum in golf is is crazy.

Jimmy

For the dumbest, most absurd thing. And I, my dad's looking down on me from heaven being he's very upset with me right now because he loved golf and got a hole in one once. And it was like the highlight of his life. But barring that golf, stop it.

Harold

Yeah, and Shultz never got a hole in one. He was very disappointed that that never happened.

Jimmy

And I still have my dad's hole in one trophy he got because I couldn't throw it away.

Liz

And we also heard from our pal Shaleigh. She's been busy, but she didn't want us to worry. So she got in touch again.

Jimmy

Thank you, Shaleigh.

Liz

And she writes, I was finishing up part three of 1990. And I was intrigued with the large fan base that Peanuts has from all over the world. I've really loved seeing the huge influence it has on the audience in Japan. If I ever plan on traveling outside of North America, I'll have to check that out with my sister. She's always wanted to visit Japan because she loves the culture and the nerdy stuff.

Harold

Yeah, that would be an amazing trip.

Jimmy

Or maybe you could get a group trip too, because my daughter Anna, that's one of her bucket list places to visit.

Harold

That would be cool. Yeah, we should get one of those Perillo tour things going.

Jimmy

Well, didn't we promise to go to Japan apparently?

Harold

Oh, yeah. Oh my.

Liz

All right.

Jimmy

Because we're going to see the pizza place.

Liz

Oh, right.

Michael

When we hit our million subscriber.

Jimmy

There you go.

Harold

Well, there's the museum in Japan. Maybe the museum in Japan would have us. We've got listeners there. Hello, everybody in Japan. Give us a shout out. Give us a text or an email if you're.

Liz

Actually, and we've been charting very high in South Korea as well.

Jimmy

All right.

Liz

Maybe it could spin around there.

Jimmy

Can you imagine people on the other side of the world listening to our silly podcast? It's like the neatest feeling and so strange. Like, wow.

Harold

Yeah. For all the bad things people say about the Internet, there's pretty amazing mind-blowing things about it that just never, never we could have imagined.

Liz

Never.

Harold

Being in this place.

Jimmy

It is crazy that you can watch or listen to. I mean, this show is a perfect example, but so many of them just deep dives into whatever the thing that your thing is. That's really is cool. And we don't focus on that enough.

Liz

And we got a review on Apple podcasts from Deb P who writes, I've certainly learned a lot of new things about Peanuts and Charles Schulz listening to this podcast, as well as the time periods in which Charles Schulz was drawing the strip. The hosts have an enthusiasm for Schulz's work that shows through in every episode. And they have a lot of fun examining Peanuts year by year, making this a very enjoyable podcast.

They cover Schulz's drawing techniques, what he was doing in a given year, where pop culture was at the same time, and give a running index of happiness and anger in the strip for each given year. They also explain Peanuts' obscurities, those references Schulz made that were timely when he wrote them, but can be head scratchers now. You won't find a better Peanuts podcast out there than this one. So be of good cheer and give this show a listen if you want to learn a lot about Peanuts.

Harold

Oh, thank you, Deb. That's a real honor to hear that.

Liz

That's it for my part of the mail. What do you have, Jimmy?

Jimmy

Well, we got some texts from Captain Billy. Every episode is somebody's first. You have to explain who Liz is. I think CBS carried the specials to the 2000s, then they moved to ABC till Apple bought them. Boo Apple. All right. Well, that's editorial by Captain Billy, not me. But they are producing new specials. The Marcy one is extra good. Oh, that's good to hear.

Liz

Okay.

Jimmy

That's very cool.

Harold

Cool. I'd like to see that. I don't have Apple TV. I may need to splurge given all the new stuff out there.

Liz

It's really an expense. I mean, I think it costs like six bucks.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Harold

Maybe I'll give that a go. All right. Well, thanks Captain Billy.

Jimmy

Yeah. So guys, if you want to keep in touch, remember if you don't keep in touch, I worry, you can shoot us an email. We're unpackingpeanuts at gmail.com. You can call or text the hotline 717-219-4162. You can follow us on social media. I'll give you that litany at the end of the show. But yeah, we always love hearing from you. And you know, as we approach the 2000, the end of the run of Strips, let us know what you'd like for us to do afterwards. That'd be great.

We can figure out what we'd like to do together. Yeah.

Harold

And if you do want to give us a review like Deb just did, we so appreciate that. And it definitely helps people discover Unpacking Peanuts. You might like it.

Jimmy

March 9th. This is really a good one. So Sally is trying to butter some toast and she's very frustrated. She says, this butter is practically frozen. And then she yells at the top of her lungs, nobody told me life was going to be this hard. Charlie Brown comes in and sees her at this point. Sally continues ranting. I hate getting up in the morning. School drives me crazy. And now she with a look of absolute ferocity on her face and frustration is buttering it.

And she says, and now I have to butter my toast with chunky butter. To which Charlie Brown says, chunky butter.

Michael

Yeah, chunky butter is one of the worst things in the world.

Jimmy

The worst.

Michael

But if you leave the butter out, then you got to worry about it going bad.

Harold

Well, yeah, not chunky peanut butter. I'm all for that.

Jimmy

Well, you can leave, but you don't need to refrigerate butter.

Michael

You don't?

Liz

In the summer, you do.

Michael

Okay. Yeah, because I hate it when it breaks the matzahs. Do you hate it when the butter breaks the matzahs?

Jimmy

Oy vey, do I hate it when it breaks the matzahs.

Harold

Poor Sally. She's struggling with life.

Jimmy

Yeah. But no, I totally agree with this. It is a real frustration if you have to put a big chunk of butter and you can't move. That's terrible.

Harold

It's the worst. Microwave.

Jimmy

I love the drawing of her in the fourth panel, because we have another five panel daily here.

Harold

But I mean, yeah, if you saw that just by itself, you might even guess it's not by Schulz. She looks so different.

Jimmy

Yeah. Pure frustration and rage. One big tooth in the middle of her mouth. I find that hard to do as a cartoonist to draw teeth. Because sometimes you want to do it for a cheesy grain or something like that.

Harold

Uh-huh.

Jimmy

I think it's hard to draw cartoon teeth.

Michael

Yeah.

Harold

Really?

Michael

I think it's best not to do it.

Jimmy

Most of the time it is. 90% of the time.

Michael

Yeah.

Harold

For sure. Eliminate all teeth. Yeah. I love drawing cheesy teeth. I mean, it's one of the easiest things for me. So I-

Michael

Real lion teeth. It makes sense.

Harold

It's the qualms we have about the way things look in reality and all that. Yeah.

Jimmy

Well, trade you. You could draw my teeth and I'll draw your trees.

Harold

Deal.

Jimmy

There you go. March 14th. It's a symbolic panel. Linus is sitting there with his blanket and looking up above his head, he sees a storm cloud gathering just over him. He's looking up and he has round- you can see the whites of his eyes, very unpeenutsy looking. Then in panel two, we cut to him in blanket position and from off panel, we hear, oh no. Then we see it's Lucy who is looking at a mess of comic books lying on the floor and she says, all right, who's been in my comic books?

Linus hears this and realizes that he's in trouble, so he quickly ducks underneath his blanket. He sits there with it over his head saying, a storm is approaching, everyone take cover. But Lucy's not following it. She walks right up to Linus under the blanket and says, you've been in my comic books again, haven't you? And she's showing him the wrinkled up magazines. Then she's yelling, I tried to keep them in order and now you've messed them all up. You drive me crazy.

From now on, leave them alone and stay out of my room. Then she walks away. Linus is still just sitting there under the blanket. And when she leaves, he pulls himself out from the blanket, gets back in thumb and blanket position and says, the storm abates, the sun comes out, peace reigns again.

Michael

The man's a poet.

Jimmy

Yeah, this is classic.

Harold

Really bad with comic books.

Liz

But really good with sisters who are angry.

Harold

Yeah. So Michael, did this make you cringe seeing how Linus treats comic books?

Michael

I think I stole a lot of my sister's comic books. I had to read those modeling with Millie.

Jimmy

Right. But now a lot of people don't know, because you did write the first comic book price guide. Was it the Argosy Guide to Comics Fandom? Was that it?

Michael

The Argosy Price Guide.

Jimmy

Argosy Price Guide. You were what, 14?

Michael

15.

Jimmy

15. Okay. So how did you know when you were a kid to keep your comic? Because your collection is stunning. How did you know to keep them so nice and that this was something worth preserving? Were you just that way about everything or comics in particular?

Michael

I knew because my friend Tom and I were avidly racing around LA on our bikes, trying to find comics in old bookstores. They usually had a little pile of stuff, two or three years old for a dime. That was pretty typical. Yeah, so that was the only way we could get old comics. And there was no way you could buy them otherwise. It just, and they basically had no value.

Yeah, and then the thing is one day we stumbled on Collector's Bookstore on Hollywood Boulevard, and we were directed to climb some stairs up into the place where Burt Bloom, the son of the owner of the bookstore, had his comic book Empire. And we never saw anything like this in our lives. This was actually the greatest moment of my life, is the walking in and the room, the table, the walls, all Golden Age comics. Wow. Which we'd never, never seen one.

We'd heard about them, but we'd never seen them. And they were going for, I mean, the stuff I drooled after was like all-star comics in Captain America's. And they were as much as like five bucks each. Wow. All-stars were 10, Captain America's were five.

Harold

So 50 times their original cost.

Michael

I had a 25 cents allowance a week. So obviously I couldn't buy anything, but we worked for Burt for a couple of years.

Jimmy

Oh, wow.

Michael

Mostly like boxing the recent comics. There's an outer room where they just alphabetical order. These are all the detective comics go in this box. Anyway, we would do that. He'd pay us like a dollar an hour in trade. But we learned the value. We learned that Jesus comics can be worth five bucks. Right. So we started taking care of our comic.

Harold

So how did he take care of a comic that was worth $5? Did he stick it in some sort of bag like we do today?

Michael

No, there were no bags. He did have his little cabinet which he let us look in, because there were times when he went out to lunch, and me and Tom would kind of run the place. Yeah, he opened the cabinet, and there was action number one for $100. Wow. So we actually had those in our hands, and looked at them, he trusted us, actually.

Yeah. So eventually, I can't remember, but little plastic bags came along, and we just started realizing that, wow, this might be worth $10 someday, and so when we'd go to buy the new comics every week, we'd go to Farmers Market, and the lady there let us dig through the comics before they were put out on the racks, and we'd look for condition.

Harold

Oh, wow.

Michael

And we'd go through and, there's a little bend in the corner. So generally, the comics I had were like stupendous condition, and they took really good care of them.

Liz

For 65 years, you took really good care of them.

Michael

Well, that led to the Price Guy, which at the time was not a big deal to us, except there was another bookstore that wanted to get, start doing comics, and he had this brilliant idea that, hey, he knew we worked for Burt, and he said, hey, you guys, you know what comics are worth. I'll pay you 20 bucks to compile a Price Guide to Comics, and he was going to sell it, run ads and some of these zines, and thought he can get rich.

So yeah, we made our 20 bucks each, and took like two days, and we just made up prices.

Harold

But you had some idea, right? You remembered what was.

Michael

Well, we did have some idea, but we didn't do any research. We were just lazy. We just thought, wow, 20 bucks.

Liz

Well, you based it on the theory of old books too, right?

Michael

We didn't know anything about anything except that 100 was the top. We're actually number one.

Harold

In retrospect, if you go back and flip through that, how do you feel you did given where everything went?

Michael

Oh, terrible. It's like the worst thing in the world. It was like two 15-year-olds trying not to do any work.

Harold

So how old were you the first time you went into that upper room and saw those comics?

Michael

Oh, 14, 15, 14 probably.

Harold

That must have been amazing.

Michael

Yeah. No, it was. It was, I mean, really, because at that time, you're like an old guy. Yeah, in those days, no, you're no one. The comics did not acknowledge their previous history.

Jimmy

Right.

Michael

I mean, you have these comic characters going back to the 40s, but outside of an occasional, something like maybe a panel or something in the letters column where someone will write in and we'd realize, wow, there are all these superheroes from the 40s. Just the thought of that, we didn't know anything about them, what they looked like. But we did know Captain America because he had come back in Marvel. That was my fantasy was to see a Captain America.

Then we just happened to stumble on a place that had all of them. I could have bought them all for a couple of hundred bucks. But that's the way it goes.

Harold

In what year did the Argosy comic book price site come out?

Michael

65.

Harold

65. Wow. Yeah.

Michael

And they're actually quite valuable because there's only a few copies printed. They were reprinted. Someone did an edition in the 90s, a reproduction of the original price guide. Those are fairly cheap if you want to see how bad it is.

Harold

That's so cool, Michael.

Michael

Yeah, Bill Shelley. And yeah, the official notice, the official word of it being the first price guide was Bill Shelley who wrote books about comic fandom, had a book called The Golden Age of Comic Fandom, and had a page on it saying this is the first price guide. So we didn't even know it was the first price guide. We had no idea. Anyway, I'm going to be forgotten for everything else except for that.

Jimmy

Holy smokes. Do you know how much a high quality copy of the Argosy comic book price guide would get?

Michael

Over a grand. You have what?

Jimmy

$1,200.

Harold

You should have put that in a plastic bag.

Michael

No, I did, but my copy somehow disappeared.

Jimmy

First known comic book price guide, published in 1965, five years before the first published over street. Fewer than 50 copies are known to exist. 7.0 in 2020 went for $1,229.

Michael

That's probably my copy. Oh, I try not to think about it.

Jimmy

I understand that. I understand that. March 16th. I really related to this one. So Lucy walks up to Charlie Brown, who's on the pitcher's mound, and Lucy has her baseball cap on top of her head. But underneath the baseball cap between her head and the cap is her baseball mitt. And she says to Charlie Brown, I can't play today, manager. I couldn't find my glove.

To which Charlie Brown responds, wouldn't it be funny if it turned out that your glove was on your head and your cap on top of your glove? Lucy just turns around, walks away and says, I'll go home and look around again. If I can't find it, just start without me.

Michael

The funny thing, well, this is a funny strip. But here we have a comic strip, a funny comic strip running for, I have to do the math, 43 years. Charlie Brown never makes jokes.

Jimmy

Yeah.

Michael

This is like as close to a joke as he would be.

Harold

He is a dry, dry joke teller.

Jimmy

Yeah. I remember there was a big deal when we got to fifth grade, because in fifth grade, you could use the soda machine at lunch. Up to fourth grade, you had to get milk or just drink something out of your thermos, but in fifth grade, you could use the soda machine. I was standing in line waiting for it, and I took one quarter out and I couldn't find my second quarter. So I took the first quarter and I put it between my lips, hold it there.

Then I'm patting around trying desperately to find my second quarter, and I find the second quarter, and I put it in the machine, but now I can't find the first quarter. I'm just patting myself on my back and just look at my friend, Frankie standing behind me, looking at me like you're the dumbest person I've ever met. So I relate, and that's not getting any better. That was fifth grade. I would have 600 graphic novels today, published today, if I wasn't always looking for a pen.

Michael

The Apple Pencils. Mine disappears at least once a day.

Jimmy

That's the most horrifying thing because they're not cheap.

Michael

They should put a little clip on it so it doesn't roll.

Jimmy

Yeah. You know, you could do Fine My iPhone on everything. Can you do Fine My Apple Pencil?

Liz

Well, but it'll just say it's at your house.

Jimmy

That's true. Yeah. Right. Well, that good. Yeah.

Harold

It's in your mouth.

Jimmy

March 17th. Oh, boy, this is great. Snoopy is bringing his pal Woodstock to try out for the baseball team. So Woodstock has a tiny little baseball cap and a tiny little baseball glove. And Snoopy says to him, now, when we ask him if you can play, don't let him know you're so short. Then they walk up to the pitcher's mound, smiles on both of their faces. Charlie Brown is kind of talking to them and he says, you have a friend who wants to play on our team.

But because he's taller, so much taller than Woodstock, he just says, where? Because he didn't even look down to see him. And we see an unbelievably frustrated and depressed Woodstock down there by Charlie Brown's shins.

Michael

I was so excited when I read this, because I went like, oh, this is going to be a great sequence. I really want to see Woodstock try to field a hard at the line drive. It didn't happen.

Jimmy

What a missed opportunity, I think, to have Woodstock on the team. Right. Right. It could have been funny. You could even see him like co-playing, but he could be in Snoopy's hat or something and playing shit stuff with him.

Michael

Right.

Jimmy

Yeah. I love Woodstock in the baseball cap.

Liz

He can't be any worse than Lucy.

Harold

Yeah.

Jimmy

Right.

Harold

I love the little jumble of the Woodstock hash marks in a big pile, in the middle of the balloon. I would love to have known what that sounded like.

Jimmy

Yeah. March 21st, Charlie Brown, in his role as manager, is handing out the new baseball caps. And that's what we see in our first panel. Panel two, Lucy just arrives at the field saying, what's going on? And now we see Charlie Brown has all the caps out. Standing on the pitcher's mound, he's gonna start handing them out. He goes, and everyone who made the team this year gets a new cap. Schroeder's the first to come up and he says, here you go, Schroeder, you deserve it.

Puts the cap on his head. Then he tosses one to Pigpen and saying, here you are, Pigpen, try to keep it clean. And then he even puts one on Snoopy's head saying, this is for you, Snoopy ol pal. Lucy is watching this. And then finally he gives one to Linus saying, here you go, Linus, a brand new cap. And then Lucy is standing there just looking at Charlie Brown. Not a word passes between them.

Then Charlie Brown reaches out for something, turns around and gives Lucy a new cap, but it's not a baseball cap, it's a dunce cap. And she walks back out into the outfield saying, I don't know if I've made the team or not. New cap day in Little League was the big day. But I knew kids that signed up for Little League just to get the cap and then quit.

Harold

It's like going to the free cap day at the minor league baseball.

Jimmy

Yeah. Yeah. So this was just a real flashback for me for New Cap Day. I still have some of my little caps.

Harold

I mean, talk about Charlie Brown's dry humor. Totally deadpan, you know, passing this out. He was prepared.

Jimmy

Yeah, he prepared this.

Harold

Yeah, right. So there's something to be said for the Charlie Brown humor. It's definitely there. And this is the time he gets to be kind of the Oprah Winfrey of the pitchers, man. You get a cap.

Jimmy

All right, guys, so how about we we call it there? I think we got some good strips coming up, but they deserve all the time and attention we can give to them. So let's push those back to next week. And we'd love to have you guys come back next week. And if you want to keep this conversation going between now and then, there's a couple of different ways you can do it. First, we would love for you to go over to our website, unpackingpeanuts.com.

Sign up for the great Peanuts re-read and get that one email a month, letting you know what we're going to be covering. And also you can shoot us an email, unpackingpeanutsatgmail.com. You can give us a call on our hotline, 717-219-4162, or you can find us on social media. We are at UnpackPeanuts on Instagram and threads, and at UnpackingPeanuts on Facebook, Blue Sky, and YouTube. And remember, I want to hear from you because when I don't hear, I worry.

So with all that said, come back next week for more 1993 from Michael, Harold and Liz. This is Jimmy saying, be of good cheer.

Harold

Yes, be of good cheer.

Liz

Be of good cheer.

Michael

Yes, be of good cheer. Yes.

Liz

Yes.

Harold

Yes.

Liz

Yes. Unpacking Peanuts is copyrighted by Jimmy Gownley, Michael Cohen, Harold Buchholz, and Liz Sumner. Produced and edited by Liz Sumner. Music by Michael Cohen. Additional voiceover by Aziza Shukralla Clark. For more from the show, follow UnpackPeanuts on Instagram and threads. Unpacking Peanuts on Facebook, Blue Sky, and YouTube. For more about Jimmy, Michael, and Harold, visit unpackingpeanuts.com. Have a wonderful day, and thanks for listening. Mash up.

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