Gasoline Alley by Jim Scancarelli for January 11, 2014

  1. Missing large
    cpalmeresq  almost 11 years ago

    I have a good feeling about this.

     •  Reply
  2. Image002
    hsawlrae  almost 11 years ago

    “OK, here goes. I don’t remember.”

     •  Reply
  3. Stormdrainnodump
    pelican47  almost 11 years ago

    OOOOOhhhhhh Good!

     •  Reply
  4. Koala
    miqq1234  almost 11 years ago

    ….welcome to a ride down memory lane

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    therese_callahan2002  almost 11 years ago

    A portrait that ages? They must have read about Dorian Gray.

     •  Reply
  6. Rick
    davidf42  almost 11 years ago

    I can’t wait. This is gonna be good!

     •  Reply
  7. It  s a gas station    by todd sullest
    Max Starman Jones  almost 11 years ago

    I have been waiting a long time for this arc. At least six years!

     •  Reply
  8. Th
    marvee  almost 11 years ago

    Good! I was afraid this was going a different way, and it may eventually, but we’ll be more ready for it.

     •  Reply
  9. Snapshot10
    battle of plattsburgh  almost 11 years ago

    Pull up a chair…..

     •  Reply
  10. Bandit 2
    jhnd20  almost 11 years ago

    Oh, I like this…

     •  Reply
  11. Missing large
    tomfitzmorris  almost 11 years ago

    What an opportunity! Now Walt can begin reminiscing about Doc and Avery and Bill and their cars, but in a way that brings the circumstances up to the modern age. Then he finds Skeezix, and the whole cycle since 1918 can begin all over again. And Walt doesn’t have to die.

    Like, who alive remembers all the way back to the beginning of the strip? The story could go any which way, and occasionally Old Walt will reappear, still telling his story to a girl reporter who gets older as years go by.

    This would be great!

    Do it!

    Tastefully yours,Tom Fitzmorris

     •  Reply
  12. It  s a gas station    by todd sullest
    Max Starman Jones  almost 11 years ago

    I wish go comics would go along with this by replacing Joel in the banner and putting Walt back.

     •  Reply
  13. It  s a gas station    by todd sullest
    Max Starman Jones  almost 11 years ago

    14 straight days of Walt and counting. I love it! (in case anyone hasn’t figured this out)

     •  Reply
  14. Spooky
    unca jim  almost 11 years ago

    “The old guy is corny.Bring back lame brained Gretchen, Slim, or Rufus and Joel the prophet.”~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~14,000+ people just turned around and gaped at you, aghast at what you just said !!

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    Larry L Stout  almost 11 years ago

    Start of what could be the greatest story line in many a year. This what I like to see; hope it will last many, many weeks.

     •  Reply
  16. Solange
    ewalnut  almost 11 years ago

    A series of stories taking place at different points in time would be great.

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    pepnkids  almost 11 years ago

    This is goning to be real BORING!

     •  Reply
  18. Image002
    hsawlrae  almost 11 years ago

    Get LOST, bozo.

     •  Reply
  19. John w kennedy 2010 square
    John W Kennedy Premium Member almost 11 years ago

    Professionals still use more traditional cameras when they can. Better lenses, better flash, better control of brightness, focus, and motion blur, and many other kinds of good stuff. They’re digital now, of course, but otherwise they’re about the same. Indeed, for quite a few years, many simply used their old high-end film cameras with the backs replaced by new digital backs; I imagine some still do.

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    blbtigers34 Premium Member almost 11 years ago

    My Dad was a young man in Detroit when he started reading Gasoline Alley. That was 1926. I picked it up from him after he died ion 1989. I would love for Walt to go back to those 1920s days. Jim S. can do what Lynn Johnston is doing on For Better or For Worse and reprise those long ago stories.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    Joeytrom  almost 11 years ago

    This is their chance to start all over from the beginning, as another commenter stated, with a modern touch. A complete reset.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    3pibgorn9  almost 11 years ago

    Go for it, Walt.

     •  Reply
  23. Schulzsense 0
    Paul1963  almost 11 years ago

    Bringing the story up to modern times would eliminate arguably the key moment in the story: Walt’s adoption of Skeezix. If a 23-year-old man found a baby abandoned on his doorstep at any point in the last fifty years or so, there’s no way he would be allowed to retain custody of the child. The baby would be taken away, made a ward of the state and eventually placed in a foster home. Instead of being the first piece of Walt’s extended family, Skeezix would just be a story to be brought up every now and then: “Hey, what about when Walt found that baby on his doorstep? Man, that was weird. Wonder what ever happened to the kid?”

     •  Reply
  24. Nermal
    Willow Mt Lyon  almost 11 years ago

    I want to hear it, and it should be recorded with a copy given to each grandchild. That is the only way my children heard their grandfather’s voice because he passed away long before they were born.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment