Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson for September 30, 2014
Transcript:
Hobbes: "So what's it like being on tv?" Calvin: "It's great!" Calvin: "Now that I'm on television, I'm different from everybody else! I'm famous! Important!" Calvin: "Since everyone knows me, everything I do now is newsworthy. I'm a cultural icon" Hobbes: "I think your antenna needs adjusting" Calvin: "Watch, I'll use my prestige to endorse a product!"
BE THIS GUY about 10 years ago
Does he get residuals?
ORMouseworks about 10 years ago
What are the call letters for your TV show, Calvin? ;)
Yngvar Følling about 10 years ago
You don’t need to “think.” He’s made his view on the matter abundantly clear. No cartoon. No merchandising. The strip is the finished product and that’s all.
Ray49FL about 10 years ago
everybody’s a dreamer and everybody’s a star
Richard Howland-Bolton Premium Member about 10 years ago
He’s just like Gilbert Harding! (“I have indigestion, but I don’t suffer from it”) (sorry to those who don’t remember the 1950’s in the UK)
Hobbes Premium Member about 10 years ago
Don’t look now, but I think Calvin has been framed.I’m surprised that Calvin even knew what the wordendorse-ment.
Click here: B.C. (July 17, 2008)Click here: The Argyle Sweater (October 26, 2009)Click here: Dilbert (March 30, 2011)Click here: Peanuts (August 24, 2004)Hobbes Premium Member about 10 years ago
Note that what Calvin is describing today is the opposite of Bill Watterson: Simply being seen on TV makes someone a cultural icon, worthy of endorsing commercial products. Bill, on the other hand, prefers not to be recognized by people, and he opposed creating commercial Calvin and Hobbes products, even though he could have benefited from them financially. Bill does not want everyone to know him when they see him, and he does not want everything that he does to somehow become newsworthy.
Hobbes Premium Member about 10 years ago
The Peanuts strip that I posted above has the wrong date on it — August 2004 was when it was rerun in the newspapers (after Charles Schulz died in 2000). The original date of this strip was August 25, 1970, back when groceries were less expensive, and when grocery clerks keyed in the prices on the register rather than electronically scanning the items. Today, because of computer technology, there are even fewer world-famous grocery clerks.
rshive about 10 years ago
Chocolate coated Sugar Bombs!
Hobbes Premium Member about 10 years ago
@Grog: They were under-appreciated.
mourdac Premium Member about 10 years ago
Calvin – the original reality tv star.
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member about 10 years ago
Weirdly prescient. He IS a cultural icon. Mazel tov, Bill.
Charlie Fogwhistle about 10 years ago
Wow! He’s a celebrity. A legend in his own mind.
josh_bisbee about 10 years ago
He did mention that, initially, he wasn’t opposed to a C&H cartoon. The main reason it never happened was because he would have to be the one to choose the voices, and he preferred to have the readers choose what they sound like.
jbeckstead16 about 10 years ago
Anyone born after 2010 won’t understand what Hobbes meant.XD
CalvinObvious about 10 years ago
Calvin and his pet tiger Hobbes are playing television. Calvin says he is no famous. Hobbes thinks they should call Uncle Max.
Dr_Fogg about 10 years ago
Justin Bieber butt comes to mind here.
ACTIVIST1234 about 10 years ago
He speaketh for YouTube!
Fan o’ Lio. about 10 years ago
This was an unauthorized knock-off.
Number Three about 10 years ago
I wonder if Calvin will have his own advert?
xxx
Susie Derkins D: about 10 years ago
Let’s see the commercials of Calvin.
susan.e.a.c about 10 years ago
Calvin’s on the right track. Too many people in the media think their opinion matters more than the rest of ours.