Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
Itâs interesting what a radical departure theyâve gone for, both graphically and tonally.
Visually, Jaimesâ NANCY seems to be a somewhat looser version of Bushmillerâs world, and in terms of the writing, weâre back to the short, minimalist dialogue that Gilchrist originally replicated before developing the comic into a surprisingly personal vehicle for his own observations and interests.
Whether you were a fan of Gilchristsâ take or not, to go from a sentimental, visually lush continuity to a series of dry, waspish gags drawn in a minimalist aesthetic is quite a jolt. Because Gilchrist had fleshed out the characters with backstories colored by an overarching sweetness, this is a much more aggressive reset than Mark Lasky to Jerry Scott, or even from Scott to early Gilchrist. Itâll be interesting to see how many readers who came to love Gilchristâs NANCY will remain on board for this new incarnation.
Iâll stick it out for a while; see how it goes. I did prefer the Gilchristsâ style, but I am familiar enough with the original Ernie Bushmiller strips (and even the older âFritzi Ritzâ comics) to tell how true to the spirit of the original she stays with it.
. Yesterday, Nancy looked more like a cut-and-paste figures from a cheap graphics art app youâd find on your cell phone. And the dialogue wasnât funny at all (I donât even want to know what that line about cornbread was referring to). Todayâs strip was a marked improvement. The art style is still minimalistic. But all least Nancy looked like Nancy. And this time, they actually had a funny gag. I donât like the jaundiced skin tones though. And that excuse about artists not having color control in newspapers during the week falls flat. Gilchrist and the others had no problems with their flesh tones.
As a life long comic fan, many of my favorites are drawn by new artists, and I still enjoy reading them. But not this time. No warmth or artistic talent. I find it depressing, so goodbye Nancy. At least I still have Gasoline Alley and Dick Tracy.
iâve been reading nancy for over 50 years. iâm going to give this new version a try for a bit. itâs way too soon (only 2 days) to make any kind of judgement about anything.
What Iâm wondering is how long does the newcomer to Three Rocks continue to offer observations on itâs most famous citizen before the characters go solo? (And will Fritzi and Phil still be married in the storyline?)
I like the gag here â very Bushmiller. But the art looks labored. Bushmillerâs style was that it was very simple, but you could tell he was a terrific artist, with a very smooth line and a very easy look. This doesnât look like that.
And itâs a small point, but I dislike the font lettering.
What is sadder than long-term Nancy fans leaving after only two days is the predominance of snarky, mean-spirited âgood riddanceâ comments. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, and when you disagree, it doesnât give you license to make a fool of yourself. But then again, you are the fool, so why not?
I am NOT a happy camper at all! Iâve been reading âNancyâ for over 50 years and Iâm not a fan of this minimalist art! This just doesnât look right to me. Might have to let this go!
Two days now, first day negative comment toward Nancy the child, today just made no sense, actually one character saying âare such a pairâ and Nancy responding like she heard it..do not like the general feeling of this new comic.
I LOVE âDISEMBODIED HEADâ!! Itâs so surreal. Pull back and show that it is on a stick, or maybe a tentacle monster with a human head. It just hovers in there, like a shy straight man, unable to come out from behind the vaudevillian curtain and reveal his tacky red-white stripe suit made from matchsticks and gum wrappers.
I am in my 60s and have been reading Nancy as far back as I remember, back when Ernie Bushmiller used to draw Nancy. I am just glad to read her, regardless of who draws the strip. For what itâs worth, I do prefer Oliviaâs style to Guyâs.
Day 2 has me even further convinced of this new versionâs complete superiority to the last cartoonist: a funny Busmiller-type gag, clean beautiful art and the artist isnât name dropping to further his own station.
I know I said I would give Olivia Jaimes a couple of weeks to hit her stride, but I am starting to doubt I will even last through the first week. Even the âFlashbackâ 1930âs Ernie Bushmiller sepia tone strips that Guy Gilchrist used back in January had more character in their artwork. Except for the earbuds, this looks like something drawn and colored by my 6 year old grandchildren.
This makes me so nostalgic â for the days when comic strips were drawn by talented artists who had a sense of humor. Ernie Bushmiller is turning in his grave. Nancy should have died with him.
Iâve been on both sides of this. Iâve had comics I love change, and Iâve had to develop my own comic for newspapers and endure comments filled with doubts. Honestly? I hated when comics I loved changedâat first!! Then I often fell back in love over time. Great example, I love âFor Better or Worseâ, and I was devastated when it ended and started over. I was born in 1981, I felt like I grew up with Elizabeth. Now, just as we were both adults and life was about to get interestingâshe was a little baby all over again??Now years later, I feel like Iâve gotten to know Elly in a way I never did as a kid. And as a Mom of two little kiddos, Iâm so happy it started over. Itâs like checking in with a friend who just gets it every morning.
Change itself is terrible; we probably all have a favorite warm fuzzy sweatshirt we love. When I had to develop my own comic from a webcomic to a newspaper strip, some readers understandably had a lot of fears and doubts. In the first weeks of the relaunch, I stayed offline. Some readers took anything as a sign that my comic had been dumbed down, that my artwork was going to be destroyed, I was never going to be able to share longer stories again, etc. I had to hang in there and wait it out, because I knew what I had planned, but there was no way to just reveal it all at once in a few panels in the first week.
This isnât Bushmiller and this isnât Gilchristâthis is Jaimes. We donât know whatâs coming! Thereâs likely no comparison, (how often are two cartoonists exactly alike?) but thatâs a little exciting! Iâm delighted to see comic history unfold before our eyes. This doesnât happen everyday. Can you imagine if there had been a comments section when the comic originally shifted its focus from Aunt Fritz to Nancy??? (Ok, omg, donât you kinda wish there was? To sneak a peek at? Ha! There are probably letters to editors out there saved somewhere). Iâm looking forward to seeing where this new artist takes us!
As Wally Wood is supposed to have opined, the only reason Ernie Bushmillerâs Nancy was one of the most-read strips is that by the time you decided it wasnât worth reading, youâd already read it. When Bushmiller admirers explain his merits, I can see what theyâre talking about, but I canât see becoming a fan myself. With Jaimes, I canât even see what her admirers are talking about. Iâll give her one more week, but I would never even have signed on to the strip if I hadnât discovered just last year that the Gilchrist version was occasionally worth reading.
I like it, so far. Very minimalist; not as surreal as yesterdayâs, but reminiscent of Bushmillerâs humor â with updates. I donât think the color is necessarily off: maybe Sluggo is meant to be non-white now? Itâs really up to the artist.
Like everyone here, I had my doubts, but I also still loves it at the same time. I love the call-back to the original art style. And I think that the modern twist on jokes (this is how fresh comedians and people under 30-40 make wisecracks now) was not only much needed, but offers a chance for more new audiences to get in on Nancy and stay with her to the end. I can honestly say that this strip made me chuckle and yesterday was the first time Iâd ever actually laughed at Nancy. I DO believe that there should be a little more background detail and I hope eventually the cartoonist/narrator lets the characters do their own thing. If you want examples of future classic Nancy work that Olivia has drawn up that is really quite cute, John Glynn made a post about that on the GC blog. I look forward to seeing Nancy progress, rebrand, but still stay classy!
Just putting my two cents in: I had stopped reading because of Gilcrest. Not because of his style, but because I found him to be a hypocrite. He claimed to be so religious, but on his social media he was looking at pictures that wereâŠquestionable.Iâm back now to give the new cartoonist a chance.
JLG Premium Member almost 7 years ago
Itâs interesting what a radical departure theyâve gone for, both graphically and tonally.
Visually, Jaimesâ NANCY seems to be a somewhat looser version of Bushmillerâs world, and in terms of the writing, weâre back to the short, minimalist dialogue that Gilchrist originally replicated before developing the comic into a surprisingly personal vehicle for his own observations and interests.
Whether you were a fan of Gilchristsâ take or not, to go from a sentimental, visually lush continuity to a series of dry, waspish gags drawn in a minimalist aesthetic is quite a jolt. Because Gilchrist had fleshed out the characters with backstories colored by an overarching sweetness, this is a much more aggressive reset than Mark Lasky to Jerry Scott, or even from Scott to early Gilchrist. Itâll be interesting to see how many readers who came to love Gilchristâs NANCY will remain on board for this new incarnation.
maybeinthenextworld almost 7 years ago
what a delightful caprice! Youâve done it again, Olivia. Viva La Jaimes!
ComicsInMyPants Premium Member almost 7 years ago
Well, Iâm ready to take the leap off board.
Rosette almost 7 years ago
My only complaint it Sluggoâs skin tone.
He looks like a corpse.
KaiserFrazer67 almost 7 years ago
Iâll stick it out for a while; see how it goes. I did prefer the Gilchristsâ style, but I am familiar enough with the original Ernie Bushmiller strips (and even the older âFritzi Ritzâ comics) to tell how true to the spirit of the original she stays with it.
coratelli almost 7 years ago
Who is the guy in the first panel?
Catmom almost 7 years ago
I miss Guy! The colors are so depressing, why is Sluggo green?
ericbrower almost 7 years ago
. Yesterday, Nancy looked more like a cut-and-paste figures from a cheap graphics art app youâd find on your cell phone. And the dialogue wasnât funny at all (I donât even want to know what that line about cornbread was referring to). Todayâs strip was a marked improvement. The art style is still minimalistic. But all least Nancy looked like Nancy. And this time, they actually had a funny gag. I donât like the jaundiced skin tones though. And that excuse about artists not having color control in newspapers during the week falls flat. Gilchrist and the others had no problems with their flesh tones.
William Ryan JR almost 7 years ago
As a life long comic fan, many of my favorites are drawn by new artists, and I still enjoy reading them. But not this time. No warmth or artistic talent. I find it depressing, so goodbye Nancy. At least I still have Gasoline Alley and Dick Tracy.
Dobber Premium Member almost 7 years ago
These kids arenât even remotely cute. Iâm out of here.
scpandich almost 7 years ago
I would think that fans of Nancy would wait more than two days before writing it off.
billytheclam almost 7 years ago
iâve been reading nancy for over 50 years. iâm going to give this new version a try for a bit. itâs way too soon (only 2 days) to make any kind of judgement about anything.
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member almost 7 years ago
I was told Nancy was good again after Glichristâs saccharine travesty, and lo, it is so.
jrankin1959 almost 7 years ago
What Iâm wondering is how long does the newcomer to Three Rocks continue to offer observations on itâs most famous citizen before the characters go solo? (And will Fritzi and Phil still be married in the storyline?)
G B almost 7 years ago
I;m removing Nancy from the my comic list, the drawings are terrible the colors look like the characters belong in a morgue.
Richard L Lewis Premium Member almost 7 years ago
Not impressed with the artwork at all. Someone needs to practice the old style.
Ignatz Premium Member almost 7 years ago
I like the gag here â very Bushmiller. But the art looks labored. Bushmillerâs style was that it was very simple, but you could tell he was a terrific artist, with a very smooth line and a very easy look. This doesnât look like that.
And itâs a small point, but I dislike the font lettering.
Darryl Heine almost 7 years ago
Aunt Fritzi wonât be in Olivia Jaimesâ Nancy anyway?
Jan C almost 7 years ago
What is sadder than long-term Nancy fans leaving after only two days is the predominance of snarky, mean-spirited âgood riddanceâ comments. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, and when you disagree, it doesnât give you license to make a fool of yourself. But then again, you are the fool, so why not?
jakiken Premium Member almost 7 years ago
I am NOT a happy camper at all! Iâve been reading âNancyâ for over 50 years and Iâm not a fan of this minimalist art! This just doesnât look right to me. Might have to let this go!
lambert2015 almost 7 years ago
Two days now, first day negative comment toward Nancy the child, today just made no sense, actually one character saying âare such a pairâ and Nancy responding like she heard it..do not like the general feeling of this new comic.
katina.cooper almost 7 years ago
Nancy looks a lot like she did when this first started back when Fritzi first saw her.
mountainside87 Premium Member almost 7 years ago
They look mean. And Sluggoâs coloring is terrible. And why are there random people in the strip, making comments about them?
Leslie B. almost 7 years ago
I LOVE âDISEMBODIED HEADâ!! Itâs so surreal. Pull back and show that it is on a stick, or maybe a tentacle monster with a human head. It just hovers in there, like a shy straight man, unable to come out from behind the vaudevillian curtain and reveal his tacky red-white stripe suit made from matchsticks and gum wrappers.
goodman.rv1 almost 7 years ago
I am in my 60s and have been reading Nancy as far back as I remember, back when Ernie Bushmiller used to draw Nancy. I am just glad to read her, regardless of who draws the strip. For what itâs worth, I do prefer Oliviaâs style to Guyâs.
linwoodbragg almost 7 years ago
Day 2 has me even further convinced of this new versionâs complete superiority to the last cartoonist: a funny Busmiller-type gag, clean beautiful art and the artist isnât name dropping to further his own station.
johnzakour Premium Member almost 7 years ago
Actually, I thought this gag was pretty cute. I know what itâs like for a strip to change creators and itâs a process.
h.v.greenman almost 7 years ago
I know I said I would give Olivia Jaimes a couple of weeks to hit her stride, but I am starting to doubt I will even last through the first week. Even the âFlashbackâ 1930âs Ernie Bushmiller sepia tone strips that Guy Gilchrist used back in January had more character in their artwork. Except for the earbuds, this looks like something drawn and colored by my 6 year old grandchildren.
Thomas Pallen Premium Member almost 7 years ago
Terrible âartworkâ â like so many other modern âcartoonistsâ, this woman simply cannot draw, has no color sense, and nothing to say.
rabbitwarren almost 7 years ago
A definite jump in quality. Writing, art, etc.
lager.lager.lager almost 7 years ago
These comments are such a hoot. Itâs the same predictable response every time thereâs a change.
âIt was better before.â
âI donât like change.â
âI know whatâs best for everyone.â
âNot only will I never read Nancy again, but Iâll never read comics again because this one violates all that is holy.â
Get a life.
LV1951 almost 7 years ago
If it ainât broke! Donât fix it! Not my Nancy! :(
Mr. Lucas Brice almost 7 years ago
This makes me so nostalgic â for the days when comic strips were drawn by talented artists who had a sense of humor. Ernie Bushmiller is turning in his grave. Nancy should have died with him.
Georgia Dunn creator almost 7 years ago
Iâve been on both sides of this. Iâve had comics I love change, and Iâve had to develop my own comic for newspapers and endure comments filled with doubts. Honestly? I hated when comics I loved changedâat first!! Then I often fell back in love over time. Great example, I love âFor Better or Worseâ, and I was devastated when it ended and started over. I was born in 1981, I felt like I grew up with Elizabeth. Now, just as we were both adults and life was about to get interestingâshe was a little baby all over again??Now years later, I feel like Iâve gotten to know Elly in a way I never did as a kid. And as a Mom of two little kiddos, Iâm so happy it started over. Itâs like checking in with a friend who just gets it every morning.
Change itself is terrible; we probably all have a favorite warm fuzzy sweatshirt we love. When I had to develop my own comic from a webcomic to a newspaper strip, some readers understandably had a lot of fears and doubts. In the first weeks of the relaunch, I stayed offline. Some readers took anything as a sign that my comic had been dumbed down, that my artwork was going to be destroyed, I was never going to be able to share longer stories again, etc. I had to hang in there and wait it out, because I knew what I had planned, but there was no way to just reveal it all at once in a few panels in the first week.
This isnât Bushmiller and this isnât Gilchristâthis is Jaimes. We donât know whatâs coming! Thereâs likely no comparison, (how often are two cartoonists exactly alike?) but thatâs a little exciting! Iâm delighted to see comic history unfold before our eyes. This doesnât happen everyday. Can you imagine if there had been a comments section when the comic originally shifted its focus from Aunt Fritz to Nancy??? (Ok, omg, donât you kinda wish there was? To sneak a peek at? Ha! There are probably letters to editors out there saved somewhere). Iâm looking forward to seeing where this new artist takes us!
Jefano Premium Member almost 7 years ago
As Wally Wood is supposed to have opined, the only reason Ernie Bushmillerâs Nancy was one of the most-read strips is that by the time you decided it wasnât worth reading, youâd already read it. When Bushmiller admirers explain his merits, I can see what theyâre talking about, but I canât see becoming a fan myself. With Jaimes, I canât even see what her admirers are talking about. Iâll give her one more week, but I would never even have signed on to the strip if I hadnât discovered just last year that the Gilchrist version was occasionally worth reading.
InquireWithin almost 7 years ago
I like it, so far. Very minimalist; not as surreal as yesterdayâs, but reminiscent of Bushmillerâs humor â with updates. I donât think the color is necessarily off: maybe Sluggo is meant to be non-white now? Itâs really up to the artist.
TRiche almost 7 years ago
Like everyone here, I had my doubts, but I also still loves it at the same time. I love the call-back to the original art style. And I think that the modern twist on jokes (this is how fresh comedians and people under 30-40 make wisecracks now) was not only much needed, but offers a chance for more new audiences to get in on Nancy and stay with her to the end. I can honestly say that this strip made me chuckle and yesterday was the first time Iâd ever actually laughed at Nancy. I DO believe that there should be a little more background detail and I hope eventually the cartoonist/narrator lets the characters do their own thing. If you want examples of future classic Nancy work that Olivia has drawn up that is really quite cute, John Glynn made a post about that on the GC blog. I look forward to seeing Nancy progress, rebrand, but still stay classy!
fuzz3942 almost 7 years ago
Not impressed. Will give it the rest of the month.
jmw90 almost 7 years ago
Not sure what to think yet. Iâll give it a little time but so far not a fan. Hope Olivia develops a sense of humor and maybe takes an art class.
MJ Premium Member almost 7 years ago
So, has anyone been able to explain yesterdayâs âjokeâ yet? Just wondering.
Arthur Anderson Premium Member almost 7 years ago
This âartistâ is garbage. So long to a strip that Iâve read for 50 years. Thank God there is now âNancy Classicsâ on this website.
richardjohnsonvp almost 7 years ago
Well, better than yesterdayâs. Iâm willing to give it a month or so, anyhow.
Max Starman Jones almost 7 years ago
Jughead lost the cap, left the Archie comics, and became commentator for this comic.
EOCostello almost 7 years ago
Scratching my head a little bit, but still willing to give the artist-writer a chanceâŠ
Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member almost 7 years ago
Thats the kind of gag that you would see in an original Nancy. Just brought the props up to date.
I like it.
wilburygirl almost 7 years ago
Just putting my two cents in: I had stopped reading because of Gilcrest. Not because of his style, but because I found him to be a hypocrite. He claimed to be so religious, but on his social media he was looking at pictures that wereâŠquestionable.Iâm back now to give the new cartoonist a chance.
emmikatjohnson almost 7 years ago
True friendship is maintaining that rhythm instead of taking both buds for yourself.
DRMFeint almost 7 years ago
I like this but i feel like jaimes has nancy to addicted to her phone
LochNessMonster almost 7 years ago
Very relatable!
Iwa Iniki about 6 years ago
I do not know what they are supposed to look like; there I cannot comment on their looks.But I would like to know, âWhat is an earbudâ?
Iwa Iniki about 6 years ago
Should be therefore, not there.
jrankin1959 6 months ago
Six years gone, eh? Time fliesâŠ