Frank and Ernest | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Bob Thaves Tom Thaves |
Website | www |
Current status/schedule | Current daily strip |
Launch date | November 6, 1972[1] |
Syndicate(s) | Newspaper Enterprise Association |
Genre(s) | Humor, Satire |
Frank and Ernest is an American comic strip created and illustrated by Bob Thaves and later Tom Thaves. [2] It debuted on November 6, 1972, and has since been published daily in over 1,200 newspapers. [3]
The strip is distributed to Spanish-speaking countries as Justo y Franco. [4]
Bob Thaves died on August 1, 2006. His son, Tom Thaves, has since taken over production of the strip. [5]
Thaves won the National Cartoonists Society's Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for 1983, 1984, and 1986 for his work on the strip. Other awards include the Mencken Award for Free Speech and designation as a Champion of Creativity by the American Creativity Association in 2006. [6]
A comic strip is a sequence of cartoons, arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often serialized, with text in balloons and captions. Traditionally, throughout the 20th and into the 21st century, these have been published in newspapers and magazines, with daily horizontal strips printed in black-and-white in newspapers, while Sunday papers offered longer sequences in special color comics sections. With the advent of the internet, online comic strips began to appear as webcomics.
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Notable events of 2005 in comics.
Notable events of 2006 in comics.
The Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA) is an editorial column and comic strip newspaper syndication service based in the United States and established in 1902. The oldest syndicate still in operation, the NEA was originally a secondary news service to the Scripps Howard News Service; it later evolved into a general syndicate best known for syndicating the comic strips Alley Oop, Our Boarding House, Freckles and His Friends, The Born Loser, Frank and Ernest, and Captain Easy / Wash Tubbs; in addition to an annual Christmas comic strip. Along with United Feature Syndicate, the NEA was part of United Media from 1978 to 2011, and is now a division of Andrews McMeel Syndication. The NEA once selected college All-America teams, and presented awards in professional football and professional [NBA] basketball.
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Robert Thaves was the creator of the comic strip Frank and Ernest, which began in 1972.
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