HEY LUCKY! THE FAR SIDE IS BACK!

Jim_S

Resident Curmudgeon
Gold Site Supporter
It's Finally Happening: The Far Side is BACK!
BY JEFF REYNOLDS JUL 11, 2020 4:45 PM EST

https://pjmedia.com/culture/jeff-re...inally-happening-the-far-side-is-back-n633225

Ahhhh, some good news for the weekend, after a 2020 that has left a lot to be desired. The Far Side is BACK!

This week, very quietly, and very irregularly (appropriate, no?), Gary Larson introduced a New Stuff section of his Far Side website. He published three new cartoons on Monday, July 7, and hopefully more soon.

Gary Larson teases return of ‘The Far Side.’

Larson retired The Far Side in 1995, but teased a return in September 2019. In New Stuff, Larson explains the pressures of creating his daily cartoon on deadline, and finally rediscovering his passion with new digital tools:

I don’t want to mislead anyone here. This corner of the website—“New Stuff”—is not a resurrection of The Far Side daily cartoons. (Well, not exactly, anyway—like the proverbial tiger and its stripes, I’m pretty much stuck with my sense of humor. Aren’t we all?) The thing is, I thoroughly enjoyed my career as a syndicated cartoonist, and I hope, in spirit at least, we had some laughs together. But after fifteen years of meeting deadlines, well, blah blah blah … you know the rest. The day after I retired from syndication, it felt good not to draw on a deadline. And after moving on to other interests, drawing just wasn’t on my to-do list. Things change. But then a few years ago—and returning to the subject at hand—*something happened in my life, and it started with a clogged pen.

Despite my retirement, I still had intermittent connections to cartooning, including my wife’s and my personal Christmas card. Once a year, I’d sit myself down to take on Santa, and every year it began with the same ritual: me cursing at, and then cleaning out, my clogged pen. (Apparently, the concept of cleaning it before putting it away each year was just too elusive for me.) As problems go, this is admittedly not exactly on the scale of global warming, but in the small world of my studio, it was cataclysmic. Okay, highly annoying.

So a few years ago—finally fed up with my once-loyal but now reliably traitorous pen—I decided to try a digital tablet. I knew nothing about these devices but hoped it would just get me through my annual Christmas card ordeal. I got one, fired it up, and lo and behold, something totally unexpected happened: within moments, I was having fun drawing again. I was stunned at all the tools the thing offered, all the creative potential it contained. I simply had no idea how far these things had evolved. Perhaps fittingly, the first thing I drew was a caveman.

The “New Stuff” that you’ll see here is the result of my journey into the world of digital art. Believe me, this has been a bit of a learning curve for me. I hail from a world of pen and ink, and suddenly I was feeling like I was sitting at the controls of a 747. (True, I don’t get out much.) But as overwhelmed as I was, there was still something familiar there—a sense of adventure. That had always been at the core of what I enjoyed most when I was drawing The Far Side, that sense of exploring, reaching for something, taking some risks, sometimes hitting a home run and sometimes coming up with “Cow tools.” (Let’s not get into that.) But as a jazz teacher once said to me about improvisation, “You want to try and take people somewhere where they might not have been before.” I think that my approach to cartooning was similar—I’m just not sure if even I knew where I was going. But I was having fun.

So here goes. I’ve got my coffee, I’ve got this cool gizmo, and I’ve got no deadlines. And—to borrow from Sherlock Holmes—the game is afoot.

Again, please remember, I’m just exploring, experimenting, and trying stuff. New Stuff. I have just one last thing to say before I go: thank you, clogged pen.

—Gary Larson

The first three panels are classic Far Side: a play on words, aliens probing a farmer, and bears eating Cub Scouts. The website is full of classic strips, sketchbooks, and extra features.

One can scarcely imagine a better escape from the insanity of today’s news than the insanity of the alternate universe of The Far Side.

Jeff Reynolds is the author of the book, “Behind the Curtain: Inside the Network of Progressive Billionaires and Their Campaign to Undermine Democracy,” available at www.WhoOwnsTheDems.com. Jeff hosts a podcast at anchor.fm/BehindTheCurtain. You can follow him on Twitter @ChargerJeff, and on Parler at @RealJeffReynolds.




AP Photo/Paul Sakuma
 

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Jim_S

Resident Curmudgeon
Gold Site Supporter
My favorite Christmas present for years was the Far Side desk calendar for the coming year.
 
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