Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Friday, June 27, 2014

FORGOTTEN BOOK: EQUAL TIME FOR POGO

Equal Time for Pogo by Walt Kelly (1968)

For the past few months I have been occasionally dipping into the swampy waters of the Okefenokee reading -- or, more often, rereading the adventures of everyone's favorite possum.

From almost the very beginning the unassuming marsupial has evinced little or no interest in politics, while those about him (his creator included) go overboard in trying to explain/confuse/satirize/or just plain misconstrue the human and/or animal condition.

Alas, poor Kelly, the 1968 election cycle proved to be almost to much for him.  Republican contenders were coming out of the woodwork, only to drop from the scene shortly after they had been satirized in the strip.  Mr. Romney (no, the one with the car elevator) left the scene shortly after being portrayed as a wind-up toy -- if he tries to talk, he puts his foot in mouth, either his or someone else's.  Wind-up toy Nixon is off and running at a drop of the hat.  Meantime, wind-up Rockefeller is singing about being "A lady-in-waiting, I'm anticipating."  Wind-up George McGovern charges forth on his white donkey, shield ablaze with the words "Wholly Grail or Bust." Ronald Reagan is an enthusiastic puppy acting as the head on a clown's body.  Huckster and showman P.T. Bridgeport stands on the rear platform of the SOP railroad line (the Same Old Party Line) ready to travel to New Hampshire only to have the rear platform fall off the train: "the platform har'ly ever goes with the old part line."

Our president at the time is portrayed as a longhorn Texas steer who tends to get stuck in inescapable places and whose eyesight is so bad that he's lost his vision.  (Ten days after that caricature appeared, a national paper finally noticed thee resemblance between the longhorn steer and the incumbent president and banned the strip, which show the press of nearly half a century ago to be as nearsighted as today.)

Beauregard and ends up the hound dog decides to run for president also himself as his vice-presidential candidate. leaving him to wonder who will take the top spot.  Because Pogo is trusting, dependable, and a perfect gentleman, Molester Mole decides that Pogo is the perfect dupe candidate -- someone that he could easily control, a true dark horse candidate.  And if you have a dark horse candidate, you should have a white horse candidate -- actually, a white-horse-power candidate.  Enter a strutting little martinet of a chicken, Prince Pompadoodle, who bears a strong resemblance to a certain Alabaman governor.

Things keep getting more confused, in real-life and on the Okefenokee, until Kelly pulls a fast one and convinces many of his main characters that it is December in June and that all the election folderol is over.  Reality can sometimes be just too much for a satirist.

One more thing.  In an introductory footnote (actually a footnote to a footnote), Kelly writes: "The cartooned figure of Senator Robert can be found here.  Normally the cartoonist drops the caricature of one who has departed.   but, in truth, it is hard to  comprehend that this friend is gone.  Besides, he believed in the fun we all have shared.  To this extent also, he lives on."

Today, there are many strips that skewer pomposity.  Back then, there was only one that did it right.

8 comments:

  1. I always thought Albert was the real hero of the strip.

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  2. I believe Albert thought the same thing, Bill

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  3. Yes, I agree. This one is on the shelf but hasn't been reread as much as the others because of all the politics, which are, the farther (further?) away in time I get, the less appealing.

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  4. Not a big thing, but the knight is Eugene McCarthy, not McGovern (who wouldn't make the national radar before '72).

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    1. My bad. I know better, having seen him on the campaign trail.

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  5. kevin is really into CALVIN AND HOBBES and GARFIELD. I am going to get him one of these.

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    1. If he likes newspaper comics, check out Weapon Brown -- the funny pages go Mad Max. Cyborg Charlie Brown faces off against Terminator Calvin in a post-apocalyptic landscape that includes a giant, ravenous, fur-covered slug called the Garf. (Sadly, Pogo only has a single panel as a scavenger.)

      http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/weaponbrown/

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