Everett True Comics
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Looking for new moderators
Hello y'all,
I'm looking for a few (1-3) people willing to moderate this community and keep it active. I am planning on going away for a while, focusing on my studies and future, and avoiding social medias and the brainrot it brings me.
I would love it if the community would retain the same nature it does now, being Condo comics featuring Everett. I can't control what the future moderators will do, though, so kindly let me know if you're interested.
Hello everetters,
For a while I've been thinking about transcribing the comics I post so more people can enjoy them, but I've never actually transcribed before so I could use some pointers.
I'm very bad at describing anything that isn't dialogue, and I'm unsure if transcribing solely the dialogue is sufficient to get the message across, so maybe with somebody with more experience could voluntarily transcribe the comics at their own convenience? In which case, I would post their transcription in the text body.
If anybody got any suggestions / advice on how to transcribe actions and environment, or if you want to voluntarily transcribe some comics posted here, feel free to let me know in the comments.
- • 100%Featured
The Outbursts of Everett True (1907)
I was looking around for some specific comics, when I ran across an archived version of the 1907 book titled The Outbursts of Everett True. I was going to link directly to the PDF, but thought some people might like the source page better.
- Featured
Welcome to c/truecomics
Hi y'all,
Just wanted to sticky this to let y'all know that this community exists and I am the moderator (also of !madmax@midwest.social). I don't want to be the only one posting so I hope y'all post your favourite True strips in here as well. Also some simple rules:
- This place is only for the posting of Everett True comics by Condo,
- Please try posting the most high quality image of a comic excerpt,
- If you can, post the publication date of the comic strip, otherwise type either nothing or (date unknown).
Okay Everett lovers let's get this twentieth century party started
Printed 107 years ago today in the Grand Forks Herald. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found the the Library of Congress site. Feel free to pick a comic from there and post it yourself!
Printed 104 years ago today in The West Virginian. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site. Feel free to pick one yourself and post it!
Several of E.T.'s comics are about the importance of voting. Early voting wasn't a thing back then, but it is now, and it has started in most states. See here: https://www.vote.org/early-voting-calendar/
btw this is an edit of a cartoon that came out in October 1913, e.g. see this example in The Day Book of Chicago. I love the fact that he's saying "Punk!" in the original.
Printed 112 years ago today in The Seattle Star. Image cleaned up, especially on the letters, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site. Feel free to pick something from there and post it yourself!
Printed 109 years ago today in The Tacoma Times. Image cleaned up, see the original. (Lamentably, that page also has a racist caricature on it.)
Found on the Library of Congress site. Feel free to pick a cartoon and post it yourself!
Printed 109 years ago today in The Seattle Star. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Originally published 1906-07-19
This concludes the baseball arc!
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
I didn't watch it yet, but found it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Outbursts_of_Everett_True#Adaptations
Printed 109 years ago today in The Detroit Times. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site; feel free to look there for something to post yourself!
Printed 104 years ago today in The West Virginian. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site. Feel free to pick a cartoon from there and post!
People sometimes ask why these old comics are still relatable, and part of the answer is: selection bias! Namely, those of us who post them tend to select those that we find relatable. To highlight that, here are all the Everett True comics on the Library of Congress site that came out on October 26 (of various years). These are not cleaned up or even cropped from their newspaper:
- Everett True doesn't give up his seat! 1905. Inconsistent with how he acts in future years
- Everett True complains to Mrs True 1906. A candidate for selection
- Everett True berates an employee 1908. Not very good behavior.
- Everett True discusses tariffs. 1910. Kind of relevant to current US politics. But the joke isn't that great.
- Everett True objects to a preacher's language. 1910. Probably more relevant back in the day.
- Everett True pushes past a guy. 1914. Kind of funny, but not really all that exciting
- Everett True wants to get waited on. 1914. Maybe kind of relateable... not really though.
- Everett True objects to a card game. 1914. I don't really get it, but I don't play cards...
- Everett True doesn't do chores. 1916. Only slightly relateable
- Everett True objects to a dating couple. 1916. wtf?
- Everett True beats up a drunk who doesn't buy a Liberty Loan. 1917. Kind of dated.
- Everett True beats up another guy who didn't buy a Liberty Bond. 1917. Also kind of dated. Note that the quality of this image is very poor.
- Everett True beats up a guy who wakes him up. 1918. Dated, kind of...
- Everett True objects to tipping. 1918. Very relevant, though they seemed to tip differently back then. A candidate for selection.
- Everett True freaks out on the phone. 1921. I don't really get this one, I think he was listening to "hold music"?
- Everett True gets called to bail out a friend who was speeding. 1921. A candidate for selection.
- Everett True can't get a word in. 1921. A candidate for selection.
- Everett True irritates Mrs True. 1921. Would be a candidate for selection but I'm not crazy about Mrs True referring to his "brutality" - it sounds like he's abusive (which he isn't shown to be).
- Everett True has gout. 1922. Wat is gout? I thought only Kings of England got it. Seems dated.
- Everett True hates jazz. 1922. seems weird. I think jazz back then was like rock n roll was later on?
SO TO SUMMARIZE, out of 20 candidates, only 4 of these are candidates for selection. I'd probably pick the one related to the dangers of speeding, because it might appeal to the !fuckcars@lemmy.world crowd (of which I am one!) Or maybe the one about tipping, since the image is a lot cleaner. But many of the other ones are dated, some don't make sense, and some even present Everett in a very unflattering light.
Another thing to think about is that this may not be a complete selection of the comics that could be available. Some might only be in newspapers that are not in the Library of Congress' archives. Some might not have been selected for publication by the editors of the papers that are (because I think a batch of comics would be sent to the newspapers periodically, and the editors would then fit one in whenever they had room). And some, like that one example from 1917, might be in such poor condition that it couldn't be cleaned up enough. I think this is a type of survivorship bias, but I'm not sure.
Anyway, I hope that was interesting! And if it wasn't, then... OUTBURST.jpg.EDIT: I should have ended this by saying: as you can see, there are plenty of comics that aren't chosen, but maybe you see some that you think are worthwhile! If so please feel free to post it! Just take a screencap and crop, look for more comics here:
- library of congress (older interface)
- library of congress (newer interface)
- collection - july 15 1905 to sept 14 1909, 494 comics
- collection, 1907, 94 pages
Printed 103 years ago today in the East Oregonian. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Originally published 1906-7-17
Printed 105 years ago today in The Daily Graphic (Pine Bluff, Arkansas.) Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
> The League of Nations (LN or LoN; French: Société des Nations [sɔsjete de nɑsjɔ̃], SdN) was the first worldwide intergovernmental organisation whose principal mission was to maintain world peace.[1] It was founded on 10 January 1920 by the Paris Peace Conference that ended the First World War. The main organisation ceased operations on 18 April 1946 when many of its components were relocated into the new United Nations. As the template for modern global governance, the League profoundly shaped the modern world.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Nations
> Sealioning (also sea-lioning and sea lioning) is a type of trolling or harassment that consists of pursuing people with relentless requests for evidence, often tangential or previously addressed, while maintaining a pretense of civility and sincerity ("I'm just trying to have a debate"), and feigning ignorance of the subject matter.[1][2][3][4] It may take the form of "incessant, bad-faith invitations to engage in debate",[5] and has been likened to a denial-of-service attack targeted at human beings.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sealioning
Printed 109 years ago today in The Day Book. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 106 years ago today in The Pensacola Journal. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Originally published 1906-07-15
Printed 117 years ago today in The Seattle Star. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Originally published 1906-07-14
Printed 110 years ago today in The Day Book. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 110 years ago today in The Day Book. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 104 years ago today in The Pensacola Journal. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 118 years ago today in the Spokane Press. Image cleaned up, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 109 years ago today in the Detroit Times. Image cleaned up slightly, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 115 years ago today in The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal. Image cleaned up a bit, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Originally published 1907-02-21
I originally wasn't planning on posting today but I stumbled upon this one that's too good not to share. I'll be back next time with another arc!
Printed 109 years ago today in The Seattle Star. Image cleaned up; see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress Site.
Originally published 1905-08-06
This concludes the horse track arc. When I find another good theme I'll share with you all. It's been fun!
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/20842969
> Who says a comic from 1918 can't be funny?
Printed 119 years ago today in The Seattle Star. Image rotated, contrast/brightness increased, sharpness adjusted, various artifacts removed, see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Printed 117 years ago today in The Seattle Star. Image cleaned: brightness/contrast and sharpness adjusted, artifacts cleaned up, some solid colors improved; see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.
Originally published 1905-08-05
(I don't 100% get this one tbh)
Printed 112 years ago today in The Tacoma Times. Image brightness/contrast modified and some artifacts cleaned up; see the original.
Found on the Library of Congress site.