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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums24 Years Ago Today; Bill Watterson publishes the last Calvin and Hobbes comic strip
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Calvin and Hobbes @Calvinn_Hobbes
On December 31, 1995, Bill Watterson published the final 'Calvin & Hobbes' comic strip. For most of us, it was like watching our absolute best friend ever move to another continent! The hole in our hearts is still felt even now!

8:00 AM - Dec 31, 2019

Calvin and Hobbes is a daily American comic strip created by cartoonist Bill Watterson that was syndicated from November 18, 1985 to December 31, 1995. Commonly cited as "the last great newspaper comic", Calvin and Hobbes has enjoyed broad and enduring popularity, influence, academic and philosophical interest.
Calvin and Hobbes follows the humorous antics of the title characters: Calvin, a precocious, mischievous and adventurous six-year-old boy; and Hobbes, his sardonic stuffed tiger. Set in the contemporary suburban United States, the strip depicts Calvin's frequent flights of fancy and friendship with Hobbes. It also examines Calvin's relationships with family and classmates, especially the love/hate relationship between him and his classmate Susie Derkins. Hobbes' dual nature is a defining motif for the strip: to Calvin, Hobbes is a living anthropomorphic tiger, while all the other characters see Hobbes as an inanimate stuffed toy. Though the series does not mention specific political figures or contemporary events, it does explore broad issues like environmentalism, public education, philosophical quandaries and the flaws of opinion polls.
At the height of its popularity, Calvin and Hobbes was featured in over 2,400 newspapers worldwide. In 2010, reruns of the strip appeared in more than 50 countries, and nearly 45 million copies of the Calvin and Hobbes books had been sold worldwide.
<snip>
History
Development
"I thought it was perhaps too 'adult,' too literate. When my then-8-year-old son remarked, 'This is the Doonesbury for kids!' I suspected we had something unusual on our hands."
Lee Salem, Watterson's editor at Universal, recalling his reaction after seeing Watterson's first submission
Calvin and Hobbes was conceived when Bill Watterson, while working in an advertising job he detested,[6] began devoting his spare time to developing a newspaper comic for potential syndication. He explored various strip ideas but all were rejected by the syndicates. United Feature Syndicate finally responded positively to one strip called The Doghouse, which featured a side character (the main character's little brother) who had a stuffed tiger. United identified these characters as the strongest, and encouraged Watterson to develop them as the centre of their own strip. Though United Feature ultimately rejected the new strip as lacking in marketing potential, Universal Press Syndicate took it up.
Launch and early success (19851990)
The first strip was published on November 18, 1985 in 35 newspapers. Watterson was warned by the syndicate not to give up the day job yet, but it was not long before the series had become a hit. Within a year of syndication, the strip was published in roughly 250 newspapers and was proving to have international appeal with translation and wide circulation outside the United States.
Although Calvin and Hobbes would undergo continual artistic development and creative innovation over the period of syndication, the earliest strips demonstrate a remarkable consistency with the latest. Watterson introduced all the major characters within the first three weeks, and made no changes to the central cast over the 10 years of the strip's history.
By April 5, 1987, Watterson was featured in an article in The Los Angeles Times. Calvin and Hobbes earned Watterson the Reuben Award from the National Cartoonists Society in the Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year category, first in 1986 and again in 1988. He was nominated another time in 1992. The Society awarded him the Humor Comic Strip Award for 1988. Calvin and Hobbes has also won several more awards.
As his creation grew in popularity, Watterson underwent a long and emotionally draining battle with his syndicate editors over his refusal to license his characters for merchandising. By 1991, Watterson had achieved his goal of securing a new contract that granted him legal control over his creation and all future licensing arrangements.
Creative control (19911995)
Having achieved his objective of creative control, Watterson's desire for privacy subsequently reasserted itself and he ceased all media interviews, relocated to New Mexico, and largely disappeared from public engagements, refusing to attend the ceremonies of any of the cartooning awards he won. The pressures of the battle over merchandising led to Watterson taking an extended break from May 5, 1991, to February 1, 1992, a move that was virtually unprecedented in the world of syndicated cartoonists.
Comparison of Calvin and Hobbes' following layout changes
During Watterson's first sabbatical from the strip, Universal Press Syndicate continued to charge newspapers full price to re-run old Calvin and Hobbes strips. Few editors approved of the move, but the strip was so popular that they had no choice but to continue to run it for fear that competing newspapers might pick it up and draw its fans away. Watterson returned to the strip in 1992 with plans to produce his Sunday strip as an unbreakable half of a newspaper or tabloid page. This made him only the second cartoonist since Garry Trudeau to have sufficient popularity to demand more space and control over the presentation of his work.
Watterson took a second sabbatical from April 3 through December 31, 1994. When he returned, he had made the decision to end the strip. In 1995, Watterson sent a letter via his syndicate to all editors whose newspapers carried his strip announcing his plans to end the strip by the end of the year. Stating his belief that he had achieved everything that he wanted to within the medium, he announced his intention to work on future projects at a slower pace with fewer artistic compromises.
The final strip ran on Sunday, December 31, 1995. It depicted Calvin and Hobbes outside in freshly fallen snow, reveling in the wonder and excitement of the winter scene. "It's a magical world, Hobbes, ol' buddy... Let's go exploring!" Calvin exclaims as they zoom off over the snowy hills on their sled, leaving, according to one critic ten years later, "a hole in the comics page that no strip has been able to fill."
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Cartoonist
(7,579 posts)At least there you had them doing solo efforts. Bill hasn't done anything since outside of a few pieces
Dennis Donovan
(31,059 posts)Rorey
(8,514 posts)I don't know why it mattered so much to me, but I remember being in disbelief.
I feel like we were left hanging. What is Calvin up to these days? Is Hobbes in a box in the attic? They seemed so real to me. (And no, I'm not crazy.
)
Dennis Donovan
(31,059 posts)Guessing he's working for Google now, and secretly carries Hobbes around the Google Campus in a backpack.
Pacifist Patriot
(25,216 posts)UniteFightBack
(8,231 posts)NNadir
(38,553 posts)Sloumeau
(2,657 posts)Calvin and Hobbes strip ever in it. This year I donated it to the public library, so that many children could enjoy the comic. Few things are better than the smile of a child.
Javaman
(65,981 posts)I'm about 2 years into it.
It's just so wonderful and insightful.
it's like a warm cozy blanket on a cold day for me.
WinstonSmith4740
(3,470 posts)A couple of cartoonists have picked up the mantle and do a strip called "Bacon and Hobbes". Calvin is grown up and married to Susie (of course). I don't think it's syndicated anywhere, and is probably only available on line, but for those of you jonesing for C&H, this was their inaugural (I think) strip, plus a couple. Enjoy.
https://imgur.com/gallery/tUzAL
On edit: Notice the date of the cartoon, and what Bacon is afraid of...they knew then.
erronis
(24,553 posts)wcast
(595 posts)I still have two of my favorite panels in my office. The first is Olive Oyl catching Popeye in her dress and Popeye says I yam what I yam.
The second is the inferiority complex suffers convention when the emcee says that they wanted one attendee to know he was never invited.
calimary
(90,830 posts)Hopeful and full of wonder and leaving them fully in their element, setting off on the next adventure - in which the reader was invited to fill in the story line. Ending it without an ending.
Loved that strip! Sorry when it ended but glad it concluded the way it did.
packman
(16,296 posts)
Damn shame we all have to get older, but we don't necessarily have to grow up.
Timeless!
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)I always figured Dad was a big clue to what Calvin would become. Or not. Calvin forever "contains multitudes."
central scrutinizer
(12,655 posts)Aristus
(72,528 posts)There was one strip that showed Calvin and Hobbes walking in the woods, and there was garbage everywhere. Calvin was lamenting this fact, along with the increase in construction development, and how it was crowding out the natural world.
As they walk away in the final panel, Calvin says "I wonder if you can refuse to inherit the world?..."
TeamPooka
(25,577 posts)also about pollution.
Ninga
(9,036 posts)once artists (of any kind) capture the hearts of the public sometimes they need to be more gracious than they feel. Not so Watterson, he not only never got it, he never respected it.
About 15 years ago or so, occasionally I would pass him and his wife pushing a stroller up the street. I would nod hello, never more than that, as I would acknowledge any other person walking up the street.
I heard he moved because too many people tried to talk to him in the coffee shop or grocery store.
TheRickles
(3,536 posts)Apart from avoiding his fans (which he's totally entitled to do).
Ninga
(9,036 posts)JohnnyRingo
(20,998 posts)Just kidding. I was one of his biggest fans and still own every book he ever published.

2naSalit
(103,817 posts)Towlie
(5,580 posts)leftieNanner
(16,171 posts)Loved Calvin and Hobbes! We have a few "Calvinisms" in our family. "Calvin ball" of course, and "A check mark for Tuesday."
Thanks for the thread.
Glaisne
(658 posts)The great comics of our time.
oldsoftie
(13,538 posts)Monsieur_Grumpe
(184 posts)
:large
underpants
(197,209 posts)Thanks.
ET Awful
(24,788 posts)














RainCaster
(13,892 posts)Thank you for sharing
scarletwoman
(31,893 posts)"Snow Sharks!"
dhill926
(16,953 posts)Jimvanhise
(604 posts)Although Watterson had stopped doing interviews he reportedly told people that he didn't want his strip to turn into a self-parody like Peanuts had become. Watterson was horrified by both the over commercialization of Peanuts and the fact that Schulz continued writing it long after he had anything to say, and continued writing it until practically the day he died. I would wince reading its declining years when the characters had nothing of interest to say and a daily gag would end with a character saying "whatever," a word which actually means nothing. But readers apparently liked that, although other professional cartoonists found it painful to see Peanuts decline. So Watterson ended on a high note but unfortunately has done nothing new since other than his recent April 1st crossover strips done for the revived Bloom County comic strip.
dugog55
(381 posts)scarletwoman
(31,893 posts)DashOneBravo
(2,679 posts)I made it to the last 3 paragraphs.
Thanks for that
scarletwoman
(31,893 posts)It's really well done - although it leaves you missing Calvin & Hobbes even more.
Dennis Donovan
(31,059 posts)(I'd watch it tonight, but it's new years eve on the last day of this horrible decade and I'm trying not to cry
)
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)
Docreed2003
(18,714 posts)When I was a child, my grandfather would always open the Sunday newspaper and grab the comics. He said he was reading the "intellectual portion" of the news first. So at a young age, I gravitated towards the comics as well.
"Calvin and Hobbes" was always my favorite strip, still is. That last strip came out two months before I turned 18. I felt like I was losing my own childhood and an old friend. The memories of reading those comics will always last and for that I'm thankful. I'm also thankful for how the "C&H"'s comic still teach me lessons as an adult!
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