2 Oct: Meet Charlie Brown
Happy 75th birthday, ‘Peanuts’! Charles Shulz’ iconic comic strip made its debut (although Snoopy had yet to appear) on 2nd October, 1950.
Peanuts would grow into a global phenomenon, running in 2,600 papers across 75 countries. At its peak, it was translated into 21 languages – but never lost its bittersweet mix of humour, disappointment, and charm, making Charlie Brown and the gang cultural touchstones for decades.
The first words of the strip? “Here comes good ol’ Charlie Brown… How I hate him.” This tone was a notable departure from the loud, chaotic, adventure stories that dominated ‘the funny pages’ at the time. Schulz’ characters weren’t fighting villains or chasing treasure: they were kids, wrestling with life’s quiet frustrations, hopes, and existential questions. It was postwar suburban America in miniature, disguised as a children’s comic, but also aimed at the grown-ups reading the paper over their morning coffee.
In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly consider why the strip became such a hit; reveal how Schulz’s own childhood got reflected in his characters; and marvel at how, despite his IP becoming a massive merchandising juggernaut, the cartoonist kept control over his creations until the day he died…
Further Reading:
• ‘Peanuts Comic Strip Debut October 2 1950’ (TIME, 2014): https://time.com/3445127/peanuts/
• ‘Peanuts’ Creator Charles Schulz Dies’ (The Washington Post, 2000): https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2000/02/14/peanuts-creator-charles-schulz-dies/f742958c-dffe-4cef-a481-b9d2cd2749c2/
• ‘Charles M. Schulz on CHARLIE BROWN | Everyman’ (BBC, 1977): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzu8aLpzIKw
#Comics #50s #Publishing #US
