Gasoline Alley by Jim Scancarelli

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  1. Ronshua

    RonshuaGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Happy days now and ahead . Your timing is great Jim , thanks !

  2. MaxStarmanJones

    MaxStarmanJones said, about 1 month ago

    Finally, the moment we’ve been waiting for. How is the end game going to play out now?

  3. jumbobrain

    jumbobrainGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Awwwww.

  4. JDG

    JDGGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    What happened to Walt????

  5. Susan001

    Susan001 said, about 1 month ago

    The drawing of the first frame is superb! Jim, Your work should be exhibited in a museum.

  6. Ravenswing

    Ravenswing said, about 1 month ago

    Heh, I’m just waiting for the two Grumpy Old Men in the balcony box to mutter …

  7. oldbooger

    oldbooger said, about 1 month ago

    And you thought vaudeville died out back in the 1940s!

    There’s still a surprise or two in store for this storyline … then maybe it will end gracefully and we can return to the regular, historical GA characters.

  8. axe-grinder

    axe-grinderGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    A grand moment, made sweeter by the twists and turns along the way.

  9. 436rge

    436rge said, about 1 month ago

    UNCLE WALT!!! WHERE ARE YOU!!! GRRRRR!

  10. Wallcloud

    Wallcloud said, about 1 month ago

    Thank God for on line comics, The KC Star dropped Gasoline Alley and others years ago.

    These comics are drawn in color every day. The last time I checked the Daily Oklahoman still prints theirs IN COLOR every day. Three cheers…for them

  11. Dypak

    DypakGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Comics should be printed in b&w, like God and Walt Kelley intended. It’s tradition, it’s cultural. Just because we can do a thing doesnt mean we need to do a thing. Sunday color comics are one thing, dailies are just too much. Color is an editors way of making it look like he’s giving us value while actually doing very little. Instead of color I’d much rather have more space in my newspaper devoted to the comics. Maybe then artists could have the space they need to tell their stories the way they want, instead of limiting themselves to 3 or 4 panels. Look at some of the old classic comics at Daily Ink dot com. Wonderful, huge panels, where the mood is set by shading, not color. Color is just an easy out for an artist. A true artist, like our Jim, can set a mood with only one. Black, on a white background.

    Way to go Byrd, you made me proud. Thanks Jim, for a wonderful story. You are the best.

  12. ziggae

    ziggaeGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    I’m a sucker for happy ending. Gertie went through a lot to get to this.

  13. Macushlalondra

    MacushlalondraGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    It’s justification for being thrown out all those times and having to sneak in. I hope that creep manager hears this.

  14. Devonshade

    DevonshadeGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    This storyline has been a stretch from the beginning. Hopefully it has reached its limits, and these two porkers will hit the road for good.

  15. kab2rb

    kab2rb said, about 1 month ago

    I hope this storyline keeps going there is more that can be done I am enjoying so much. Thank heavens the writers came up with more on Gertie and Byrd.

  16. crunkbot

    crunkbot said, about 1 month ago

    Dypak, I have to agree. While my issues with GA’s plotting are many, the art is always impressive.

    The addition of color to the dailies has led to utterly egregious mess like Girls & Sports, a strip in which the “artist” is apparently unaware that lines can have variable thickness.

  17. whmIII

    whmIII said, about 1 month ago

    Are we there yet???

  18. stringmusicianer

    stringmusicianer said, about 1 month ago

    I thought the pace of this arc was just as much artistry as the drawing itself. A story needs time to build and gather intrigue. And what a great ending! I bet Terry and the diner staff are looking after Walt.

  19. ocean17

    ocean17 said, about 1 month ago

    She was and IS the inspiration for my composition “Angel Food!” No, I mean “Beagle Eyes!” I mean “Beddy Byes!” … aw, shoot…

    Well hello, Gertie
    Hellooo, Gertie
    It’s so nice to have you back where you belong

  20. Joe Allen Doty

    Joe Allen Doty said, about 1 month ago

    Gertie was right. Earl E. Byrd did compose “Angel Eyes” because of her.

    Grumpy old men in the balcony box next to the stage?

    You mean like Statler and Waldorf of the Muppets Show?

  21. Chikuku

    ChikukuGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Her dream came true! Yay!

  22. roohey

    roohey said, about 1 month ago

    How many other women sitting in the audience were told that song was written for them….Gertie may not be the only Angel Eyes

  23. JanCinVV

    JanCinVVGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Yeah, but how many of them are on stage with Byrd and he’s telling the world?

  24. boldyuma

    boldyuma said, about 1 month ago

    Like Jackie Gleason said years ago….”How sweet
    it is”….and…”Away weee go!”….

  25. marvee

    marveeGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Gertie may have to make a big decision. Go on the road with Byrd or stick with Walt. What will she do?

  26. Deborah Reyes

    Deborah ReyesGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    I checked out some of the Gasoline Alley strips from the 20s, 30s, 40s, etc. I was astounded that they appeared in newspapers which advertised there there were SIXTEEN pages of color comics on Sunday - and the newspapers only cost a nickle back in those days!

    The comics have ALWAYS “sold” the newspapers. Beginning with the advent of radio - audiences could always get their news somewhere else. But ONLY newspapers could deliver comic strips. It is no wonder that newspapers have all fallen on hard times since they began tossing their comic pages overboard!

  27. Dypak

    DypakGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Deborah,
    Being in the military my family always moved around alot. One of the first things we always did in a new town was subscribe to the paper. For one it was always a good way to get to know the new town. But our real main reason was to get the comics. And what was always nice was that no matter how strange or different the new place was we always had old friends in the newspaper funnies. Especially the Stars & Stripes. That’s a comic friendly newspaper.

  28. Dypak

    DypakGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Norm,
    You’re always talking about other folks attacking you. I suppose you think that your comment to Doty wasn’t an attack, it was simply a rhetorical question, right? Sometimes you really push the limits of cuddly, crusty old codger too far. Joe had an honest question, maybe a bit obvious, true, but what’s the harm? We can’t all be eloquent, erudite and loquacious, like you.

  29. axe-grinder

    axe-grinderGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Speak of grumpy old men, and one appears…

  30. axe-grinder

    axe-grinderGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Dypak, I too am happy the GA dailies are b&w, but I love the color Sundays as a once-a-week treat. I hope Jim will bring the Earl and Gertie saga into the Sundays soon.

  31. Macushlalondra

    MacushlalondraGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Not to worry Dypak, Not Norman’s just being his usual grumpy self. He never has anything positive to say!

  32. jumbobrain

    jumbobrainGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    Dypak:

    “God and Walt Kelly”…indeed.

  33. Xrystalia

    XrystaliaGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    The drawing in the first panel makes me want to pick up some art tools and try to create something beautiful too. So nice. And thrilled for Gertie… hoping it keeps going well for her from this point on.

  34. axe-grinder

    axe-grinderGenius_badge said, about 1 month ago

    NotNormanChubsyUbsy said, Do I contradict myself?
    Very well then I contradict myself,
    (I am large, I contain multitudes.)
    Walt Whitman, “Song of Myself”

    Do you flatter yourself?
    Very well then you flatter yourself.