Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this plus any other comic strip delivered to your Personalized Comic Page, Daily. With a free account you will be able to build a Comic Page filled with the Comics you want to see each day.
With the largest collection of Comics and Editorial Cartoons online there is plenty to choose from. Upgrade to a GoComics Pro account (Only $.99/Month) and have unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
Customize Homepage
Daily Comics Email
Comment, share, interact with other comic fans
The Wizard of Id has been enchanting audiences since 1964, but the real wizards behind this comic classic were artist Brant Parker and writer Johnny Hart.
The pair began paving the path to the Kingdom of Id in 1950, when Parker, a staff artist for the Binghamton Press in upstate New York, was asked to judge a high school art contest. Among the entrants was a teenager by the name of Johnny Hart, whose work so impressed Parker that he arranged a meeting.
© Creators Syndicate, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2013. Universal Uclick, All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy

Comments (29) (Please sign in to comment)
Llewellenbruce said, 4 months ago
Just like the witch in “The Wizard of Oz”.
DreamScourge said, 4 months ago
@
Quic-he! Hahahha! Does a smile and a groan count?
MPeters said, 4 months ago
I take it this is the Witch of the East?
Prof danglais said, 4 months ago
@Llewellenbruce
I thought she was supposed to be the wicked witch of the east, from the ‘Wizard of Oz’, except she’s not wearing red shoes. Now I don’t understand the joke.
mpk39 said, 4 months ago
In the book they’re silver, but she’s not wearing those either.
Bruno Zeigerts said, 4 months ago
Which witch is which?
Cracked.com had an interesting article about how Glenda was the real wicked witch.
win said, 4 months ago
“The house began to pitch,
The kitchen took a slich,
It landed on the Wicked Witch in the middle of a ditch
Which was not a happy situation for the Wicked Witch!”
– Munchkins, Wizard of Oz
MadCow
said, 4 months ago
Alain Harper (מיכאל בן-אברם)
said, 4 months ago
@Prof danglais
You don’t understand the joke simply because she has her ruby (or silver, whatever) slippers in her closet at home? Maybe she got them to try to avoid her well-deserved fate… ;)
Alain Harper (מיכאל בן-אברם)
said, 4 months ago
@Bruno Zeigerts
I have no interest in what CRACKED says about Glinda. I get the impression that they’d claim snow was coal black and toxic if they thought the claim would get a laugh.
Razzilla said, 4 months ago
You can pretty much tell it’s a story of two women trying to kill each other over a pair of shoes…
rshive said, 4 months ago
And buried in gingerbread dough.
William Pursell
said, 4 months ago
Aye …and the last thing you’ll see is the glare from a pair of Ruby Red Slippers….Oh and don’t try to run and hide…it won’t do you any good….Glenda one hellofashot with a house.
Alexikakos said, 4 months ago
Here is the “Cracked” article Bruno Zeigerts was talking about.
“I get the impression that they’d claim snow was coal black and toxic if they thought the claim would get a laugh.”.
I’m with Alain Harper in that, to quote:
.
.
.http://www.cracked.com/article_18881_5-reasons-greatest-movie-villain-ever-good-witch_p2.html
.
It’s just over an 8 minute read.
The language is rough in places.
.
To be fair, there are some interpretations of events that will make you see things differently. There are some nicely taken out movie stills too.
mkahn said, 4 months ago
How The Wizard of Oz should have ended (2:12)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=munbt8qpCiQ