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Does anyone no how to see the very first strip? Or do you have to buy a book. Maybe we can all catch up by reading from the very beginning:D
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Aaron, NOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!:( :(
The thing that has me worried is that he'll wind up like the Calvin and Hobbes artist and retire.:( :( I also hope this doen't mean that the show is going on sabitical, too. |
Aww man, say it ain't so!!! :(
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He needs it. He's admitted he's been phoning the strips in for a while now. He doesn't even do the daily artwork anymore; he mostly writes the dialogue.
If he returns, I hope the strips will be better than ever. |
The Boondocks are on MySpace
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More on The Luther
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From Fox Trot...
Dear Jason,
Nice try but we'll wait until October.:) Signed, JB13 http://news.yahoo.com/comics/foxtrot...NlYwMlJVRPUCUl |
Boondocks on DVD in July (BV)
The DVD release of the Cartoon Network's animated series 'The Boondocks,' has been moved from its initial June 13 date to July 25.
All 15 episodes of the Aaron McGruder created show will be packaged as a three-disc set enttiled 'The Boondocks: The Complete First Season: Uncut and Uncensored,' retailing at $49.95. Based on the award winning and controversial comic strip-- distributed in 350 newspapers nationwide-- about the adventures of two young brothers, Riley and Huey Freeman, who experience a culture clash when they move from Southside Chicago to the suburbs to live with their grandfather. Regina King ('Miss Congeniality 2,' 'Ray') and John Witherspoon ('Friday After Next') are among the actors who voice characters on the satiric toon. 'Uncut and Uncensored's' extensive bonuses include a behind-the-scenes featurette, commentary on select episodes, and deleted scenes. |
I am so excited. We love this show so much.
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First Soul Food and now this
Syndicate Says 'Boondocks' May Not Return
Cartoonist Hasn't Answered Pleas to Resume Comic Strip By Laura Sessions Stepp Washington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, September 26, 2006; Page C01 It's over for "The Boondocks" comic strip, at least for now. After six years -- a remarkably short run for a strip that found its way into 300-plus newspapers, including The Washington Post -- Universal Press Syndicate told subscribers yesterday they should start looking for someone to replace political/social satirist Aaron McGruder. McGruder, a Columbia native who in his twenties became the Garry Trudeau of the hip-hop generation, took a sabbatical six months ago to recharge. The syndicate kept checking with him, reminding him that its newspaper clients needed several weeks in order to prepare for his return or his departure. Apparently, the mind behind young black radicals Huey and Riley Freeman has gone Hollywood, or at least has further hopes of doing so, and has decided he can't devote himself to the grind of a daily strip. His late-night animated show, "The Boondocks," on the Cartoon Network was recently renewed for another season, the first-season DVD is out, and a film is reportedly in the works. Perhaps for McGruder, whose broad and sometimes outrageous characterizations forced readers to confront racial stereotypes and caused cartoon editors to blanch, the future of the funny papers is in pixels rather than picas. The cartoonist, 31, did not respond to a request for comment yesterday. A message on his voicemail indicated he was taking some time to "restore his creative juices." The heavies at Universal are clearly not happy with the way McGruder handled the situation, although they worded their news release carefully. "Although Aaron McGruder has made no statement about retiring or resuming The Boondocks for print newspapers . . . newspapers should not count on it coming back in the foreseeable future," Universal's president, Lee Salem, said in the release. "Numerous attempts . . . to pin McGruder down on a date that the strip would be coming back were unsuccessful." According to industry sources, McGruder's editor at Universal, Greg Melvin, flew to Los Angeles recently and spent a couple of days trying to get the cartoonist to abide by the terms of his agreement to return in six months. "We were getting dozens of phone calls every day from newspapers asking when he was coming back," Salem said in a telephone interview. "It seemed unfair to keep them dangling." He added that if McGruder decides to return, Universal would welcome him back. McGruder created "The Boondocks" in 1997 for the Diamondback, the student newspaper at the University of Maryland, and was getting nibbles from television types, according to Salem, when Universal signed him in 1999. The strip came at a time when newspapers were hungry for a hip black cartoonist, and McGruder had attitude to spare. His work either infuriated readers or made them laugh out loud. He routinely slapped around Black Entertainment Television and its founder, Bob Johnson, for its dependence on booty-shaking videos. His strips after the invasion of Iraq about Condoleezza Rice needing a man were provocative enough that many papers, including The Post, refused to run them. His apparent departure raises several questions, according to those in the industry. Is he pulling a Dave Chappelle here? The 33-year-old comedian stunned his fans when he bolted last year from his Comedy Central show, ditching a $50 million deal and returning to a stand-up tour onstage. If McGruder is really a political commentator at heart, will he miss the immediacy of a daily strip? "I'm not going to say a strip carries the same rewards as TV, but you can comment with far more immediacy," Salem said. And how successful will he be without his daily newspaper base? Other cartoonists have successfully pursued outside interests, aided in part, says Jake Morrissey, a New York editor who worked with cartoonists at United Media and Universal Press, because "every single day their work was in front of millions of people's eyes." Some of them also took sabbaticals when at the top of their game -- Garry Trudeau after 12 years penning "Doonesbury" and Bill Watterson after six years with "Calvin and Hobbes"; Gary Larson walked away from "The Far Side" for several years. When they returned, so did their readers. But there's no guarantee that will happen. Says Morrissey, "When you leave, Americans' attention goes on to something else." COME BACK TO ME AARON!!!!!:( :( :( |
That really bites, even though I only read him in the Sunday Comics.....in my best Florida Evans voice....DAMN, DAMN, DAMN I even have Riley on the front of my cell phone.
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That sucks! I would definitely return to The Boondocks if Aaron McGruder was indeed retiring. I really hope he's not. I even turned my intelligent HS junior niece onto The Boondocks with his big ol' collections book.
*kicking rocks with head hanging waaay down* |
:( .
Okay that period is there for a reason. I originally just typed a sad face, because I was too lazy to express myself with words. GC told me that my message was too short and I needed at least three characters. |
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I stopped reading newspaper cartoon strips a long, long time ago so no loss on that front. I am REALLY enjoying the show, although it got off to a bumpy start initially. It's a pretty practical move IMO- lots more people will be exposed to and enjoy his work through the tv medium.
And there are always the books collecting the strip... |
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