Tom the Dancing Bug

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Tom the Dancing Bug
Author(s)
Genre(s)Humor, Politics, Satire

Tom the Dancing Bug is a weekly

US current events from a liberal point of view. Tom the Dancing Bug won the 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008,[1] and 2009[2] Association of Alternative Newsweeklies Awards for Best Cartoon. The strip was awarded the 2010 Sigma Delta Chi Award for editorial cartooning by the Society of Professional Journalists[3] and best cartoon in the 2018 Robert F. Kennedy Book & Journalism Awards.[4] His work on the strip won Bolling the 2017 Herblock Prize[5][6] and the 2021 Berryman Award for Editorial Cartoons,[7][8][9] and he was a finalist in the Editorial Cartooning category for the 2019[10] and 2021[11] Pulitzer Prize
.

Publication history

As Bolling recounted in an interview:

I started Tom the Dancing Bug in 1990 in a small New York newspaper. It was called New York Perspectives, then it was called New York Weekly, then it was called "bankrupt." But before it went bankrupt, I was able to sell the strip to a few other papers. For seven years, I was sending packages out and following up with phone calls, trying to get editors to run the strip. I ended up selling it to about 60 newspapers [under the name Quaternary Features]. I was surprised at the success I had, especially in selling to daily newspapers. I didn't think it would be my market. In 1997, the Universal Press Syndicate approached me and asked if we could work together. That came at just the right time, as I was starting a more serious day job, and I was about to have my first baby. I just didn't have the time and energy to devote to the selling of the strip. I decided that whatever job they did would be better than whatever I could put forth at that time.[12]

The strip appears in mainstream and alternative weekly newspapers, as well as on the Boing Boing website. At its peak, it was syndicated in print in over 100 newspapers.[13] It ran on Salon.com from 1995 until March 18, 2010.[14]

In 2012, Bolling launched a subscription service, the Inner Hive,[15] which he credits with keeping the comic going amid declines in print newspapers.[16]

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, and especially with the election of Donald Trump as president in 2016, Tom the Dancing Bug's focus became more overtly political. When accepting the Clifford K. and James T. Berryman Award for Editorial Cartoons on May 4, 2022, Bolling said, "When it started, it was just about apolitical. It was usually about a prehistoric ape-man, or an idiotic time traveler, or something even sillier. The comic strip got more political, more often, as it went along, certainly taking a turn after 9/11. But it was at the rise of Trump in 2016 that I just about handed the comic strip to what I saw as the most important political phenomenon of my lifetime."[9]

Bolling also explained his approach to satire, pre- and post-Trump, at the same dinner:

In the before days, pre-Trumpism, my age-old satirist trick was to exaggerate and twist my target's position to expose its hypocrisy or flaws. But you can't exaggerate Trump. He does it before you can. And he's better at it. And then he'll double down on that. And forget about exposing the logical flaws in Trumpist positions - let's just say that logic is not their intended feature. So one technique I've developed is that instead of exaggerating, I'll recontextualize. I take exactly what's happening and put it in a new context to shine a different light on it. ... So I'll take the

pretend to be his own publicist, I started this Calvin and Hobbes pastiche series with little Donald and his imaginary publicist John. ... In this 2020 comic, I put certain Americans' refusal to wear masks during a pandemic into the context of a 1940s newsreel about the sacrifices Americans will and won't make for the good of the country.[9]

Recurring characters and segments

Tom The Dancing Bug has no real narrative continuity. The title itself is a dadaist non-sequitur, as there is no character called "Tom The Dancing Bug" ever seen or referred to in the strip.

Some individual strips are one-shot "stand-alone" presentations, but certain recurring features within the strip are seen regularly on a rotating basis. One of the most popular recurring segments, "Super-Fun-Pak Comix", appears roughly once every month or two, and is dealt with in a separate entry, below. Other features currently seen on a fairly frequent basis include:

Super-Fun-Pak Comix

A recurring feature, Super Fun-Pak Comix consists of four to six smaller strips, grouped together. These collections of smaller comic strips poke fun at the typical conventions and clichés of modern comic strips. For example, they commonly make fun of stereotypical New Yorker cartoon settings, such as two people sitting across a desk or a husband and wife at home reading the paper. Individual comics can also be based around peculiar or bizarre concepts, like 'Funny Only to Six-year-olds' or 'Comic Designed to Fit Vertical Spaces'. Many Fun-Pak strips are one-offs, but there are also numerous recurring strips, and occasionally, some Fun-Pak space is taken up by a fake ad for unlikely products. As well, some recurring long-form Tom The Dancing Bug comics occasionally make Fun-Pak appearances in a shorter format, and a few recurring Fun-Pak characters (Percival Dunwoody, Dinkle) have made appearances in a long-form strip.

Super-Fun-Pak Comix also appears as a daily strip on gocomix.com.[19]

Currently recurring mini-strips (not always seen in every Fun-Pak) include:

  • Percival Dunwoody, Idiot Time Traveller from 1909 is in awe of the modern age, although he is also amazed by things that existed well before 1909, including lightbulbs, dogs and hands. However, he is aware of his own idiocy. Later strips have revealed him to be unfamiliar with the mechanics of time travel and causality (for example, believing that accidentally interfering with someone in the future could prevent his own birth).
  • Dinkle, The UnLovable Loser is a parody of such characters as
    anti-Semitism, and sociopathic
    behaviour, ruthlessly exploiting everyone he encounters.
  • Marital Mirth is a parody of The Lockhorns. The strip concerns a middle-aged married couple in an extremely unhappy relationship, and is supposedly drawn by bitter (fictional) cartoonist Rex Feinstein.
  • Doug is an anthropomorphic cartoon creature who is too generically drawn to be any particular type of animal. He is not of high intelligence and has few real talents. The How to Draw Doug scripts make fun of Doug's rather pathetic life.
  • Darthfield reimagines the cartoon character of Garfield the cat as Darth Vader, such as with the ability to use the Force to strangle people.
  • Phil Collins is a comic strip about, unsurprisingly, Phil Collins. In recent Fun-Pak strips, he has been teamed up with The Ghost of James Caan.
  • Science Facts for the Immature presents a scientific fact which is either a double entendre or is followed by a punchline based on bodily humor. Variations of this mini-strip have included Science Facts for the Depressed and Science Facts for the Internet-Addled.
  • Various Superhero comics, featuring superheroes with names and traits that parody superheroes in general. Examples include 'Talk-Up-His-Secret-Identity Man' and 'Garish-Skintight-Lycra-Outfit Man'.
  • Hillbilly Bill, of The Hills is a parody of Barney Google and Snuffy Smith.
  • Classix Comix/Comix Playhouse is an extremely shortened comic form of famous plays and novels. This is apparently a reference to Classics Illustrated, a series that provided classic books in shortened comic form.
  • Comics for the Elderly (formerly "Hey, Old People! Comics!") shows old people giving ornery advice to young people and the young people quickly accepting it.
  • Uncle Cap'n is an old lazy pirate who swears and makes you do his work for him through supposed 'puzzles' and 'fun' (but usually illegal) activities. He is a parody of
    Cappy Dick
    .
  • Selfish Gene is about a boy named Gene who only acts in ways that are beneficial to him under the framework of sociobiology. This is a reference to Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene.
  • Chaos Butterfly parodies the butterfly effect. Each strip features a butterfly in Brazil flapping its wings and indirectly causing something unpleasant to happen to a man in Chicago some time later.
  • Killjoy was Here features Killjoy, a man who ruins any attempt at a funny dialogue by spouting out depressing facts on global issues such as poverty.
  • The Epic/Brutal Report is a two-panel comic based on the good news/bad news gag. The first panel has a teenager relaying the 'good news' to his friends, who then exclaim 'Epic!'. In the second panel, he will tell them the 'bad news', to which his friends exclaim 'Brutal!'. The 'bad news' is always extremely disproportional and/or outlandish relative to the 'good news'.
  • Comics Appropriating and Abusing Intellectual Property Newly Lapsed Into the Public Domain is a vertical strip that has run in the first Super Fun Pak Comix installment of each year since 2019, when works resumed lapsing into the public domain in the United States. Each parodies one of more of the works that entered the public domain of January 1 of that year, initially through fart jokes. 2022's installment was instead a complete Billy Dare strip, featuring the Hardy Boys.

Following the September 11 attacks, Bolling used the Super Fun Pak Comix format to acknowledge the events; the punchline to each one of the comics was, "Terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center, killing thousands".[20]

Books

Several book-form collections have been published:

In 2020, Bolling began publishing a series containing the complete set of Tom the Dancing Bug comic strips. The first volume, Into the Trumpverse, collected strips from 2016-2019. Bolling then began adding volumes in reverse chronological order, dubbing Into the Trumpverse as Volume 7. Thus far, volumes 7 through 3 have been published.

References

  1. ^ Gardner, Alan. Ruben Bolling Wins Best Cartoon Award from AAN. The Daily Cartoonist (June 10, 2008)
  2. ^ Xerexes, Xavier. Onward Into the Webcomics Breach. Comix Talk (July 1, 2009)
  3. ^ "Tom the Dancing Bug Blog". Gocomics.typepad.com. Retrieved 2014-02-22.
  4. ^ FULL LIST: 2018 Robert F. Kennedy Book & Journalism Award Winners (May 3, 2018)
  5. ^ "'Tom The Dancing Bug' Creator Ruben Bolling Awarded The 2017 Herblock Prize". GoComics. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  6. ^ "Ruben Bolling (Pen name of Ken Fisher) | the Herb Block Foundation".
  7. ^ Degg, D. D. (May 11, 2022). "Ruben Bolling Wins 2021 Berryman Award". The Daily Cartoonist.
  8. ^ "Ruben Bolling wins 2021 Berryman Cartoonist Award". National Press Foundation. November 1, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Winning Editorial Cartoonist Accepts Berryman Award (May 10, 2022)
  10. ^ "Finalist in editorial cartooning: Ken Fisher, drawing as Ruben Bolling, freelancer". Pulitzer Prize. 2019. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  11. ^ "Finalist: Ken Fisher, drawing as Ruben Bolling, for "Tom the Dancing Bug," Andrews McMeel Syndicate". Pulitzer Prize. 2021. Retrieved 2021-06-13.
  12. ^ a b Pikul, Corrie (2005-01-14). "The mystery man behind "Tom the Dancing Bug"". Archived from the original on 2006-07-19.
  13. ^ @RubenBolling (March 21, 2021). "This is sadly true. Tom the Dancing Bug used to be in well over 100 print newspapers, and for a while in the NYT ab…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  14. ^ Bolling, Ruben (2010-03-22). "Salon, so long". Retrieved 2010-03-29. Salon.com has informed me that they have canceled Tom the Dancing Bug.... I was told that the cancellation was made because of 'severe budget constraints,' and that traffic for the comic continued to be good.
  15. ^ Bolling, Reuben (May 9, 2012). "Come on and join Tom the Dancing Bug's INNER HIVE!". Boing Boing. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  16. ^ Roth, Stephen (November 26, 2018). "Politics Through the Compound Eyes of 'Tom the Dancing Bug". GoComics. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  17. ^ Manjoo, Farhad (2002), "March of the "lucky duckies"", Salon, retrieved 2010-05-13
  18. ^ Bolonik, Kera (2006). "The world according to Ruben Bolling".
  19. ^ Bolling, Ruben. "Super-Fun-Pak Comix by Ruben Bolling". GoComics. Retrieved 2020-04-27.
  20. ^ Bolling, Ruben (2001-09-29). "Tom the Dancing Bug Comic Strip, September 29, 2001 on GoComics.com". Tom the Dancing Bug. GoComics.com. Retrieved 13 May 2010.

External links