Comic strips are series of drawings that appear as regular features in newspapers or magazines. Some have a story that continues from one day to the next. Others have a humorous new situation each day. But all feature a set of established characters. Comic strips are one of the few art forms that originated in the United States. It is estimated that they are read by more than 200 million people every day. This makes them one of the world's most popular art forms.
Comic strips began when Joseph Pulitzer, publisher of the New York World, asked cartoonist Richard Outcault to create a continuous character dressed in yellow so that the newspaper could experiment with yellow color printing. The result was The Yellow Kid, a depiction of Irish slum life in 1895.
William Randolph Hearst, publisher of the New York Journal, sensed a real circulation builder in these "funny papers." He commissioned a whole staff of cartoonists to create the first color comic section. This appeared in the Journal's Sunday edition. The Katzenjammer Kids, Alphonse and Gaston, Happy Hooligan, and Little Nemo in Slumberland were among the most popular. Soon daily comics in black and white were added. The first one, introduced in 1907, was the forerunner of Bud Fisher's Mutt and Jeff.
Other smaller newspapers around the country wanted to carry comic strips. But they could not afford to hire their own cartoonists. As a result, the system of syndication was born. The syndicate (an agency) hires cartoonists, helps develop their features, and then sells their work to many individual newspapers.
More and more publishers and syndicates began to carry comics. At one time there were over a hundred syndicates selling comics. Bringing Up Father (also known as Maggie and Jiggs), Moon Mullins, Toonerville Trolley, Barney Google, Skippy, Harold Teen,Smitty, Mr. and Mrs., The Timid Soul, and Blondie were among the favorite strips in the early 1930's.
In the mid-1930's a new form of comic began to appear: the story strip. These strips used more attractive, realistic artwork rather than humorous artwork to tell exciting stories that continued from day to day. They quickly built up a great following. Dick Tracy,Little Orphan Annie, Gasoline Alley, Tarzan, Prince Valiant, and Flash Gordon are a few examples. Some of these new strips, such as Popeye, Li'l Abner, and Alley Oop, combined a continuous story with humor.