![]() Also like Doonesbury, in 1987 Bloom County won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning. While some other comics have used this technique as well, notably Doonesbury, it remains rare in comics, and Bloom County was most often compared to Doonesbury for content and attitude. As Bloom County came to an end, Breathed had the characters go off in search of jobs in the other comics strips, such as Family Circle and Marmaduke. Setting the comic up as a job for the characters to act in, Breathed was able to acknowledge the existence of other strips, making jokes about them and featuring guest appearances by characters from other comic strips. One sequence featured Opus confused because he hadn't read the script. Breathed also made the strip self-reflexive, often breaking from the comic to give comments from the "management" or from the characters themselves. Unlike other comics, Bloom County's animal and human characters interacted as equals and spoke to each other. Breathed had a definite political slant to his comic, but he made fun of the follies of both conservatives and liberals.īloom County was a unique creation not only because of its humor, but because of the unusual perspectives Breathed used. Breathed used the two to ridicule not only politicians but the election process and the American public's willingness to believe the media campaigns. Whenever the country faced a presidential election, The Meadow Party would emerge with its candidates: Bill the Cat for President and an often reluctant Opus for V.P. The terrorists faced off against the Mary Kay Commandos, complete with pink uzis.īreathed was adept at political satire as well. Breathed used this to point out the cruelties of animal testing as well as the extremism of the animal rights terrorists. Breathed had Opus's mother being held in a Mary Kay testing lab. Corporations such as McDonalds and Crayola felt the barb of Breathed's wit, though not as much as Mary Kay Cosmetics. He lampooned the American military through the creation of Rosebud, a basselope (part basset hound, part antelope) that the military wanted to use to smuggle bombs into Russia. Milo and Opus both worked for the Bloom Picayune, the local newspaper, and Breathed used them to launch many attacks on the media. Opus had a nose job and constantly bought stupid gadgets advertised on TV. He also attacked American fads, institutions, and corporations. The strip supposedly ended because Trump the Cat bought the comic and fired all of the "actors."īreathed didn't restrain himself to ridiculing individuals. In the world of Bloom County, Donald Trump's brain was put in the body of Bill the Cat. In the later years of the strip, Donald Trump and his outrageous wealth became a chief focus of Breathed's satire. Reading through the strip is like reading through a who's who of 1980s references: Caspar Weinberger, Oliver North, Sean Penn and Madonna, Gary Hart. Opus eventually became the star of the strip and when Breathed ended the comic, he was the last character to appear.īreathed used his comic menagerie to ridicule American society, culture, and politics. One, a parody of Garfield, was Bill the Cat, a disgusting feline that usually just said "aack." The other was the big-nosed penguin named Opus, who first appeared with a much more diminutive honker as Binkley's pet, a sorry substitute for a dog. But two other animals became the most famous characters of the strip. Over the years, the boarding house residents changed the Major and Bobbi Harlow vanished and the human inhabitants were joined by a host of animals including Portnoy, a hedgehog, and Hodge Podge, a rabbit. Other original residents included Mike Binkley, a neurotic friend of Milo Binkley's father Bobbi Harlow, a progressive feminist school teacher Steve Dallas, a macho despicable lawyer and Cutter John, a paralyzed Vietnam vet. Both boarding house and county appeared to be named for a local family, originally represented in the comic strip by the eccentric Major Bloom, retired, and his grandson Milo. Capturing popular attention with witty comment, the strip also offered a new perspective in the comics.īloom County began in 1980 with the setting of the Bloom Boarding House in the mythical Bloom County. During its run, the comic strip reveled in political, cultural, and social satire. ![]() A popular daily comic strip of the 1980s, Bloom County was written and drawn by Berkeley Breathed.
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