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Gnorm Gnat
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| Gnorm Gnat | |
|---|---|
Gnorm Gnat, the eponymous character | |
| Author | Jim Davis |
| Current status/schedule | Ended |
| Launch date | March 1, 1973 |
| End date | December 25, 1975 |
| Syndicate(s) | None |
| Genre | Humor |
| Followed by | Jon (Comic Strip) |
Gnorm Gnat is an American gag-a-day comic strip by Jim Davis centered on a community of anthropomorphic insects, with the title character being the protagonist. The strip appeared weekly in The Pendleton Times in Pendleton, Indiana, the only newspaper to publish the strip,[1] from 1973 to 1975, but failure to take the character to mainstream success led Davis to instead create the comic strip Garfield. Mike Peters, creator of Mother Goose and Grimm, has said that Gnorm Gnat is now a part of "cartoon folklore" as a failure that paved the way for major success.[2]
History
[edit]
Davis developed the idea for the strip while assisting cartoonist Tom Ryan on his Tumbleweeds strip. Davis saw the possibilities for gags with insect characters, and the strip was adopted by The Pendleton Times starting in early 1973.[3] During this time, Davis unsuccessfully pitched Gnorm Gnat to various syndicates.[4] According to writers Mark Acey and Scott Nickel, Davis would receive rejections for Gnorm Gnat for years.[5] "I thought bugs were funny, and nobody else did", Davis later said.[6]
Davis also recounted that one editor had advised him, "Your art is good, your gags are great, but bugs—nobody can relate to bugs!" Davis took the advice to heart and then turned to Garfield.[4] Some in the media have also reported that Davis had become "bored with the strip."[7] Another reporter suggested that the notion that no one can relate to insects has been disproved by some jokes in the comic strip The Far Side by Gary Larson.[8]
For years since the strip ended, Davis claimed that the last published Gnorm Gnat strip involved Gnorm being stepped on by a human foot.[1] This was later debunked after a Google Drive document containing many editions of The Pendleton Times that included Gnorm Gnat comics was uploaded in 2019 by YouTuber Quinton Kyle Hoover, a noted Garfield fan. The document contained the actual final strip (published on Christmas Day 1975), which depicted Gnorm standing beside a "Merry Christmas" message, saying, "Thanks, Pendleton."[9] The document also contained some strips for Davis' next work, Jon, a prototype to Garfield, which debuted in the Times on January 8, 1976, two weeks after Gnorm Gnat ended. The comic strip Jon was renamed Garfield on August 1, 1977.[9]
The Gnorm Gnat comics were published without copyright notices, making them and the characters public domain under pre-1978 U.S. copyright law.
Legacy
[edit]Garfield would later become accepted for national distribution by United Feature Syndicate in 1978 (the strip ended its run in the Times on March 2,[9] and made its national debut on June 19 that year) and became a worldwide success. In 1992, one Garfield book called Garfield Takes His Licks referred to Gnorm as an in-joke. Gnorm Gnat was listed as #2 among the "Top Ten Comic Strips Jim Davis Tried Before Garfield", being placed behind "Garfield the Toaster" and above "Milt the Incontinent Hamster."[10] In 1997, one Garfield comic strip featured a fly talking to a spider; Davis alluded to Gnorm Gnat by commenting that, "After nearly 30 years, I finally got a bug strip published".[11]
However, Davis's fellow-cartoonist Mike Peters looked back on Gnorm Gnat in an unfavorable way. Peters claimed, "We can always be thankful that Jim's first strip never made it... Gnorm Gnat has gone down in cartoon folklore as a most fortunate failure. Can you imagine a bright orange gnat on every car window? A great, huge gnat for the Thanksgiving Day Parade. A big fat gnat saying 'I hate Tuesdays.'"[2]
Characters
[edit]The characters of Gnorm Gnat were meant to be presented in a "simple, humorous style" of appearance.[5] Davis displays the characters and describes them in the book 20 Years & Still Kicking!: Garfield's Twentieth Anniversary Collection.
- Gnorm Gnat is a gnat who Davis says plays the "straight man" and who sometimes behaves like the character Walter Mitty, a trait later shared by Orson Pig from U.S. Acres/Orson's Farm.[4]
- Lyman is an insect with buck teeth who wears a hat. Described as "insane", he frequently irritates his "best friend" Gnorm with his punning quips and roundabout methods of cheating at tennis and checkers. Davis later named a character after him in Garfield.[4]
- Dr. Gougo is an unspecified insect who acts as an incompetent medical practitioner. He speaks in a broken German accent.
- Freddy is a bedraggled fruit fly who has one week to live, however, despite this, he does not die in the strip.[5]
- Natasha is a beautiful insect whom Gnorm has a crush on, this was later referenced by Dr. Liz Wilson & Jon in Jon.
- Dr. Morton Rosenwurm is an erudite worm.[4] He has a fondness for reciting poetry, particularly the works of fictional Poet Laureate "John Arbuckle".
- Cecil Slug is a naïve, dimwitted slug.[4]
- Drac Webb is a villainous spider (introduced as the strip's "token nasty") who eats other characters, typically by trapping them in webs.
- Wench Webb is Drac Webb's wife and a "source of many Bickerson-type discussions".[4] She is one of only two female characters in the strip.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Loderhose, Gary (1999). Legendary Hoosiers: Famous Folks from the State of Indiana. Guild Press. p. 122. ISBN 9781578600977.
Garfield wasn't Jim Davis's first comic strip. His first attempt failed. A cartoon featuring a gnat named Gnorm, it appeared in only one newspaper, the Pendleton (Indiana) Times. Jim ended the strip by having a giant shoe crush the gnat.
- ^ a b Peters, Mike. "Foreword". In 20 Years & Still Kicking!: Garfield's Twentieth Anniversary Collection. By Jim Davis. New York: Ballantine Books, 1998, p. 10.
- ^ Rita Winters (April 21, 1973). "Talk of the town". The Muncie Star. p. 8. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g Davis, Jim. 20 Years & Still Kicking!: Garfield's Twentieth Anniversary Collection. New York: Ballantine Books, 1998, p. 14.
- ^ a b c Acey, Mark and Scott Nickel, Garfield at 25: In Dog Years I'd Be Dead. New York: Ballantine Books, 2002, p. 14.
- ^ Aucoin, Don. "Everyone's favourite fat cat turns 25". The Record. Kitchener, Ontario: June 17, 2003, pg. C.2.
- ^ Lenz, Ryan. "Drawing on cartoon cat's success." Packet and Times. Orillia, Ontario: July 23, 2003, pg. B.3.
- ^ Doup, Liz. "Flabby tabby Garfield is 20." The Gazette. Montreal, Quebec: June 19, 1998, pg. D.7.
- ^ a b c "Newly Discovered – Davis' Pre-Garfield Garfield". The Daily Cartoonist. July 29, 2019. Retrieved October 25, 2019.
- ^ Davis, Jim. Garfield Takes His Licks. New York: Ballantine Books, 1992.
- ^ Davis, Jim. 20 Years & Still Kicking!: Garfield's Twentieth Anniversary Collection. New York: Ballantine Books, 1998, p. 155.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Gnorm Gnat at Wikimedia Commons
Gnorm Gnat
View on GrokipediaDevelopment and Publication
Creation and Inspiration
Jim Davis, born on July 28, 1945, near Marion, Indiana, grew up on a family farm surrounded by cows, cats, and other animals, where frequent bouts of asthma kept him indoors and fostered his early interest in drawing.[9] To pass the time and entertain his mother, he sketched farm animals, honing skills that would later define his cartooning career.[7] After studying art and business at Ball State University, where he contributed cartoons to the school newspaper, Davis worked in advertising, creating storyboards and animations.[4] In 1969, he joined Tom K. Ryan as an assistant on the western comic strip Tumbleweeds, learning the intricacies of producing a daily strip, including pacing, gags, and syndication processes.[9] It was during this period, around 1972–1973, that Davis conceptualized Gnorm Gnat, inspired by the gag potential of anthropomorphic insects after editors rejected his initial ideas for farm animal characters like cows and pigs, deeming them unappealing to readers.[9] Davis developed initial sketches featuring a community of bugs, selecting a gnat named Gnorm as the protagonist—a blunt, straight-man figure who provided cynical commentary amid more eccentric insect companions, often breaking the fourth wall for humorous effect.[1] The strip debuted weekly in The Pendleton Times on March 1, 1973, and ran until December 25, 1975, as a gag-a-day format emphasizing the underdog appeal of overlooked creatures like insects.[9][10] This experience taught Davis key lessons in character relatability and market viability, influencing his later creation of Garfield.[7]Syndication History
Gnorm Gnat debuted on March 1, 1973, in The Pendleton Times in Pendleton, Indiana, running as a local weekly gag strip without national syndication.[11][10] The strip continued in this paper until its conclusion on December 25, 1975, over nearly three years.[10] In early 1974, the strip briefly expanded to a few regional Indiana newspapers, including a delayed run in the Fortville Tribune that lasted until January 1975 before reverting to local publication primarily in Pendleton.[12] That same year, amid his early career challenges assisting on other strips, creator Jim Davis sought broader distribution by pitching Gnorm Gnat to syndicates, including sending sample packages to potential client papers.[10] However, these efforts were unsuccessful, as syndicates rejected the strip due to its niche focus on anthropomorphic insects, deeming the subject matter unappealing to general audiences despite acknowledging its humor.[13] The total output amounted to approximately 140 strips during its run.[2]Cancellation and Aftermath
The Gnorm Gnat comic strip concluded its run in late 1975 after more than two years of weekly publication exclusively in The Pendleton Times, a local newspaper in Pendleton, Indiana, where readership remained limited to the regional audience.) Syndicate rejections played a key role in the cancellation, with editors citing the humor as "too insect-specific" and unlikely to appeal broadly, as one noted, "Who can relate to a bug?"[5] Additionally, creator Jim Davis faced financial pressures from assisting on his family's farm, where his initial payment for the strip was just $28, underscoring the lack of viable income from the endeavor.[14] The final strip, published on December 25, 1975, depicted Gnorm beside oversized "Merry Christmas" letters, with the character directly thanking the city of Pendleton in a nod to its local supporters.[10] In the immediate aftermath, Davis shifted focus in 1976 toward developing cat-themed concepts, drawing on the anthropomorphic style from Gnorm Gnat but adapting it for greater relatability, which laid the groundwork for Garfield by 1978.[5] He incorporated clippings and samples from Gnorm Gnat into portfolio pitches to syndicates during this period, using them to demonstrate his artistic versatility despite the prior rejections.[6] Post-cancellation, Davis retained the original artwork in his personal collection, while some early strips survived through fan clippings and microfiche archives preserved in local Indiana libraries, including the Pendleton Public Library.)Content and Themes
Fictional World
The fictional world of Gnorm Gnat depicts an anthropomorphic insect society inhabiting a backyard ecosystem, where bugs construct homes from natural elements such as anthills, leaves, and dirt clods, while engaging in everyday activities that mirror human jobs, relationships, and leisure pursuits. This setting portrays insects as a cohesive community navigating social dynamics in a scaled-down version of the human world, complete with organized interactions and communal spaces.[15][12] Natural hazards like approaching human feet, sudden rainstorms, and other environmental perils frequently propel the narrative, underscoring the constant vulnerability of the insect inhabitants to larger forces.[16][17] Insects in this universe demonstrate acute awareness of their minuscule scale compared to humans, treating ordinary objects—such as discarded soda cans or scraps of paper—as monumental landmarks or barriers that shape their environment and daily challenges. To satirize human societal parallels, the strip features inventive world elements like rudimentary insect "technology" fashioned from twigs, leaves, and other organic materials, emphasizing resourceful adaptations within their constrained habitat.[17][5]Humor Style
Gnorm Gnat employed a gag-a-week format, typically utilizing single-panel or three-panel setups to deliver punchlines centered on the everyday struggles of insect life. These strips relied heavily on puns, irony, and visual twists to generate humor, often highlighting the precarious existence of anthropomorphic bugs in a oversized human world. For instance, a strip from May 24, 1973, features a visual twist where the protagonist escapes being taped but is immediately stapled, underscoring the relentless hazards faced by tiny creatures.[17] The humor frequently incorporated satire by mirroring human absurdities through bug society, such as financial woes adapted to an insect's brief lifespan; in a September 6, 1973, strip, a fruit fly character laments his exorbitant life insurance premiums given his one-week life expectancy, poking fun at insurance industry practices. Similarly, dark ironic humor appears in early strips like March 1, 1973, where the same character's low divorce rate is joked about despite his short life, as fruit flies do not live long enough to get divorced, satirizing marital instability in human terms. Wordplay on bug-related terms formed another core motif, as seen in a January 31, 1974, pun portraying the lead gnat as a "gnat in shining armor," blending chivalric tropes with insect nomenclature.[17] Fourth-wall breaks added a meta layer to the comedy, with characters directly addressing the reader or the creator, Jim Davis, to comment on comic production tropes. A March 8, 1973, strip shows the artist interacting with the gnat, while a February 7, 1974, example uses word bubbles in a self-referential manner to lampshade narrative conventions. Recurring motifs included size-based humor, such as insects being randomly crushed by oblivious humans, emphasizing ironic scale disparities and survival anxieties, and existential dilemmas tied to insect biology, like the futility of long-term planning for short-lived species. These elements combined to create a sarcastic tone that broke the fourth wall frequently, engaging readers through direct asides and acknowledgments of the strip's artificiality.[17][1]Narrative Structure
Gnorm Gnat primarily consisted of standalone weekly strips characterized by minimal continuity, allowing each installment to function independently as a self-contained gag, shaped by the constraints of local newspaper publication in The Pendleton Times, which emphasized brief, digestible content without extended narratives. While the format emphasized isolated humorous vignettes, occasional short arcs spanning two to three weeks emerged, such as sequences depicting Gnorm bombing as a stand-up comic and being hooked off stage.[18] The pacing followed a consistent pattern: a rapid setup in the initial panel introduced the scenario, middle panels built escalating absurdity through character interactions or mishaps, and the final panel delivered a punchline resolution for immediate comedic payoff. These elements ensured accessibility for readers in a single sitting, prioritizing punchy delivery over prolonged development.[18] Over its run from 1973 to 1975, the narrative approach evolved noticeably. Early strips leaned toward observational humor centered on everyday insect life, while later entries adopted a self-referential tone, meta-commenting on the strip's existence.[1] Innovative structural devices enhanced the storytelling without complicating the gag-a-week format. Captions often simulated "news" bulletins from the insect world, providing contextual flavor, while thought bubbles exposed characters' inner monologues to layer irony and sarcasm. These techniques added depth to the portrayal of insect society challenges, such as survival pressures, in a concise manner.[1]Characters and Art
Protagonist and Key Figures
Gnorm Gnat serves as the central protagonist of the comic strip, depicted as a hairy, cynical gnat who functions primarily as the straight man amid the eccentric behaviors of surrounding insect characters.[15] His personality is marked by sarcasm and a frequent awareness of the comic's artificiality, often breaking the fourth wall to comment on the absurdity of events or his own lack of punchlines.[17] Gnorm harbors unfulfilled ambitions, aspiring to stardom as an actor or performer, which aligns with Walter Mitty-like daydreams of grandeur that contrast sharply with his everyday frustrations.[15] He is routinely portrayed performing stand-up comedy routines that underscore his role as the reactive foil to chaotic scenarios.[19] These traits position Gnorm as the lens through which the strip's humor unfolds, enduring mishaps with dry wit rather than initiating them. Among the key recurring figures, Freddy the Fruit Fly stands out as Gnorm's melancholic companion, characterized by profound depression stemming from his species' one-week lifespan.[17] Introduced in the debut strip on March 1, 1973, Freddy embodies dark humor through quips about his fleeting existence, such as lamenting high life insurance premiums or low divorce rates due to short marriages.[17] His interactions with Gnorm often highlight themes of mortality and resignation, with Gnorm attempting (and failing) to cheer him up, driving gags centered on existential dread. Freddy's final appearance occurs on May 22, 1975, marking the evolution of the strip's ensemble before its cancellation.[17] Lyman, an eccentric insect of unspecified species—possibly resembling a flea—acts as Gnorm's unreliable sidekick, defined by his free-spirited yet mildly unhinged demeanor.[15] Prone to insensitive jokes and impulsive actions, Lyman serves as a hyperactive contrast to Gnorm's cynicism, frequently dragging the protagonist into ill-advised schemes or pranks that amplify the strip's comedic tension. For instance, in a February 7, 1974, strip, Lyman assists Gnorm with spelling but veers into unrelated absurdity, exemplifying their foil dynamic.[17] Lyman's backstory hints at a nomadic, carefree lifestyle amid the insect society's quirks, though his loyalty remains questionable. Drac Webb, a cannibalistic spider, functions as an opportunistic antagonist and rival to Gnorm, introducing predatory elements to the otherwise lighthearted insect community.[15] His interactions typically involve trapping Gnorm in webs for comedic standoffs, as seen in the July 19, 1973, strip where Gnorm negotiates his fate through absurd recipe suggestions. Drac's overprotectiveness toward his web and bossy nature make him a foil to Gnorm's ambitions, often interrupting the gnat's comedic pursuits with looming threats. These encounters underscore Gnorm's role as the beleaguered everyman reacting to external chaos. Cecil Slug is a dim-witted slug who serves as another foil to Gnorm, often contributing to the strip's humor through his stupidity and simplistic outlook.[15] Described as a "village idiot," Cecil's antics typically involve bungled attempts at everyday tasks, amplifying the absurdity in interactions with more savvy characters like Gnorm.[12] Dr. Rosenwurm, a highly intelligent worm, provides contrast as the community's genius, frequently dispensing overly complex advice or inventions that backfire comically.[15] His know-it-all demeanor leads to gags where his intellect clashes with the insects' mundane problems, positioning him as a pompous yet endearing supporting figure.[12] The characters feature exaggerated traits that amplify their personalities for gag potential, such as Gnorm's furrowed brow emphasizing perpetual annoyance.[18] This approach anthropomorphized insects to explore relational dynamics within their fictional world, drawing inspiration from Davis's interest in bugs.[20]Visual and Artistic Elements
Gnorm Gnat's artwork featured simple black-and-white line drawings executed with bold inks, drawing on the traditions of mid-20th-century newspaper comics to create a clean, readable format suitable for daily syndication. The style emphasized exaggerated proportions, particularly oversized eyes on the anthropomorphic insect characters, to amplify emotional expressions and comedic timing.[18] Over the course of its run from 1973 to 1975, the illustration evolved from somewhat rough and sketchy panels in the initial strips to cleaner lines and more dynamic compositions by 1974, allowing for better integration of action-oriented gags. This refinement aligned with Jim Davis's growing experience, reverting to his original cartoony aesthetic influenced by earlier works like Tumbleweeds, while maintaining a consistent black-and-white presentation without color elements.[2] Visual gags relied heavily on scale contrasts between the minuscule insect protagonists and enormous human-scale objects, such as tape dispensers or tennis rackets, to heighten the absurdity of everyday scenarios. Onomatopoeia bubbles, like "ARRRGH" for exclamations or "splat" for impacts, added auditory emphasis to physical comedy, while subtle background details occasionally incorporated additional insect figures to enrich the world-building without overwhelming the focal humor. Davis produced the strips using traditional pen-and-ink on Bristol board, handling all aspects solo without assistants during the limited local run.[18][21]Reception and Legacy
Contemporary Response
During its initial run from 1973 to 1975, Gnorm Gnat garnered a modest local readership in Pendleton, Indiana, where it appeared weekly in The Pendleton Times. Farmers and families in the rural community formed the core audience.[8][15] Critical mentions were sparse and confined to Indiana newspapers; the lack of syndication ensured no significant national coverage.[22] Audience demographics skewed toward adults who enjoyed the satirical take on insect society, supplemented by some child appeal from the exaggerated visual gags and antics, though overall circulation remained low reflective of the small-town paper's reach.[23]Influence on Later Works
The experience with Gnorm Gnat prompted Jim Davis to pivot from anthropomorphic insects to more relatable mammals, specifically cats, after feedback from syndicate editors indicated that audiences were unlikely to connect with bug protagonists.[7] Davis noted the abundance of dog-centric strips like Peanuts and Beetle Bailey in the funny pages, but a scarcity of cat-focused ones, leading him to develop Garfield as a sarcastic, lasagna-loving feline to broaden appeal while drawing on his established gag-writing style.[24] This shift retained core elements from Gnorm Gnat, including the protagonist's biting sarcasm and frequent fourth-wall breaks, which mirrored Gnorm's self-aware commentary and evolved into Garfield's snarky asides directed at readers or his owner, Jon.[1] The gag-a-day format of Gnorm Gnat, emphasizing standalone humorous vignettes in an anthropomorphic community, directly influenced Garfield's structure, where daily strips feature isolated antics amid a supporting cast of farm animals and pets that echo the insect society's dynamics.[1] Meta-humor, such as Gnorm's direct addresses to the audience, persisted in Garfield through visual gags and narrative winks, like the cat's disdainful reactions to strip conventions, maintaining Davis's preference for light, observational comedy over serialized plots.[6] Davis leveraged his Gnorm Gnat portfolio and production experience when pitching Garfield to United Feature Syndicate in 1978, crediting the earlier strip's local run for honing his syndication-ready skills in consistent output and visual simplicity, which contributed to Garfield's rapid national success appearing in over 100 newspapers within its first year. This professional groundwork from the insect strip enabled Davis to refine his approach, transforming lessons in audience engagement into a formula that propelled Garfield to become one of the most widely syndicated comics, with the experience underscoring the value of iterative character development in cartooning.[8]Modern Rediscovery
In the late 2010s, comic strip historians and fans initiated efforts to archive Gnorm Gnat, uncovering many long-lost strips from microfilm at the Pendleton Community Public Library in Indiana. In January 2020, reviewer Quinton Reviews scanned over 130 strips and uploaded them to Wikimedia Commons, where 139 examples are publicly available as of 2024. These uploads marked a pivotal moment in the strip's digital preservation, transforming it from near-obscurity to accessible online resource. Sites like the Lost Media Wiki have further documented the archival process, cataloging the recovered dailies and noting the challenges in locating the remaining examples from the original run of approximately 146 weekly strips between 1973 and 1975.[3][25] Recent media attention has spotlighted Gnorm Gnat's unique qualities, contributing to its reevaluation as an innovative precursor to Jim Davis's later successes. In February 2024, Screen Rant featured 10 selected strips, lauding their meta-humor—such as characters directly addressing the cartoonist or breaking the fourth wall—as prescient and influential on modern comics. An April 2024 Screen Rant article compared Gnorm's straight-man role to Charlie Brown's, emphasizing the strip's sharp wit despite its limited original reach. The Daily Cartoonist echoed this in June 2024, describing Gnorm as a "sarcastic, fourth-wall-breaking bug" that showcased Davis's early talent for gag timing and visual punchlines.[17][26][1] This resurgence has fostered cultural appreciation for the strip's ahead-of-its-time elements, including self-deprecating gags that poke fun at the medium itself. In 2022, exhibits along the Garfield Trail in Grant County, Indiana—featuring Davis's original artwork and early sketches—included references to Gnorm Gnat within broader retrospectives of his career at local museums like the James Dean Gallery in Fairmount. The rediscovery has also inspired fan engagements, such as speculative continuations shared online since 2020, often exploring "what if" scenarios for the insect ensemble. Despite these developments, roughly 7% of the strips remain unavailable in public archives as of 2025, with no official reprints pursued; the works' public domain status due to absent copyright notices has not prompted collections from Davis or his associates.[27][3]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Gnorm_Gnat_comic_strips
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