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Why People Should Salute The Far Side's Gary Larson....Still 
By: Rick London
When in the mood, I can talk about my favorite Far Sides all night, Only several humorists influenced me greatly before Londons Times Cartoons became my pet prroject. Others who influenced me a great deal were the original cast members of Saturday Night Live, a former roommie in New York, Patrick Weathers (who also was a featured performer on SNL in the early 1980's) Steven Wright, Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore, Jack Benny, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Lucy, Rowan & Martin, Peter Sellers, and and I'm sure I could name a hundred more if I had time. One other cartoonist was the late great Charles Schulz, and they all influenced me in a different way.
Larson's influence touched me and I melted like butter at the humor as it was the way I felt, and thought, and viewed the world also. The Far Side was like a super-human psychiatrist. He/she didn't have to ask me how I felt, he/she already knew and told me in one little cartoon panel. He was evolved from common cartooning and he usually focused on what he knew best, science and animals. He had a major in biology and aside from the frequent use of cows and insects, biology and mad funny looking scientists were often his theme-de-jour. Before Larson launched The Far Side, he was working on a cartoon called "Nature's Way". The Seattle Times was the first paper to publish it in 1979. A year later, Chronicle Features picked The Far Side up for syndication and it ran fifteen years. Larson put down his pin on New Years Day, 1995. For awhile we heard nothing. Then he wrote a very biologically-accurate children's story about worms titled "There's A Hair In My Dirt" which quickly became a New York Times Best Seller. When asked why he was retiring, he said, he simply didn't want to become mediocre. He stopped while he was ahead. He could be labeled more than a cartoonist, perhaps a "cartoon surrealist" of sorts. A lot of his cartoons featured bovine behavior and conversations that cows had when no people were around. The behavior was often erudite to make the reader understand he or she perhaps might not be so much smarter than these cows (and other animals, from squid to deer to bears. Cats and dogs often appeared in Far Side panels and nobody can forget the dog, in a car with it's owners, smiling, yelling to a dog in a yard, "I'm going to the vet to get tutored!!!"
One of his most famous panels shows a chimpanzee couple grooming each other. One discovers a blonde human hair on the other and queries "Conducting a little more 'research' with that Jane Goodall tramp?" Jane Goodall's institute board immediately took action as they thought it was in awful taste, Their attorneys shot out a letter to Larson and his Chronicle Syndicate, in which they described the cartoon as an "atrocity". They were stopped, ironically by Goodall herself, who enjoyed the cartoon. Since then, all of the profits from the sale of a Far Side shirt featuring this cartoon benefit the Goodall Institute. Most recently, Larson has published a 2007 calendar and 100% of the royalties benefit Conservation International. So Gary Larson not only turned out to be a very talented man, but a man who cares about the world in which he lives, and does something about it in a very unique way. Gary Larson is not just the greatest cartoon who ever graced the planet (and I don't gush often), he's obviously a very kind soul as well.
Article Source: http://www.uberarticles.com/articles
Cartoonist Rick London, founder of Londons Times Cartoons says many famous funny people have influenced him but none had an impact like The Far Side's Gary Larson on his now very Top Internet Cartoon, Londons Times The Gary Larson Far Side Influence Continues
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