Screentime: A “Zits” Treasury. By Jerry Scott and Jim
Borgman. Andrews McMeel. $19.99.
The final proverbial nail in the
proverbial coffin of newspapers may have been driven when Berkshire Hathaway
sold its 30 daily and 49 weekly newspapers early in 2020: Warren Buffett has
been a vocal longtime proponent of newspapers, particularly for their ability
to cover local news with more depth and understanding than other media can or
choose to bring to such stories. The papers are not going out of business yet –
the group was sold to Lee Enterprises, of which Buffett spoke highly, and that
company now owns 75 dailies and about 350 specialty publications. But to buy
the papers from Berkshire Hathaway, Lee Enterprises had to get financing
from…Berkshire Hathaway. So even though the financing is not a gift but a loan
(at 9% interest), the whole thing amounts to Berkshire Hathaway lending Lee Enterprises
money to take the newspapers off its hands. And this from a huge company whose
chairman speaks proudly of delivering newspapers as a boy.
It is not just news, local or otherwise,
that disappears when newspapers do. Less discussed, perhaps less noticed, but
in many ways equally important, the demise of newspapers destroys non-Internet comic
strips, one of two quintessentially American art forms (the other being jazz).
It has been a long slow downward spiral for newspaper comics, longer and slower
than the one for the papers themselves: the size of comic strips inexorably
shrank for decades, boosting the market for super-simple, quick-gag strips and
ones with art that, to put it politely, is not just simple but simplistic – and
therefore easy to shrink (think Garfield
and Dilbert). To see graphically
(that is, visually, in the way comics themselves do) just what has long since
disappeared, it is only necessary to pick up one of Peter Maresca’s Sunday Press
books offering reprints of hundred-plus-year-old comics: in one, every single
Sunday strip of Winsor McCay’s Little
Nemo measures 15 x 20 inches. Wow!
And wow, is that depressing to contemplate
while surveying the strips of the 21st century – except for a very,
very few, such as Zits. Jerry Scott
and Jim Borgman are among the last of the Old Guard cartoonists, and although
that probably makes them both feel ancient, it is meant as a compliment. Very,
very few cartoonists working today know how to build to a final panel as
effectively as Scott does with his ideas and words; very, very few know how to
produce art that tells a story and limns its characters as well as Borgman
does. Every Zits book – which shows
all the strips much larger than they ever appear in newspapers nowadays –
confirms anew just how good this strip is, how inventive it remains, how fresh
its ideas and drawings are even after almost a quarter of a century (see? Old
Guard).
Zits
does keep up with the times, witness the title Screentime, but also has a timeless quality to which anyone who has
ever raised a 16-year-old (or been a
16-year-old) can relate. Yes, the new collection has Jeremy agreeing only to
text his mom in full sentences, because it takes her too long to look up the
abbreviations. Yes, Jeremy finds that he can scroll through social media with
either thumb and is therefore “instagrambidextrous.” Yes, mother Connie tries
to explain what a postcard is and comes up with the formulation, “It’s like
Snapchat on a rotary phone.” Yes, dad Walt tells Jeremy to swat the wasp in his
room with something like a newspaper, and Jeremy ends up with “wasp parts on my
N.Y. Times app” (that particular newspaper is still around, for now). But
up-to-date Zits elements like these
coexist with non-time-bound ones, such as a strip in which Sara is worried that
she might have a facial wrinkle, Jeremy says they should consult an expert, and
he calls his mom over (Connie’s expression is one of the many that Borgman draws
with absolute perfection). Jeremy complains that he feels as if he ate a whole
buffalo, his mom is concerned and asks what he actually ate, and he says, “Half
a buffalo.” The food thing, an ever-present issue with teenagers, looms large
in Zits: the strip in which Connie
starts to ask Jeremy if he is hungry, only to turn around and see him literally
taking bites out of the refrigerator, is a perfect example. The feelings of
parents as their kids grow are also a source of continuing amusement, plus occasional
levels of real warmth, as in a four-panel Father’s Day strip showing Jeremy at
various ages, hugging his dad each time – with the final panel showing Walt
standing barely as high as Jeremy’s waist and Connie observing, “Get used to
it.” And there is plenty of character-driven comedy (along with touches of
seriousness) in Zits as well.
Notably, in Screentime, much-pierced and
much-tattooed Pierce creates a hover app and sells it for a billion dollars.
Yes, a billion. He then uses the proceeds for “giving away three hundred
million pairs of prescription eyeglasses to the rural poor in India,”
explaining, “If I have a choice between hoarding money I don’t need and helping
millions of people, I choose helping.” Pierce is a superb disproof of the
notion that weird-looking, bizarre-acting teens have no value and no values. In
a later billionaire-related strip, Pierce looks at his phone and complains,
“GAH! More stock dividends,” then makes a call and says, “Evelyn, eradicate
hunger in another sub-Saharan country, please.”
It is the writing that makes the Pierce-as-billionaire strips so effective and, in their own way, poignant. But sometimes Zits is purely a celebration of cartoon art. That happens most often in the color Sunday strips. In Screentime, there is a wonderful and hilarious four-panel one in which the first three panels show Connie as overly clingy animals where Jeremy is concerned: a constricting snake, an octopus, and a kangaroo with Jeremy in her pouch (leading to Jeremy’s fourth-panel observation that only one letter separates “mothering” from “smothering”). Just as marvelous and just as creative is a Sunday offering with a huge middle panel showing Jeremy’s many, many expressions and activities as he interacts with his friends and the world. To the left of this panel is a tiny one in which Connie sees him coming home, and to the right of the huge panel is another tiny one – in which Connie asks, “What did you do today, Jeremy?” and her quintessential 16-year-old replies, “Nuthin.’” That is parenting-of-a-teen in a nutshell. It is no wonder that, in a daily strip that sums up so many charms of Zits, Jeremy is telling Walt that he has no real plans for the day, “Just a pool party, paintball fight, burgerfest and a movie,” leading Walt to say to Connie, “I want to be a teenager again,” and Connie to reply, “Why? Aren’t you still tired from the first time?” Now there is a question for the ages, perfectly posed by, to and for the Old Guard.
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