People sometimes ask why these old comics are still relatable, and part of the answer is: selection bias! Namely, those of us who post them tend to select those that we find relatable. To highlight that, here are all the Everett True comics on the Library of Congress site that came out on October 26 (of various years). These are not cleaned up or even cropped from their newspaper:

SO TO SUMMARIZE, out of 20 candidates, only 4 of these are candidates for selection. I’d probably pick the one related to the dangers of speeding, because it might appeal to the !fuckcars@lemmy.world crowd (of which I am one!) Or maybe the one about tipping, since the image is a lot cleaner. But many of the other ones are dated, some don’t make sense, and some even present Everett in a very unflattering light.

Another thing to think about is that this may not be a complete selection of the comics that could be available. Some might only be in newspapers that are not in the Library of Congress’ archives. Some might not have been selected for publication by the editors of the papers that are (because I think a batch of comics would be sent to the newspapers periodically, and the editors would then fit one in whenever they had room). And some, like that one example from 1917, might be in such poor condition that it couldn’t be cleaned up enough. I think this is a type of survivorship bias, but I’m not sure. Anyway, I hope that was interesting! And if it wasn’t, then… OUTBURST.jpg.

EDIT: I should have ended this by saying: as you can see, there are plenty of comics that aren’t chosen, but maybe you see some that you think are worthwhile! If so please feel free to post it! Just take a screencap and crop, look for more comics here:

  • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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    27 days ago

    The phone one: the 🎶🎵 isn’t really music, just the singsong voice of the operator saying, “Line’s busy!” for the 4th time. He’s been trying and trying to get his call through, so it damn sure is busy! Remember there was no voicemail or Call Waiting, and it cost money for each call.

    The card game is Bridge, which is called that because the players on opposite sides of the table are a team, who have to work together to win but can’t actually look at the other one’s cards. I’m no expert, but his partner set him up to lose badly with impossible bids.

    Gout is associated with obesity and age, who’d imagine it could affect a slim youth like Everett True?

      • Rolando@lemmy.worldOP
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        26 days ago

        Office Cat! Makes me happy every time I see it. I’m pretty sure it was a syndicated column of thoughts and observations by “Junius” whose real name might have been “Edgar Allan Moss.” I haven’t tracked down much more info, though.

    • Rolando@lemmy.worldOP
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      26 days ago

      Oh, that makes sense, about the phone operator. The thing is, when I’m looking at these comics I’m not spending too much time on the first pass. (Plus, I’m usually watching a movie at the same time.) Well, sometimes a detail will catch me and then I’ll spend the next half-hour going down a rabbithole. Anyway, when I’ve narrowed it down to 4-5 I’ll look at each of them a lot closer.

  • tallricefarmer
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    27 days ago

    The cards one is pretty good. You guys need to learn how to play 500

    I am surprised you found most of these unrelatable.

  • GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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    26 days ago

    The dating one was about a guy whose last wife had died. Everett was accusing him of being a real taskmaster and working his last wife to death, so warning the new lady off of a bad situation.

    I’d say it was a candidate.

    • Rolando@lemmy.worldOP
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      24 days ago

      Yeah, on closer look it’s pretty interesting… hey, you should post it! Just do a screencap and crop, no problem!

  • FauxPseudo @lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    Even after accounting for selection bias, it’s remarkable how many of these still fit today. Go look at any other 1920s comic and try to find as many relevant bits as Mr. True offers. They were tapping into universal truths.

  • Rolando@lemmy.worldOP
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    26 days ago

    ADDENDUM: Oops I missed a couple, all from 1915: