Monday, February 28, 2011

American Legion Magazine cartoon - Roy Delgado

Here's a drawing clip from the February issue of American Legion Magazine . . . as a matter of fact, just came to me via email from my partner-in-crime and collegue, Gary Zeller . . . whose own work I like because of its simplicity and crispness and right to the point and he uses color great ! 



Thanks, Zell

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Here's a thought for the day:

" Life is not made up of great sacrifices and duties but of little things which smiles and kindness given habitually are what win and preserve the heart and secure comfort. "

SIR HUMPHRY DAVY, 1778-1829  English Chemist and Inventor

Sunday, February 27, 2011

cartoon of the day


Who doesn't like a centerfold spread ( made popular by Playboy )  ? H-m-n-n ?

Saturday, February 26, 2011

cartoon of the week

New Yorker cartoon


Just for the helluvit, I'd love to see this cartoon in the New Yorker . . . but probably won't . . .

Friday, February 25, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado


This cartoon appears on page 176 in the latest March issue of Reader's Digest magazine on the newsstand now. 

As I mentioned before, when drawing military cartoons I always draw Marines, since I am most familiar with their uniforms ( without having to do any research ).

I always get a little irritated when I see a cartoon of a man in the military and the cartoon is way off on the uniform.  With the advent of Google it's much, much easier to have the correct info in front of you in a jiffy, rather than the old way of clipping images and putting them in envelopes and then filing them for retrieval . . . it was a tedious, time-consuming boring chore that is welcome of its demise.

Bob Dylan was right . . . " Times, they are a changin . . "

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado



As I mentioned before, I have an affinity for hoboes and bums . . reason probably being that as a kid growing up in Tucson AZ, at 218 North Third Avenue ( now an empy lot ), the house was located just one-and-a-half blocks from the Southern Pacific Railroad, where my father worked as a machinist.  He bought the house so he could walk to work in the roundhouse where they made the parts and worked on the trains.

I remember many times hoboes would hop off the boxcars and flat cars and hang around and sleep at a hobo jungle, ( about two square blocks of desert, right in town ! ) located right alongside the train tracks.  It just so happened that the hobo jungle, which was right in the city was our playground where you could hunt for gophers, cotton-tail and jack rabbits, gila monsters, lizards, horned toads, scorpions, spiders and a few other animals that would make great targets for our homemade sling shots . . . we were the "big game hunters" . . . .  the hoboes, bums and tramps, as we called them then, were usually from the east and would show up like clockwork for the winter . . . at about 10-12 years old I started hanging around the hobo jungle and some of them would make a fire and cook a Mulligan stew in an empty gallon tin can . . . man, it smelled good . .

To me they were NOT homeless people and I don't think that THEY thought of themselves as " homeless" . . . they were " hoboes" . . . free spirits . . . travelers . . . lost souls with wanderlust in their DNA . . many preferred a cheap red wine instead of a meal. That was sad.

The word always got out which houses would cheerfully give you a meal.  They would know exactly almost when my mother would be making lunch or dinner on a Saturday usually, I don't know why.  They could tell by smelling when the meal was ready to serve.  They would politely knock on the door, politely ask if we had anything to eat since they hadn't eaten in days , and my mother would bring them out a bowl of stew or chicken soup or whatever to the porch and they would eat outside . . They knew, that it was best to do this alone, otherwise it could be considered rude to show up with two or more . .  

I found out years later that these hoboes would make a mark with chalk on the curb in front of the house that would give you a meal.  In fact this bit of trivia was mentioned in a comic book about hoboes that the great Harvey Kurtzman illustrated in the 80's.  I wish I knew the title.

This is my tie-in to cartooning that is relevant all from this cartoon about bums ! . . . e-r-rr-r homeless people .

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

cartoon of the day



One of my favorite cartoons, first drawn in the last century . . it's been around . . . I predict it'll sell . . . I just don't know when or who will buy it . . .  I'll just have to wait and see . . .

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Thought of the day:

" To keep a lamp burning we have to keep putting oil in it. "

MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA, 1910-1997, Yugoslav Missionary

If you're a freelance cartoonist or a writer, this means you.  Keep plugging, keep inspired, keep putting oil in the lamp . . . keep on keeping on.   It's right there, as clear as it needs to be.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Cartoon of the day



This cartoon was sold yesterday to Leatherneck Magazine.  It's kind of an inside joke in that in The Marine Corps, your rifle is your best friend.  Your are taught that it IS your best friend because it can keep you alive.  You learn to take it apart and put it back together blindfolded. 

 That is why they put so much empahsis that every Marine must qualify with the rifle on the rifle range.  Sometimes you have to sleep with your rifle . . . it becomes your best friend . . in the cartoon above, the poor dog senses that he has competition for that title right now . . . you know how dogs can sense fear . .  of course they can also sense love . . .

Friday, February 18, 2011

Harvard Business Review - Roy Delgado




This drawing appears on page 36 in the current Harvard Business Review magazine on the newsstand now. 

It is in a regular section called " Strategic Humor " . . . . This feature used to occupy a double-page spread, but since a lot of magazines experiencing readership decline in print format, they had to make it now just a single page. 

This feature in this issue contained just three cartoons . . . the other two were by my partner-in-crime, Peter Vey . . . whose work you see everywhere, including being a mainstay at The New Yorker.

Peter's style is unique, contemporary, original, funky, quirky, his absolute own and I think it's absolutely brilliant !

They made ONE Peter Vey and then they threw away the mold !

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado



I always get a kick out of the fast-talking snake oil salesmen . . . Ron Popeil is probably the one of the top 3 that ever lived. This guy could sell iceboxes to eskimos.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado



Good question . . . I was actually asked that by one of my kids . . .  and I said, quickly:  " Of course, the stork ! "   I got a funny look, I remember, that I'll never forget . . . About a week later she comes up to me and says: " Liar, Liar ! Pants on fire ! "

It's nice to reminisce and remember all the good thoughts and experiences . . . FORGET all the negative stuff . . .  UNLESS, you can learn from it, THEN, that is the only reason you ever think about it . . .  Like Henry Ford told us:   " Even a mistake may turn out to be the one thing necessary to a worthwhile achievement. "

Monday, February 14, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado



I like cartoons about religion . . . as long as you don't put a firecracker or bomb on a turban on a guy that could pass for Franco Harris . . . or as long as it's making fun about any religion but ONE . . . THEN, you should respect their wishes . . .  because you are insensitive or disrespectful to do otherwise  . . . . it's a dangerous occupation to be a cartoonist . . . I wonder if the Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard wishes he should become a plumber like his uncle ? or maybe he could have opted for an Amway distributorship . . . Joined the French Foreign Legion . . I can think of a dozen other safer things he could've done besides pursuing cartooning !

I'd love to pull this gagline on an imam or a priest or a pastor or minister or preacher or a chaplain . . . man, I'd give anything to watch someone pull this off !  Just to see the expression on his face !

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado


I love gags about hobos, bums and tramps  . . . but NOT the homeless . . . hey, aren't they the same ?   

Friday, February 11, 2011

Cartoon of the day


I used to work for a guy like this . . . funny thing about him . . . he definately didn't want to spread the wealth around  . . . but he LOVED to spread the BLAME around . . . it takes all kinds.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Cartoon of the day - Roy Delgado


Here's a cartoon that pushes the envelope a little . . . . like everything else . . .

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Cartoons available for licensing - Roy Delgado

Cartoons available on almost any subject.  For use in magazines, newspapers, newsletters, powerpoint presentations, advertising . . .  humorous illustration services . . . competetive, fast responses and turnaround.

 Award-winning cartoonist Roy Delgado's cartoons have appeared in almost every major magazine in the United States and in many publications in the world.  Prices depend on usage.  Inquires welcome: