I wrote last week about changes to our comics pages
, which began this week. Peanuts and Spot the Frog are out. Lio and Over the Hedge are in.
There’s been a little outrage, but not the torrent we expected or at least planned for.
Here’s one email we received: YOU LITERALLY RUINED MY MOTHER’S DAY - I HAVE BEEN READING PEANUTS
(CHARLIE BROWN) SINCE 1958 EVERY DAY, AND
WAS ENJOYING THE OLDER ONES ALL OVER AGAIN. CHILDREN PROBABLY DON’T
READ THE COMICS SO WHY ADD SOMETHING
ABOUT WOODLAND CRITTERS. CHARLIE BROWN IS ABOUT LIFE.
It’s hard to know how to respond to such visceral pain. And I would not attempt to tell this reader that she has no right to feel that way. She does. But I think that our
Sunday storyabout the changes explained our position in an honest and open way. That matters.
Our reporter, Tim Clodfelter, has dabbled in comics, and he knows his stuff. And let me say for the record that I am a huge Peanuts fan. I named my first pet Snoopy if that’s any indication. But the past years have been tough on Schulz & Co. As cheesy as it is to watch the Family Circus kids talk about the Internet, it was in many ways much more painful to look at the Peanuts gang frozen in time. At first, there was comfort in their constancy. Then it became sort of like a museum, a homage to the dead rather than a conversation about life.
Your host is Ken Otterbourg, the managing editor at the Winston-Salem Journal. It's a forum to discuss the media, from