
Ruben Bolling
Contributor at Boing Boing
Cartoonist, Writer. Two-time Pulitzer Prize Finalist, Herblock Prize, RFK Journalism Award, Berryman Award, NCS Awards, Top 76 Theme Park Influencer
Articles
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3 days ago |
inthesetimes.com | Mattie Lubchansky |Jen Sorensen |Tom Tomorrow |Ruben Bolling
Jen Sorensen is a cartoonist for Daily Kos, The Nation, In These Times, Politico and other publications throughout the US. She received the 2023 Berryman Award for Editorial Cartooning from the National Press Foundation, and is a recipient of the 2014 Herblock Prize and a 2013 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award. She is also a Pulitzer Finalist.
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5 days ago |
boingboing.net | Ruben Bolling
Here is Steve Martin in a 1974 video he made at Ed's Warehouse restaurant and Markham Street in Toronto. Martin had done some late night talk show appearances, but this was still two years from his first SNL appearances, and three years from his 1977 debut album Let's Get Small, that propelled him to stardom.
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1 week ago |
boingboing.net | Ruben Bolling
Fantagraphics Books has launched a new line of non-superhero Marvel comic book compilations, "Lost Marvels," with the publication late last month of Lost Marvels No. 1: Tower of Shadows, collecting the full 9-issue 1969-1970 run of the horror comic book series. It's a hardcover book that reproduces the pages as they would have looked in the original comic book form, complete with "Ben-Day" dot coloring.
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1 week ago |
boingboing.net | Ruben Bolling
Support your friendly neighborhood independent comic strip: SIGN UP FOR THE INNER HIVE and you'll get each week's Tom the Dancing Bug comic at least a day before publication. Plus other exclusive content like extra comics, commentary, juicy gossip, puzzles, jokes, and insider theme park gossip. Please do join the team that makes it possible for Tom the Dancing Bug to exist. Get the new book that explains it all.
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1 week ago |
boingboing.net | Ruben Bolling
This video explains how 19th century French physicist Jules Antoine Lissajous used tuning forks to map out two-dimensional shapes, called Lissajous curves, that uniquely correspond to every musical interval, the difference in pitch between two notes. Musician Reuben Levine notes:"What I find fascinating about this chart is that some element of the character of each interval seems to come through in these visualizations.
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Making an exception to my boycott of Xitter to post this new comic now up on Boing Boing - DON'T CALL THEM N@ZIS! - https://t.co/1QwKXWC31d https://t.co/HA0r43NI2W

This week's comic now posted to Bluesky: https://t.co/CBdpCXh7aN - LET'S GO! Bluesky https://t.co/aEhF9P2PjW Threads https://t.co/jZrlTpfit9 Insta https://t.co/S3bB5LAahE Mastodon https://t.co/wtR29qUoW2 🗞️Newsletter https://t.co/aEEU8B6I0S 👉Inner Hive https://t.co/kOLyMAPdj1!⭐️

RT @GDNPearson: @RubenBolling This is such a good deal. Unfortunately, I don’t drink coffee.