Pondus

Pondus is a comic strip created by the Norwegian cartoonist Frode Øverli. Since its start in 1995, it has become one of the most successful comic strips in Scandinavia. It has been translated to several languages, including Danish, English, German, Finnish, French, Icelandic, Latin, Sami, Swedish and Esperanto.

The first issue of the Norwegian Pondus magazine, July 4, 2000.

In 2000 it inspired its own magazine.

Publication history

Øverli initially developed a strip titled A-laget (A-team) in 1995, prior to leaving the magazine Pyton. This early version focused on three characters who were fanatical football-supporters. By the time the strip in its earliest form was first published in a small local newspaper Vest-Nytt of Sotra on October 28, 1995, it had taken the name Pondus.[1] In 1996 it began a four-year run as a supporting strip in the Norwegian magazine devoted to Bud Grace's Ernie, leading to its breakthrough on April 2, 1997, when it was taken on as a daily strip in national distribution newspaper Dagbladet.[1]

On July 4, 2000, it began publication in its own Pondus magazine, as the first Norwegian strip to ever carry its own monthly publication.[2] This was followed on June 6, 2001 with the launch of a Swedish sister magazine.[3] The strip runs daily in more than 80 Norwegian newspapers, and is syndicated to several international publications, most notably Swedish Dagens Nyheter, Danish Berlingske Tidende, and Icelandic Frettabladid.

As of 2007's first issue, Pondus magazine left publisher Schibsted to continue its run with publisher Egmont. In a simultaneous event, the character Pondus quit his job as a bus driver, and bought a pub.[4]

Frode Øverli has twice received the Sproing Award for Pondus, in 1998 and 2003, and the Adamson Award in 2006.[5][6]

Characters

Pondus' family

  • Pondus - the main character, a late-thirties, football fanatic family man.
  • Beate - Pondus' wife.
  • Påsan/Kevin - Pondus' teenage son.
  • Sneipen/Frida - Pondus' baby daughter.
  • Bjarne - the family's exceptionally stupid dog.

Jokke's family

  • Jokke - Pondus cool friend and a former notoriously pathetic pursuer of ugly women.
  • Camilla - Jokke's girlfriend, and the mother of their child. Broke up but are together now.
  • Else - Jokke's mother and wife of Günther.
  • Günther - Jokke's bald, German midget stepfather.
  • Jacobsen - Jokke's father, a former jailbird.
  • Gordon - Jokke and Camilla's baby.

Other characters

Publications

Pondus magazine

The Pondus magazine has been a monthly publication since 2000. The line-up of past and current guest strips are:

Pondus albums

There have so far been 9 digest albums, all but the seventh given football-related titles. English translations appended:

  • 1. Første omgang (2001, Schibsted, ISBN 82-509-4551-4) First Half
  • 2. Andre omgang (2002, Schibsted, ISBN 82-509-4788-6) Second Half
  • 3. Hat trick (2003, Schibsted, ISBN 82-509-4955-2) In reference to football's hat-trick, a 3-goal accomplishment.
  • 4. Flat firer (2004, Schibsted, ISBN 82-509-5204-9) Flat Four. A reference to the "back four" in soccer, which normally involves four defenders, flat in reference to the defence forming a straight line, to execute an offside trap. The cover displays Pondus playing football, having just "flattened" the opponent player #4.
  • 5. Fem rette (2005, Schibsted, ISBN 82-509-5409-2) Five Correct. A reference to the Norwegian football pools betting on 12 matches, with prizes awarded for 10, 11, or 12 successful predictions. 5 is a very poor result.
  • 6. 0-6 (2006, Schibsted, ISBN 82-509-5592-7) In reference to a very poor result for the home team in a football match. In Norwegian it can also mean no sex, or "Zero sex". The cover displays Jokke, the goalkeeper, fumbling the ball to concede a goal, as the foot of an opponent player is bound for Jokke's crotch. In the background, Jokke's girlfriend looks horrified.
  • 7. Sju lange og sju breie (2007, Egmont, ISBN 978-82-429-3132-0) Seven Long and Seven Wide, an old Scandinavian expression signifying time which feels like an eternity, and referring to Pondus' old boys football squad of 14 odd-looking men posing on the cover.
  • 8. 8. Divisjon (2008, Egmont, ISBN 978-82-429-3697-4) 8. Division, the lowest league level in Norwegian football.
  • 9. Nummer 9 (2009, Egmont, ISBN 978-82-429-4059-9) Number 9, referring to Pondus' shirt number, a shirt usually held by top notch strikers.
  • 10. Ti tette og en badehette (2010, Egmont, 978-82-429-4198-5)
gollark: They probably also don't go in the exact directions subway designers would want.
gollark: > mad social scientistI'd really like to see something like this somewhere.
gollark: Just nanorobotically/magically assemble everything exactly where it's needed.
gollark: Hyperbolic geometry has interesting properties I would probably like to know more about except geometry is very hard.
gollark: Or hyperbolic space warehouses.

See also

Sources

Footnotes
  1. Harper, Morten. "Pondus-en fordomsfull folkehelt". Samtiden (3–2005): 107–117. Archived from the original on 2006-12-30.pdf (in Norwegian)
  2. Mode Steinkjer (June 27, 2000). "Tegneseriens lokale Beckham". Dagsavisen (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on August 30, 2006.
  3. Anders Grønneberg (June 6, 2001). "Pondus tar av". Dagbladet (in Norwegian).
  4. Kristian Hellesund (January 14, 2007). "Tilsynelatende nytt". Serienett.no (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  5. "Prisvinnere norsk kategori". Tegneserier.no (in Norwegian).
  6. Britt Sørensen (September 23, 2006). "Prestisjepris til Øverli". Bergens Tidene (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on September 21, 2007.
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