The Dinette Set

The Dinette Set is a single-panel newspaper comic by artist Julie Larson. Set in the fictional Midwestern suburban community of Crustwood, the comic satirized middle-class culture; its main characters are 50-ish sisters Verla Darwin and Joy Penny.[1] The comic poked fun at middle-class perceptions (and misperceptions) of common, everyday issues.

The Dinette Set
Author(s)Julie Larson
Current status/scheduleConcluded daily gag panel
Launch date(self-syndication) November 16, 1990 (November 16, 1990)
(syndication) 1997 (1997)
End dateNovember 29, 2015 (November 29, 2015)
Alternate name(s)Suburban Torture (1990–1997)
Syndicate(s)King Features (1997–c. 2006)
Creators Syndicate (c. 2006 – Jan. 2010)
United Feature Syndicate (May 2010–Nov. 29, 2015)
Genre(s)humor

Publication history

Larson's comic began as Suburban Torture in the Los Angeles Reader and other alternative newspapers in November 16, 1990.[1] It was then syndicated daily by King Features from September 9, 1996 to 2004, when it moved to Creators Syndicate.[2]

In January 2010, Larson announced The Dinette Set was leaving Creators for self-syndication.[3] In May of 2010, however, Larson signed on with United Feature Syndicate.[4]

The strip continued until November 29, 2015, after which Larson retired from drawing.[5]

Format

The strip is a single panel comic that usually has two panels in most Sunday papers. It usually takes place in the Penny's dining room or in their living room, or in the summer months, their backyard pool. Much of the humor in the strip comes from the shirts the characters are wearing and signs hanging in the background. The characters are usually wearing T-shirts that have the name of a popular book or movie or TV show and then that say "on ice". (Example: "The Jerk on Ice") Usually these pop culture references have never been performed on ice. A lot of times at least one of the characters have a coffee mug that says "shut up" on it. In the scenes in the dining room, there is a to do list hanging in the background for humor. The strip usually has an object hidden in the picture for the reader to find known as a "find it".

gollark: 'Tis hard.
gollark: Sure there is.
gollark: Yes, like it is conveniently easy in compile errors.
gollark: If it filled it in with some default value it'd be horrible and break.
gollark: There could be times when your syntax was invalid, i.e. a box is empty.

References

  1. Astor, David (November 30, 1996). "Middle Class Is Satirized In 'Set". Editor & Publisher. Pg. 22
  2. Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 125. ISBN 9780472117567.
  3. Gardner, Alan. "JULIE LARSON TAKES DINETTE SET TO SELF SYNDICATION," The Daily Cartoonist (January 25, 2010).
  4. Gardner, Alan. "THE DINETTE SET MOVES TO UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE," The Daily Cartoonist (May 20, 2010).
  5. Staff. "‘The Argyle Sweater’ replaces ‘Dinette Set’ as comic’s creator retires," Journal Star (Nov. 28, 2015


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