Zippy the Pinhead is the main character in the comic strip of the same name, created by Bill Griffith.
The Zippy comic strip has a cult following of devoted readers; however, many people find nothing humorous in Zippy and cannot comprehend the strip. This antagonism and confusion is so common that the official Zippy website contains a tutorial on understanding the comic strip When the original home of the Zippy daily strip, the San Francisco Chronicle, cancelled it briefly in 2002, the Chronicle received thousands of letters of protest, including one from Robert Crumb, who called Zippy "by far the very best daily comic strip that exists in America". The Chronicle quickly restored the strip, but dropped it again in 2004, leading to more protests as well as grateful letters from non-fans. The strip continues to be syndicated in other papers, but often ranks at or near the bottom of reader polls[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/comics/poll98.htm.
The strip is unique among syndicated multi-panel dailies for its near-absence of either straightforward gags or continuous narrative, and for its unusually intricate artwork, which is only slightly simplified from the style of Griffith's 1970s underground comics.
Zippy almost* always wears a yellow muumuu with large red spots, and clown shoes.
He is married to a nearly identical pinhead named Zerbina, and has two children, Fuel-Rod and Meltdown. He has two close friends: Claude Funston, a hapless working man, and Griffy, a stand-in for Bill Griffith who often appears in the strip to complain about various aspects of modern life. A humanoid toad, Mr. Toad (less commonly Mr. the Toad), appears occasionally, embodying blind greed and selfishness.
In his daily-strip incarnation, Zippy spends much of his time traveling and commenting on interesting places; recent strips focus on his fascination with roadside icons featuring giant beings; Zippy also frequently participates in his long-running conversation with the giant fiberglass doggie mascot of San Francisco's "Doggie Diner" chain (later, the Carousel diner near the San Francisco Zoo). The website encourages people to send photos of interesting places for Zippy to visit in the strip.
His most famous quote is "Are we having fun yet?" It became a catch phrase, and appears in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations. At the 2003 University of Florida Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels, Griffith recalled the phone call from Bartlett's:
Rumors of a Zippy movie project have circulated for decades, and Griffith has devoted dozens of strips to his real and imagined dealings with Hollywood. An animated television series, to be produced by Film Roman and co-written by Diane Noomin, was in negotiations from 1996 to 2001, but was abandoned due to lack of financing.
On July 9th in 2004, Zippy made his stage debut in San Francisco in FUN: THE CONCEPT at the Dark Room Theatre. Bill Griffith approved of the adaptation, though he did not work on the project. FUN: THE CONCEPT was written by Denzil J. Meyers with Jim Fourniadis. It starred Mikl Em (San Francisco Actor/Poet Michael McElligott) as Griffy and Bryce Byerly as Zippy with Sherilyn Connelly as the ghost of Karen Carpenter, Seanetta as Mr Toad & The ethereal Snowman, George Lewis as Rene Descartes & Mr Speedy Delivery and Katrina James as the wise cracking diner waitress.
Live action footage of an actor portraying Zippy and singing a song about the character was included in the 1988 documentary, Comic Book Confidential. Stand-up comic Jim "The Bob" Wyand's work has been greatly influenced by Zippy's outlook.
A collection of about 1,000 Zippy quotes is packaged and distributed with the Emacs text editor *. Most installations of the fortune command, available on most Unix-type systems, also contain this collection. This gives Zippy a very wide audience, since most Emacs users can have a random Zippy quote printed on their screen by typing "M-x yow" (on PC keyboards that's Alt-X, then y-o-w, then Enter) and most Linux or BSD users can get a random quote by typing "fortune zippy" in a shell.
However, as a result of legal action, these quotes are being erased for GNU Emacs 22 (now in development), being replaced by some instantly-created substitutes. (Nobody would dare suggest that you save etc/yow.lines from your previous release, and replacing it after upgrading, though.)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Zippy the Pinhead".
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