Snake Tales
For the Australian television series of the same name see: Snake Tales (TV series)
For the missions mode of the same name see: Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance
Snake Tales | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Allan Salisbury |
Website | Snake Tales Website |
Current status / schedule | Running |
Launch date | April 1974 |
Genre(s) | Humor, Australia, Animals |
Snake Tales (also known as simply Snake, after the main character) is a gag-a-day comic strip written by Australian cartoonist Allan Salisbury (aka Sols).
Snake Tales was originally titled The Old Timer and was first published in The Daily Telegraph on 25 April 1974. The initial group of characters featured: The Old Timer, an elderly bloke with a long thirst and a reluctance to shout for beers; The Con Man; The Kangaroo, who constantly avoids being killed for food; the Flyin' Doc; and The Last Lost Tribesman and his Wife, who are determined to stay lost.
In July 1975 The Sun News-Pictorial published the strip as a replacement for Les Dixon's Bluey and Curley. Sols gradually added characters including Crazy Croc, Lillie (the Old Timer's distant admirer), a devious butcher, a group of duck hunters, the comic strip didn't make a great impression until the introduction of the character Snake. Snake was first introduced in 1976 and gradually gained greater prominence to the point where the name of the strip was changed to Snake Tales in 1978. The strip has now been internationally syndicated and appears in over 450 newspapers (both daily and Sunday editions) worldwide.
The strip is set in an unspecified location in the Australian outback. Occasionally a shot of a traditional outback pub by itself on a lone road is seen.
The principal characters include:
- Snake: a not very smart poisonous snake.
- Lady Snake: the Snake's girlfriend.
- The Flyin' Doc: a pilot with the Australian Royal Flying Doctors Service
When it was syndicated in the United States, Sols was asked to re-draw Lady Snake, as her "two lumps" were said to be offensive. He drew her with a bikini top instead.[1]
References
- ↑ Bateman, Daniel. "Snake's still after his buxom lady", Townsville Bulletin, 2008-03-15, p. 20.