Calvin & Hobbes was and remains one of my favorite comics of all time. I feel like I learned a lot from it and it helped me understand way more than I knew at the time.
Calvin and Hobbes is easily the greatest comic strip of all time, no contest. Not even close. I started reading it as a kid in the early 90's. Any earlier and I would have been too young to read, much less understand the jokes, but it did leave me quite saddened that the strip ended so shortly after I got into it. And I really did get into it pretty hard. I had every single book and drew all kinds of fan art and everything. I'll love that comic 'til the day I die.
Calvin & Hobbes is at least 80% of the reason why I became a comic strip artist. Something about this comic convinced me that this was the great unsung art form. And decades later, I’m still a believer.
When I was younger my grandmother would save me all the dick tracy, phantom Calvin and hobbes, spider-man, farside and flash Gordon comic strip and give em to me when I visited, I wallpapered my room in em, unfortunately my house was destroyed in katrina and that room I miss the most from everything I lost
This cartoon cracked my head wide open. I still remember reading the first strip. And then just devouring the books one by one. Totally defined my childhood.
As a kid, I would have given anything to have an official Hobbes plush toy - both the real one and what Calvin sees. I remember my Mom explaining why there weren't any and figuring out what artistic integrity is. Even as a butthurt child I had to respect the man for it.
I totally respect Watterson's decision to not market C&H (and it p1sses me off to no end when scummy bootleggers try to cash in on C&H) but to that end, it almost makes me want to learn to sew so I can make my own personal Hobbes plush to add to my collection.
I liked Hobbes so much the first toy I ever gave my son was a stuffed tiger I found on Amazon. It looks surprisingly like Hobbes’ stuffed form. It was pretty easy to find if you’re still interested.
@@enrkm85 Huh. I've never actually thought about what kind of voice Hobbes would have, Calvin's was always something like young Macauley Culkin in my head. I do like your choices for Hobbes though, both are very fitting to the character's personality.
Also, The problem is that every beloved comic hits a point where it just stops being what it was originally. Peanuts, Garfield, etc. Some rebrand and get a second life like Funky Winkerbean and Doonesbury but then they grow stale again. Larsen and Watterson knew when it was time to go. Leave people wanting more than saying “remember when it used to be good”.
i grew up with Calvin & Hobbes, deeply loved and still love them. The fact Watterson’s decision to end all gave me a lot of sadness at that time but time after time i uderstood that was the right decision cause that is what makes all so special... it's like childhood... happens just only one time, it never come back and if you enjoyed it at max, gives to you good memories. Thanks Mr.Watterson.
Perhaps he ended the series simply because he used up all his good ideas. Honestly I think it's better for a series to end with it still at it's peak in quality than for it to run on to the point where quality takes a sharp decline. Leave the audience wanting more, as they say.
It never really ends. I mean, you can buy the complete sets and read it over and over again. Bill Waterston's work was completely original, so every time you go back to re-read Calvin and Hobbes, it still feels fresh and is a joy to read. Unlike Garfield for instance, where you want to gouge your eyes out right away because every other skit is almost the exact same panel wise, with dull jokes.
@@EverlastingHobnocker your comment messed me up just as bad as the pokemon fans theorizing that ash ketchums entire adventure was a dream he had comatose after being attacked by the spearow.
Even thought I was fifteen at the time the strip ended, it still broke my heart to know I would no longer see it featured in my favorite part of the paper. My mother, who would pass only nine years later, cut it out of the paper and took it to her office to have it laminated for me. It remains one of my most cherished keepsakes both as a memory of her and the comic. Something Under the Bed is Drooling was one of the first books I bought with my own money, and I do have the hardcover set, and will never get rid of it. Thank you for doing this episode.
I first discovered Calvin & Hobbes when I was I roughly around the age of 9 or so, visiting my Great Grandmother a lot in my youth with my grandparents that raised me. She owned this wonderful house in Rhode Island, and it actually had what she referred to as a drawing room/library. One day out of boredom I was doing what any young child does and exploring. Looking over the books I came across one that simply stood out, it was one of the collections of Calvin & Hobbes, it was then I became engrossed in it. I read that book so much, that eventually my great grandmother gave it too me before our vacation was over. It was a phenomenal experience in my childhood being able to read something that I once thought was just something apart of the newspaper and meant for grown ups. I will always cherish the stories that were told, and one day hope to share it with my future children.
A lot of my childhood was deeply lonely. For several reasons, Calvin and Hobbes came to provide a lot of comfort. It’s satirized, yet honest depiction of a recession-era family helped kids to understand how hard our parents worked just to keep us fed. Calvins nature showed us that we could be a cool rebel, while also being highly intelligent. Most of all, it’s quiet and cozy moments of cuddling by a warm fire on Christmas Eve while snow fell outside and our ever-exhausted parents held hands, looking down at us, and dozing on the couch, helped us learn to appreciate these beautiful and fleeting moments. NOTHING so effectively brings me back to Christmas Eve in the 90’s quite so effectively as Calvin and Hobbes. It taught me to recognize those moments and to hold them tight in my memories. A lot was wrong with my childhood. Bill Watterson showed me just how good I truly had it.
What a great video. I loved C&H growing up, as I felt I could identify with it so much. Guess Bill Watterson is what kids nowadays call a "Chad". Fighting his publisher for (or rather against) merchandising right, full well knowing it would leave millions upon millions on the table, running and *ending* his daily strip on his own rerms and on the height of popularity - "just" to keep his artistic integrity and the strip's integrity intact. Of course I felt sad when it ended, but looking back, Watterson did the right thing, and executed it perfectly. No saccharine schmaltz, no misty eyed goodbye, no definite cut, no "passing of the torch" or a wink with the notion of a possible comeback. Just a regular strip that emphasized what he felt had always been at the heart of it. Brilliant.
This one actually got me misty-eyed, guys 🥲 I was a C&H fan since Day One, read it religiously every day, owned all the books, used the Sunday strips as wrapping paper for every present i gave in the early ‘90s, made blown-up photocopies of poignant panels and plastered them around town, had _tasteful_ bootleg stickers stuck on every car i owned… magical times 😊 Thanks for the wonderful trip back to happier days, as well as some tidbits i didn’t know about (like i totally slept on _Hobbes & Bacon_ 😳). You guys rock, as always 😎👍
The Calvin and Hobbes books I collected as a kid had snippets of some of Watterson’s insights into his thought process on some of the strips he made. In one particular strip he drew Calvin fantasizing about destroying his own school with a fighter jet and how some angry parents wrote in calling it distasteful. Bill’s response was “Some of my readers were just never kids themselves.” Bill’s integrity as an artist still resonates with me to this day.
@@Dargonhuman I ran the whole gamut myself. Aliens, monsters, fireballs, unexplained explosions (as in I never bothered coming up with explanations for said explosions,) ice powers, Carrie-style psychic abilities. I had a lot of school destruction fantasies as a kid, and never stopped as a teenager.
True, but in todays world it would be on the news and tabloids would be hunting him down to 'justify himself'. And in a way TODAY it would be very different than the eighties.
Great strip with Calvin, an F-15, and "A smoldering crater is all that remains of Calvin's Elementary school!" Can't tell you how many times I woke up fantasizing that my school had been wiped out. Snow days too, with the radio on hoping your district would be called. No greater pleasure as a kid than hearing that. Like a bonus Christmas.
I’m so thankful that Calvin and Hobbes had came to Poland in early 2000. I found it in Warsaw in an free daily advertising newspaper which became very popular at the time and I had fallen in love immediately. The art style; minimalistic yet expressive and powerful. Scripts; not only funny but clever and thought provoking; lots of them I quote to this day. I collected cut strips. In long time there was no chance to buy book version in polish, so bought English version by Warner Books (“The Essentials of Calvin and Hobbes”)which was available in Empik bookstores(they had English corner). C&H had made huge impact on me; on my art style and on the way I think on making stories especially comic stories. I admire Bill Waterson’s artistic attitude especially I couldn’t do it for economic reasons. Last thing. C&H is the only strip could put joke referring to Polish history like this: Calvin as Spiff: “... he locks onto target “ Susie: “Psst. Calvin! What was the capital of Poland until 1600? Calvin: “Krakow” Susie: “Thanks” Calvin (not listening): “Krakow! Krakow! Two direct hits!”
Wow, the guy had a level of integrity you almost never see in the entertainment industry these days, or every really. My childhood was all about the ultra consumerism of the late 80s and early 90s where He-Mans and Ninja Turtles reigned supreme. This story makes me think of being a young lad and going to my grandparents house for breakfast every Sunday, shredding thru the chronicle looking for the comics while waiting for my grandmother to finish cooking. Right there on the front page just under The Peanuts would be Calvin and Hobbs. And now i just made myself depressed cuz I'm old and i know I'll never get experiences exactly like that in the exact same way again lol
I loved Calvin and Hobbes almost from the beginning. I was a teenager and it spoke to me the way that Charlie Brown did when I was in Elementary school. Brilliant writing, even better illustrations, Watterson must have worked so hard to make something so spectacularly simple. His integrity has only deepened my respect over the years. I had all the collections until I lost them in a move, even had the calendars, but now I’ve got the big ol’ hardback complete collection so it’s all good. I would probably give my left arm to get an original strip. Since I’m poor, I hope that limbs become currency soon lol
I was introduced to C&H as a kid while visiting my grandparents' house during summers and on holidays (born in 82, I was just starting to read when my granddaddy must have bought the first available collections). I looked forward to each visit as much for the chance to revisit them and hopefully find a new collection on the bookshelf as I did seeing family members again. C&H brings back memories of those visits. When I was old enough to have a little spending money, Scholastic book fair was my chance to get my own C&H collections. There never had been and never will be anything like it. Watterson played with the nature of the format in revolutionary ways. I was blown away when I read that the first two frames/top line of the full color Sunday panels were never integral to the story. Some papers didn't publish them, so they laid out the setting, but you could still enjoy the rest of the panel without ever seeing those frames.
Even if I wanted Calvin & Hobbes merch in one way or the other at some point in my life, these days I can't help but admire Watterson for having it be just that one special thing: A comic strip.
I adored Calvin & Hobbes as a kid and still do as an adult; it was a brave decision to do what he did in the end. Doesn’t really matter it ended when it did, Calvin and Hobbes is forever.
It's truly shocking how much something like a comic strip about a boy and his stuffed tiger can effect your life growing up. I own almost every one of Wattersons books, so I have a good collection of Calvin and Hobbs and to this day every once in a while I pull one out and spend a good amount of time laughing out loud and going back in time to a simpler time of my life. Thank you Bill!
Calvin and Hobbes ended the same year I graduated high school, and though my local paper didn't carry it until 1990, I found all the books at the Scholastic Book Fairs starting in 1987. It shaped me into who I am today along with SNL and George Carlin. I have the final two panels of the last strip tattooed on my forearm. " Let's go exploring!"
I began reading C&H a few years into the run in my local paper, usually only on Sundays though. Probably 1987-88. I was a few years older than him (I was a very grown up 11 year old) but something in it made me laugh. Not like a Garfield laugh, or Cathy or Doonesbury. Like For Better or For Worse kind of laugh. I recognized it and the situations that Calvin was getting into. As I grew older, I saw more of myself in Calvin than I was comfortable admitting at the time. Toe-head, precocious, and with a wild imagination that was more interesting than the world around me. C&H began to let me find my childhood again. Not the real one where food was sometimes scarce or parents were too violent with their children. One that I hoped I could one day live in. I grew up though and C&H became a fond memory. When it was spoken about with my mom (who loved it), she would always sigh a little and laugh. I was her Calvin. A few years ago, my brother bought the hardbound collection for me. I was living for the first time on my own and was having a really difficult year. Opening that box was one of the best moments of my life. Thumbing through the pages brought back a flood of memories. Some welcome, some not; but all vital to me remembering who I was and am. A few years ago, when my mother died, C&H is partially what got me through. The subreddit on Reddit and the books were a balm for me and let me relive a time when the world was less confusing. "Stripped" is amazing (and one of the few DVD's I have purchased in recent memory) and "Dear Mr. Watterson" was a love letter to all of us and to him. Thank you Mr. Watterson.
Agreed, it is unfortunate, especially with toy collecting being fairly mainstream these days. We are proudly the Galaxy (of fans) in Toy Galaxy, for Dan and Producer Greg!
Whenever I see Netflix's The Toys that made Us, I remember Toy Galaxy and I know Netflix ripped them off, Dan and his team should have been doing the Netflix shows.
Agreed! Unlike other Toy devoted channels, Mr. Larson keeps Toy Galaxy wholesome, not resorting to colorful swear words or being hypersensitive to criticism as a few hosts are. And he maxes out the trivia on the videos as well.
Found the complete set for my nephew . He’s only 2 1/2 now so may be a few years until he gets into it but I hope he loves it as much as I have and appreciates the writing as well . Waterson is such a great writer and especially being older , I can appreciate him standing up for what he believes and not selling out in anyway he wasn’t comfortable with . You’re awesome Bill ! Thank you . ❤
The closing got me crying. My dad bought us a lot of the paperback collections and he’d read them with me as a bedtime ritual a lot. I’ve had a lot of health issues lately that have reframed my perception of life and death and it really has me missing those days and moments.
What an awesome video! I was 8 years old in 1985 13 years old in 1995. I was an introvert I spent all my time reading, with my three favorite things to read being The Far Side books, Garfield books, but most importantly Calvin and Hobbes books. I felt such a kinship was Calvin because he was a kid with no friends you lived in his imagination which is basically what I did. I used to ride my bike 20-minute ride round trip to a gas station near my house newspaper every day to see the new Calvin and Hobbes. The other comic strip artist of the day should give Bill Watterson some Kudos because I read all their comic strips to but I really bought the paper for his
I loved Calvin and Hobbes since I was very young. My library had most if not all of the book compilations and I read them over and over again. Some of the lines of dialogue have entered my day to day vocabulary, such as "scientific progress goes boink", etc. I never really understood why it just ended randomly the way it did. I'm so glad this video was made to clear everything up! Thank you!
I've been a fan since Something Under the Bed is Drooling. Tyrannosaurs in F-14s is still one of my favorites. I still miss them; I would read the whole paper and finish with The Far Side and Calvin and Hobbes. That strip was always something wonderful, and we'll never see another like it.
This made me emotional. Grew up with C&H, was reading it before I even knew how to read and remember where I was when I read the final strip. It was and remains perfect.
I saw Calvin in my local paper before I could read, and when I could read I came home every day hoping for a new strip in the paper. I saw repeats when Mr. Watterson took his first break, and I was worried that it would be the end. As he came into his second break I was really upset because this was the first part of my childhood that ended. Even today, Calvin and Hobbes holds a really special place in my heart. Thank, Bill, for sharing and thank you, ToyGalaxy for making this video.
Bill Watterson wasn’t just an artist. He was a poet. A Nauseous Nocturne is a masterpiece and sticks with me after thirty years. I love Calvin and Hobbes, and even today I find new angles from which to see the stories and humour.
I grew up with Calvin and Hobbes and always loved it. Now that I am a Dad with a 6 year old son, the ending of this video actually made me tear up. Kudos dude. Great video.
Hands down my favorite comic strip. I read it every day. When I was in college I had to write a paper on a “great master “, which was defined as anyone who has had artwork published. I chose Bill Watterson. I used the 10th anniversary collection for my references. I got an A. This is the only comic strip that got me to lol, and occasionally want to cry. Bill Watterson did what most creators never do, he left us wanting more
‘The surest sign that there is intelligent life out there in the universe, is the fact that nobody has tried to contact us’ Calvin Still the best explanation for the Fermi paradox to date 🙃
I knew kids growing up who ended up getting into reading philosophy and literature, and with time becoming serious academics, whose first questions about life came from Calvin and Hobbes. Life changing.
My Dad read the comic in the strip when I was a kid and he loved it, which in turn spurred my brothers and I to read it. I didn't get all the jokes until I was an adult, but Calvin's adventures as a kid with his best friend/stuffed tiger resonated with me. And I still thought it was pretty funny. So from 2nd grade forward I would try to get new collections as they came out and always read it on Sundays
Calvin & Hobbes helped me get through the loss of a dear childhood friend. He introduced me to it (and Bloom County, incidentally), and we both exchanged collected editions to each other at Christmas. We would have arguments as to which of us was Calvin, and which of us was Hobbes. That ended when his (then undiagnosed) bi-polar depression overcame him and he committed suicide in 1993. He was just 22. Reading Calvin & Hobbes reminded me (and still does) of my friend at his happiest and most alive.
I discovered Calvin and Hobbes in middle school. I’ve loved it ever since. As a middle school art teacher, I have the books in class and love seeing students fall in love with it too. Thank you Mr. Watterson.
Calvin and Hobbes shaped my way of thinking as a kid. As an artist I applaud Waterson's integrity through the decades. Looking at the landscape of comics, games, cartoons, etc. that are being remade or reinvented today, man... he was right.
One of my favorite strips was Calvin asked go's dad where babies come from, dad said some come from sears, but was told he was a Kmart blue light special
I'd love to see an expansion of the Robotman story covered, either here or somewhere else, because that's got to be some tale. How the merchandise line failed, the lameness of the cartoon special, how the comic strip thrived in relative obscurity, how the story was changed to make the comic better, and how Robotman himself was subsequently written off his own comic strip.
Yeah, I'd like to know more. I do remember Robotman being shoved on us kids by the media, but I remember the cartoon being extremely bland and void of anything resembling a soul. It was like somebody drew some sketches on a napkin and they threw together a cartoon in ten minutes.
Waterson went out on top.Calvin and Hobbs will be in the public conscience for all time .I didn't want it to end like all others but that's what makes it even more special.
Wow dude Wife makes me a custom C&H t-shirt on her circuit machine a few weeks ago because she didn't know how much I was into the comic strip...and here this is. Awesome
I loved Calvin & Hobbes with a reverence that was new to me as a youngster. Oh, I was so mad when he went on hiatus and genuinely angry when he ended it. (Of course, that was all about me and not about Watterson.) Somehow I missed the complete collected editions; I'll have to splurge and enjoy diving into that world again. His influence on me as a storyteller is immeasurable. Thanks for making this video, folks.
I 100% understand and respect Watterson’s decision not to indulge in merchandise, but I was always disappointed we never got Calvin & Hobbes action figures.
And it bit him (and by extension the series fans) squarely on the ass when they started bootlegging Calvin pissing on things T-shirts and window decals. Not saying he had to go the Garfield route and plaster them on everything, but I think they should have twisted his arm for a limited edition prop replica style Hobbs plushie.
@@mightyfilm there are some really good crochet patterns out there to make hobbes stuffed dolls. Had a family member make one for me and it looks wonderful on my shelf with all the trade paperbacks
@@Schmiggy23 I shouldn't have to make my own merchandising. Not that I can't sculpt a figure of some obscure toy-lineless series, but I'd rather collect than craft. Besides, I have too many sad memories of clay figures falling off shelves or crumbling to dust when I was younger. Once I made this great Grounder from AOSTH figure made out of wax, melted, got knocked around, got sticky and covered in lint and dust, and then I sadly had to get rid of it.
I adored Calvin and Hobbes growing up. And it's wild to learn that Watterson and Breathed were friends. Bloom County (and its various iterations) was another one of my absolute favorites.
Calvin and Hobbes will always inhabit a part of my heart and soul. I love what Bill Waterson did and how he kept the series so pure. It will forever be a completely perfect “thing”, and that so rarely happens.
I loved calvin and hobbes. I don't remember how I first found the comic but I might have gotten a book as a gift or at a used sale or something. and we ended up accumulating all the compilation books. I had them with me one year when I was camping with a bunch of family and friends and everyone was passing them around. those are some good comics and it's so pleasant to know that so many other people were inspired by them.
Used to snip and collect _Calvin & Hobbes_ from the newspaper. Long before I could imagine it might be collected in book form someday. Not much to say that wasn't already said beautifully in this video. I loved it. Still love it. Brings a tear to my remembering its end. A wonderful historic account and tribute. Thank you, Toy Galaxy.
Thank you so much for the video! Calvin and Hobbes was a part of my life when life was easier and fun. No matter what was going in my life , the energy and wit of this strip was awesomely genius in creating smiles without trying!
I read that strip every morning before school. It was a sad day when it ended. Its still amazing how it works to this day as my kids read the collections i own and love them.
Calvin and Hobbes struck a chord with me that no other cartoon strip had. In fact, I've only ever viewed a handful of strips from the likes of Peanut or Garfield, whereas I have bought all of the Calvin and Hobbes collection books, and have read them many times over. Calvin and Hobbes is thought provoking, reflective, a stirrer of memories and very humourous. Was I sad when it ended? Absolutely, but I understand Watterson's reasons for doing so, and absolutely applaud the integrity he showed throughout its run with regard to his beliefs and aims, and can only thank him for the time he took to share his vision with the rest of the world.
I found Calvin & Hobbes as a Teen and fell in love with it. When the Hardback Collection came out I was able to grab one. As an Artist I respect the man for sticking to his principles. It will never be forgotten because there will always be a Kid that picks up one of the books and falls in love with these stories that will always stay relevant because everyone was a Kid.
I've got all the Calvin and Hobbes collections and books and I occasionally read them from time to time. I grew up with this comic and it will always be my favorite
One of the most bittersweet videos you've ever made. This comic was one of the best and most impactful of my youth. I found it when I was a sophomore in high school, and it let me stay connected to the innocence of childhood.
I really liked checkin' out Calvin and Hobbes every Sunday morning, but knew nothing about the artist. Thanks for getting us up to speed. I can really appreciate Waterson's integrity, focus and dedication.
this was a wonderful look into my childhood...I grew up with reading Calvin and Hobbes, and still own a handful of the books, though I don't own the complete collection box. My nephews love reading the comics...so I guess the legacy lives on through them
Thanks for this excellent retrospective. C&H has been an indelible and ongoing influence in my life. I was 10 when the comic strip began, and like so many commenting, grew up having its daily dose of humor, absurdity and brilliance accompany me for a significant part of my life. As it turns out, my spouse and I named our firstborn son Calvin, in no small part due to C&H. Now, my Calvin is in high school barely a hop, skip and a jump away from going to college. And he has a whole row of C&H books on his bookshelf. Coincidentally, my younger son turned 10 recently and I've noticed he's been sneaking off with his older brother's C&H books making his way through the strips ... When my kids were younger and complained to me of being bored, I can't count the number of times I broke out the transmogrifier (aka cardboard box) to see what would happen. (Narrator: Hijinks ensued.) Thanks Bill!
I found it through my older brother. He loved Calvin and Hobbes and The Farside, he would read them every Sunday when the color comics came, and he started collecting the bound volumes when they were published. He grew up and got to cool for school, so I inherited it all and I still read through them today.
In the YT genre of 'man too old to be standing in front of a cabinet of toys' this is the only show I really enjoy. The others seem derivative and grasping. I love the research, writing, and Dan's self effacing presenting style. Cheers!
I stumbled onto Calvin and Hobbes in elementary school and was obsessed. I loved the range of topics which felt mature and childish. It's really hard to say but I think my favorites were the various snow scenes Calvin came up with. I agree that the lack of commercialization kept C&H pure but also meant no fun way to show the love. Thank you so much for this video.
Watterson was a stubborn bastard when it came to artistic integrity, but I still respect the hell out of him for it as much as his work on Calvin & Hobbes.
I like to say that you have your Elvises (Elvi?) and your Buddy Hollys. You either die young and are eternally cool or live long enough to be a has-been. Yes, I know Elvis did make a comeback but if his image is ever carved into a mountain, we all know it would be the young Elvis.
He is the foundation of my values of artistic integrity. Fun Fact: Calvin and Hobbes was released less than three weeks before I turned six-years-old, which is the age of Calvin.
Loved this episode! My little boy is reading and loving my old collection of Calvin and Hobbes books just as I did when I was young. It is fun enjoying those strips all over again through his eyes. I enjoy your channel very much. It is fun going down memory lane and also learning something new about the toys, cartoons, and comics I grew up with. Keep it up! I’d enjoy seeing episodes on Bloom County and the Six Million Dollar Man. Thanks a bunch!
Spent majority of my childhood reading these. Me and one of my late close friends would buy the collections and trade off after we read them. Man 20 years was so long ago. You will be missed SDL.
I was introduced to Calvin and Hobbes within a year of its run when my local newspaper started to carry it. I immediately fell in love with its celebration of childhood innocence and imagination. I was in my 20’s when the strip began, a time when I was getting close to graduating college and facing all those big decisions that college graduates must face, and reading Calvin every morning reminded me of a time of my life that was lost to me, but which I still cherished. When the three-volume Calvin and Hobbes was published, I purchased one of the first copies on sale at my local bookstore and took a trip down memory lane, but this time accompanied by my son, who was three years old and captivated by the strip as I read it him, my finger moving from panel to panel. He’s now in his 20’s and still enjoys pulling the volumes off of the shelves and rereading the strips, especially the Spaceman Spiff ones, which were and still are his favorites. (Mine are Calvin’s snowmen dioramas. What a dark imagination that child sometimes had.) Calvin and Hobbes ended at the right time with the perfect coda. It has rightfully earned a place of deep affection in my heart and in my son’s and, hopefully someday, in future generations.
I discovered Calvin & Hobbes in the early 90s through a friend. I fell in love with it instantly even though it was complicated to get the books here in France at the time. I still own them to this day and reread them regularly.
Calvin & Hobbs was amazing but not in our local paper. Same with Foxtrot. Always had to get the compilations from the book faire at school or beg my parents to get it for me from the book store.
Calvin and Hobbes was instrumental to my childhood. Between the collections and reading it in the paper til it finished and to now, it still stands as my favourite of its type along with the Far Side.
Calvin & Hobbes was and remains one of my favorite comics of all time. I feel like I learned a lot from it and it helped me understand way more than I knew at the time.
Calvin and Hobbes is easily the greatest comic strip of all time, no contest. Not even close.
I started reading it as a kid in the early 90's. Any earlier and I would have been too young to read, much less understand the jokes, but it did leave me quite saddened that the strip ended so shortly after I got into it. And I really did get into it pretty hard. I had every single book and drew all kinds of fan art and everything. I'll love that comic 'til the day I die.
Calvin & Hobbes is at least 80% of the reason why I became a comic strip artist. Something about this comic convinced me that this was the great unsung art form. And decades later, I’m still a believer.
When I did my senior capstone in college I focused on comic lit and C&H was one of my major sources of inspiration
When I was younger my grandmother would save me all the dick tracy, phantom Calvin and hobbes, spider-man, farside and flash Gordon comic strip and give em to me when I visited, I wallpapered my room in em, unfortunately my house was destroyed in katrina and that room I miss the most from everything I lost
What is your comic strip?
@@clipsandreviews6613 It’s a weekly webcomic called ‘Puck’. It’s got a lot of that Calvin & Hobbes DNA.
That such a _private_ mind would share such a treasure with us... now that's wealth! I share that pull with you friends
This cartoon cracked my head wide open. I still remember reading the first strip. And then just devouring the books one by one. Totally defined my childhood.
As a kid, I would have given anything to have an official Hobbes plush toy - both the real one and what Calvin sees. I remember my Mom explaining why there weren't any and figuring out what artistic integrity is. Even as a butthurt child I had to respect the man for it.
I actually had a generic stuffed tiger that looked similar when I was little. Dog tore it up, though...😥
I totally respect Watterson's decision to not market C&H (and it p1sses me off to no end when scummy bootleggers try to cash in on C&H) but to that end, it almost makes me want to learn to sew so I can make my own personal Hobbes plush to add to my collection.
I liked Hobbes so much the first toy I ever gave my son was a stuffed tiger I found on Amazon. It looks surprisingly like Hobbes’ stuffed form. It was pretty easy to find if you’re still interested.
Did you ever wonder what Calvin's voice would sound like? Hobbs thou, its Dan Ackroyd from ghostbuster. Chevy Chase would be second.
@@enrkm85 Huh. I've never actually thought about what kind of voice Hobbes would have, Calvin's was always something like young Macauley Culkin in my head.
I do like your choices for Hobbes though, both are very fitting to the character's personality.
Also, The problem is that every beloved comic hits a point where it just stops being what it was originally. Peanuts, Garfield, etc. Some rebrand and get a second life like Funky Winkerbean and Doonesbury but then they grow stale again. Larsen and Watterson knew when it was time to go. Leave people wanting more than saying “remember when it used to be good”.
I owe Calvin and Hobbes more than I can ever express in words. Great video!
Ayyyy Comic Pop big fan!
i grew up with Calvin & Hobbes, deeply loved and still love them. The fact Watterson’s decision to end all gave me a lot of sadness at that time but time after time i uderstood that was the right decision cause that is what makes all so special... it's like childhood... happens just only one time, it never come back and if you enjoyed it at max, gives to you good memories. Thanks Mr.Watterson.
Perhaps he ended the series simply because he used up all his good ideas. Honestly I think it's better for a series to end with it still at it's peak in quality than for it to run on to the point where quality takes a sharp decline. Leave the audience wanting more, as they say.
Every time I see that last sled ride where Calvin says "Let's go exploring", I tear up. EVERY TIME.
i feel that. the magic of our youth, Mr. Watterson captured that perfectly
My mom cut the final strip out of the newspaper for me and framed it.
Today it hangs on the wall of the room of my son... Calvin.
I avoided the final strip for 15 years as I "didn't want it to end"
When I finally DID see it, I cried
:)
Someone made another "final strip" where Calvin has been put on Ritalin and Hobbes is no longer alive to him
@@EverlastingHobnocker there's also the Robot Chicken version, but I meant the Bill Waterston one.
:)
It never really ends. I mean, you can buy the complete sets and read it over and over again. Bill Waterston's work was completely original, so every time you go back to re-read Calvin and Hobbes, it still feels fresh and is a joy to read. Unlike Garfield for instance, where you want to gouge your eyes out right away because every other skit is almost the exact same panel wise, with dull jokes.
The same reason I've never watched Barry London
@@EverlastingHobnocker your comment messed me up just as bad as the pokemon fans theorizing that ash ketchums entire adventure was a dream he had comatose after being attacked by the spearow.
It instantly became my favorite comic strip as soon as I first read it. So many of us grew up reading this strip. Great vid.
Even thought I was fifteen at the time the strip ended, it still broke my heart to know I would no longer see it featured in my favorite part of the paper. My mother, who would pass only nine years later, cut it out of the paper and took it to her office to have it laminated for me. It remains one of my most cherished keepsakes both as a memory of her and the comic. Something Under the Bed is Drooling was one of the first books I bought with my own money, and I do have the hardcover set, and will never get rid of it.
Thank you for doing this episode.
My mom also cut the final strip out of the newspaper for me and framed it.
Today it hangs on the wall of the room of my son... Calvin.
Calvin and Hobbes- a pinnacle of art and a staple of my childhood. Thanks for the misty memories.
I first discovered Calvin & Hobbes when I was I roughly around the age of 9 or so, visiting my Great Grandmother a lot in my youth with my grandparents that raised me. She owned this wonderful house in Rhode Island, and it actually had what she referred to as a drawing room/library. One day out of boredom I was doing what any young child does and exploring. Looking over the books I came across one that simply stood out, it was one of the collections of Calvin & Hobbes, it was then I became engrossed in it. I read that book so much, that eventually my great grandmother gave it too me before our vacation was over. It was a phenomenal experience in my childhood being able to read something that I once thought was just something apart of the newspaper and meant for grown ups. I will always cherish the stories that were told, and one day hope to share it with my future children.
A lot of my childhood was deeply lonely. For several reasons, Calvin and Hobbes came to provide a lot of comfort. It’s satirized, yet honest depiction of a recession-era family helped kids to understand how hard our parents worked just to keep us fed. Calvins nature showed us that we could be a cool rebel, while also being highly intelligent. Most of all, it’s quiet and cozy moments of cuddling by a warm fire on Christmas Eve while snow fell outside and our ever-exhausted parents held hands, looking down at us, and dozing on the couch, helped us learn to appreciate these beautiful and fleeting moments. NOTHING so effectively brings me back to Christmas Eve in the 90’s quite so effectively as Calvin and Hobbes. It taught me to recognize those moments and to hold them tight in my memories. A lot was wrong with my childhood. Bill Watterson showed me just how good I truly had it.
What a great video. I loved C&H growing up, as I felt I could identify with it so much. Guess Bill Watterson is what kids nowadays call a "Chad". Fighting his publisher for (or rather against) merchandising right, full well knowing it would leave millions upon millions on the table, running and *ending* his daily strip on his own rerms and on the height of popularity - "just" to keep his artistic integrity and the strip's integrity intact.
Of course I felt sad when it ended, but looking back, Watterson did the right thing, and executed it perfectly. No saccharine schmaltz, no misty eyed goodbye, no definite cut, no "passing of the torch" or a wink with the notion of a possible comeback. Just a regular strip that emphasized what he felt had always been at the heart of it. Brilliant.
This one actually got me misty-eyed, guys 🥲 I was a C&H fan since Day One, read it religiously every day, owned all the books, used the Sunday strips as wrapping paper for every present i gave in the early ‘90s, made blown-up photocopies of poignant panels and plastered them around town, had _tasteful_ bootleg stickers stuck on every car i owned… magical times 😊 Thanks for the wonderful trip back to happier days, as well as some tidbits i didn’t know about (like i totally slept on _Hobbes & Bacon_ 😳). You guys rock, as always 😎👍
The Calvin and Hobbes books I collected as a kid had snippets of some of Watterson’s insights into his thought process on some of the strips he made.
In one particular strip he drew Calvin fantasizing about destroying his own school with a fighter jet and how some angry parents wrote in calling it distasteful.
Bill’s response was “Some of my readers were just never kids themselves.”
Bill’s integrity as an artist still resonates with me to this day.
Lol I remember those
I mean, really, what kid _hasn't_ fantasized about destroying their school in some whimsically creative fashion?
@@Dargonhuman I ran the whole gamut myself. Aliens, monsters, fireballs, unexplained explosions (as in I never bothered coming up with explanations for said explosions,) ice powers, Carrie-style psychic abilities. I had a lot of school destruction fantasies as a kid, and never stopped as a teenager.
True, but in todays world it would be on the news and tabloids would be hunting him down to 'justify himself'. And in a way TODAY it would be very different than the eighties.
Great strip with Calvin, an F-15, and "A smoldering crater is all that remains of Calvin's Elementary school!" Can't tell you how many times I woke up fantasizing that my school had been wiped out. Snow days too, with the radio on hoping your district would be called. No greater pleasure as a kid than hearing that. Like a bonus Christmas.
I’m so thankful that Calvin and Hobbes had came to Poland in early 2000. I found it in Warsaw in an free daily advertising newspaper which became very popular at the time and I had fallen in love immediately. The art style; minimalistic yet expressive and powerful. Scripts; not only funny but clever and thought provoking; lots of them I quote to this day. I collected cut strips. In long time there was no chance to buy book version in polish, so bought English version by Warner Books (“The Essentials of Calvin and Hobbes”)which was available in Empik bookstores(they had English corner). C&H had made huge impact on me; on my art style and on the way I think on making stories especially comic stories. I admire Bill Waterson’s artistic attitude especially I couldn’t do it for economic reasons.
Last thing. C&H is the only strip could put joke referring to Polish history like this:
Calvin as Spiff: “... he locks onto target “
Susie: “Psst. Calvin! What was the capital of Poland until 1600?
Calvin: “Krakow”
Susie: “Thanks”
Calvin (not listening): “Krakow! Krakow! Two direct hits!”
I miss Calvin & Hobbes so much. Still hurts.
It really does sometimes.
He is the hero we all want, but which none of us deserve.
Well, sometimes when it´s time to quit, you better quit! You wouldn´t want C&H to 'go Simpsons', right?
@PedroFerreira-ze5yp so true. The pain of something great ending is far better than watching it turn into a pile of sludge.
Wow, the guy had a level of integrity you almost never see in the entertainment industry these days, or every really. My childhood was all about the ultra consumerism of the late 80s and early 90s where He-Mans and Ninja Turtles reigned supreme.
This story makes me think of being a young lad and going to my grandparents house for breakfast every Sunday, shredding thru the chronicle looking for the comics while waiting for my grandmother to finish cooking. Right there on the front page just under The Peanuts would be Calvin and Hobbs. And now i just made myself depressed cuz I'm old and i know I'll never get experiences exactly like that in the exact same way again lol
My brothers and I began to read Calvin and Hobbes and it was certainly a very unique comic strip. It will always hold a special place in my heart
I loved Calvin and Hobbes almost from the beginning. I was a teenager and it spoke to me the way that Charlie Brown did when I was in Elementary school. Brilliant writing, even better illustrations, Watterson must have worked so hard to make something so spectacularly simple. His integrity has only deepened my respect over the years. I had all the collections until I lost them in a move, even had the calendars, but now I’ve got the big ol’ hardback complete collection so it’s all good. I would probably give my left arm to get an original strip. Since I’m poor, I hope that limbs become currency soon lol
This actually made me cry. You guys are the best.
I was introduced to C&H as a kid while visiting my grandparents' house during summers and on holidays (born in 82, I was just starting to read when my granddaddy must have bought the first available collections). I looked forward to each visit as much for the chance to revisit them and hopefully find a new collection on the bookshelf as I did seeing family members again. C&H brings back memories of those visits. When I was old enough to have a little spending money, Scholastic book fair was my chance to get my own C&H collections. There never had been and never will be anything like it. Watterson played with the nature of the format in revolutionary ways. I was blown away when I read that the first two frames/top line of the full color Sunday panels were never integral to the story. Some papers didn't publish them, so they laid out the setting, but you could still enjoy the rest of the panel without ever seeing those frames.
What a joy to think about Calvin and Hobbes again. Now off to read some Bloom County.
Even if I wanted Calvin & Hobbes merch in one way or the other at some point in my life, these days I can't help but admire Watterson for having it be just that one special thing: A comic strip.
This is peak Toy Galaxy content. Loving and respectful. Glad I caught it so early.
I adored Calvin & Hobbes as a kid and still do as an adult; it was a brave decision to do what he did in the end. Doesn’t really matter it ended when it did, Calvin and Hobbes is forever.
"... a shared mis-remembering of the past" - brutal but true. Nice production - many thanks for creating
It's truly shocking how much something like a comic strip about a boy and his stuffed tiger can effect your life growing up. I own almost every one of Wattersons books, so I have a good collection of Calvin and Hobbs and to this day every once in a while I pull one out and spend a good amount of time laughing out loud and going back in time to a simpler time of my life. Thank you Bill!
Calvin and Hobbes ended the same year I graduated high school, and though my local paper didn't carry it until 1990, I found all the books at the Scholastic Book Fairs starting in 1987. It shaped me into who I am today along with SNL and George Carlin. I have the final two panels of the last strip tattooed on my forearm. "
Let's go exploring!"
I began reading C&H a few years into the run in my local paper, usually only on Sundays though. Probably 1987-88. I was a few years older than him (I was a very grown up 11 year old) but something in it made me laugh. Not like a Garfield laugh, or Cathy or Doonesbury. Like For Better or For Worse kind of laugh. I recognized it and the situations that Calvin was getting into.
As I grew older, I saw more of myself in Calvin than I was comfortable admitting at the time. Toe-head, precocious, and with a wild imagination that was more interesting than the world around me. C&H began to let me find my childhood again. Not the real one where food was sometimes scarce or parents were too violent with their children. One that I hoped I could one day live in.
I grew up though and C&H became a fond memory. When it was spoken about with my mom (who loved it), she would always sigh a little and laugh. I was her Calvin.
A few years ago, my brother bought the hardbound collection for me. I was living for the first time on my own and was having a really difficult year. Opening that box was one of the best moments of my life. Thumbing through the pages brought back a flood of memories. Some welcome, some not; but all vital to me remembering who I was and am.
A few years ago, when my mother died, C&H is partially what got me through. The subreddit on Reddit and the books were a balm for me and let me relive a time when the world was less confusing.
"Stripped" is amazing (and one of the few DVD's I have purchased in recent memory) and "Dear Mr. Watterson" was a love letter to all of us and to him.
Thank you Mr. Watterson.
The single best comicstrip ever. Period.
I really don’t understand why this channel doesn’t have more subscribers. Keep up the great work in the meantime!
Agreed, it is unfortunate, especially with toy collecting being fairly mainstream these days. We are proudly the Galaxy (of fans) in Toy Galaxy, for Dan and Producer Greg!
Whenever I see Netflix's The Toys that made Us, I remember Toy Galaxy and I know Netflix ripped them off, Dan and his team should have been doing the Netflix shows.
Agreed! Unlike other Toy devoted channels, Mr. Larson keeps Toy Galaxy wholesome, not resorting to colorful swear words or being hypersensitive to criticism as a few hosts are. And he maxes out the trivia on the videos as well.
Found the complete set for my nephew . He’s only 2 1/2 now so may be a few years until he gets into it but I hope he loves it as much as I have and appreciates the writing as well . Waterson is such a great writer and especially being older , I can appreciate him standing up for what he believes and not selling out in anyway he wasn’t comfortable with . You’re awesome Bill ! Thank you . ❤
Calvin and Hobbes got me through a extremely lonely childhood.
The closing got me crying. My dad bought us a lot of the paperback collections and he’d read them with me as a bedtime ritual a lot. I’ve had a lot of health issues lately that have reframed my perception of life and death and it really has me missing those days and moments.
Calvin & Hobbes was so great. Loved reading it and a highlight of my week was always the Sunday paper with Calvin & Hobbes in full color.
What an awesome video! I was 8 years old in 1985 13 years old in 1995. I was an introvert I spent all my time reading, with my three favorite things to read being The Far Side books, Garfield books, but most importantly Calvin and Hobbes books. I felt such a kinship was Calvin because he was a kid with no friends you lived in his imagination which is basically what I did. I used to ride my bike 20-minute ride round trip to a gas station near my house newspaper every day to see the new Calvin and Hobbes. The other comic strip artist of the day should give Bill Watterson some Kudos because I read all their comic strips to but I really bought the paper for his
I want to age like you be do.
Calvin and Hobbes is the highest level of daily art ever made in my lifetime
Ben Snakepit is a close second.
Sergio Argones, Groo, and Mad Magazine guy. His stuff is unreal detail per block
I loved Calvin and Hobbes since I was very young. My library had most if not all of the book compilations and I read them over and over again. Some of the lines of dialogue have entered my day to day vocabulary, such as "scientific progress goes boink", etc. I never really understood why it just ended randomly the way it did. I'm so glad this video was made to clear everything up! Thank you!
Gotta give props to Watterson for deciding not to franchise his property.
The rare example of integrity
I've been a fan since Something Under the Bed is Drooling. Tyrannosaurs in F-14s is still one of my favorites. I still miss them; I would read the whole paper and finish with The Far Side and Calvin and Hobbes. That strip was always something wonderful, and we'll never see another like it.
I love Calvin and Hobbs. I still have two compilation books "Revenge of the Babysat" and "Scientific Progress Goes 'Boink."
Great writing and video Toy Galaxy! I've watched this video about five times already!
This made me emotional. Grew up with C&H, was reading it before I even knew how to read and remember where I was when I read the final strip. It was and remains perfect.
I saw Calvin in my local paper before I could read, and when I could read I came home every day hoping for a new strip in the paper. I saw repeats when Mr. Watterson took his first break, and I was worried that it would be the end. As he came into his second break I was really upset because this was the first part of my childhood that ended. Even today, Calvin and Hobbes holds a really special place in my heart. Thank, Bill, for sharing and thank you, ToyGalaxy for making this video.
Bill Watterson wasn’t just an artist. He was a poet. A Nauseous Nocturne is a masterpiece and sticks with me after thirty years. I love Calvin and Hobbes, and even today I find new angles from which to see the stories and humour.
I still remember him calling Susie a Bat Webbed Booger Being. 😂
I grew up with Calvin and Hobbes and always loved it. Now that I am a Dad with a 6 year old son, the ending of this video actually made me tear up. Kudos dude. Great video.
I only have a comb, a chair, and a C&H collection book from my childhood. I'm also reading it to my 6 year old boy right now. Good job to us! Cheers!
Oh God...Toy Galaxy made me glassy eyed at the end. 🥺
I had to pause this right after the opening schpeel. I CAN NOT wait to hear you talk about this. Unexpected, and perfect for the channel.
Well done.
Hands down my favorite comic strip. I read it every day. When I was in college I had to write a paper on a “great master “, which was defined as anyone who has had artwork published. I chose Bill Watterson. I used the 10th anniversary collection for my references. I got an A. This is the only comic strip that got me to lol, and occasionally want to cry. Bill Watterson did what most creators never do, he left us wanting more
‘The surest sign that there is intelligent life out there in the universe, is the fact that nobody has tried to contact us’
Calvin
Still the best explanation for the Fermi paradox to date 🙃
My favorite quote in the entire series!
Amen.
I knew kids growing up who ended up getting into reading philosophy and literature, and with time becoming serious academics, whose first questions about life came from Calvin and Hobbes. Life changing.
the title characters are literally named after 16th-17th century philosophers
Hello my childhood. Nice to see you again. Still have all the books on my shelf, next to Garfield and The Far Side ^_^
My Dad read the comic in the strip when I was a kid and he loved it, which in turn spurred my brothers and I to read it. I didn't get all the jokes until I was an adult, but Calvin's adventures as a kid with his best friend/stuffed tiger resonated with me. And I still thought it was pretty funny. So from 2nd grade forward I would try to get new collections as they came out and always read it on Sundays
Awesome video. Calvin and Hobbes, along with The Far Side were my favorite comic strips. 👍
Calvin & Hobbes helped me get through the loss of a dear childhood friend.
He introduced me to it (and Bloom County, incidentally), and we both exchanged collected editions to each other at Christmas. We would have arguments as to which of us was Calvin, and which of us was Hobbes.
That ended when his (then undiagnosed) bi-polar depression overcame him and he committed suicide in 1993. He was just 22.
Reading Calvin & Hobbes reminded me (and still does) of my friend at his happiest and most alive.
I discovered Calvin and Hobbes in middle school. I’ve loved it ever since. As a middle school art teacher, I have the books in class and love seeing students fall in love with it too. Thank you Mr. Watterson.
I feel no shame in admitting, this made me cry
Calvin and Hobbes shaped my way of thinking as a kid. As an artist I applaud Waterson's integrity through the decades. Looking at the landscape of comics, games, cartoons, etc. that are being remade or reinvented today, man... he was right.
Calvin and Hobbes is definitely one of my favorite comic strips. Thanks for doing this, Dan!
One of my favorite strips was Calvin asked go's dad where babies come from, dad said some come from sears, but was told he was a Kmart blue light special
I'd love to see an expansion of the Robotman story covered, either here or somewhere else, because that's got to be some tale. How the merchandise line failed, the lameness of the cartoon special, how the comic strip thrived in relative obscurity, how the story was changed to make the comic better, and how Robotman himself was subsequently written off his own comic strip.
I'd watch that video!!!
Also would like to know how a lawsuit from DC was avoided: Doom Patrol=Robotman
That heart on his chest was a huge reason I went against using RobotMan for a handle.
@@machineman6498 So glad they replaced it with a lightning bolt for the comics, though.
Yeah, I'd like to know more. I do remember Robotman being shoved on us kids by the media, but I remember the cartoon being extremely bland and void of anything resembling a soul. It was like somebody drew some sketches on a napkin and they threw together a cartoon in ten minutes.
Waterson went out on top.Calvin and Hobbs will be in the public conscience for all time .I didn't want it to end like all others but that's what makes it even more special.
Wow dude
Wife makes me a custom C&H t-shirt on her circuit machine a few weeks ago because she didn't know how much I was into the comic strip...and here this is. Awesome
I loved Calvin & Hobbes with a reverence that was new to me as a youngster. Oh, I was so mad when he went on hiatus and genuinely angry when he ended it. (Of course, that was all about me and not about Watterson.) Somehow I missed the complete collected editions; I'll have to splurge and enjoy diving into that world again. His influence on me as a storyteller is immeasurable. Thanks for making this video, folks.
I 100% understand and respect Watterson’s decision not to indulge in merchandise, but I was always disappointed we never got Calvin & Hobbes action figures.
And it bit him (and by extension the series fans) squarely on the ass when they started bootlegging Calvin pissing on things T-shirts and window decals. Not saying he had to go the Garfield route and plaster them on everything, but I think they should have twisted his arm for a limited edition prop replica style Hobbs plushie.
I wanted a TV show, myself
@@mightyfilm there are some really good crochet patterns out there to make hobbes stuffed dolls. Had a family member make one for me and it looks wonderful on my shelf with all the trade paperbacks
@@Schmiggy23 I shouldn't have to make my own merchandising. Not that I can't sculpt a figure of some obscure toy-lineless series, but I'd rather collect than craft. Besides, I have too many sad memories of clay figures falling off shelves or crumbling to dust when I was younger. Once I made this great Grounder from AOSTH figure made out of wax, melted, got knocked around, got sticky and covered in lint and dust, and then I sadly had to get rid of it.
@@mightyfilm Yeah, just a solid lawsuit to stop all of that garbage. I always wished he would’ve done that.
I adored Calvin and Hobbes growing up. And it's wild to learn that Watterson and Breathed were friends. Bloom County (and its various iterations) was another one of my absolute favorites.
Calvin and Hobbes will always inhabit a part of my heart and soul. I love what Bill Waterson did and how he kept the series so pure. It will forever be a completely perfect “thing”, and that so rarely happens.
I loved calvin and hobbes. I don't remember how I first found the comic but I might have gotten a book as a gift or at a used sale or something. and we ended up accumulating all the compilation books. I had them with me one year when I was camping with a bunch of family and friends and everyone was passing them around. those are some good comics and it's so pleasant to know that so many other people were inspired by them.
Used to snip and collect _Calvin & Hobbes_ from the newspaper. Long before I could imagine it might be collected in book form someday.
Not much to say that wasn't already said beautifully in this video. I loved it. Still love it. Brings a tear to my remembering its end.
A wonderful historic account and tribute. Thank you, Toy Galaxy.
Thank you so much for the video! Calvin and Hobbes was a part of my life when life was easier and fun. No matter what was going in my life , the energy and wit of this strip was awesomely genius in creating smiles without trying!
I read that strip every morning before school. It was a sad day when it ended. Its still amazing how it works to this day as my kids read the collections i own and love them.
Calvin and Hobbes struck a chord with me that no other cartoon strip had. In fact, I've only ever viewed a handful of strips from the likes of Peanut or Garfield, whereas I have bought all of the Calvin and Hobbes collection books, and have read them many times over. Calvin and Hobbes is thought provoking, reflective, a stirrer of memories and very humourous. Was I sad when it ended? Absolutely, but I understand Watterson's reasons for doing so, and absolutely applaud the integrity he showed throughout its run with regard to his beliefs and aims, and can only thank him for the time he took to share his vision with the rest of the world.
I don't have the words to express how much I admire Bill Watterson. He created a perfect object, and managed to protect it from an imperfect world.
I found Calvin & Hobbes as a Teen and fell in love with it. When the Hardback Collection came out I was able to grab one. As an Artist I respect the man for sticking to his principles. It will never be forgotten because there will always be a Kid that picks up one of the books and falls in love with these stories that will always stay relevant because everyone was a Kid.
I've got all the Calvin and Hobbes collections and books and I occasionally read them from time to time. I grew up with this comic and it will always be my favorite
One of the most bittersweet videos you've ever made. This comic was one of the best and most impactful of my youth. I found it when I was a sophomore in high school, and it let me stay connected to the innocence of childhood.
This is a topic that brought tears to my eyes multiple times. Thank you Bill Watterson. A huge influence on my childhood.
I really liked checkin' out Calvin and Hobbes every Sunday morning, but knew nothing about the artist. Thanks for getting us up to speed. I can really appreciate Waterson's integrity, focus and dedication.
this was a wonderful look into my childhood...I grew up with reading Calvin and Hobbes, and still own a handful of the books, though I don't own the complete collection box. My nephews love reading the comics...so I guess the legacy lives on through them
Great video, I was filled with nostalgia and longing the entire time. What a fascinating guy Mr. Watterson was.
Thanks for this excellent retrospective. C&H has been an indelible and ongoing influence in my life. I was 10 when the comic strip began, and like so many commenting, grew up having its daily dose of humor, absurdity and brilliance accompany me for a significant part of my life.
As it turns out, my spouse and I named our firstborn son Calvin, in no small part due to C&H. Now, my Calvin is in high school barely a hop, skip and a jump away from going to college. And he has a whole row of C&H books on his bookshelf. Coincidentally, my younger son turned 10 recently and I've noticed he's been sneaking off with his older brother's C&H books making his way through the strips ...
When my kids were younger and complained to me of being bored, I can't count the number of times I broke out the transmogrifier (aka cardboard box) to see what would happen. (Narrator: Hijinks ensued.) Thanks Bill!
I found it through my older brother. He loved Calvin and Hobbes and The Farside, he would read them every Sunday when the color comics came, and he started collecting the bound volumes when they were published. He grew up and got to cool for school, so I inherited it all and I still read through them today.
In the YT genre of 'man too old to be standing in front of a cabinet of toys' this is the only show I really enjoy. The others seem derivative and grasping. I love the research, writing, and Dan's self effacing presenting style. Cheers!
This channel single handedly changed the way I view RUclips as a whole. I can't get over their dedication and production value, it boggles my mind.
I stumbled onto Calvin and Hobbes in elementary school and was obsessed. I loved the range of topics which felt mature and childish. It's really hard to say but I think my favorites were the various snow scenes Calvin came up with. I agree that the lack of commercialization kept C&H pure but also meant no fun way to show the love. Thank you so much for this video.
Great video - legendary creator and comic strip!
Watterson was a stubborn bastard when it came to artistic integrity, but I still respect the hell out of him for it as much as his work on Calvin & Hobbes.
You know the saying, "you either die a hero or live long enough to become the villain?"
We all agree where Calvin & Hobbes falls on that spectrum.
I respect him more because of his integrity.
I like to say that you have your Elvises (Elvi?) and your Buddy Hollys. You either die young and are eternally cool or live long enough to be a has-been. Yes, I know Elvis did make a comeback but if his image is ever carved into a mountain, we all know it would be the young Elvis.
Watterson only wants to be a cartoonist not a part of corporate money-making machine unlike these days. A rare feat but he had my respect.
@@akaiseigo I could respect that too. Was involved they start fucking shit up. Don't be mind being wealthy ( not famous)
He is the foundation of my values of artistic integrity.
Fun Fact: Calvin and Hobbes was released less than three weeks before I turned six-years-old, which is the age of Calvin.
Loved this episode! My little boy is reading and loving my old collection of Calvin and Hobbes books just as I did when I was young. It is fun enjoying those strips all over again through his eyes. I enjoy your channel very much. It is fun going down memory lane and also learning something new about the toys, cartoons, and comics I grew up with. Keep it up! I’d enjoy seeing episodes on Bloom County and the Six Million Dollar Man. Thanks a bunch!
Calvin and Hobbes is for me the best comic strip to ever come out. Loved this episode. Let’s get more like this
Spent majority of my childhood reading these. Me and one of my late close friends would buy the collections and trade off after we read them. Man 20 years was so long ago. You will be missed SDL.
Great episode! Hope you do Bloom County!
I was introduced to Calvin and Hobbes within a year of its run when my local newspaper started to carry it. I immediately fell in love with its celebration of childhood innocence and imagination. I was in my 20’s when the strip began, a time when I was getting close to graduating college and facing all those big decisions that college graduates must face, and reading Calvin every morning reminded me of a time of my life that was lost to me, but which I still cherished. When the three-volume Calvin and Hobbes was published, I purchased one of the first copies on sale at my local bookstore and took a trip down memory lane, but this time accompanied by my son, who was three years old and captivated by the strip as I read it him, my finger moving from panel to panel. He’s now in his 20’s and still enjoys pulling the volumes off of the shelves and rereading the strips, especially the Spaceman Spiff ones, which were and still are his favorites. (Mine are Calvin’s snowmen dioramas. What a dark imagination that child sometimes had.) Calvin and Hobbes ended at the right time with the perfect coda. It has rightfully earned a place of deep affection in my heart and in my son’s and, hopefully someday, in future generations.
This was beautiful to read.
I discovered Calvin & Hobbes in the early 90s through a friend. I fell in love with it instantly even though it was complicated to get the books here in France at the time. I still own them to this day and reread them regularly.
Calvin & Hobbs was amazing but not in our local paper. Same with Foxtrot. Always had to get the compilations from the book faire at school or beg my parents to get it for me from the book store.
Calvin and Hobbes was instrumental to my childhood. Between the collections and reading it in the paper til it finished and to now, it still stands as my favourite of its type along with the Far Side.
This was a lot more emotional than I expected. Excellent episode Dan!