Scott Adams, the once enormously successful Bay Area cartoonist who built a simply drawn comic strip lampooning corporate ...
George Kittle is candidly discussing the difficulties of professional football. Kittle, 32, was carried off the field with a ...
Sy O’Neill interviewed Bill for the Cleveland Plain Dealer for an article titled “A boy, his tiger and their best friend; ...
Courtly Observations is a recurring series by Erwin Chemerinsky that focuses on what the Supreme Court’s decisions will mean ...
Eddie, being a little kid, has an idealistic view of things and expects all the hoopla about the new year to mean that ...
The host of On with Kara Swisher and Pivot talks about the industry’s Trump pivot, Elon Musk’s unraveling, and the uneasy ...
The IRS knows more about your financial activity than you may realize. These are a few of the ways the IRS tracks your ...
On December 31st, 1995, just ten years after Watterson first began his monumental comic strip, Calvin and Hobbes had its ...
As a Social Studies Concentrator and the upcoming Comp Director and Editor-at-Large for CrimArts, I thought it would only be fitting if my vanity piece combined the two loves which have so far defined ...
Early in 2025, the staff writer Calvin Tomkins decided to chronicle turning a hundred in the same year as The New Yorker’s hundredth anniversary, in a piece titled “Becoming a Centenarian.” Tomkins ...
Calvin and Hobbes, Bill Watterson’s beloved comic strip, ended three decades ago this month, yet its magic endures, says William Kuskin, CU Boulder English professor and expert on comics and graphic ...