Wednesday, January 12, 2011

South Park Fishsticks Episode Stream

of faults: the tournament hypothesis - An additional 1

I receive email from Claudio Gioda this fundamental contribution:

This afternoon I gave a look at the tables on Guastaveglia "People of Rome " Bonura of 1931 that sent me a few days ago and I was just to write, to ask if you had noticed the small print in the final two tables, those of May 1931, when asked Cat Nippo, with deductive consequences that could make from them.

But I saw that preceded me with a post centratissimo on your blog! Congratulations!
just wanted to point out that the cat is well characterized by Nippo fault, which must have had in mind the U.S. boards to draw it that way.



But we know that the character was just published in Italy in 1936 and also in other parts of the world, according to data INDUCKS, appears to have been published in 1931 than on American newspapers. So, where could they have made the tables Guasta back in May 1931, plus a few weeks after the U.S. publication in newspapers?


The first hypothesis
"romantic" is that it came from Disney itself, which was approached for permission to publish, as indicated by the footnotes . The Americans may have provided the source material. All the rest ' Illustration of the People, the year before, providing numerous strips in a very short distance from the USA.
A second hypothesis to be considered less attractive for us, but one that arrived to the office copies of U.S. newspapers with strip in print and Fault that had seen the cat on them Nippo, drawing inspiration.
would be interesting to go to fund research documentation, but I realize that it must be difficult, since it is an initiative lasted only a few months on the Sacramento Bee.
The story reminds me a little 'history of the early Mickey Mouse newspaper after a dispute with Disney when Nerbini did write under the apocryphal mice that everything was approved by Disney . If you've noticed the tables above 14 May NOT have the footnote "exclusivity for Italy."



If the first hypothesis is true (do not judge it unlikely, indeed!), And that the presence of Nippo was due to an inspiring model expressly provided by Disney (the Daily strips), I would find it difficult to say that we are probably facing the first Disney Italian expressly authorized and endorsed by the parent.

course I doubt there is a: but if the people of Rome received the strip, why not publish them directly, as did Gigli in Turin in 1930?

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