Barney & Clyde
Author(s)Gene Weingarten, Dan Weingarten, and David Clark
Websitewww.gocomics.com/barneyandclyde
Current status/scheduleOngoing daily
Launch dateJune 7, 2010
Syndicate(s)Counterpoint Media (2023–present)
The Washington Post Writers Group (2010–2023)
Genre(s)Humor, friendship, family

Barney & Clyde is a daily newspaper comic strip created by Washington Post columnist Gene Weingarten, his son Dan Weingarten, and cartoonist David Clark. Originally syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group,[1] it debuted on June 7, 2010. Barney & Clyde appears in The Washington Post, The Miami Herald, The Detroit Free Press and many other newspapers.

History

On Father's Day 2010, Gene Weingarten wrote about how their collaboration began.[2]

In 2022, The Washington Post Writers Group announced it was winding down its comic strip business;[3] Barney & Clyde eventually was picked up for syndication by Counterpoint Media.[4]

Characters and story

Barney & Clyde is about the friendship between a billionaire and a homeless man. The title characters are J. Barnard Pillsbury, owner and CEO of multinational drug company Pillsbury Pharmaceuticals, and homeless Clyde Finster. Other prominent characters are Barney's second wife Lucretia Pillsbury, Barney's 11-year-old daughter from his first marriage Cynthia Pillsbury, and Clyde's homeless friend, Dabney Mountbatten IV. Clyde also cares for a rabbit named Adolf. When panhandling, Clyde refers to Adolf by his stage name, Fluffykins McNeedsahug.

In 2011, Florida resident Horace LaBadie began suggesting scripts to the creators. In time, he became a frequent contributor to the strip. The Weingartens invented a street denizen named Horace who tells arcane jokes other characters do not understand.

References

  1. "Barney & Clyde". The Washington Post Writers Group. Retrieved May 19, 2011.
  2. Weingarten, Gene (June 17, 2010). "Gene and Dan Weingarten, drawn together by their comic strip, Barney & Clyde". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 19, 2011.
  3. Tornoe, Rob (June 16, 2022). "New syndication options for illustrators: Syndicates facilitate ongoing opportunity for creators of comics and puzzles". Editor & Publisher.
  4. Degg, D. D. (May 13, 2023). "Barney & Clyde and Counterpoint". The Daily Cartoonist.


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