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2003
THE CARTOONISTS:

JERRY BARNETT
(RETIRED)
The Indianapolis News
Indianapolis, IN

TONY BAYER
The News-Dispatch
Michigan City, IN

MARK BRAYER
The Daily Journal
Franklin, IN

TOM CHERRY
"Those Funky Idiots"
Muncie, IN

STACY CURTIS
Freelance
Indiana

JIM DAVIS
"Garfield"
Muncie, IN

J.W. DAVIS
"From the Basement"
Crawfordsville, IN

MICHAEL FRALEY
Kendallville, IN

SCOTT GILL
The Kokomo Tribune
Kokomo, IN

GENE HERNDON
The Noblesville
Daily Times

Nobelsville, IN

SHANE JOHNSON
The Indiana Daily Student
Indiana University

IRENE JOSLIN
The Brown County Democrat
and
Columbus
Republic

Nashville, IN

RICHARD KOLKMAN
"Things from Nowhere"
"One Girl"
Indiana

BOB LANG
RightToons.com
Churubusco, Indiana

DAN LYNCH
(RETIRED)
The Journal Gazette
Fort Wayne, IN

SCOTT NICKEL
Paws, Inc.
"Triple Take"
Muncie, IN

DAVID REDDICK
Paws, Inc.
Star Trek.com
Muncie, IN

DAVE SATTLER
The Lafayette Journal
and Courier

Lafayette, IN

LEE P. SAUER
The Herald-Republican
Angola, IN

KEVIN SPEAR
www.kevinspear.com
Anderson, IN

BRUCE TINSLEY
"Mallard Fillmore"
Indiana

GARY VARVEL
The Indianapolis Star
Indianapolis, IN

TOM WEAVER
Freelance Cartoonist
Bloomington, IN




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JIM DAVIS, "Garfield" - Muncie, IN - E-mail | Archives


space Jim Davis is the creator of the popular comic strip, "Garfield."

Jim Davis was born July 28, 1945, in Marion, Ind., and was raised on a small Black Angus cow farm with his parents, James and Betty, and his younger brother, Dave (Doc). As on most farms, the barnyard had its share of stray cats -- about 25 at one time, by Jim's estimation.

He attended Ball State University in Muncie, Ind., where he majored in art, business and practical jokes.

After college, Jim spent two years working for a local advertising agency before becoming an assistant to "Tumbleweeds" creator Tom Ryan. Jim learned the skills and discipline necessary to become a syndicated cartoonist and began his own strip, "Gnorm Gnat." When he tried to sell the strip to a newspaper syndicate, he was told: "It's funny, but bugs? Who can relate to a bug?" After five years of drawing Gnorm, Jim drew a giant foot that fell out of the sky, crushing Gnorm in his last comic appearance.

Jim studied the comics pages very closely and noticed there were a lot of successful strips about dogs, but none about cats. He combined his wry wit with the art skills he had honed since childhood, and Garfield, a fat, lazy, lasagna-loving, cynical cat, was born. Jim says Garfield is a composite of all the cats he remembered from his childhood, rolled into one feisty orange fur ball. Garfield was named after Jim's cantankerous grandfather, James Garfield Davis.

The strip debuted on June 19, 1978, in 41 U.S. newspapers.

Today, Garfield is read in 2,600 newspapers by 263 million readers around the globe.

Jim Davis has had many successes with Garfield, including four Emmy Awards for Outstanding Animated Program and induction into the Licensing Hall of Fame (1998), but his most prized awards are from his peers in the National Cartoonists Society: Best Humor Strip (1981 and 1985), the Elzie Segar Award (1990) and the coveted Reuben Award (1990) for overall cartooning.

Davis is founder and president of Paws, Inc., a full-service licensing studio created to support Garfield's global business ventures.