George Herriman - 2 points

I think the jazz influences help enhance the experience of the comic. I really enjoy how the music only helps enhance the story of the comic. For example, in the stork exchange having the jazz there helps bring more life to the main characters and the inanimate objects. If you mute the video the actions of each character is dampened. The easiest example of this is at the beginning of the animation when Krazy is flying in the air and he flies past the plane to have the plane catch up with him. Without song it's not as impactful when Krazy yells at the plane to catch up. Also his “voice” is lost as well. With the piano pounding out each note when he yells gives him more anger than what is drawn. The jazz I feel makes watching/reading his comics even more enjoyable.

The comics themselves have a different type of jazzy vibe. The way the paneling enhanced the story telling gave the comic that jazzy feel. I really love how the simplicity of the drawings made it easy to relate to Krazy or Ignatz as the main characters. The backgrounds aren't super fleshed out so you as the reader can fill in the gaps with your own backgrounds. On top of that most of the comics stories are about things that most people go through but slightly dramatized for comedic effect. For instance, the August 16, 1916 strip, about Krazy on the US border is trying to kill a the mexican bug. Krazy has a cannonball and still can't kill the jumping bug or he gets a whole crew of helpers and they all get out played by the bug. All four of them get constantly tangled up within each other and get tripped up. Each trip up is creative and also funny. Even if you take out the unnecessary ethnic labeling the story would still be funny. 


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