
Toothpaste for DinnerA slide-show tour of the most addictive comic on the Web.
Updated Friday, June 24, 2005, at 1:05 PM ETClick here to read a slide-show essay about Toothpaste for Dinner.
In 2000, cartoonists Ted Rall and Ruben Bolling debated the year's best comics, and in March of this year, James Sturm described the lifestyle at his Center for Cartoon Studies. Douglas Wolk assessed Marjane Satrapi's graphic novel Persepolis 2, and A.O. Scott considered the incisive realism of Matt Groening's Life in Hell and The Simpsons: "When reality becomes cartoonlike, the only place for a realist is in cartooning." Daniel Engber, Slate's Explainer, discusses his own brush with online infamy.
Or join the discussion
on the Fray
on the Fray
Nobody Liked John Murtha but His Voters. God Bless Him.
WaPo Says Administration Is Trying To Bypass White House Press Corps. That's News?
The Thing Henry Paulson Shouldn't Have Left Out of His New Memoir
Is It a Coincidence That the Head of Toyota Is Named Toyoda?
Shafer: More Plagiarism by the Daily Beast's Gerald Posner
There Are Eight Ways Around the GOP's Filibusters and Holds. Why Aren't Dems Using Them?















