True Classroom Flubs and Fluffs

True Classroom Flubs and Fluffs

"True Classroom Flubs and Fluffs" was a non-fiction American comic strip by cartoonist and comic-book artist Jerry Robinson. It was syndicated through the 1960s in Sunday newspapers, most notably the "New York Sunday News" (later incorporated into the "New York Daily News"). It was one of a very small number of syndicated comic features dependent on reader submissions.

Robinson statedFact|date=August 2007 that the material for this feature was submitted to him by readers, and that each submission was a genuine error perpetrated by a student, either in oral response to a classroom question or in a written assignment.

Each Sunday edition (there was never a daily version) consisted of several spot illustrations rather than the sequential panels of a conventional comic strip. Above each drawing was a typeset caption purporting to contain the text of an authentic classroom error, followed by the name and city of the person who had submitted (not committed) the error. Robinson's drawing would then illustrate the error, sometimes including dialogue balloons for one or more of the characters in the drawing.

A typical item was a caption stating, "The transatlantic cable was laid by W.C. Fields", followed by Robinson's drawing of a caricatured W.C. Fields seated in a rowboat in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, unspooling an immense cable. Readers were expected to recognize the error, in this case, that the actual supervisor of the transatlantic telegraph cable was C.W. Field (Cyrus West Field).

At least one paperback compilation was published.Fact|date=August 2007


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Jerry Robinson — For the football player, see Jerry Robinson (American football). For the businessperson, see Gerry Robinson. Jerry Robinson Robinson at the 2008 Comic Con International in San Diego …   Wikipedia

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