The Story Behind Peanuts’ Final Comic Strip

Peanuts debuted in 1950 and became a beloved comic strip series that grew in popularity rapidly year after year. Creator Charles M. Schulz developed one of the most adorable casts of comic strip characters, making it hard not to get attached to the Peanuts comics. Fans would open the Sunday comic section to see Charlie Brown miss the football or to watch Snoopy embark on amazing adventures. As the series became more loved, Peanuts eventually became a multimedia franchise with its own movies and television shows.
Fans everywhere held their breath as Peanuts neared its final days in February 2000. At the time, it was common knowledge that creator Schulz was getting ill and having an extremely difficult time continuing to illustrate the comic strips. While there were warning signs that the comic strip series was coming to a close, nobody could have predicted how the end of Peanuts would pan out.
True fans of the series noticed something off about this comic strip right away. It became evident to readers all over the world that this comic strip, unlike the hundreds of others that came before it, had been lettered with a computer rather than with Schulz’s pen and pencil. His health would sadly deteriorate quickly from this point on, and the comic strips that followed would also be typed rather than written by hand.

Peanuts debuted in 1950 and became a beloved comic strip series that grew in popularity rapidly year after year. Creator Charles M. Schulz developed one of the most adorable casts of comic strip characters, making it hard not to get attached to the Peanuts comics. Fans would open the Sunday comic section to see Charlie Brown miss the football or to watch Snoopy embark on amazing adventures. As the series became more loved, Peanuts eventually became a multimedia franchise with its own movies and television shows.

Fans everywhere held their breath as Peanuts neared its final days in February 2000. At the time, it was common knowledge that creator Schulz was getting ill and having an extremely difficult time continuing to illustrate the comic strips. While there were warning signs that the comic strip series was coming to a close, nobody could have predicted how the end of Peanuts would pan out.

True fans of the series noticed something off about this comic strip right away. It became evident to readers all over the world that this comic strip, unlike the hundreds of others that came before it, had been lettered with a computer rather than with Schulz’s pen and pencil. His health would sadly deteriorate quickly from this point on, and the comic strips that followed would also be typed rather than written by hand.

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