Dictionary Definition
peanuts n : an insignificant sum of money; a
trifling amount; "her salary is peanuts compared to his"
User Contributed Dictionary
see Peanuts
English
Pronunciation
Noun
peanuts- Plural of peanut
- A very small or
insufficient amount
(especially of a salary).
- It's a fun job, but it pays peanuts.
Translations
- German: (2: for peanuts) für einen Apfel und ein Ei
See also
- bananas analogy to monkey instead of elephant
- beans (not worth a hill of beans)
- goober peas
Extensive Definition
Peanuts is a syndicated
daily
and Sunday
comic
strip written and illustrated by Charles
M. Schulz, which ran from October 2,
1950, to
February
13, 2000
(the day after Schulz's death), continuing in reruns afterward. The
strip is considered to be one of the most popular and influential
in the history of the medium, with 17,897 strips published in all,
making it "arguably the longest story ever told by one human
being," according to Professor Robert
Thompson of Syracuse
University. At its peak, Peanuts ran in over 2,600 newspapers,
with a readership of 355 million in 75 countries, and was
translated into 21 languages. It helped to cement the four-panel
gag strip as the standard in the United States, and together with
its merchandise earned Schulz more than $1 billion. and
It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown won or were nominated for
Emmy
Awards. The holiday specials remain quite popular and are
currently broadcast on
ABC in the United States during the appropriate season.
History
1940s
Peanuts had its origin in Li'l Folks, a weekly panel comic that appeared in Schulz's hometown paper, the St. Paul Pioneer Press, from 1947 to 1950. He first used the name Charlie Brown for a character there, although he applied the name in four gags to three different boys and one buried in sand. The series also had a dog that looked much like the early 1950s version of Snoopy. In 1948, Schulz sold a cartoon to the Saturday Evening Post; seventeen single-panel cartoons by Schulz would be published there. The first of these was of a boy who resembled Charlie Brown sitting with his feet on an ottoman.In 1948, Schulz tried to have Li'l Folks
syndicated through the Newspaper Enterprise Association. Schulz
would have been an independent contractor for the syndicate,
unheard of in the 1940s, but the deal fell through. Li'l Folks was
dropped in 1949. The next year, Schulz approached the United
Features Syndicate with his best work from Li'l Folks.
When his work was picked up by United Features
Syndicate, they decided to run the new comic strip he had been
working on. This strip was similar in spirit to the panel comic,
but it had a set cast of characters, rather than different nameless
little folk for each page. The name Li'l Folks was too close to the
names of two other comics of the time: Al Capp's
Li'l
Abner and a strip titled Little Folks. To avoid confusion, the
syndicate settled on the name Peanuts, a title Schulz always
disliked. In a 1987 interview, Schulz said of the title Peanuts:
"It's totally ridiculous, has no meaning, is simply confusing, and
has no dignity — and I think my humor has dignity." The
periodic collections of the strips in paperback book form typically
had either "Charlie Brown" or "Snoopy" in the title, not "Peanuts",
because of Schulz's distaste for his strip's title. The Sunday
panels eventually typically read, Peanuts, featuring Good Ol'
Charlie Brown.
1950s
Peanuts premiered on October 2, 1950, in seven newspapers: The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Minneapolis Tribune, The Allentown Call-Chronicle, The Bethlehem Globe-Times, The Denver Post and The Seattle Times. It began as a daily strip; its first Sunday strip appeared January 6 1952, in the half page format, which was the only complete format for the entire life of the Sunday strip.Schulz made the decision to produce all aspects
of the strip, from the script to the finished art and lettering,
himself. Thus the strip was able to be presented with a unified
tone, and Schulz was able to employ a minimalistic style.
Backgrounds were generally eschewed, and when utilised Schulz's
frazzled lines imbued them with a fraught, psychological
appearance. This style has been described by art critic John Carlin
as forcing "its readers to focus on subtle nuances rather than
broad actions or sharp transitions."
While the strip in its early years resembles its
later form, there are significant differences. The art was cleaner,
sleeker, and simpler, with thicker lines and short, squat
characters. For example, in these early strips, Charlie Brown's
famous round head is closer to the shape of a football.
Most of the kids were initially fairly round-headed.
1960s-1970s
Peanuts is remarkable for its deft social commentary, especially compared with other strips appearing in the 1950s and early 1960s. Schulz did not explicitly address racial and gender equality issues so much as he assumed them to be self-evident in the first place. Peppermint Patty's athletic skill and self-confidence is simply taken for granted, for example, as is Franklin's presence in a racially-integrated school and neighborhood.Schulz would throw satirical barbs at any number
of topics when he chose. Over the years he tackled everything from
the Vietnam War
to school dress codes to the "new math". One
of his most prescient sequences came in 1963 when he added a little
boy named "5" to the
cast, whose sisters were named "3" and "4", and whose father had
changed their family name
to their ZIP
Code, giving in to the way numbers were taking over people's
identities. In 1957, a strip in which Snoopy tossed Linus into the
air and boasted that he was the first dog ever to launch a human,
parodied the hype associated with Sputnik 2's launch of "Laika" the dog into
space earlier that year. Another sequence lampooned Little
Leagues and "organized" play, when all the neighborhood kids
join snowman-building
leagues and criticize Charlie Brown when he insists on building his
own snowmen without leagues or coaches.
Peanuts did not shy away from cartoon violence.
The most obvious example might be Charlie Brown's annual, futile
effort to kick the football while Lucy holds it. At the last
moment, she would pull the ball away just as he was kicking. The
off-balance Charlie would sail into the air and land on his back
with a loud thud. There was also the ever-present threat of Lucy to
"slug" someone, especially her brother Linus. Though violence would
happen from time to time, only once was a boy ever depicted hitting
a girl (Charlie Brown, who accidentally hit Lucy; when Lucy
complained about it, Charlie Brown went down to her psychiatric
booth where she returned the slug much harder). Schulz once said,
"A girl hitting a boy is funny. A boy hitting a girl is not
funny."
Peanuts touched on religious themes on many
occasions, most notably the classic television special
A Charlie Brown Christmas in 1965, which features the character
Linus van
Pelt quoting the
King James Version of the Bible (Luke 2:8-14) to explain to
Charlie Brown what Christmas is all
about. (In personal interviews, Schulz mentioned that Linus
represented his spiritual side.)
Peanuts probably reached its peak in American
pop-culture awareness between 1965 and 1980; this period was the
heyday of the daily strip, and there were numerous animated
specials and book collections.
1980s-1990s
During the 1980s other strips rivaled Peanuts in popularity, most notably Doonesbury, Garfield, The Far Side, Bloom County, and Calvin and Hobbes. However, Schulz still had one of the highest circulations in daily newspapers. The daily Peanuts strips were formatted in a four-panel "space saving" format beginning in the 1950s, with a few very rare eight-panel strips, that still fit into the four-panel mold. In 1975, the panel format was shortened slightly horizontally, and shortly after the lettering became larger to accommodate the shrinking format. In 1988, Schulz abandoned this strict format and started using the entire length of the strip, in part to combat the dwindling size of the comics page, and also to experiment. Most daily Peanuts strips in the 1990s were three-panel strips.Schulz continued the strip until he was forced to
retire because of health reasons.
The end of Peanuts
The final daily original Peanuts comic strip was published on January 3, 2000. Original Sunday strips continued for a few weeks, with the last one published, coincidentally, the day after Schulz's death on February 12. The final Sunday strip included all of the text from the final Daily strip, and the only drawing: that of Snoopy typing in the lower right corner. It also added several classic scenes of the Peanuts characters surrounding the text. Following its finish, many newspapers began reprinting older strips under the title Classic Peanuts. Though it no longer maintains the "first billing" in as many newspapers as it enjoyed for much of its original run, Peanuts remains one of the most popular and widely syndicated strips today.Cast of characters
seealso List of Peanuts characters The initial cast of Peanuts was small, featuring only Charlie Brown, Shermy, Patty (not to be confused with Peppermint Patty), and a beagle, Snoopy.Though the strip did not have a lead character at
the onset, it soon began to focus on Charlie Brown, a character
developed from some of the painful experiences of Schulz's
formative years. Charlie Brown's main characteristic is either
self-defeating stubbornness or admirable determined persistence to
try his best against all odds: he can never win a ballgame but
continues playing baseball; he can never fly a
kite
successfully but continues trying to do so. Though his inferiority
complex was evident from the start, in the earliest strips he
also got in his own jabs when verbally sparring with Patty and
Shermy. Some early strips also involved romantic
attractions between Charlie Brown and Patty or Violet
(the next major character added to the strip).
As the years went by, Shermy, Violet, and Patty
appeared less often and were demoted to supporting roles
(eventually disappearing from the strip by the end of the
1960s/beginning of the 1970s), while new major characters were
introduced. Schroeder,
Lucy
Van Pelt, and her brother Linus
debuted as very young children — with Schroeder and Linus
both in diapers and pre-verbal. Snoopy, who began as a typical
puppy, soon started to verbalize his thoughts via thought
bubbles. Eventually he adopted other human characteristics,
such as walking on his hind legs, reading books, using a typewriter, and participating
in sports. He also grew
from a puppy to a full-grown dog.
One recurring theme in the strip is Charlie
Brown's Little League baseball team. Charlie Brown is
the manager of the team and, usually, its pitcher, with the other
characters of the strip comprising the rest of the team. Charlie
Brown is a terrible pitcher,
often giving up tremendous hits which either knock him off the
mound or leave him with only his shorts on. The team itself is also
poor, with only Charlie Brown's dog Snoopy being
particularly competent. Because of this, the team consistently
loses. However, while the team is often referred to as "win-less",
it does win at least 10 games over the course of the strip's run,
most of these when Charlie Brown is not playing.
In the 1960s, the strip began to focus more on
Snoopy. Many of the strips from this point revolve around Snoopy's
active, Walter
Mitty-like fantasy life, in which he imagined himself to be a
World War I
flying ace or a bestselling
suspense novelist, to the bemusement and consternation of the
other characters who sometimes wonder what he is doing but also at
times participate. Snoopy eventually took on many more distinct
personas over the course of the strip, notably college student "Joe
Cool".
Schulz continued to introduce new characters into
the strip, particularly including a tomboyish, freckle-faced,
shorts-and-sandals-wearing girl named Patricia Reichardt, better
known as "Peppermint
Patty." "Peppermint" Patty is an assertive, athletic but rather
obtuse girl who shakes up Charlie Brown's world by calling him
"Chuck," flirting with him, and giving him compliments he is not so
sure he deserves. She also brings in a new group of friends (and
heads a rival baseball team), including the strip's first black
character, Franklin,
a Mexican-Swedish kid named José Peterson, and Peppermint Patty's
bookish sidekick Marcie, who calls
Peppermint Patty "Sir" and Charlie Brown "Charles." (Most other
characters call him "Charlie Brown" at all times, except for
Eudora,
who also calls him "Charles"; Charlie Brown's sister Sally Brown,
who usually calls him "big brother"; and a minor character named
Peggy
Jean in the early 1990s who called him "Brownie Charles" after
he could not remember his own name. Also, Snoopy calls his owner,
Charlie Brown, "that round-headed kid.")
Several additional family members of the
characters were also introduced: Charlie Brown's younger sister
Sally, who is fixated on Linus; Linus and Lucy Van Pelt's younger
brother Rerun;
and Spike,
Snoopy's desert-dwelling brother from Needles,
California, who was apparently named for Schulz's own childhood
dog. Snoopy also had two other brothers who made some appearances
in the strip.
Other notable characters include: Snoopy's friend
Woodstock, a bird whose chirping is represented in print as hash
marks but is nevertheless clearly understood by Snoopy; Pigpen,
the perpetually dirty boy who could raise a cloud of dust on a
clean sidewalk or in a snowstorm; and Frieda,
a girl proud of her "naturally curly hair", and who owned a cat
named Faron, much to Snoopy's chagrin. (The way Faron hung over
Freida's shoulder prompted Linus to comment that he was "the
world's first boneless cat.")
Peanuts had several recurring characters who were
actually absent from view. Some, such as the Great
Pumpkin or Manfred
von Richthofen (the Red Baron), may
or may not have been figments of the cast's imaginations. Others
were not imaginary, such as the Little
Red-Haired Girl (Charlie Brown's perennial dream girl who
finally appeared in 1998, but only in silhouette), Joe
Shlabotnik (Charlie Brown's baseball hero), World War II (the
vicious cat who lives next door to Snoopy - not to be confused with
Frieda's cat, Faron), and Charlie Brown's unnamed pen pal. After
some early anomalies, adult figures never appeared in the
strip.
Schulz also added some fantastic elements,
sometimes imbuing inanimate objects with sparks of life. Charlie
Brown's nemesis, the Kite-Eating
Tree, is one example. Sally Brown's school building, that
expressed thoughts and feelings about the students (and the general
business of being a brick building), is another. Linus' famous
"security
blanket" also displayed occasional signs of anthropomorphism.
Ages of the Peanuts characters
Over the course of their nearly fifty-year run, most of the characters' literal ages do not change more than two years. An exception are the characters who were newly introduced as infants, who begin at birth, catch up to the rest of the cast, then stop. Rerun is unique in that he stopped aging in kindergarten. Linus was first mentioned in the strip where his birth is announced, on September 19, 1952. He then ages to right around Charlie Brown's age over the course of the first ten years, during which we see him learn to walk and talk with the help of Lucy and Charlie Brown. When Linus stops aging he is about a year or so younger than Charlie Brown. Charlie Brown was four when the strip began and aged over the next two decades until he settled in as an eight-year-old (after which he is consistently referred to as eight when any age is given). Sally remains two years younger than her older brother Charlie Brown, although Charlie Brown was already of school age in the strips when she was born and seen as a baby.In one strip, when Lucy declares that by the time
a child is five years old, his personality is already pretty well
established, Charlie Brown protests, "But I'm already five! I'm
more than five!"
The characters, however, were not strictly
defined by their literal ages. "Were they children or adults? Or
some kind of hybrid?" wrote David Michaelis of Time magazine.
Schulz distinguished his creations by "fusing adult ideas with a
world of small children." Michaelis continues:
In other words, the cast of Peanuts transcended
age and were more broadly human.
Current events were sometimes a subject of the
strip over the years. In a 1995 series, Sally mentions the Classic
Comic Strip Characters series of stamps, which were released four
years earlier, and a story about the Vietnam War ran for 10 days in
the 1960s. The passage of time, however, is negligible and
incidental in Peanuts.
Critical acclaim
Peanuts is often regarded as one of the most influential and well-written comic strips of all time. Schulz received the National Cartoonist Society Humor Comic Strip Award for Peanuts in 1962, the Elzie Segar Award in 1980, the Reuben Award in 1955 and 1964, and the Milton Caniff Lifetime Achievement Award in 1999. A Charlie Brown Christmas won a Peabody Award and an Emmy; Peanuts cartoon specials have received a total of 2 Peabody Awards and 4 Emmys. For his work on the strip, Charles Schulz is credited with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and a place in the William Randolph Hearst Cartoon Hall of Fame. Peanuts was featured on the cover of Time Magazine on April 9, 1965, with the accompanying article praising the strip as being "the leader of a refreshing new breed that takes an unprecedented interest in the basics of life."Considered amongst the greatest comic strips of
all time, Peanuts was declared second in a list of the greatest
comics of the 20th century commissioned by The
Comics Journal in 1999. Peanuts lost out to George
Herriman's Krazy Kat, a
strip Schulz admired, and he accepted the positioning in good
grace, to the point of agreeing with the result. In 2002 TV Guide
declared Snoopy and Charlie Brown equal 8th in their list of "Top
50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time", published to
commemorate their 50th anniversary.
Cartoon tributes have appeared in other comic
strips since Schulz's death in 2000, and are now displayed at the
Charles
Schulz Museum. In May 2000, many cartoonists included a
reference to Peanuts in their own strips. Originally planned as a
tribute to Schulz's retirement, after his death that February it
became a tribute to his life and career. Similarly, on October 30
2005, several
comic strips again included references to Peanuts, and specifically
the It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown television special.
The December 1997 issue of The Comics Journal
featured an extensive collection of testimonials to Peanuts. Over
forty cartoonists, from mainstream newspaper cartoonists to
underground, independent comic artists, shared reflections on the
power and influence of Schulz's art. Gilbert Hernandez wrote
"Peanuts was and still is for me a revelation. It's mostly from
Peanuts where I was inspired to create the village of Palomar in
Love and Rockets. Schulz's characters, the humor, the insight...
gush, gush, gush, bow, bow, bow, grovel, grovel, grovel..." Tom
Batiuk wrote "The influence of Charles Schulz on the craft of
cartooning is so pervasive it is almost taken for granted." Batiuk
also described the depth of emotion in Peanuts: "Just beneath the
cheerful surface were vulnerabilities and anxieties that we all
experienced, but were reluctant to acknowledge. By sharing those
feelings with us, Schulz showed us a vital aspect of our common
humanity, which is, it seems to me, the ultimate goal of great
art."
In 2001, the Sonoma
County Board of Supervisors renamed the Sonoma
County Airport, located a few miles northwest of Santa
Rosa, California, the
Charles M. Schulz Airport in his honor. The airport's logo
features Snoopy in goggles and scarf, taking to the skies on top of
his red doghouse. A bronze statue of Charlie Brown and Snoopy
stands in Depot Park in downtown Santa Rosa.
Schulz was included in the touring exhibition
"Masters of American Comics" based on his achievements in the art
form while producing the strip. His gag work is hailed as being
"psychologically complex", and his style on the strip is noted as
being "perfectly in keeping with the style of its times.".
Theatrical productions
Peanuts characters even found their way to the live stage, appearing in the musicals You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown and Snoopy!!! — The Musical, and in "Snoopy on Ice", a live Ice Capades-style show aimed primarily at young children, all of which have had several touring productions over the years.You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown was originally a
successful off-Broadway
musical that ran for four years (1967-1971) in New York
City and on tour, with Gary
Burghoff as the original Charlie Brown. An updated revival
opened on Broadway
in 1999, and by 2002 it had become the most frequently produced
musical in American theatre history. Pig-Pen appeared in a
memorable spot for Regina
vacuum cleaners.
They are currently spokespeople in print and
television advertisements for the
MetLife insurance company. MetLife usually uses Snoopy in its
advertisements as opposed to other characters: for instance, the
MetLife blimps are named "Snoopy One" and "Snoopy Two" and feature
him in his World War I flying ace persona.
The characters have been featured on Hallmark
Cards since 1960, and can be found adorning clothing,
figurines, plush dolls, flags, balloons, posters, Christmas
ornaments, and countless other bits of licensed merchandise.
The Apollo 10
lunar
module was nicknamed "Snoopy" and the
command module "Charlie Brown". While not included in the
official
mission logo, Charlie Brown and Snoopy became semi-official
mascots for the mission. Charles Schulz drew an original picture of
Charlie Brown in a spacesuit that was hidden aboard the craft to be
found by the astronauts once they were in orbit. This drawing is
now on display at the Kennedy
Space Center. Snoopy is the personal safety mascot for NASA
astronauts, and NASA issues a Silver
Snoopy award to employees that promote flight safety.
The 1960s pop band, The
Royal Guardsmen drew inspiration from Peanuts, and their single
Snoopy vs. The Red Baron reached number two on the charts.
In the Sixties, Robert L.
Short interpreted certain themes and conversations in Peanuts
as being consistent with parts of Christian
theology, and used them as illustrations during his lectures
about the gospel, and as
source material for several books, as he explained in his
bestselling paperback book,
The Gospel According to Peanuts.
In 1980, Charles Schulz was introduced to artist
Tom
Everhart during a collaborative art project. Everhart became
fascinated with Schulz's art style and worked Peanuts themed art
into his own work. Schulz encouraged Everhart to continue with his
work. Everhart continues to be the only artist authorized to paint
Peanuts characters.
Giant helium balloons of Charlie Brown and
Snoopy have long been a feature in the annual
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City.
The characters were licensed for use in 1992 as
atmosphere for the national amusement
park chain
Cedar Fair. The images of the Peanuts characters are used
frequently, most visibly in several versions of the logo for
flagship park, Cedar Point.
Knott's
Berry Farm, which was later acquired by Cedar Fair, was the
first theme park to make Snoopy its mascot. Cedar Fair also
operated Camp Snoopy,
an indoor amusement park in the Mall of
America until the mall took over its operation as of March
2005, renaming it The Park
at MOA (now Nickelodeon
Universe), and no longer using the Peanuts characters as its
theme.
Peanuts on Parade has been St.
Paul, Minnesota’s tribute to Peanuts. It began in 2000, with
the placing of 101 five-foot tall statues of Snoopy throughout the
city of Saint Paul. The statues were later auctioned at the
Mall
of America in Bloomington,
Minnesota. In 2001, there was "Charlie Brown Around Town," 2002
brought "Looking for Lucy," and finally, in 2003, "Linus Blankets
Saint Paul." The statues were auctioned off at the end of each
summer, so some remain around the city but others have been
relocated. Permanent, bronze statues of the Peanuts characters are
also found in Landmark Plaza in downtown Saint
Paul.
The Peanuts characters have been licensed to
Universal
Studios Japan (while Peanuts merchandise in Japan has been
licensed by Sanrio, best known
for Hello
Kitty).
The Peanuts gang have also appeared in video
games, such as Snoopy
in a 1984 by Radarsoft, Snoopy Tennis (Game Boy
Color), and in October 2006,
Snoopy vs. the Red Baron by Namco
Bandai. Many Peanuts characters have cameos in the latter game,
including Woodstock, Charlie Brown, Linus, Lucy, Marcie and Sally.
In July 2007, the Peanuts gang also made it onto cell phones in the
Snoopy the Flying Ace mobile game by Namco Networks.
Peanuts has also been involved with NASCAR. In 2000,
Jeff
Gordon drove his #24 Chevrolet with a
Snoopy-themed motif
at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Two years later, Tony Stewart
drove a #20 Great
Pumpkin motif scheme for two races. The first, at Bristol
Motor Speedway, featured a black car with Linus sitting in a
pumpkin field. Later, at Atlanta
Motor Speedway, Tony drove an orange car featuring the Peanuts
characters trick-or-treating. Most recently, Bill Elliott
drove a #6 Dodge with an
A Charlie Brown Christmas scheme. That car ran at the 2005
NASCAR
BUSCH Series race at Memphis
Motorsports Park.
Books
The Peanuts characters have been featured in many books over the years. Some represented chronological reprints of the newspaper strip, while others were thematic collections, such as Snoopy's Tennis Book. Some single-story books were produced, such as Snoopy and the Red Baron. In addition, most of the animated television specials and feature films were adapted into book form.Charles Schulz always resisted publication of
early Peanuts strips, as they did not reflect the characters as he
eventually developed them. However, in 1997 he began talks with
Fantagraphics
Books to have the entire run of the strip, almost 18,000
cartoons, published chronologically in book form. The first volume
in the collection, The
Complete Peanuts: 1950 to 1952, was published in April 2004.
Peanuts is in a unique situation compared to other comics in that
archive quality masters of most strips are still owned by the
syndicate. All strips, including Sundays, are in black and white.
The following books publish much of this previously-unreproduced
material.
- Chip Kidd, ed. (2001) Peanuts: The Art of Charles M. Schulz. New York: Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-375-42097-5 (hardcover), ISBN 0-375-71463-4 (paperback).
- Derrick Bang with Victor Lee. (2002 reprinting) 50 Years of Happiness: A Tribute to Charles M. Schulz. Santa Rosa, California: Charles M. Schulz Museum. ISBN 0-9685574-0-6
- Derrick Bang, ed. (2003) Lil' Beginnings. Santa Rosa, California: Charles M. Schulz Museum. The complete run of Li'l Folks (1947 – 1950) ISBN 0-9745709-1-5
- Charles M. Schulz (1975) Peanuts Jubilee: My Life and Art with Charlie Brown and Others. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-25132-6 (paperback).
- Charles M. Schulz (2004) Who's on First, Charlie Brown?. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-46412-5.
- Robert L. Short (1965) The Gospel According to Peanuts. Westminster John Knox Press: ISBN 0-664-22222-6.
The Complete Peanuts
The entire run of Peanuts, covering nearly 50
years of comic strips, is being reprinted in Fantagraphics'
The Complete Peanuts, a 25-volume set to be released over a 12-year
period, two volumes per year, published every May and October. The
final volume is expected to be published in May 2016.
References
External links
- Snoopy.com: Official Peanuts Website
- Snoopy's Home: Charles M. Schulz's home page
- Peanuts Collector Club
- Peanuts Collectible Ornaments Guide
- AAUGH.com: Peanuts Book Collecting Guide
- Peanuts Animation and Reprints Page
- Charles M. Schulz Museum website
- NCS Awards
- Fantagraphics Books - The Complete Peanuts series
- Peanuts Gang Wikia
- Snoopy the Flying Ace on mobile
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