| BALTIMORE,
Maryland (AP) -- Comic creator Mort Walker knew
he was on to something when he brought a
computer technician into Beetle Bailey's world
and asked fans for their input.
He got 84,324 replies -- mostly e-mails, of
course.
Walker, who started drawing Beetle, Gen.
Halftrack and Sarge in 1950, soon understood
just how much computers have permeated our
lives. Many fans had ideas for gags, including
the old joke of struggling for hours to repair a
computer that -- surprise! -- is unplugged.
Walker thought he could come up with a new
cache of jokes, all centered on the frustrations
of figuring out upgrades, gadgets, CD-ROMs and
Internet surfing.
And he was looking for a new character who
would epitomize the expanding technology. So he
asked readers to submit names, and he came up
with a winner: "Chip Gizmo" will appear July 4
at Camp Swampy.
The suggestion came from those who know the
subject well -- information technology
specialists at the State Department, where
Walker made his announcement Tuesday.
Walker, an Army veteran, said that when he
made his choice, he didn't know who had made the
entry. He had help in picking the winner from 10
chief information officers from the military and
the U.S. Department of Labor, who bared all to
Walker in a meeting in Washington, he said.
They showed off their equipment belts -- with
dangling cell phones, pagers, tape recorders,
Palm Pilots, BlackBerrys and hand-held Global
Positioning Systems.
He found the techs to be earnestly nerdy, proud
of their jobs and their work, he said. However,
the king of Army pranks discovered that these
military employees did not necessarily want to
be made into a joke.
So Walker shifted his concept of Army
Specialist Chip Gizmo, making him more of a
likable character than an annoying know-it-all.
And he gave him lots of gadgets. Spiky-haired,
cross-eyed, rumpled Gizmo appears with phone
antennae, curling wires and earpieces poking out
of his Army fatigues.
He's around 30 and will live in his own world
-- with a mind swirling in cyberspace. At the
same time, the other characters will live more
like Walker, reflecting the generations of World
War II and Korea.
"I have so many friends like this -- no
matter how many times you explain to them --
they have this blank expression on their face,"
Walker, 78, said in an interview from his home
in Stamford, Conn.
So goes the humor that will follow Chip Gizmo
into Camp Swampy, as the computer specialist
faces off with old-fashioned Gen. Halftrack. For
example, when Gizmo warns Halftrack not to use
his pop-out CD-ROM holder for a coffee cup
holder, the general relents. Next, Gizmo finds
him using it to hold his martini glass.
This is not the first time Walker has
introduced new characters or injected timely
story lines into Beetle Bailey. Lt. Jack Flap
made his appearance in 1970, a time when blacks
were not seen in white comic strips. The last
new addition was Cpl. Yo, an Asian character,
who debuted five years ago.
Both characters were called stereotypes by
some readers. However, Walker said that comics
are filled with stereotypes and he likes to find
humor in all characters. He also likes to jar
the characters occasionally: He once sent Gen.
Halftrack (ogler of blonde bombshell Miss Buxley)
to "sensitivity training."
"I like to keep doing something new and
different, so people can't say I'm doing the
same thing all the time. I like to challenge
myself," said Walker, whose strip now appears in
1,800 newspapers worldwide.
Walker hopes those who have grown up with
computers will be attracted to Chip. But even
readers who have been turning to Beetle Bailey
since the 1950s will get the computer jokes, he
said.
Earl Hemminger, one of the four State
Department workers who used their lunch hour to
come up with Chip Gizmo's name, said he's not
offended by the stereotype. Even the jokes at
the military's expense don't ruffle Hemminger, a
12-year Army veteran.
"It's fun to have something once in a while
that sort of pokes fun at the whole system
without being irreverent," he said. "It's a
reality check sometimes, and I've never felt
insulted by it."
And, he said, the character rings true.
"If I wore my uniform and spiked my hair, I
would look just like that guy," he said,
laughing. "We're all computer nerds." |