• Episode 55 — ALYAC Fest
    Jun 26 2025

    Boston Kids Comics Fest, which had grown exponentially since it launched in 2018, is taking a pause this year. But the good news is that there’s a viable alternative, particularly for those west of Boston: the very first Young Artists Comics Fest, aka ALYAC Fest, coming to the Ashland Public Library on July 13, 2025. We talked to event organizers Meena Jain, past director of the Boston Kids Comics Fest and current director of the Ashland Public Library; Tony Davis, owner of the Million Year Picnic Comic Book Store in Harvard Square and a co-founder of the Boston Kids Comics Fest; and Katrina Ireland-Bilodeau, director of youth services/assistant director of the Ashland Public Library, about what to expect.

    Also, the latest on not one, but TWO new "Pet Peeves" books, based on Dave and Pete's popular comic strip.

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    26 mins
  • Episode 54, Cagen Luse of Comics in Color
    Apr 23 2025

    Luse — a longtime local cartoonist himself — sat down with Pete and Dave to talk about what people can expect this year's Boston Comics in Color festival, and why it's more relevant, and necessary, than ever. Also in this ep: A new Art Spiegelman doc, the GoComics kerfuffle, and more!

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    26 mins
  • Episode 53, Brian Anderson
    Feb 9 2025

    Brian Anderson isn't just a Worcester, Massachusetts native, although he gets extra props for that. He's also the creator of the very funny comic strip "Dog Eat Doug," the author of several children’s picture books and illustrated novels, including "The Conjurers" trilogy, and now he’s released two graphic novels based on the "Dog Eat Doug" characters, called "Sophie: Jurassic Bark” and “Sophie: Frankenstein’s Hound.” He lives in North Carolina with his family, which includes a herd of rescued dogs and cats, and now, he's on Strip Search! Listen in to his chat with Dave and Pete, and also to our tribute to the late, great cartoonist Jules Feiffer.

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    37 mins
  • Episode 52, Jeff Kinney of 'Diary of a Wimpy Kid'
    Nov 30 2024

    A self-described failed cartoonist, Jeff Kinney spent eight years developing his first “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” novel after syndicates passed on his daily comic strip. Within a few years after that, he found himself with a hit book series and a movie in the works (the first of many), and he’s since become the steward of a worldwide franchise that shows no signs of abating. Plus, he gives back every day to his community of Plainville, Massachusetts, via his bookstore, An Unlikely Story. How cool is that? For some reason, Jeff sat down with London & Chianca for a wide-ranging interview on Strip Search: The Comic Strip Podcast.

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    35 mins
  • Episode 51, Kim Tomsic and Mark Parisi
    Nov 13 2024

    Kim Tomsic, the author of middle-grade novels like “The 11:11 Wish” and “The 12th Candle,” and nonfiction books like “The Elephants Come Home,” has teamed up with "Off The Mark" cartoonist and author Mark Parisi for the new she-said, he-said illustrated diary book “The Truth About 5th Grade,” published by HarperCollins. And what a book it is! Find out all about it when the pair appears on the latest episode of Strip Search. Also, Dave goes behind the scenes at the latest Rhode Island Comic Con.

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    50 mins
  • Episode 50, Maria Scrivan
    Oct 4 2024

    Since getting her start with her hilarious single-panel comic “Half Full,” which is syndicated nationally by Andrews-McMeel, Maria Scrivan has thrown herself into her graphic novel work, and the result seems to have been as much fun for her readers as for herself: 2020’s “Nat Enough” was an instant New York Times bestseller, and the series’ popularity has only grown since. We sat down with Maria to talk about cartooning, graphic novels, and surviving middle school. Plus: Dave's review of the "What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine" at Norman Rockwell Museum!

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    36 mins
  • Episode 49, Phil Witte & Rex Hesner on 'Funny Stuff'
    Jul 8 2024

    If a panel cartoon is good enough, it can wind up adorning kitchen refrigerators, office bulletin boards, and social media feeds for years on end. So how do panel cartoonists do it, with artwork that can sometimes amount to no more than a few scrawled lines, and text that might comprise just a few words? It’s a question that, apparently, haunted Phil Witte and Rex Hesner — so much so that they wrote a book about it, “Funny Stuff: How Great Cartoonists Make Great Cartoons.”

    Well, the impetus was actually a little more complicated than that, as you'll hear when Dave London and Pete Chianca sit down with Phil and Rex for the latest episode of "Strip Search." Also, find out the latest about the rollout of the latest "Pet Peeves" collection by London & Chianca, "Nerd Dad!"

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    38 mins
  • Episode 48, Bob Eckstein Talks Museums
    May 12 2024

    Bob Eckstein may, by his own admission, not have especially enjoyed being dragged to museums by his parents as a child. But something changed along the way, which is readily apparent If you take a look at Bob’s new book, “Footnotes from the Most Fascinating Museums.” It features 155 beautifully painted depictions of more than 75 museums in North America, accompanied by stories that help get to the essence of what makes them so special.

    Creating the paintings wasn’t as difficult an undertaking as it sounds, according to Eckstein. “What I did was based on what the museum called for — I simply was the background music to the beautiful museums. And I just kind of tried to lend my skills to what was needed,” Eckstein says. “But I was very much a secondary person in this whole process, in the sense that the museum itself told me what style I should try to do."

    And Eckstein spent about as much time tracking down the fascinating stories behind the museums that he included, several of the best of which he shared in the latest episode of "Strip Search: The Comic Strip Podcast." Listen to hear our discussion about museums, Bob's painting technique, and (for good measure) some real talk about the future of cartooning and the newspapers that have historically been their home.

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    46 mins