'''Garfield''' is a comic strip created by
Jim Davis featuring Garfield the cat, Odie the dog, and their owner
Jon Arbuckle. As of 2007, it is syndicated in roughly 2,570
newspapers and
journals and it currently holds the
Guinness World Record for being the
worldâs most widely
syndicated comic strip.
[1] The popularity of the strip has led to an animated television series, several animated television specials and two theatrical feature-length live-action films, as well as a large amount of ''Garfield''
merchandise.
Overview

The first ''Garfield'' comic strip appeared on
June 19,
1978.
''Garfield'' debuted on
June 19,
1978, which is considered to be Garfieldâs birthday. The strip makes fun of pet owners and their relationship with their pets, often with the pet as the true master of the home. Garfield also struggles with human problems, such as
diets, Mondays,
apathy,
boredom, and so on. Garfield is able to understand what Jon or other humans say. He supposedly cannot talk back, but often Jon seems to be able to tell what he is saying just from his expression or gestures which are much like those of a human.
[2] However, Garfield is able to talk in thought bubbles to Odie and the other animals. Odie understands what Garfield says to him, but in general cannot communicate back to Garfield except by barking; he is the only character that doesnât seem to have any normal way of communicating. However, Odie did have three thought bubbles with words in the strip.
[3] In an early strip, Odie is shown poking his former owner (Lyman) and it is written in his thought bubble âIâm hungry.â In a second strip, Odie is on the fence in the alley with Garfield, And Garfield says to Odie âSay hi to the people, dummyâ and it is written in his thought bubble âHi to the people, dummy.â In a third strip, Odie says, âLady of Spain, I adore youâ although this may just be Garfield as a ventriloquist. Odie has also had an empty thought bubble on a few occasions. Most of the other animals (Arlene, Nermal, Squeak the Mouse, Guido the Spider and others) are capable of a two-way conversation with Garfield. Garfield, apparently, is able to type, and he has written messages that Jon has read and understood (mostly letters to
Santa Claus); which happens almost every year.
Over the course of the strip, Garfieldâs behavior and appearance evolved. Initially, he was drawn extremely fat with flabby
jowls and small round eyes. Later, his appearance was slimmed down, his eyes enlarged, and his head made rounder and more infant-like; these changes contributed to a
stereotypically cuter appearance. By 1981, Garfield started walking on his hind feet from time to time (these rear paws are now drawn as proportionally huge), because he was too fat to walk on four legs. By the middle of 1983, his familiar appearanceâfeaturing
oval-shaped eyesâhad taken shape. By this time, Garfield was walking on two feet, and the strip emphasized
sitcom situations such as Garfield making fun of Jonâs stupidity and his inability to date. Jon and Odie have also evolved quite a bit, from being thin and starkly colored to the cartoons they are today.
Like many comic strips, ''Garfield'' is not exclusively drawn by its creator.
Jim Davis still writes and makes rough sketches for the strip, but his company,
Paws, employs cartoonists and assistants who do most of the work of the finished drawing and inking, while Davisâs final job is usually confined to approving and signing the finished strip. Otherwise, Davis spends most of his time managing the business and merchandising of Garfield.
Learning from the indifference his previous comic strip creation
Gnorm Gnat, Jim Davis has made a conscious effort to include all readers in Garfield; keeping the jokes broad and the humor general and applicable to everyone. As a result the strip typically avoids the social or political commentary present in some of Garfieldâs contemporaries, such as ''
Boondocks'', ''
Doonesbury'', ''
Dilbert'', and ''
Cathy''. Although a couple of strips in 1978 addressed inflation and, arguably,
organized labor, as well as Jon frequently smoking a pipe or subscribing to a bachelor magazine, these elements were ultimately pruned from the product with the intent of maintaining a more universal appeal. Davis adamantly disavowed social commentary in an interview published at the beginning of one of the book compilations, joking that he once believed that
OPEC was a
denture adhesive.
The characters and situations in Garfield have often been constant, with no change or development for the past several years. While this was not unique to Garfield, as Calvin in ''
Calvin and Hobbes'' and the children of ''
Peanuts'' never aged, other strips such as ''
For Better or For Worse'', ''
Cathy'', and ''
Doonesbury'' maintain a continuity with characters who develop, age, and may even die as the strip proceeds. In one particular sequence, however, leading up to Garfieldâs 25th birthday (which is always marked by Garfield complaining about his age along with the rest of the characters making subtle references to it), Davis brought back the Garfield from 1978, the one that waddled and always had a frown under his pinpoint eyes. The old and new Garfields talk and find that, although they look different, they are still both too greedy and territorial to stand even themselves.
[4]
On
17 July, 2006,
[5] a new storyline began with the promise of changing Garfieldâs life forever (according to the stripâs
official website). During the next two weeks, Garfield and Jon accidentally spotted Garfieldâs vet and Jonâs crush
Liz in a restaurant with another man. After an embarrassing meeting, Liz admitted that she actually liked Jon, and the date ended with a kiss
[ The Garfield Vault Strip ] on
28 July (both Jon and Jim Davisâs birthday), when Jon could finally say that he had a life.
The comic strip was turned into a cartoon special for television in 1982 called ''
Here Comes Garfield''. Actor
Lorenzo Music, previously known as the voice of Carlton the doorman on the show ''
Rhoda'', was hired to portray the voice of Garfield.
Soul singer Lou Rawls provided music. Twelve television specials were made (through 1991) as well as a
Saturday morning television series, ''
Garfield and Friends'', which ran from 1988 to 1995 on
CBS, and still runs occasionally in syndication today.
In 1984, Garfield was introduced to the
Macyâs Thanksgiving Day Parade as a balloon. This is one of the most popular at the parade. In recent years, he has been holding Pooky.
For his work on the strip, creator Jim Davis received the
National Cartoonist Society Humor Strip Award for 1981 and 1985, and their
Reuben Award for 1989.
In 1990, Garfield made an appearance on the
TV special ''
Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue''. While he was in Coreyâs (the
sisterâs) room, he was a
lamp sitting beside a
picture of
ALF.
In
June 7,
1999, newspapers began to offer full-color ''Garfield'' weekday strips.
A
live-action film version of the
comic strip, ''
Garfield: The Movie'' had its debut in the
United States on
June 11,
2004. The film employed a
computer-animated Garfield and real Odie.
Lorenzo Music had died before filming began, and
Bill Murray was cast as the voice of Garfield. Murrayâs laid-back, deadpan delivery has often been compared to Musicâs; indeed, Music provided the voice of Murrayâs
Peter Venkman character in ''
The Real Ghostbusters'', the cartoon version of ''
Ghostbusters''. Murray became the fourth actor to provide a voice for Garfield:
Tommy Smothers voiced the role in a cat food commercial, and an unnamed Lorenzo Music sound-alike was used in another TV spot.
Garfieldâs second live-action feature film, '', was released on
June 16,
2006.
In November 2007, the first Garfield
direct-to-video feature will be released: ''
Garfield Gets Real'', a
CGI-animated movie written by
Jim Davis.
On Sunday July 1st of 2007, a possible memorial tribute was featured in a Garfield strip. The logo shows Garfieldâs eyes being inked with a brush, and the name âVALETTEâ is hidden in the stars above the house in the last panel.
Valette Greene, who passed away on
January 17, 2007, was Davisâ first assistant and the sole inker of the strip until 1997.
[1]
Main characters
Main articles: List of Garfield characters
Garfield
'First Appearance:'
June 19, 1978
Garfield is the main character. He is a
lazy,
selfish,
overweight,
orange tabby cat who enjoys eating and sleeping.
He hates Mondays because of his consistent streak of bad luck on them. He hates
diets because he believes it to be "die with a T" and February because he believes it to be "the Monday of months". He considers himself to be more intelligent than other animals and humans. He also hates spiders, although sometimes he communicates with them. In fact, over time, Garfield has communicated or understood the thoughts of many things, including other cats, mice, rats, dogs, people, clocks, trees, spiders, bathroom scales, squirrels, fish, plants, foods (mostly from the fridge), ants, birds and a ball of yarn.
Garfield was born in the kitchen of Mama Leoni's Italian Restaurant and developed a taste for
lasagna the day he was born. This was revealed on a Garfield TV special called Garfield: His nine lives. Ever since then, it has always been his favorite food. At birth, Garfield weighed 5lbs, 6oz. Later in his life, Garfield runs across his Mother again one Christmas Eve, accidentally, and meets his Grandfather for the first time. Although, in a series of strips from
November 10 to
November 22, 1980, Garfield meets his other grandfather, and in a television special called ''Garfield on the Town'', he finds his long-lost mother, and is disgusted to find that they are all "mousers" which is the technical term for mice eaters.
At the end of the TV special ''
Garfield Gets a Life'', Jonâs car is shown driving away, and his
vehicle registration plate says
Indiana, indicating that Garfield lives in Indiana.
Jim Davis added this is possible because he is from
Indiana. It is revealed in the special
Garfield Goes Hollywood that he and Jon live in
Muncie, Indiana in a contest called pet search.
In his cartoon appearances, Garfield usually causes mischief in every episode. In June 1983,
comic strips introduced Garfield's
alter-ego, Amoeba Man, yet he was only shown in 6 strips (6-20 through 6-25). Amoeba Man is only one of his few imaginary alter egos. The Caped Avenger is one of the more common ones. Others include
Banana Man, The
chickenman, The
Mummy, Count Cat, and The
Sock.
It was revealed on
October 27 1979 that he doesnât like
raisins.
[6] This has also been implied in a comic strip where Garfield saves time by making a list of things he doesn't want for his birthday instead of things he does want. The only thing on the list was raisins. His birthday is
June 19,
1978.
[7][8][9]
Jon Arbuckle

Jon
Main articles: Jon Arbuckle
'First Appearance:'
June 19, 1978
Garfield and Odie's owner. His birthday is July 28 1951, the same date as
Jim Davis', but six years later.
He has poor
social skills and his attempts at dating have usually failed, (in more modern issues, he has been getting lots of dates from Liz) but Garfield is happy as long as Jon keeps him fed. He has a taste in bizarre attire and has several dull hobbies, including talking to his plants, stamp collecting, playing the accordion, and organizing his clothes.
His mother often refers to him as Jonny, and his full name was revealed on
December 6,
2001 to be Jonathan Q. Arbuckle, but he usually just goes as Jon. Jim Davis got this name from an old coffee commercial. He thought the name fit the poor sap who would be stuck with a cranky feline with an overactive appetite.
Even though he introduced himself as a cartoonist in the very first strip, Jon is never seen drawing cartoons, but his job was once referenced, as seen in the 1984 Christmas Sequence when Jon left for a cartoonists' convention. (However, Garfield is seen in a couple of strips using Jon's easel and ink, presumably his cartooning tools. In one strip, Garfield draws a cat.)
Jon seems to understand Garfield in some of the later comics, but only sometimes. Garfield's punch lines tend to roll toward the viewer, usually when Garfield answers questions. In the July 13, 1998, comic, he even reacted to Garfield even though Garfield hadn't even thought anything.
[10][11]
In recent comic strips Jon has had his first success in love and finally hit it off with Garfieldâs vet, Dr. Liz Wilson (following the path of the end of the first movie).
Odie

Odie
Main articles: Odie
'First Appearance:'
August 8, 1978

Odieâs first appearance.
Jonâs pet dog (originally owned by Jonâs friend
Lyman, who hasnât been seen in the strip for 18 years, last appearing in only one panel on Garfieldâs tenth birthday). However, there is a slight controversy, because the book ''Garfield: His Nine Lives'' states that both were introduced in 1978, it is widely believed to be the most truthful. Odie is a yellow, long-eared
beagle who is always drooling and walks on all four legs. He is very unintelligent and naĂŻve (although he has been shown on rare occasions to be the exact opposite). His birthday is on August 8th and is celebrated once in a strip where Jon says that Garfield didnât care about Odieâs birthday. Because of his naĂŻvetĂ©, Garfield likes to play tricks on him, particularly taking advantage to give him the bootâquite literallyâwhen he is standing on the edge of a table.
Odie is the only animal character who doesnât communicate with any form of
dialogue (except in one comic where Odie actually speaks in Garfieldâs dream, once when he tries coffee and says âRowr...â and another when he sings on a fence âLady of Spain, I adore youâ and another one, the
June 15, 1980 comic where heâs poking his original owner, Lyman, and saying heâs hungry
[3]), solely communicating with
body language and his enthusiastic barking and other dog sound effects.
Odie didnât appear in the very first comics; he made his debut on
August 8,
1978,
[13] which is considered his birthday. Odie was originally going to be named Spot, but Davis thought the name âOdieâ better indicated stupidity. (Odie was the name of the village idiot in Davisâ car ad.) This was referenced in an early strip where Odie has âan accidentâ on the carpet, and Garfield remarks that they should have named him Spot. Odie used to have black ears, but Davis was told that he looked a little like
Snoopy; Odieâs ears are now brown.
Sometimes Odie catches on to Garfieldâs tricks; one time Odie was sleeping on a rug, and Garfield crept up and pulled the rug out from under him, spinning him into the air. As Garfield settled in, Odie got back at him by stamping his foot into the floorboard, shooting Garfield into the ceiling.
10 Another favorite trick of Odieâs is sneaking up behind Garfield while Garfield is eating, and barking loudly, which results in Garfield being startled and pitching forward face-first into his food bowl. However, Garfield got back at Odie a few times. In one comic, Odie does it to Garfield, who then does it to Odie. Jon then yells at them and they do it together to him. In one comic series, Garfield taunted a dog that then beat him up so severely that his cast covers all of his body but part of his face. Odie torments Garfield twice in the comic series, but Garfield gets his revenge in the final strip, where he is now out of his cast, and he uses it as a weapon to strike Odie really hard with.
By the early 1990s, Odieâs presence in ''Garfield'' became so rare that some readers wondered if he had met the same fate as his former owner Lyman. (A letter published in ''
National Review'', responding to an
Anthony Lejeune article about the decline of the American comic strip, complained that Odie had become ''doggie non grata''.) In recent years, however, Odie has resumed much of his former status in the cast.
Themes and settings
Usually, the standard setting is Garfield standing on a table or floor, always flat. Occasionally, Garfield ventures elsewhere and when he goes somewhere else, he usually spends a week or two in that area.
★ 'The table' is the most common setting in the strip. Common scenarios for these strips include Garfield sleeping on his back, eating, drinking coffee (usually with Jon), kicking Odie off the table, or sitting beside Jon (who is often calling women on the phone to ask for a date—mostly getting rejected). This is likely because Garfield usually needs to be face-to-face with Jon to interact with him. In strips such as ones taking place in the living room or outdoors, the drawings are made smaller to fit both Jon and Garfield in. Sometimes, the table is actually important to the story, such as being cut up to get Jonâs dinner plate, a gag with a round table, and to mask Odie while Garfield was using him as a stool to get hot chocolate during December.
★ 'The TV chair' is one of Garfieldâs favorite places, where he entertains himself with shows like ''Binky the Clown'' and others. Many of the shows mentioned are absurd and stupid, and give Jim Davis an opportunity to comment on pop culture. In a few early strips the chair had a floral print, but Garfield sneezed it off after having an allergic reaction to the flowers. In earlier strips Garfield doesnât use the chair at all; he is perched on top of the TV and bends his head down, planting his face right in front of the screen.
★ 'Garfieldâs bed': as a prodigious sleeper, Garfield is often found here. Even when not asleep, he sometimes uses his blanket for entertainment purposes (Amoeba Man, the Caped Avenger). The bed is sometimes moved around the house, including on the table.
★ 'Outside', Garfield has confrontations with various characters, such as dogs (more vicious than Odie), birds, worms, and even conscious flowers. âBeware of Dogâ signs abound, and Garfield often tries to torment the chained-up dogs as some kind of revenge. Garfield also tries to capture birds in the birdbath, often (but not always) unsuccessfully. He finds it a lot easier to capture flowers though, and often eats them.
★ Early in the strip, Garfield would spend time on the 'window ledge' and sometimes get trapped in the roll-up blinds. One of these events culminated in a two-week storyline in which Garfield, Odie, Jon, two complete strangers, and even a street lamp all got trapped in the blinds
[2]. This was one of the few storylines in which a Sunday strip was part of the regular story arc. After this, Jon bought
Venetian blinds (which Garfield, somehow, still manages to get stuck in).
★ 'The fence in the alley' is an area where Garfield often tells bad jokes or caterwauls, in an homage to
vaudeville with the background moon providing his spotlight. Odie joins the act from time to time, once as a
ventriloquistâs dummy, once as âMr. Skins,â who accompanied Garfield on the drums, and once as a cue card boy. Garfield is frequently the target of disgusted fans (usually unseen), who throw shoes, vegetables, and houseplants, and other things that would hurt, at him, and once burned down his fence with burning arrows (Garfieldâs temporary replacement, a plastic flamingo, just âdidnât feel the sameâ). Garfield, however, loves the attention he receives, and once complained that he thought a joke deserved more than a single shoe. He does sometimes get applause from his audience (once Odie held the applause sign upside down and the fans clapped upside down) though one time the audience consisted solely of his mother, another time the custodian. He apparently has to be booked onto the fence by an agent (in one strip, his agent booked him a gig on a chain link fence). Everyone thinks Odie makes better entertainment. When asked how Garfield could stand on the fence without falling, it was revealed the fence was apparently very wide.
★ 'Up the tree' is another area where Garfield often traps himself. Garfield knows not to climb, but ironically can never overcome the urge. A firefighter usually has to save him on the last day of the week. Once, Jon got stuck up the tree trying to rescue him. And once, Garfield tried to run down a tree, crashing into the ground. Another time, a firefighter came to rescue him, but when he complained about âalways getting the fat ones,â Garfield sent the firemanâs ladder crashing to the ground.
★ Occasionally, Garfield will be taken to the 'vetâs office', a place he loathes. In this setting, Jon always tries to get a date with Liz, the vet, and usually fails badly. Liz sometimes does go out with Jon. At the end of one date, Jon got a kiss, his first of only three so far in the comic. (However, with his having officially âgotten a lifeâ as of July 28, 2006 when he received his second kiss, this could change.)
★ Sometimes Jon takes Garfield to the 'park'. Jon tries to meet girls in the park, but always fails miserably and humorously. (âShe acknowledged my existence!â Jon joyfully declared after a female passer-by told him to âShut upâ before he could even say anything.)
★ 'Vacations' are taken by Jon and his pets every so often, usually to exotic places. Early in the series, Garfield had to sneak along in Jonâs suitcase (this tactic is also used in the second Garfield film, ''). But at some point Jon gave up and took him along as an equal, albeit sometimes dressed as a child. Most often Jon will choose some undesirable
tourist trap in a tropical setting. In a particular storyline, Jon takes Garfield to an isle called Guano Guano which actually means âbat fecesâ in Spanish. Although Jon does say âAlohaâ to a native, thereby speaking
Hawaiian, it is not said where the isle is on the map. Greeting the native with âAlohaâ was implied as the ignorance that Americans have towards tropical cultures, because when he greets the native, it is implied that the native gives Jon an obscene gesture.
★ 'The beach' can be a sub-setting that falls under a vacation destination, but it is implied that Jon takes Garfield to the local beach. This is yet another hot spot for Jon to try to pick up dates but he always fails. Garfield hates the beach simply because it has no TV, and is too hot; however, he does like the fact that he thinks he can âgoâ wherever he wants. This theme often shows up in the summer.
★ 'An airliner' is a sub-setting for vacations. Earlier in the strip, Jon and Garfield had to ride in third class, but when they visited Guano Guano, it is not implied what section they were in. Garfield and Odie also had to be dressed as children so as not to ride with the luggage.
★ 'Campsites' are sometimes accompanied by the 'fishing in a small boat' sub-setting.
★ 'Jonâs car' is a common setting when Jon is taking Garfield to his parentsâ farm to visit, to the vet, or when Jon and Garfield go to a fast food drive through. Sometimes the destination is not implied.
★ 'Irmaâs Diner' is another occasional setting. Irma is a chirpy but slow-witted and unattractive waitress/manager, and one of Jonâs few friends (although she is probably the only woman he has known that he hasnât asked out other than in one strip, an insane lady with a monkey). The terrible food is the center of most of the jokes, along with the poor management. Along with Irmaâs Diner, other no-name restaurants, from fancy to tourist trap, are sometimes used as a setting.
★ Jon periodically visits his parents and brother on the 'farm'. This results in week-long comical displays of stupidity by Jon and his family, and their interactions.
★ 'Stores & shopping lots' are usually on and off settings where Garfield sometimes wreaks havoc. Some include the grocery store, the pet store, the furniture store, fancy restaurants, the florist, the refrigerator store, the Christmas tree lot, and the used car lot.
★ 'Cinemas' are rare settings but appear on and off. In a particular setting where Liz reluctantly goes on a date with Jon, he takes her to see a film called ''Sludge Monster VII: The Oozing''. When Jon asks Liz if she wants a bucket of popcorn, she asks for
just the bucket.
★ 'House', as in the house in which the comic takes place: there are hints of a two-story house. On Garfieldâs 16th birthday, as Garfield is expecting a surprise, it appears that there is a staircase in the background, but when viewed from outside the house in a later comic, the house appears as a one-story. Also in one comic strip Garfield falls through the ceiling claiming he jumped out of bed. A possible address for the house is 357 Shady Grove Lane.
Short storylines
Garfield comic strips have occasionally featured some members of Jim Davisâs other cartoon strip, ''
U.S. Acres'' (known as ''Orsonâs Farm'' outside the US).
Garfield often engages in one- to two-week-long interactions with a minor character, event, or thing, such as Nermal, Arlene, the mailman, an alarm clock, a talking scale, the TV, Pooky, spiders, mice, balls of yarn, dieting, shedding, pie throwing, fishing, Mondays (The Monday That Wouldnât Die), birthdays, lasagna, the âCaped Avengerâ (Garfieldâs alter ego), Mrs. Feeny, colds, hallucinations with birthday displeasures or dietary complications, talks with his grandfather, etc.
Some more unique themes are things like âGarfieldâs Believe It or Donât,â âGarfieldâs Law,â and âGarfieldâs History of Cats,â which show science, history and the world from Garfieldâs point of view. Another particular theme is the âNational Fat Week,â where Garfield spends the week making fun of skinny people. Also, there was a time when Garfield caught Odie eating Garfieldâs food, so Garfield âkicked Odie into next week.â Soon, Garfield realizes that âlife isnât the same without Odie. He keeps making me fall into my food,â with the result of Garfield falling into his food by himself. Soon after, Garfield is lying in his bed with a ânagging feeling that I forgot something,â with Odie landing on Garfield in the next panel. Most of December is spent preparing for
Christmas, with a predictable focus on presents. Every week before
June 19, the strip focuses on his birthday, which Garfield dreads because of his fear of getting older. This started happening after his sixth birthday. But, before his 29th birthday, Liz put Garfield on a diet. And on June 19, 2007, Garfield was given the greatest birthday present: âIâM OFF MY DIET!â (Note: This is the first time the dieting and birthday themes came together in a series of strips.) Occasionally the strip celebrates as well with scary-themed jokes. There are also seasonal jokes, with snow-related gags common in January or February and beach or heat themed jokes in the summer.
One storyline, which ran the week before
Halloween in 1989 (
Oct 23 to
Oct 28), is unique among Garfield strips in that it is not meant to be humorous. It depicts Garfield awakening in a future in which the house is abandoned and he no longer exists. In tone and imagery the storyline for this series of strips is very similar to the animation segment for ''Valse Triste'' from ''
Allegro Non Troppo'', which depicts a ghostly cat roaming around the ruins of the home it once inhabited.
There was some speculation about what these strips meant, including the possibility that Garfield was either dead or starving to death in an abandoned house, imagining future strips in a state of denial. Jim Davis is reported to have actually âlaughed loudlyâ when informed of these rumors circulating on the internet.
[14] In Garfieldâs ''Twentieth Anniversary Collection'', in which the strips are reprinted, Jim Davis discusses the genesis for this series of strips. His caption, in its entirety states:
:''âDuring a writing session for week, I got the idea for this decidedly different series of strips. I wanted to scare people. And what do people fear? Why, being alone of course. We carried out the concept to its logical conclusion and got a lot of responses from readers.â
Another storyline used often is when Garfield gets lost or runs away. One of these storylines lasted for over a month; it started when Jon tells Garfield to go get the newspaper. Garfield walks outside to get it, but speculates what will happen if he wanders off. Jon notices Garfield has been gone too long, so he sends Odie out to find him. He quickly realizes his mistake (Odie, being not too bright, also gets lost). John starts to get lonely, so he offers a reward for the return of Garfield and Odie. He is not descriptive, so animals including an
elephant,
monkeys, a
seal, a
snake, a
kangaroo &
joey, and
turtles are brought to Jonâs house for the reward. After a series of events, including Odie being adopted by a small girl, both pets joining the circus, and both going to the pound, Garfield and Odie make it back home.
Criticism
Despite the widespread
popularity of the comic strip, ''Garfield'' has earned negative
criticism over the years. For the past few years the strip has shown little development of character and used increasingly repetitive story lines. Davisâ work has been criticized for a declining grasp of originality and accused of reverting frequently to formula-based jokes regarding Garfieldâs weight and lazy tendencies, Odieâs stupidity, Jonâs isolation, etc, including an entire week of strips with the same punchline
[3]. However, on
July 28, 2006, Jon finally landed Liz, the veterinarian, for a girlfriend (his first ever success in love), thereby combating some of this criticism.
Marketing and products

A stuffed Garfield toy.
As a result of the worldwide proliferation of the comic strip, Paws, Inc. has become a global
licensing powerhouse, selling the charactersâ images for production on a wide variety of products, including common objects like food, toys, and household items. A
franchise of stores selling exclusively Garfield-brand products has become popular outside of North America.
In North America, the most mainstream appearances of Garfield are traditionally compilations of the comic strip, as well as other entertainment media, such as television, as the franchise expanded over time. However, Garfieldâs main success has come from the comic strip, and ''
The Simpsons'' were able to dominate Garfield in the global markets by 1996.
[4].
Books
Compilations
These books, generally released twice a year by
Ballantine Books, contain reprints of the comic as it appears in newspapers daily. These books were originally printed in black and white, but recent volumes have been in color. Each book collects approximately six months of comics, including the larger weekend comics (in black and white in all except the recent editions).
The titles of these books were styled as
double entendres alluding to Garfieldâs weight (Note: an extra at the end of a Garfield compilation advertised ârejected book titlesâ). These books introduced the âGarfield formatâ in publishing, whereby the books are horizontally oriented to match comic strip dimensions; Davis has recalled having to invent the format in order to better fit the books on store shelves. They are currently being reprinted in a larger format, showing the Sunday strips to be formatted in a size as they usually are, instead of shrunken-down to meet the book size. However, this means that the first panel after the logo box (called the drop panel because newspapers can drop it without ruining the point of the strip) is no longer printed in the compilation books.
Each of books will be re-released in the âGarfield Classicsâ format. These are available in paperback only, with every comic in full color, not just the Sunday strips. As well as colorization, the page size has also been increased. So far, the first twelve books have been reprinted in this format.
RELEASED
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
# '' (1980) (Comics from June 19, 1978-January 22, 1979)
# '' (1981) (Comics from January 23, 1979-September 22, 1979)
#:Since Garfield's birthday is on
June 19, the book contains the strip in which Garfield celebrates his first birthday.
# ''Garfield Bigger Than Life: His Third Book'' (1981) (Comics from September 23, 1979-March 30, 1980)
# ''Garfield Weighs In: His Fourth Book'' (1982)(Comics from March 31, 1980-November 2, 1980)
# ''Garfield Takes the Cake: His Fifth Book'' (1982)(Comics from November 3, 1980-June 7, 1981)
# ''Garfield Eats His Heart Out: His Sixth Book'' (1983) (Comics from June 8, 1981-January 10, 1982)
# ''Garfield Sits Around the House: His Seventh Book'' (1983) (comics from January 11, 1982-August 15, 1982)
# ''Garfield Tips the Scales: His Eighth Book'' (1984) (Comics from August 16, 1982-March 20, 1983)
# ''Garfield
Loses His Feet: His Ninth Book'' (1984) (Comics from March 21, 1983-October 23, 1983)
# ''Garfield Makes It Big: His 10th Book'' (1985)(Comics from October 24, 1983-May 27, 1984)
# ''Garfield Rolls On: His 11th Book'' (1985) (Comics from May 28, 1984-December 30, 1984)
# ''Garfield Out to Lunch: His 12th Book'' (1986) (Comics from December 31, 1984-August 4, 1985)
# ''Garfield Food for Thought: His 13th Book'' (1987) (Comics from August 5, 1985-May 9, 1986)
# ''Garfield Swallows His Pride: His 14th Book'' (1987)(Comics From May 10, 1986-October 12, 1986)
# ''Garfield World Wide: His 15th Book'' (1988) (Comics from October 13, 1986-May 17, 1987)
# ''Garfield Rounds Out: His 16th Book'' (1988)(Comics From May 18, 1987-December 19, 1987)
# ''Garfield Chews the Fat: His 17th Book'' (1989) (Comics from December 20, 1987-July 24, 1988)
# ''Garfield Goes to Waist: His 18th Book'' (1990) (Comics from July 25, 1988-February 25, 1989)
# ''Garfield Hangs Out: His 19th Book'' (1990) (Comics from February 26, 1989-September 30, 1989)
# ''Garfield Takes Up Space: His 20th Book'' (1991) (Comics from October 1, 1989-May 5, 1990)
# ''Garfield Says a Mouthful: His 21st Book'' (1991)(Comics from May 6, 1990-December 8, 1990)
# ''Garfield By the Pound: His 22nd Book'' (1992)(Comics from December 9, 1990-July 7, 1991)
# ''Garfield Keeps His Chins Up: His 23rd Book'' (1992)(Comics from July 8, 1991-February 4, 1992)
# ''Garfield Takes His Licks: His 24th Book'' (1993)(Comics from February 5, 1992-September 5, 1992)
# ''Garfield Hits the Big Time: His 25th Book'' (1993) (Comics from September 6, 1992-April 10, 1993)
# ''Garfield Pulls His Weight: His 26th Book'' (1994)(Comics from April 11, 1993-November 19, 1993)
# ''Garfield Dishes It Out: His 27th Book'' (1995) (Comics from November 20, 1993-June 11, 1994)
# ''Garfield Life in the Fat Lane: His 28th Book'' (1995) (Comics from June 12, 1994-January 10, 1995)
# ''Garfield Tons of Fun: His 29th Book'' (1996)(Comics from January 11, 1995-August 12, 1995)
# ''Garfield Bigger and Better: His 30th Book'' (1996) (Comics from August 13, 1995-March 11, 1996)
# ''Garfield Hams It Up: His 31st Book'' (1997) (Comics from March 12, 1996-October 12, 1996)
# ''Garfield Thinks Big: His 32nd Book'' (1997) (Comic from October 13, 1996-May 13, 1997)
# ''Garfield Throws His Weight Around: His 33rd Book'' (1998) (Comics from May 14, 1997-December 13, 1997)
# ''Garfield Life to the Fullest: His 34th Book'' (1999) (December 14, 1997-July 14, 1998)
# ''Garfield Feeds the Kitty: His 35th Book'' (1999)(Comics from July 15, 1998-February 13, 1999)
# ''Garfield Hogs the Spotlight: His 36th Book'' (2000)(Comics from February 14, 1999-September 11, 1999)
# ''Garfield Beefs Up: His 37th Book'' (2000) (Comics from September 12, 1999-April 8, 2000)
# ''Garfield Gets Cookinâ: His 38th Book'' (2001) (Comics from April 9, 2000-November 4, 2000)
# ''Garfield Eats Crow: His 39th Book'' (2003) (Comics from November 5, 2000-May 30, 2001)
# ''Garfield Survival of the Fattest: His 40th Book'' (2004) (Comics from May 31, 2001-December 26, 2001)
# ''Garfield Older and Wider: His 41st Book'' (2005) (Comics from December 30, 2001-July 27, 2002)
# ''Garfield Pigs Out: His 42nd Book'' (2006) (Comics from July 28, 2002-February 22, 2003)
# ''Garfield Blots Out The Sun: His 43rd Book'' (2007) (Comics from February 23, 2003-September 20, 2003)
# ''Garfield Goes Bananas: His 44th Book'' (August 28th, 2007) (Comics from September 21, 2003 to April 17, 2004)
COMING SOON TO BOOKSTORES!
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
# ''Garfield Large & In Charge: His 45th Book'' (Coming January 29th, 2008) (Comics from April 18, 2004 to November ? 2004)
''Garfield Classics''
The ''Garfield Classics'' imprint has been in print since 2001, and reprints Garfield's earlier books in a "remastered" format, with increased page size, bolder lines, and each strip in full-color format.
| 'Title' | 'comics years' | 'Release date' |
|---|
| June 19, 1978-January 22, 1979 | May 29, 2001 |
| Garfield Gains Weight | January 23, 1979-September 22, 1979 | November 27, 2001 |
| Garfield Bigger Than Life | September 23, 1979-March 30, 1980 | February 26, 2002 |
| Garfield Weighs In | March 31, 1980-November 2, 1980 | June 25, 2002 |
| Garfield Takes the Cake | November 3, 1980-June 7, 1981 | June 3, 2003 |
| Garfield Eats His Heart Out | June 8, 1981-January 10, 1982 | December 30, 2003 |
| Garfield Sits Around the House | January 11, 1982-August 15, 1982 | December 30, 2003 |
| Garfield Tips the Scales | August 16, 1982-March 20, 1983 | June 29, 2004 |
| Garfield Loses His Feet | March 21, 1983-October 23, 1983 | August 31, 2004 |
| Garfield Makes It Big | October 24, 1983-May 27, 1984 | June 28, 2005 |
| Garfield Rolls On | May 28, 1984-December 30, 1984 | July 26, 2005 |
| Garfield Out to Lunch | December 31, 1984-August 4, 1985 | April 25, 2006 |
| Garfield Food for Thought | August 5, 1985-May 9, 1986 | November 28, 2006 |
| Garfield Swallows His Pride | May 10, 1986-October 12, 1986 | April 17, 2007 |
| Garfield Worldwide | October 13, 1986-May 17, 1987 | June 26, 2007 |
| Garfield Rounds Out | May 18, 1987-December 19, 1987 | 2007 |
| Garfield Chews the Fat | December 20, 1987-July 24, 1988 | 2007 |
| Garfield Goes to Waist | July 25, 1988-February 25, 1989 | 2008 |
| Garfield Hangs Out | February 26, 1989-September 30, 1990 | 2008 |
| Garfield Takes Up Space | October 1, 1990-December 2, 1990 | 2008 |
| Garfield Says a Mouthful | December 3, 1990-1991 | 2008 |
| Garfield By the Pound | 1991-July 7, 1991 | 2009 |
| Garfield Keeps His Chins Up | July 8, 1991-February 4, 1992 | 2009 |
| Garfield Takes His Licks | February 5, 1992-September 5, 1992 | 2009 |
| Garfield Hits the Big Time | September 6, 1992-April 10, 1993 | 2009 |
| Garfield Pulls His Weight | April 11, 1993-November 19, 1993 | 2009 |
| Garfield Dishes It Out | November 20, 1993-June 11, 1994 | 2010 |
| Garfield Life in the Fat Lane | June 12, 1994-January 10, 1995 | 2010 |
| Garfield Tons of Fun | January 11, 1995-August 12, 1995 | 2010 |
| Garfield Bigger and Better | August 13, 1995-March 11, 1996 | 2011 |
| Garfield Hams It Up | March 12, 1996-October 12, 1996 | 2011 |
| Garfield Thinks Big | October 13, 1996-May 13, 1997 | 2012 |
| Garfield Throws His Weight Around | May 14, 1997-December 13, 1997 | 2012 |
| Garfield Life to the Fullest | December 14, 1997-July 14, 1998 | 2012 |
| Garfield Feeds the Kitty | July 15, 1998-1998 | 2012 |
| Garfield Hogs the Spotlight | 1998-1999 | 2013 |
| Garfield Beefs Up | September 12, 1999-April 8, 2000 | October 3, 2000 |
| Garfield Gets Cookinâ | April 9, 2000-November 4, 2000 | October 2, 2001 |
| Garfield Eats Crow | November 5, 2000-June 2, 2001 | January 1, 2003 |
| Garfield Survival of the Fattest | June 3, 2001-December 29, 2001 | February 3, 2004 |
| Garfield Older and Wider | December 30, 2001-July 27, 2002 | January 25, 2005 |
| Garfield Pigs Out | July 28, 2002-February 22, 2003 | February 7, 2006 |
| Garfield Blots Out The Sun | February 23, 2003-September 20, 2003 | January 30, 2007 |
| Garfield Goes Bananas | September 21, 2003-April 17, 2004 | August 28, 2007 |
| Garfield Large & In Charge | April 18, 2004-November ? 2004 | January 29, 2008 |
★ Newer books are only available in a similar format, starting with book #37.
In the UK, over 60 Garfield books, mainly âPocket Booksâ or paperbacks, have been published by
Ravette. The format is slightly different, as the strips are presented in a vertical style. In the Garfield 20th anniversary book, however, Davis said vertical stacking was the one type of comic anthology layout he wanted to avoid the most when compiling the above collections.
Additionally, adaptations of Garfield television specials have been published in comic format:
★ 'Garfield as Himself' (2004) collects the following books:
:
★ ''Here Comes Garfield'' (1982)
:
★ ''Garfield on the Town'' (1983)
:
★ ''Garfield Gets a Life'' (1991)
★ 'Garfield Holiday Celebrations' (2004) collects the following books:
:
★ ''Garfield in Disguise'' (Halloween special) (1985)
:
★ ''Garfieldâs Thanksgiving'' (1988)
:
★ ''A Garfield Christmas'' (1987)
:
★ ''Season's Eatings'' (2003)
★ 'Garfield Travel Adventures' (2005) collects the following books:
:
★ ''Garfield in the Rough'' (1984)
:
★ ''Garfield in Paradise'' (1986)
:
★ ''Garfield Goes to Hollywood'' (1988)
Other books
★ '' (1984),
graphic novel, later made into a
TV special.
★ ''The Unabridged Uncensored Unbelievable Garfield'' (1986)
★ ''Garfield Book of Cat Names'' (1988)
★ ''Garfield How to Party Book'' (1988)
★ ''Garfield Crazy About Numbers (1988)â (sticker book)
★ ''Give Me Coffee and No One Gets Hurt'' (discontinued)
★ ''Garfield and the Santa Spy'' (1989)
★ ''
Garfield's Judgment Day'' (1990)
★ ''Garfield: The Me Book'' (1990) (
motivational handbook)
★ ''Garfield and the Truth About Cats'' (1991)
★ ''Garfield's Insults, Put-Downs & Slams'' (1994)
★ ''Garfield Jolly Holiday 3-pack'' (19970- Renamed to Garfield Holiday Celebrations in 2004
★ ''Garfield's Big Book of Excellent Excuses'' (2000)
★ ''Garfield: The Grudesome Truesome 2 in 1 Book'' (2002)
★ ''I'm in the Mood for Food: In the Kitchen with Garfield'' (2003)
★ '' (2003)
★ ''How to Draw Garfield and the Gang'' (2004)
★ ''Garfield's Guide to Everything'' (2004)
★ ''Odie Unleashed: Garfield Lets the Dog Out Book'' (2005)
★ ''Lights, Camera, Hairballs: Garfield at the Movies'' (2006)
'Early-reader adventure novels featuring Garfield'
★ ''Garfield's Haunted House and Other Spooky Tales'' (1994)
★ ''Garfield's Stupid Cupid and Other Stories'' (1995)
★ ''Garfield Goes to Disobedience School'' (1997)
★ ''Garfield's Christmas Tales'' (1994)
★ ''Garfield's Ghost Stories'' (1990)
★ ''Garfield and the Beast in the Basement'' (2002)
★ ''Garfield and the Mysterious Mummy'' (1997)
★ ''Garfield and the Teacher Creature'' (1998)
★ ''Garfield and the Wicked Wizard'' (2002)
'Garfieldâs
Pet Force' is series of early-reader novels:
★ ''#1: The Outrageous Origin'' (1997)
★ ''#2: Pie Ratâs Revenge'' (1998)
★ ''#3: K-Niner: Dog of Doom'' (1998)
★ ''#4: Menace of the Mutanator'' (1999)
★ ''#5: Attack of the Lethal Lizards'' (1999)
'Garfield Extreme' is a series of childrenâs picture books.
★ ''Garfieldâs Extreme Cuisine: Pigging the Way Out!'' (2003)
★ ''Garfieldâs Ironcat'' (2003)
★ ''Garfieldâs Awesome Ski Adventure'' (2002)
★ ''Garfieldâs Sumo Beach Bellyball'' (2002)
DVD releases
★ ''
Garfield As Himself'' (June 29, 2004)
★ '' (July 27, 2004)
★ ''
Garfield: the Movie'' (October 29, 2004)
★ ''
Garfield's Holiday Celebrations'' (October 26, 2004)
★ '' (December 7, 2004)
★ ''
Garfield's Travel Adventures'' (February 15, 2005)
★ '' (April 19, 2005)
★ ''
Garfield's Fantasies'' (May 24, 2005)
★ '' (August 30, 2005)
★ ''
Garfield Cat Tales'' (October 18, 2005)
★ '' (December 6, 2005)
★ ''
Garfield The Movie: The Purrrfect Collector's Edition'' (June 14, 2006)
★ '' (October 10, 2006)
★ ''
Garfield Two-Movie Box set'' (October 10, 2006)
★ '' (December 5, 2006)
★ '' (March 20, 2007)
★ '' (September 4, 2007)
★ ''
Garfield Gets Real'' (November 2007)
Television
'TV-series':
★ ''
Garfield and Friends'' (
animated TV series, 1988â1995)
'TV-specials (1982-1991)'
(E)= specials that won an Emmy Award.
★ ''
Here Comes Garfield'' (animated special) 1982
★ ''
Garfield in the Rough'' (E) (animated special) 1984
★ ''
Garfield on the Town'' (E) (animated special) 1983
★ ''
Garfield's Halloween Adventure'' (E) (animated special) 1985
★ ''
Garfield in Paradise'' (animated special) 1986
★ ''
Garfield Goes Hollywood'' (animated special) 1987
★ ''
A Garfield Christmas'' (animated special) 1987
★ ''
Happy Birthday, Garfield'' (animated special) 1988 (The least known special)
★ '' (animated special) 1988
★ ''
Garfieldâs Babes and Bullets'' (E) (animated special) 1989
★ ''
Garfieldâs Thanksgiving'' (animated special) 1989
★ ''
Garfieldâs Feline Fantasies'' (animated special) 1990
★ ''
Garfield Gets a Life'' (animated special) 1991
Video games
.'']]
Garfield was also transported into
video games, the first being a never-released
Atari 2600 prototype, in 1983, and there was also an 8-bit
Famicom game of ''
Garfield'' made in
Japan in 1989 .
#''
Garfield'' (1984) prototype for
Atari 2600[15]
#''
Create With Garfield'' (1985) for
Apple II and
Commodore 64[16]
#'' (1987) for
ZX Spectrum,
Atari ST and
Commodore 64
#'' (1989) for
Atari ST (will not work on Atari STe computers),
Amiga, ZX Spectrum and Commodore 64
#'' (''A Week of Garfield'') (1989) for the
Famicom
#''
Garfield Labyrinth'' (Unknown year) for
Nintendo Game Boy
#'' (1995), for
Genesis,
Game Gear and
PC
#''
Garfieldâs Mad About Cats'' (2001), for
PC
#''
Garfield'' (2004), for
PC and
PS2 (UK Only)
#'' (2005) for
GBA
#''
Garfield & His Nine Lives'' (2006) for
GBA
#'' (2006) for
Nintendo DS,
Playstation 2, and
PC
#'' (2006) for
Playstation 2
#''
Garfield's Nightmare'' (2007) for
Nintendo DS
#'' (2007) for
PC and
Karaoke CD
#''
Garfield Gets Real'' (2007) for
Wii and
Nintendo DS
Films
★ ''
Garfield: The Movie'' (2004) â
Breckin Meyer,
Jennifer Love Hewitt, and
Bill Murray as the voice of Garfield.
★ '' (2006) â
Breckin Meyer,
Jennifer Love Hewitt, and
Bill Murray as the voice of Garfield.
★ ''
Garfield Gets Real[5][6]''(2007)-
Figurines and Toys
Danbury Mint has made numerous products for avid Garfield lovers. All but two (Bedtime for Garfield and Bedtime for Odie) are not plush, and all but seven have Garfield with another character.
★ Small Figurines (no larger than 4" x 4" x 4"): Catnap, Crowning Achievement, Easy Rider, Here's Lookin' at Me, Gourmet Picnic, Love in Bloom, King of the Jungle, Open House, Midnight Serenade, On Vacation, Return to Sender, Sittin' Pretty
★ Musicals (10" wood base with figurine atop): Anchors Aweigh, La Cucaracha, Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay; Oh, What a Beautiful Morning
★ Garfield's Christmas Village (11 pieces in all, including): Garfield's House, Post Office, Movies, Toy Shoppe, Candy Store, Courthouse, Church, Bakery, and more.
★ Large Figurines: Garfield's Retreat, Garfield's Poolside Resort, Garfield's Golf Course, Garfield's Garden
★ Other: Garfield's Carousel and Garfield's Christmas Train
★ Plush (2' tall): Bedtime for Garfield and Bedtime for Odie
★ Diecast Vehicles: Both Ertl and Esci have made a range of diecast toys featuring Garfield driving various vehicles
Miscellaneous
★ His album: ''
Am I Cool or What?''
★ His suction-cupped kitties: "Stuck on You" were a phenomenon across America and took several years for production to meet the demand. They became popular on many car windows. The concept was created after an idea trade with
Scott Adams in 1990, which involved what type of object could hold the thing other than sticky items; though in the Twentieth Anniversary book, it clearly states that these car hangers came out in 1988. One such suction-cupped plush Garfield appears in a window of a room in the sci-fi film ''
The Abyss'' during an external shot. Another is seen in the 1996 introduction for the original format for the British motoring show
Top Gear.
[17] Additionally, Garfield mimics the concept one night while tailing Jon on his date with Liz.
★ His plush products and other toy replicas were licensed for production by the
Dakin Company in the 1980s.
★ Garfield was featured in a 1988 advertising campaign for
Maple Leaf Village Amusement Park.
[7]
★ Garfieldâs merchandising approach has been criticized by a number of commentators including ''
Calvin and Hobbes'' creator
Bill Watterson, whose views against merchandising were explained at great detail in ''The Calvin and Hobbes Tenth Anniversary Book''. Watterson, when asked for his opinion of fellow cartoonists, including Jim Davis, once tactfully described Garfield as âconsistent.â He also criticized Jim Davisâs
U.S. Acres cartoon.
[18] Chris Suellentrop of
Slate accuses Davis of creating Garfield merely for the merchandising.
[19]
★ In 2000 Garfield was used as a mascot/recruiting tool for Cub Scouting, appearing on many items, including 4 plush Garfields in Cub Scout uniforms.
★ Garfield and Odie also are featured on product packaging for the retail chain
Meijer.
★ At
Kennywood, an amusement park located near
Pittsburgh, Garfield is one of the mascots. There are two Garfield themed rides. They are "Garfieldâs Nightmare" a haunted house ride, and a free-fall ride for kids, the "Pounce Bounce".
Lake Compounce, also run and owned by
Kennywood, uses Garfield theming as well.
★
Silverwood Theme Park, the Northwests largest theme park near
Coeur d'Alene Idaho, has Garfield as the official mascot.
Promotions
Garfield has also done promotions for food or shops. In 1989, he did a promotion for the
fast food restaurant,
McDonald's. Here, McDonald's sold 4
Happy Meal toys, 4 collectible
glasses, and a limited edition stuffed Garfield employee. He also did promos for the
YUM! restaurants,
KFC and
Taco Bell. In 2000, he did a
Kid's Meal promotion for
Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers, where 6 toys were sold. He did many promos for
his film, including 3
Goldfish figures, and 5
Wendy's toys, including a
card game,
magnet doll,
wind up toy, play
clock, and a pair of
sunglasses. His most recent promotion was at
Kmart where 3 toys were sold in the dining area. In 1999, a successful
Dairy Queen Kid's Meal promo, with many toys.
Tourism
Marion, and surrounding
Grant County,
Indiana have erected a series of Garfield statues around the area. The brainchild of local leader
Pete Beck [20] (a county councilman at the time), the basic idea is to place a likeness of Garfield in each community in the county. It is hoped that as the project matures Garfield fans will travel to Grant County and make a circuit to see all of the statues. The statues are made of hollow fiberglass after private fundraising provides for the construction at each location. Native son and creator of Garfield,
Jim Davis has donated the artwork to create the statues royalty free.
Statues have been erected at these locations:
★ First
Fairmount, "James Dean Garfield" was unveiled in August 2006. He is dressed in ''cool'' attire, sporting an open-button collar and denim jeans, placed outside the Fairmount Library.
[21]
★ In
Sweetser, "College-bound Garfield" was unveiled in Summer 2006; the statue is located along the popular
Sweetser Switch Trail after money was raised by the Sweetser
Lions Club.
[22] This one is in place in front of the train. Unfortunately, this one has been vandalized as its lower left arm was cut off. It is not known yet whether this will be repaired.
★ Marion, downtown along the
Mississinewa River, at the start of the popular
River Walk leading to
Matter Park, and was unveiled in July 2006. "Health and Fitness Garfield" is dressed in running attire sporting the colors of
Marion High School and carries a water bottle. This one has been vandalized when a man hugged Garfield too tightly and the head came off. The head was discovered at the Mississinewa Reservoir, and eventually restored to its body.
★
Van Buren, as a "Tribute to the Popcorn Capital", Garfield was unveiled during the 2006
Popcorn Festival. Garfield is dressed in the athletic uniform of the long-defunct Van Buren High School "Aces."
★
Marion General Hospital, unveiled Dr. Garfield May 11, 2007. He is wearing surgical scrubs, holding a stethoscope and resting one foot on a first aid kit.
[23]
★ Although not an official part of the project, in a similar vein
Arbor Trace Golf Club commissioned a local chainsaw artist to carve a wooden Garfield statue which has been placed in the clubhouse. Garfield is nattily dressed in a duffer leaning on his driver.
[24]
More statues are planned in other communities in the area as funds are raised to erect them. The town of
Swayzee hopes to erect a Garfield statue later in 2007. Fundraising has begun in the town of
Jonesboro with a preliminary design of Garfield dressed as a firefighter, commemorating that Joneboro was the home of the first organized fire department in the county. The town of
Matthews has announced plans for a Garfield statue posed as a fisherman.
[25]
Trivia

An example of ''Garfield'' without Garfield's dialogue.
★ At one point a University of Washington student offered the "Eagle_Fire Garfield Randomizer". It had found a backdoor into the comic files of ucomics.com, and thereafter had coded a page to yield panels from years of strips that could be combined and shown to friends. After uComics issued a "cease and desist" letter, the webmaster posted the letter on its former page along with the necessary code to recreate the original site.
★ Mickey Mouse has been mentioned a few times.
★ A common
internet meme involves the modification of comic strips to remove Garfield's thought bubbles, resulting in a somewhat surrealistic and arguably more subtle humor by placing the reader in Jon's perspective.
[26]
★ Jim Davis drew himself into the comic strip for Garfield's tenth birthday on June 19, 1988. He appears in the title block between Jon and Irma. The final block carries a message at the bottom which reads: HAPPY 10TH BIRTHDAY, BUDDY, JIM DAVIS.
[27]
★ The character
Milhouse has a Garfield binder on ''
The Simpsons''.
★
The Cheat from
Homestar Runner wore a Garfield Halloween costume once.
★ In
Shrek 2 the character
Puss in Boots utters Garfield's famous line, "I hate Mondays," when at a bar.
★ In the ''
Family Guy'' episode "
North by North Quahog",
Stewie Griffin reads the first ''Garfield'' strip collection, ''Garfield at Large'', but mentions Garfield having to put up with
Nermal, whose introduction actually came in the third book ''(Garfield Bigger Than Life)''.
★ In one installment of the syndicated comic strip ''
FoxTrot'', Peter attempts to promote '' at the theater he works at in the summer, so he wears a Garfield costume for a week.
★ In one of the Garfield strips, Jon is at a high-school reunion. He talks to a man named Gary Barker, Gary Barker is Jim Davis' assistant that draws the blue-pencil products before they are inked and lettered.
[28]
★ In a 2005 Garfield strip, Dagwood from the ''
Blondie'' strips made a cameo appearance when he arrives at Jon's house saying he was in the neighborhood and wanted to give Jon an invitation to a get-together. The character was drawn by artists
Dean Young and
John Marshall, and the "get-together" was being held for the strip's 75th anniversary.
★ James Garfield Davis, who is the grandfather of Jim Davis the creator of the Garfield comic strip, was named after President James A Garfield. In turn Jim Davis named the character Garfield after his grandfather.
★
3D versions of the cast, along with the text ''Coming Soon'', have been appearing on the official website when you open a certain page. This was to advertise ''
Garfield Gets Real''.
★ The Ghostbusters Connection. Lorenzo Music was the original voice for Dr. Peter Venkman, and Garfield in both animated series. Bill Murray was the actor who portrayed Dr. Venkman and was the voice of Garfield in movies.
Notes and references
1. Most Syndicated Comic Strip
2. Garfield gestures
3. The Garfield Vault Strip
4. The Garfield Vault Strip
5. The Garfield Vault Strip
6. The Garfield Vault Strip
7. The Garfield Vault Strip
8. The Garfield Vault Strip
9. The Garfield Vault Strip
10. Davis, Jim: "Garfield: 20th Anniversary Collection", page 21. Ballantine Books, 1998
11. The Garfield Vault Strip
12. The Garfield Vault Strip
13. The Garfield Vault Strip
14. Boing Boing: Death of Garfield mystery solved!
15. Garfield - Atari 2600 - Atari
16. Create With Garfield!
17. YouTube-BBC Top Gear Opening Titles 1996 .
18. Bill Watterson interview: Honk Magazine 1997
19. Garfield: Why we hate the Mouse but not the cartoon copycat Chris Suellentrop
20. Garfield statues coming to Marion County
21. America!
22. Garfield statues to debut in Grant County
23. Dr. Garfield unveiled at MGH
24. Garfield comes to life at local golf course!
25. Garfield on his way to town, Fisherman design pays homage to local bridges
26. [8]
27. The Garfield Vault Strip. Garfield.com (1988-06-19). Retrieved on 2006-08-30.
28. The Garfield Vault Strip
External links
★
Official website
★
Comic Vault Official Site of all daily comics since June 19, 1978
★
Garfield on the Nintendo DS
★
Details on all of the Garfield-related food items of the â80s and â90s, with pictures
★
Garfieldhome.org: the next best thing after lasagna
★
Garfield on ROK Comics
★
Easy-browsable Garfield Comic archive with an
RSS feed