Pluggers

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Pluggers is a comic panel created by Jeff MacNelly in 1993 that relies on reader submissions (referred to as "Pluggerisms") for the premise of each day's panel. Editorial cartoonist Gary Brookins took over in 1997, three years prior to MacNelly's death from lymphoma in 2000.

It is syndicated by Tribune Media Services.

Contents

[edit] Content

The term "plugger" refers to one who is "plugging away"[1], meaning that they are continually working in a determined way[2]. In the context of this strip, a plugger appears to be defined as a blue-collar worker (mid-Westerners in particular) who lives a typical working-class American lifestyle, accompanied by a mentality characteristic of the veteran and Baby Boomer generations. In the comic, pluggers are portrayed in the form of anthropomorphic animals, most often a plump bear, dog, or rhinoceros, sometimes a kangaroo or a cat.

Some sample captions:

  • "Some folks mow until the mower runs out of gas. A plugger mows until he runs out of steam."
  • "A plugger finally 'modernizes' her clothes dryer by replacing the straight, wooden clothes pins with spring-loaded ones."
  • "A plugger seven-course meal usually comes in one casserole dish."
  • "You're a plugger if a song that played at your wedding is now played in a commercial for a menopause medication."
  • "If you've ever worn a beanie copter or a Davy Crockett hat, you're probably a plugger."

[edit] Criticism of strip

Pluggers has an underlying editorial element to its premise. On one hand, it celebrates simplicity, hard-work and strong family bonds. However, it also implies a superiority to the "plugger" lifestyle over a stereotypical materialistic, superficial lifestyle of non-pluggers. It often criticized modernity, sophistication and safe health practices. By using the term pluggers (in contrast with non-pluggers), the strip implies that people that are not blue-collar, mid-western labourers do not have a continual amount of work or struggle in their lives. The blog Comics Curmudgeon is a major critic of the comic. [1]

Dave Eggers from Salon.com criticized the strip for lionizing the working class, despite being written by a committee of "current and former CEOs" and objected to "the self-important and vaguely jingoistic way the creators promote the cartoon".[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

An index of Pluggers comics from the last three months can be found on the official website, www.pluggers.com.