Pupung
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pupung is a daily comic strip created by Filipino cartoonist Washington "Tonton" Young. Appearing in the broadsheet Manila Bulletin, the strip revolves around its title character, a young boy, and his family and household. Pupung's family maintains a lugawan, a restaurant which mainly serves rice congee (Filipino lugaw) dishes.[1][2]
Pupung | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Tonton Young |
Current status/schedule | Ongoing |
Launch date | December 15, 1983 |
Publisher(s) | Manila Bulletin |
Genre(s) | Humor, family life, satire |
Pupung debuted as My Little Pupung in the newspaper Tempo on December 15, 1983. The strip later moved to Times Journal, where it remained until January 1986, when Young was fired after spoofing a radio campaign advertisement for then President Ferdinand Marcos. Soon after the First EDSA Revolution in February 1986, Young moved to the Manila Bulletin,[3] where the strip appears to this day.
Originally printed in black and white, it has been published in color in recent years.
Several book-length compilations have been published, starting with The Best of Pupung in 1992. Succeeding compilations have been titled sequentially (The Best of Pupung 2, The Best of Pupung 3, etc.), although the tenth in the series is designated as The Best of Pupung 0 as it featured many early strips; the designated tenth compilation that would continue the sequential order of publications was eventually released three years after The Best of Pupung 0.
Minor characters include Doglas, a pet dog, various other pets and relatives of Day and Jordan.
Besides domestic life, Pupung also focuses on Philippine pop culture and business trends, as well as the cartoonist's fascination with basketball. The strip very rarely tackles political issues.
The humor of the strip mostly depends on slapstick, visual gags and juxtaposition of familiar images, either resulted by a mishap or as part of several characters' plans. The strip also uses verbal humor, usually puns. Jokes often revolve on the physical attributes of the characters, such as Dom's chin size, Day's weight problem or Jordan's height.[citation needed]
The humor used in the strip is lighter than other Filipino comic strips which gives it a family-oriented theme. Tonton Young's younger brother Alex used the same light-hearted brand of humour in his own comic strip, Pro Kids.[5]
A restaurant based on the comic strip was opened by Dennis Nakpil in 1986. The restaurant started as an open-air stand which served Filipino dishes such as tapsilog, tosilog, and goto with egg.[6]
A branch operates at the SM Mall of Asia under the name Pupung & Friends. It features more Filipino dishes on the menu, such as pork sisig and lechon kawali. It even has montages of the comic strip on the walls.
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.