Post the first lazy/stoner/goof character you encountered in cartoon.
Starting with mine
>frenchfag by the way
Another.
>>81224050
Frenchfag too. I think I liked Gaston a little too much as a kid.
Also this fat turd. It's really no wonder I'm so lazy.
First one of them to be a canon stoner even tho gaston have hints of joint smoking trough out the albums
>>81224050
>>81224079
I wonder if they are many of us belgian/french/krauts on here, i mean comics are just as present in our culture than amerifats.
>>81224109
Wasn't one of the live action movies suposed to have him dress up as a blunt and stuff like that?
>>81224132
I'm not even one of those and I still read a significant amount of translated French comics (Gaston included) as a kid. Never owned any cape stuff.
Nutha one
>>81224132
There is a shitton i think. Even more those days since there is more and more comics in library than ever.
>>81224152
they had scooby and shaggy sit in a van, laughing and smoke trailing out of, as 'pass the dutchie' was playing
and shaggy search for his love Mary Jane
>>81224097
Eh I don't know, what did Franquin say? Gaston just seemed naturally lazy to me.
>>81224132
Ther's a handful. Like, Id say around a dozen, counting the dutch, maybe 20 counting the italians, spaniards and the couple of scandis.
>>81224182
Where u from?
Notha one
>>81224299
My dad was a huge fan and in one of the album gaston he is smoking with one of his friends and when the police man come i think he throw the roash or something.
As i said nothing clearly canon.
>>81224109
Yup, that's the one.
Pic didn't upload.
>>81224109
I don't know if he was the first one I ever saw, but the first one I remembered/recognized as a likely stoner.
I wasn't very bright. Am not very bright.
Come on guys i'm running dry.
>>81224568
Well the OP said just the first.
I enjoy this character type.
Nobody's even posting the OG goof. He comes off more as the archetype in comics than cartoons though what's with his run down house.
This guy, although his recent incarnation puts me off a bit.
>>81224888
Kind of back in the mickey mouse shorts.
>>81224109
I was gonna post this
>>81224829
Me too
>>81224109
Shaggy was livin the life man
Traveling the States with his dog getting high as fuck and eating everyones food. Good shit.
Funny how he went from normally working klutz to lazy genius.
>>81224132
IIRC the statistics well, /co/ has roughly 15-20% of euro users. Brits are the most present, followed closely by krauts and then frogs.
Bobby is great. I enjoy his buzzcut college design more though.
>>81225469
At the price of getting chased by real monsters and crazy people in costumes.
>>81224058
This guy, unless we count Goofy.
>>81224050
>>81224299
Austria. My childhood comics were mostly French/Belgian stuff with some German and local comics sprinkled in.
>>81224050
Dutchfag reporting in, Guust was and still is magical.
>>81225489
>that pic
Gaston was quite the meme character
>André Franquin who was then in charge of Spirou et Fantasio, the primary series of Spirou magazine, first introduced the character Gaston in issue n°985, published February 28, 1957.[1][2] The initial purpose was to fill up empty spaces in the magazine and offer a (comically artificial) glimpse of life behind-the-scenes at the paper.[3] His arrival was carefully orchestrated with a teasing campaign over several months, based on ideas by Franquin, Yvan Delporte and Jidéhem, with mysterious blue footprints in the margins of the magazine.
>For the Spirou issue N°1000 cover, Franquin drew 999 heads of Spirou, and one of Gaston, and the first Gaston full-page gag was featured in a bonus supplement.[4][5][6]
>In the context of the fictive story evolving at the magazine offices, the man behind the footprints, Gaston, finally turned up for a memorable job interview, telling the bemused Spirou that he didn't remember with whom or for what he had been called. Fantasio, functioning as the magazine's opinionated face of signed editorials, subsequently announced in a formal communiqué that Gaston would be the first "Hero-without-a-job". Gaston's blunders continued during a stressful and frustrating period for Fantasio, pushing him to go on a 4-week strike and eventually a vacation, initiating the story Vacances sans histoires.[7]
>From Spirou issue n°1025, the single-panel gags were replaced with Gaston strips running at the bottom of the editor's pages, signed by both Jidéhem and Franquin.[8][9] These ran until 1959 when Gaston acquired a weekly half-page, which lasted until the mid-60s when the Gaston Lagaffe gags grew to full-page.[10] A full length comic featuring Gaston has not yet been published in English.
>>81226736
Excellent choice
Buddy Bradley
>>81229240
>A full length comic featuring Gaston has not yet been published in English.
Ouch.
Btw, here are some erotic drawings of Gaston and M'oiselle Jeanne for those that enjoy rare Franquin stuff.
http://centrifugue.fr/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/sexefranquin.jpg
I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.
I don't know if it's exactly what you're asking for.
>>81231285
I think they both try to get as far away from their job as possible.
>>81231309
Those are one of my favorite gags. When hey have to try one of Profesor Bacterio's inventions or something else and they end up in Tibet or something in seconds to get away.
>>81224050
Mine too.
>>81226834
Mein Bruder.
Pretty much all public libraries at least had a complete and up-to-date set of Asterix and Lucky Luke books.
>>81225489
What about eastern europe? I know that there are some polish faggots here.
>>81224829
Why is this archetype sohot
>>81224132
frogfag reporting in as well. i was actually nicknamed gaston for a while as a kid… guess i wasn't the most energetic child.
also, pic related to the thread
>>81234057
Man, how could I forget about this guy.And it's probably hot because they're real chill and most of them would probably do gay stuff without stressing over their sexuality.
>>81231367
>Sent the new guy. I heard he is suppose to be super.
>>81231495
>>81226834
Whoa, there are other Austrians on this board? Holy shit.
>>81231495
You ever read the Columbus strips? Apparently, they ran in the Krone from 1979 onwards, but my parents had the complete print collection. So many jokes about silly puns and I loved every single one of them.
>>81235263
I'm from Vorarlberg. The Krone is something we pretty much steal on sundays while the subscription market is cornered by the Vorarlberger Nachrichten.