

Welcome to my World of cartoon characters. All cartoons
are based on true life stories gathered from news reports from around the
World. The most controversial issues throw up some of the funniest
situations as you will see.
Board drawing and digital manipulation are used to create the panel I work too
The reader first reads the Newswire flowing into the panel which over the years
I have packed in 4 funnies within the panel, .... Enjoy and Plezzzzzzz Laugh :)))
Meet the News Team
Big Ben News
May 21st 2009
Bonk One Get One Free
Streetwalking the World
May 2009
The World - It did not take long for the world financial crisis to affect the world's oldest profession in Germany.
In one of the few countries where prostitution is legal, and unusually transparent, the industry has
responded with an economic stimulus package of its own: modern marketing tools, rebates and gimmicks to boost falling demand.
Some brothels have cut prices or added free promotions while others have introduced all-inclusive flat-rate fees. Free shuttle buses, discounts for seniors and taxi drivers, as well as "day passes" are among
marketing strategies designed to keep business going.
"You've got to come up with creative solutions these days. We're feeling the economic crisis, too, club manager Stefan, told Reuters.
Other incentives being used by brothels and prostitutes include loyalty cards, group sex parties and even, perhaps bizarrely, rebates for golf players.
At another club in Berlin senior citizens and taxi drivers get a 50-per cent discount on the 80-euro admission fee on Sundays and Mondays.
"Just about everyone's turning to advertising in one form or another," Stephanie Klee, a prostitute in Berlin and former leader of the German association of sex workers told Reuters.
"If the consumer electronics shop and the optician come out with rebates and special promotions, why shouldn't we try the same thing?"
The Adolf Hitler I Have Returned Cartoon Series
Heirs Trace Paintings
Adolf2000
Picasso

Pablo Picasso's "Still Life," housed at the Museum of Modern Art
in New York and possibly stolen by the Nazis.
Washington - In the fall of 1940, Nazi looters broke into the Paris home of a renowned art connoisseur, Alphonse Kann, who had fled to London and left behind a major collection of impressionist paintings--by Braque, Cezanne, Degas, Matisse and more than two dozen by Picasso.
It was one of a series of raids against French Jewish collectors who dominated the international art business in the prewar years.
After the war, a little over half of the 300 or so paintings stolen from the Kann collection were returned to him and his family. The rest were never recovered, their fate obscured by the traditional secrecy of the international art trade, lack of access to government archives and a sense of hopelessness on the part of surviving family members.
But nearly six decades after the Nazi raid, Kann's grand-nephew Francis Warin, encouraged by the surge of interest in restitution for Holocaust-era crimes and joined by other family members, launched his own search for the missing works.
The search brought Warin to the United States, where he has confronted some of the nation's most prominent museums with complex and emotional questions likely to be repeated as more heirs eager to recoup their families' wartime losses come forward with their claims.
History and Tech Data
The Adolf 2000 cartoons ran on www.adolfhitler.com (I was the owner of the domain name at that time)
from 1998 for several years, the series which is added to regularly is based on cryopreservation.
The Newspaper in the cartoon panel ‘Die Achtung Times’ is a fictional title. To explain how Adolf arrived in the millennium I
Have drawn a picture board Click-Here
The Adolf 2000 Cartoon series is ideal for a monthly publication, although a very controversial character and subject I do not
glamorise Adolf Hitler in any way, please remember all editorial/cartoons are based on true life stories gathered from news reports around the World.
On March 25, 1996, the Funniest Graveyard was recognized
with an award from Seven Wonders, which recognizes new and original pages
on the internet.
Click - Here for the Seven Wonders Website

History and Tech Data
The Funniest Graveyard in the World - was the first cartoon series on the internet running from
1992 text based only until in 1993 the first graphical browsers appeared, so I was able to incorporate the headstones,
at that time bandwidth and dialup speeds were extremely slow so the panel had to be very low res. As you can see above I won an award from
which is still registered with Seven Wonders
The series is ideal for a weekly or monthly publication and at the time of writing consists of over 50
cartoons all very witty original and unique with more being added.
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No part of this HTML document, its links or images, may be reproduced in any form or
by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from
BobaJob Cartoons. Copyright (c) 1996 BobaJob Cartoons
All info call me UK Based 0844 3510406 ~ BobaJob

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