Coffee is consumed compulsively by many people all over the world, but cartoonists (who are notorious for keeping odd hours) seem to be especially susceptible to the allure of the drink’s stimulating properties. Given the excessive amount of publicity that many syndicated cartoonists produce for free, it’s remarkable that none of them has managed to land an advertising contract.
Garfield drank his first cup of coffee two weeks before he discovered lasagna.

Similarly, Horace (or perhaps Samson?) has a serious addiction:



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P.S. Stahler’s “Moderately Confused” panel was the original inspiration for this entire post; Shannon Wheeler’s Too Much Coffee Man is not just the title, but also the main character of his entire feature.
Here’s a B.C. strip that Brian in StL submitted and was posted two years ago. Brian commented back then that: “It’s not entirely clear to me what’s going on. In a way, the first panels look like the preliminary sketches a cartoonist does. So is the coffee affecting him? Or is Jane now able to ‘focus’ since she‘s had coffee?“

Opinions differ on optimum methods of preparation:

Scientists have been researching the heath effects of coffee for decades; this editorial cartoon by Pat Oliphant was published in 1981:

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P.S. I was amused by the similarity in viscosity.
Here’s another Dark Side of the Horse (it won’t be the last):

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P.S. Spoiler alert: Foreshadowing!
Garfield shouldn’t mind the roofing tar. He famously likes his coffee “strong enough to sit up and bark”.
The B.C. seems clear to me: after her coffee, she’s focused!
The autobiographical strip “The Big Picture” frequently has Lennie enjoying some coffee. And by some, I mean a lot.
I wonder if the “Too Much Coffee Man” cartoon is referring to civet cat coffee (look it up at your own risk).
I remember coffee. I used to drink it when I was in high school and in college and when I was working for another accountant – at the morning coffee break.
Unfortunately black coffee (as I drank it) and my stomach did not get along beyond the first 10 or so years. Now I have a cup of tea a day – though I don’t remember which of my medical conditions it is suppose to help.