Billy dreams of the greatest Kompound yet
Daddy Daze, 8/11/21

I think we're all well aware that the actual cat poster caption is "Hang In There, Baby," which led to me read this strip and immediately wonder "Hmm, is the actual 'Hang In There, Baby' poster copyrighted, and is the copyright holder extremely litigious?" This in turn led me to the Wikipedia article about the poster, which was a whole journey, informing me that:
- The photographer was Victor Baldwin, who had previous been best known for taking pics of Rat Pack celebs
- The original version was this, a photo I was totally unfamiliar with
- It was immediately ripped off and knockoff versions with different pictures proliferated, which explains why I was unfamiliar with the original
- Baldwin sued the makers of all the knockoffs he could find, just on principle, almost never asking for more than his own court costs being covered, which I guess answered my original question
- The first person to buy the poster was Meredith Wilson, composer of The Music Man
- People sent copies of the poster to Spiro Agnew and Richard Nixon during their respective scandals in the '70s, urging them to hang on to office (it didn't work)
- "Victor Baldwin made approximately $700,000 from sales of the posters, much of which went to settle his divorce, which he was apparently happy to spend it on"
- Based on their respective "See also" sections, Wikipedia apparently considers "Hang In There, Baby"'s U.K. equivalent to be a a poster featuring a tennis player's naked ass, based only on the fact that they were both wildly popular posters in the 1970s
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