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The Jetsons No. 7 comic book

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Hanna-Barbera
Description (Brief)
Gold Key Comic book based on the animated television series The Jetsons. This issue, No. 7, features a cover illustration showing the Jetson family floating on flying saucers in outer space. George Jetson being pulled by his dog Astro who is chasing a cat on a separate saucer while the rest of the family looks on. In addition to Jetsons features "The Folksinger Swinger," "Canine Camper Caper," "Nosey, But Nice," "The Lunch was all Dough," the issue also includes a Touche Turtle and Dum Dum story, "Easier Said Than Done," one-page educational strips, and a one-page text feature titled "The Last Word." The issue, dated 1963, sold for 12 cents.
The Jetsons was an animated television series produced by Hanna-Barbera that aired on ABC from 1962 to 1963 and in reruns for decades after. The primetime sitcom was set in Orbit City in the distant future and focused on the Jetson family – father George, who works at Spacely Space Sprockets, mother Jane, a homemaker, children Judy and Elroy, robot maid Rosie, and their dog Astro. Despite the high-tech gadgetry, labor-saving devices, flying cars, and space colonization of the Jetsons’ world, the series presented the family as a normative American nuclear family of the era, dealing with many of the same issues with work, family, and neighbors faced by the protagonists of The Honeymooners, Leave it to Beaver, and Father Knows Best. The Jetsons featured many futuristic technologies that have now become commonplace - video calling, tablet computers, robotic vacuums, smart watches, flatscreen televisions, drones, and holograms – as well as many others that seem misguided or still far-off such as flying cars, high quality instant food, robot housekeepers, and communities built on pillars in the sky.
The series drew from a rich American literary and entertainment genre of futuristic science fiction from Edward Bellamy’s 1887 utopian novel Looking Backward to the pulp and comic book adventures of Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon, not to mention contemporary space travel entertainment like Tom Corbett, Space Cadet. Americans in the early 1960s were fascinated by the technological innovations of the Space Age and the brighter future promised by the flood of devices, services, and improvements that marketed “better living through chemistry” and material progress. The broad economic growth and prosperity of the post World War II era had allowed many middle-class Americans to purchase luxury goods and participate in leisure activities beyond what seemed possible in the difficult 1930s and 40s. Advertisers marketed new and more inexpensive consumer goods as modern, sleek, and forward-looking, while the NASA space program and race to land a man on the moon captured the world’s attention. The Jetsons premiered amidst this techno-utopianism and seemed to capture the national mood.
Location
Currently not on view
1963
1964
ID Number
2018.3010.270
catalog number
2018.3010.270
nonaccession number
2018.3010
Object Name
comic book
Physical Description
ink (overall material)
paper (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 7 in x 10 in; 17.78 cm x 25.4 cm
place made
United States: New York, Poughkeepsie
See more items in
Culture and the Arts: Entertainment
Popular Entertainment
National Museum of American History
Subject
Animation
Record ID
nmah_1887791
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746b3-ba1a-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

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