Because I'm a 
JAWS scholar and 
shark geek, a number of people have shared Charles Forsman's
 mash-up (of 
JAWS re-told with the 
Peanuts gang) with me.
You might think I didn't like it because I'm some kind of a JAWS nut.  
But honestly, I thought it missed the mark when it came to the Peanuts characters.  I have to give credit to Forsman for drawing spot-on character designs in the style of Schulz.  But the strip didn't connect the dots between Charlie Brown, Chief Brody, Hooper, Linus, Quint, Mayor Vaughn, etc. 
So it's not that I'm a JAWS nut, so much as a big PEANUTS fan. I find the early strips groundbreaking and influential and as important to American literature as The Great Gatsby or Of Mice and Men. Seriously. 
However, I come not to bury Peanuts parodies, but to praise them.  
So here are three faux-Peanuts strips that I adore. 
First off, buy R. Sikoryak's 
MASTERPIECE COMICS.  You can get it 
here cheap. Sikoryak commits to a concept without going to easy jokes.  This collection is brilliant and beautifully illustrated. One of the stand-outs is his "Good Ol' Gregor Brown" where Kafka's 
Metamorphosis is re-told with the Peanuts cast.  This was presented as a slideshow at Kevin Geeks Out (during a "Holiday Grab Bag" show) -- and it killed.  Buy this book for yourself and get another one for your favorite English teacher. 
|  | 
| (this is just an excerpt, buy the book to read the rest) | 
Sikoryak's strip is so cool that one fan even went and got it as a tattoo.  The only thing sexier than a Charlie Brown tattoo is Kafka-Peanuts body-art!
Second, MAD Magazine did a 1968 strip titled "Will Success Spoil Charlie Brown?" where Shermy returns to the old neighborhood and sees how the commercial success of PEANUTS has changed everyone.  
As a kid, I didn't realize it was a parody of "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?" but I still got the jokes and loved seeing Charlie Brown in a toupee. 
I could not find this online. Sorry. 
But you can find plenty of other great MAD parodies.  Here's a list of the 
dozens and dozens that ran over the years. 
Third, Ted Rall's "Supply Side Lucy"
This 1996 one-panel gag is, sadly, still true today.  Check out more 
Ted Rall. He's a daring writer and he always challenges himself to do something different with each book -- whether it's a comics collection, narrative graphic novel or even his fantastic post-modern take on George Orwell's 1984. 
Do you have a favorite PEANUTS parody/homage?  Tell me about it in the comments. 
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