Funny Times (newspaper)

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EditorMia Beach
CategoriesHumor magazine
FrequencyMonthly
PublisherRenae Lesser and Gabriel Piser
Funny Times
EditorMia Beach
CategoriesHumor magazine
FrequencyMonthly
PublisherRenae Lesser and Gabriel Piser
Total circulation55,000[1] (2020)
Founded1985 (1985)
CountryUnited States
Based inCleveland Heights, Ohio
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.funnytimes.com
ISSN1045-0491

Funny Times (FT) is an American humor newspaper founded in 1985, and still published as of 2023, by the wife and husband team of Susan Wolpert and Raymond Lesser. Wolpert and Lesser were inspired by The Comic News of Santa Cruz, California, "a monthly journal of progressive editorial cartoons" founded in 1984 by Thom Zajac.[1][2][3][4] FT's political content is often subversive and has a progressive/liberal perspective.[5][6][7]

In 1997, Sandee Beyerle came across the office of Funny Times while trying to escape inclement weather.[8] She became managing editor,[4] and when Ray Lesser retired as editor, Beyerle replaced him. After Beyerle's retirement in 2022, Mia Beach was hired as the new editor. [9]

The monthly Funny Times publication is printed in the format of a daily newspaper, on newsprint paper, with each of the 24 pages[4] measuring 11 X 17 inches. The only ads it runs are for its own FT-related merchandise.

In 2025, the paper launched the Funny Times Podcast.[10] The podcast features interviews with humorists and contributors reading their pieces from the print publication on air. Guests have included Ruben Bolling, Melanie Chartoff, Dave Coverly, Bob Eckstein, Peter Kuper, P.S. Mueller, Dan Perkins, Ron Placone, Hilary B. Price, Phil Proctor, and Lenore Skenazy.[11]

Content

Each Funny Times issue is organized into sections such as "Relationships", "Dogs", "Politics", "Modern Life", and others, with the section categories varying somewhat from issue to issue. Each issue includes cartoons, columns and essays that derive humor from pop culture, current events, politics and day-to-day living. A full page in each issue is devoted to the syndicated column originally developed by Chuck Shepherd, News of the Weird, which features dozens of bizarre true stories from around the world. Publisher Ray Lesser frequently contributes his own humorous essays. As of the early 2000s, each issue contained choice selections of such offbeat comic strips as This Modern World by Tom Tomorrow, Bizarro by Dan Piraro, Zippy the Pinhead by Bill Griffith, Too Much Coffee Man by Shannon Wheeler, Tom the Dancing Bug by Ruben Bolling, The K Chronicles by Keith Knight, and Slowpoke by Jen Sorensen.

Other contributing writers and cartoonists have included, circa 2000:

[4][12]

As of 2021, works by a few of the above cartoonists and writers still appeared regularly in the Funny Times.[13]

Other publications

References

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