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  • BC. When it started in the late 1950s, its use of blatant anachronism was fresh and original. Characters used modern slang and Stone Age equivalents of modern technology, and this was a source of much of the humor. Over the decades this approach became the fallback for comic strips set in the past, which hurt BC's reputation. (As did Johnny Hart's Creator Breakdown when he started inserting his religious views into the strip, but that's another story.)
    • It arguably wasn't that influential, since in just a few years The Flintstones essentially ripped it off and yet was credited as something original.
  • Doonesbury. Many subsequent comic strips have imitated its dry wit. Indirectly if not directly, it had more influence on web comics than anything other than Manga.
    • Doonesbury was the first newspaper comic to regularly have two punchlines in the last panel: a primary joke, and a secondary one which built off the first. It was special at the time. Now almost every comic does it, making those old strips seem run-of-the-mill instead of groundbreaking.
  • The Far Side by Gary Larson. The comic strip's format has been imitated so much and so badly over the years that it's kind of hard to appreciate his originals and just how groundbreaking they were.
  • Garfield. Yes, believe it or not, some of the style of the strip was considered risky at the time, and the published books of the series was some of the first to utilize the 'mini-sized' formats that many newspaper comic collections use today. Oh yeah, and quite a few of the strips in the early years were actually controversial and Jim Davis received many complaints for some of the gags he pulled. A lot of younger people would think you were joking if you told them this fact.
  • Calvin and Hobbes, too. When it first appeared in newspapers in 1985, it was rare both in comic strips and in popular fiction generally for parents to be portrayed as anything more than slightly exasperated at the antics of their children. Many readers wrote in to complain that Calvin's parents' attitudes toward their son made them mean, perhaps even abusive. Ten years later, creator Bill Watterson could remark with some satisfaction that TV sitcoms with smart-mouthed kids and sarcastic parents had become the norm - and Calvin's parents now looked tolerant and even loving.
  • Dilbert, not just in Newspaper Comics, but in a wide variety of media, especially live-action TV. Someone unfamiliar with the comics, but a fan of The Office or Office Space might find the similarities close enough to cry plagiarism.