Hizli Gazeteci
Encyclopedia
Hizli Gazeteci is a daily comic strip
hero from Turkey
. Created by Necdet Sen. It may be translated as "Speedy Journalist". First appeared in a music magazine that called "Hey" in December 1980. Published daily newspapers Cumhuriyet
and Hürriyet
between 1984 and 1996.
HIZLI Gazeteci strips tells satirical stories of a lonely and sarcastic journalist. The serial has discussed by intellectuals and media during publishing period. The author judged two times for insulting president, police and army.
After 2002, all of HIZLI Gazeteci stories reprinted as albums from Parantez Books.
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Comic strip
A comic strip is a sequence of drawings arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often serialized, with text in balloons and captions....
hero from Turkey
Turkey
Turkey , known officially as the Republic of Turkey , is a Eurasian country located in Western Asia and in East Thrace in Southeastern Europe...
. Created by Necdet Sen. It may be translated as "Speedy Journalist". First appeared in a music magazine that called "Hey" in December 1980. Published daily newspapers Cumhuriyet
Cumhuriyet
Cumhuriyet is a centre-left Turkish daily newspaper, founded on May 7, 1924 by journalist Yunus Nadi Abalıoğlu. Based in Istanbul, it has been situated since October 17, 2005 in Mecidiyeköy. Cumhuriyet was the last newspaper to leave the old press district Cağaloğlu...
and Hürriyet
Hürriyet
-External links:* * ** * *...
between 1984 and 1996.
HIZLI Gazeteci strips tells satirical stories of a lonely and sarcastic journalist. The serial has discussed by intellectuals and media during publishing period. The author judged two times for insulting president, police and army.
After 2002, all of HIZLI Gazeteci stories reprinted as albums from Parantez Books.
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Sources
- A comment about it:
- "He is telling the story of every one of us i.e. the radical leftist, the journalist, the journalist but still revolutionist, the television producer, the most marginal people, the religious zealots, the anti-religious zealots. He depicts of people whose liberal opinions are just bigotry in disguise, of those so-called intellectuals who are most intolerant and prejudiced. Those fascists in disguise, so to speak. He satirizes the highbrows who give up their sexuality, the most humane part of them, which they think it is contradicted to being leftist. (Ertugrul Ozkok - Hürriyet)"