Judge, 1936-12 · page 1 of 53
Judge — December 1936 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Cover (December 1936) This cover features a caricatured figure operating a large lever labeled "Bigger Better Brighter," suggesting optimism about improving conditions—likely referencing the Depression era's gradual economic recovery under Roosevelt's New Deal policies. The cartoonist depicts the figure as a workman or common laborer, emphasizing that ordinary citizens were driving progress. The mechanical imagery conveys the industrial/technological advancement narrative popular in 1930s America. The left sidebar lists Judge's content categories—cartoons, humor, satire, politics, theater, etc.—typical of the magazine's satirical approach to American culture and current events. The specific political message remains unclear without additional context, but the "bigger, better, brighter" theme suggests cautious optimism about national recovery in late 1936.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
)ECEMBER DCB BiysEey | 1936 PRICE 5 CENTS ENGLAN | } Including the Humorous . Tradition and Features of L 1 ft € Cartoons Humor Satire | Politics Theatre Books Movies Radio ‘ Bridge -—— — Crosswords Mrs. Peps High Hat Wit-Nits Boba) uf =a | Are You Sure? | comicbooks.com