Jimmy Hatlo

Jimmy Hatlo
BornJames Cecil Hatlo
(1897-09-01)1 September 1897
East Providence, Rhode Island, US
Died1 December 1963(1963-12-01) (aged 66)
Area(s)Cartoonist
Notable works
They'll Do It Every Time
AwardsNational Cartoonists Society's Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award, 1957 and 1959
Silver Lady Award
Damon Runyon wrote the foreword for this hardcover Jimmy Hatlo collection published by David McKay in 1943.

James Cecil Hatlo (September 1, 1897 – December 1, 1963), better known as Jimmy Hatlo, was an American cartoonist who in 1929 created the long-running comic strip and gag panel They'll Do It Every Time, which he wrote and drew until his death in 1963. Hatlo's other strip, Little Iodine, was adapted into a feature-length movie in 1946.

In an opinion piece for the July 22, 2013, edition of The Wall Street Journal, "A Tip of the Hat to Social Media's Granddad", veteran journalist Bob Greene characterized Hatlo's daily cartoons, which credited readers who contributed the ideas, as a forerunner of Facebook and Twitter. Greene wrote: "Hatlo's genius was to realize, before there was any such thing as an Internet or Facebook or Twitter, that people in every corner of the country were brimming with seemingly small observations about mundane yet captivating matters, yet lacked a way to tell anyone outside their own circles of friends about it. Hatlo also understood that just about everyone, on some slightly-below-the-surface level, yearned to be celebrated from coast to coast, if only for a day."