
Age: 76
male
Charlie Brown is the principal character of the comic strip Peanuts, syndicated in daily and Sunday newspapers in numerous countries all over the world. Depicted as a "lovable loser," Charlie Brown is one of the great American archetypes and a popular and widely recognized cartoon character. Charlie Brown is characterized as a person who frequently suffers, and as a result is usually nervous and lacks self-confidence. He shows both pessimistic and optimistic attitudes: on some days, he is reluctant to go out because his day might just be spoiled, but on others, he hopes for the best and tries as much as he can to accomplish things. He is easily recognized by his trademark zigzag patterned shirt. The character's creator, Charles M. Schulz, said that Charlie Brown "must be the one who suffers because he is a caricature of the average person. Most of us are much more acquainted with losing than winning." Despite this, Charlie Brown does not always suffer, as he has experienced some happy moments and victories through the years, and he has sometimes uncharacteristically shown self-assertiveness despite his frequent nervousness. Schulz also said: "I like to have Charlie Brown eventually be the focal point of almost every story."[1] Charlie Brown is the only Peanuts character to have been a part of the strip throughout its 50-year run. Lee Mendelson, producer of the majority of the Peanuts television specials, has said of Charlie Brown that "He was, and is, the ultimate survivor in overcoming bulliness—Lucy or otherwise."[2] Charlie Brown's age is neither normally specified nor consistently given. His birth date in one strip is given as October 30.[3] He is four years old in a strip originally published November 3, 1950.[4] He ages very slowly in the strip's floating timeline, eventually settling at around eight years old. A strip published on April 3, 1971, suggests he was born around 1963 (setting up the gag that when he is 21, it will be 1984).[5] Initially, Charlie Brown suggests he lives in an apartment, with his grandmother occupying the one above his; a few years into the strip, he moves to a house with a backyard.[6]

Charlie Brown

Non-Disney Cameos
for Non-Disney Cameos in Mickey and Oswald
Suggested by andymayer

Ever since the beginning of the 2020s, Mickey Mouse's reputation has been getting worse and worse with every time he is blamed for the Walt Disney Company's controversial actions, and no matter how much he begs to get his own movie so that he can be seen as more than a mascot, they refuse. But when toons start disappearing all over the world and Mickey is forced to take the blame once again, he decides he has had enough of being mistreated and teams up with Oswald the Lucky Rabbit to solve the mystery and clear his name, and in the process learn what it truly means to be the leader of the club.





