Neither iteration of the syndicate ever produced a breakout comic strip; the most successful strips —
Luther,
Napoleon and Uncle Elby,
Mr. Tweedy — tended to be inherited from other syndicates. Most Mirror Enterprise strips didn't last more than two or three years, and the company appeared to give up on syndicating comic strips after c. 1961. After a five-year hiatus, the newly named Los Angeles Times Syndicate picked up the distribution of comic strips again in 1965. It had a similar lack of long-term success, with most strips not lasting more than three of four year in syndication. The most popular strips that originated with the L.A. Times Syndicate were Ed Nofziger's
Animalogic (11 years in syndication) and Lee Nordling's
Sherman on the Mount (9 years). The syndicate also distributed
Lou Grant's editorial cartoons from the 1950s through the 1980s.
Mirror Enterprises Syndicate (c. 1949–c. 1961) •
Annie Oakley by Bill Ziegler (1950–1952) •
Dragnet by Mel Keefer and Bill Ziegler (1953–1954) •
The Life of General Ike by "staff artist" Bill MacArthur (1952) — "36-installment story strip" on the life of
Dwight D. Eisenhower •
My Friend Irma by
Stan Lee, and
Dan DeCarlo (1951–1952) •
Napoleon and Uncle Elby by Margot McBride (widow of strip creator
Clifford McBride), and Joe Messerli (1952–1961) — acquired from
LaFave Newspaper Features •
Soapy Waters by George Stallings & Kay Wright (February 7, 1955 – April 20, 1957) •
Times Have Changed? by P. S. Clayton &
Jack Chick (Nov. 16, 1953 – 1955) •
Too Funny for Words by
Courtney Dunkel (June 12 1950 – 1952) — wordless daily strip
Los Angeles Times Syndicate (1965–2000) •
Animalogic by Ed Nofziger (1967–1978) •
Bonzer U by Kearney Egerton (1968) •
Bush League by John Bianchi and Ken Shaw (1975) •
Dallas by writer Jim Lawrence and artists
Paul Chadwick, Ron Harris, and Deryl Skelton (1981–1984) •
The DeBrees by
Charles Barsotti and Kipp Schuessler (1975) •
Drawn Out by Bill and Eric Teitelbaum (1980) •
Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist by
Bill Braudis and
Dave Blazek, with artwork by
Dick Truxaw (March 1997 – January 2000) •
Et Tu by Dan Harpe (1975-1976) •
Gerties Gig by Suzanne Farrow (1976) •
Gleeb by
Paul B. Lowney (1981-1985) •
Grace and Looie by
Al Wiseman (1966, 1973) •
Guindon by
Dick Guindon (1978–1981) • ''Homer's Groaners'' by Ed Stanoszek (1978-1979) •
Jeff Cobb by
Pete Hoffman (1974–1978) — acquired from
General Features Corp. •
Lady Chatter by Nellie Caroll (1965–1966) •
Legend of Bruce Lee Fran Matera, and
Dick Kulpa (1982–1983) •
Lord, I Said by Hank Hartmann and Martha Merrill (1978) •
Loose Parts by
Dave Blazek & John Gilpin (April 1998–December 2000; moved to
Tribune Media Services) •
Luther by
Brumsic Brandon Jr. (1970–1986) — inherited from Newsday Specials •
Mr. Tweedy by Ned Riddle (1974–1988) — continued from General Features Corp. •
Modesty Blaise (1976-1980) •
My Stars by Ken Bruns (1976) •
The Noob (1994) • ''Phoebe's Place'' by
Bill Schorr (1990–1991) •
Sherman on the Mount by Lee Nordling (1980–1989) •
Star Trek by
Thomas Warkentin, Sharman DiVono,
Ron Harris,
Larry Niven,
Martin Pasko,
Padraic Shigetani,
Bob Meyers,
Ernie Colón,
Gerry Conway, and
Dick Kulpa (Dec. 2, 1979 – Dec. 3, 1983) •
Star Wars by
Archie Goodwin,
Al Williamson,
Russ Manning, Russ Helm,
Steve Gerber, and
Alfredo Alcala (1979–1984) •
The Virtue of Vera Valiant by writer
Stan Lee and artists
John Buscema and
Frank Springer (1976-1977) • ''
Walt Kelly's Pogo'' by
Larry Doyle and Neal Sternecky, Peter Sternecky, and Carolyn Sternecky (Jan. 1989 – Nov. 1993) •
Why We Say by Robert Morgan and
Pete Hoffman (1974–1978) — continued from General Features Corp. == See also ==