The adults who grew up in the 80s and 90s may name one or two cartoon characters that they like very much, including mickey, Sailor Moon, Huluwa, The Flying Policewoman, etc. Snoopy certainly has its absolutely loyal fans.
Domestic and foreign brand products jointly named with Snoopy also cover clothing, food, housing, and transportation, and in 1969, the American Apollo 10 spacecraft named the command module and the lunar module "Charlie Brown" and "Snoopy" respectively, which is enough to see people's constant fanatical love for it.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="5" > Snoopy's thrilling summer camp</h1>
The most classic animation work in the Snoopy series is "Snoopy's Thrilling Summer Camp" released in 1977. The story revolves around Charlie Brown and his friends participating in a summer camp expedition, competing against competitors and bravely challenging the rapids.

Why do many adults like Snoopy?
The classic feature of this work is not only that there are more characters in the story and the structure is more substantial, but the most important thing is the vivid embodiment of the values pursued by the author Schultz, which is the cartoonization of the inner world of adults.
There are no absolutely perfect people in Snoopy's story. Charlie Brown was always inactive and poor at expressing himself; his sister Sally was always swearing and eager to theorize on the slightest thing; even the clever and calm puppy Snoopy would have been cunning and unconcerned.
These cute little flaws bring the story closer to us and become a projection of our personality.
In the workplace, we also encounter times when we need to vote, and unfair results are inevitable. The inefficient democratic elections in the summer camps are also a cute irony, the children have small calculations, some people want to become leaders at the expense of coercion or even change the rules, and some people are angry about the results of the vote.
Whether you feel familiar with this kind of picture, it is angry and funny. But the story is still going on, nothing has changed, and the challenges at summer camp are not interrupted by the results of the vote, is it not a relief again?
Maupassant has a saying, "A person's life is neither as good nor so bad as people think." ”
Adults like to find an emotional outlet for these not-so-beautiful things in Snoopy's stories, and it's not so bad to think about.
Schultz is very great, and in the cartoon kingdom he created, he conveys his perception and irony of different eras.
Everyone can find the antidote to life from it, and the noisy and contradictory pictures of light-hearted and witty pictures release the fatigue and loss of adults, and the positive attitude of adventure and optimism will not end.