The Charlie Brown Cafe
The Complete Peanuts Collections
During our initial exploration of the Pusan National University neighborhood in the north of Busan, we happened upon a strange cultural landmark: the Charlie Brown Cafe. Dedicated to all things Peanuts, this coffee house provides stressed-out college kids the chance to escape into a simpler world.

Personally, I’ve never understood the appeal of Peanuts. The comic strips are uniformly unfunny and poorly drawn. Yes, I said it! Charles Schulz must be the among the most overrated cartoonists of all time. Charlie Brown looks just like Linus, who looks just like Sally, but with different hair. If you’ve read four or five of the comics, you understand everything there is to know about all the characters.
Also, I always found Franklin really awkward. I mean, each character has a single trait: Peppermint Patty is a tomboy, Linus is insecure, Lucy is a bully and Franklin… well, Franklin is black. And I don’t consider Charlie Brown a “lovable loser” at all. Watch him fall for Lucy’s football trick enough times, and you start to realize that there’s nothing lovable about him. He’s just a loser. Grow some balls, Charlie Brown. That should be the title of the next animated special.
But even I, a virulent Peanuts-hater, couldn’t help but be charmed by the Charlie Brown Cafe. My cappuccino was served with Snoopy-shaped cinnamon (don’t even get me started on the claim that Snoopy is a “beagle”!), matching the powdered sugar on the brownie. Everything… from the cups, plates and chairs are Peanuts-based; we sat at the Linus table, and fetched our coffee when our Peppermint Patty buzzer rang.
If you’re in the area of PNU and could benefit from a world of pure innocence, then definitely check out the Charlie Brown Cafe.
Location on our Busan Map
-Our Visit To The Puppy Café in Busan

















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June 25, 2012 at 3:22 am













June 25, 2012 at 12:27 pmPreemie Maboroshi
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Wow, that’s pretty cool! What I think I like the most about it is there are so many different visual ideas — I mean, you caught them pretty well.My favorite visual idea was the glass panes hanging from the ceiling with the white line drawings of the characters. It looks like the drawings are glowing.
June 25, 2012 at 11:40 pmJared Norby
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An ‘animator’ is someone who ‘animates’ — as in Disney movies. Charles Shulz was a cartoonist.The appeal of Peanuts is its sensitively portrayed characters, its dry sense of humor, and a careful, minimalist drawing style that revolutionized newspaper cartooning.I think tens of millions of people would agree with me that Charlie Brown is not a loser — he’s an insecure introvert trying to make sense of his place in the world. Clearly, you can’t relate to that character, but take it from those of us who can: There’s a reason Peanuts is widely considered one of the greatest comic strips of all time.
June 25, 2012 at 11:45 pmMike Powell
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Whoops, you’re right about the cartoonist/animator distinction… that was a slip, and I’ve corrected it. And I know I’m definitely in the minority when it comes to my views on Peanuts! I’ve caught a lot of flak already from my family
June 26, 2012 at 3:53 amJared Norby
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Love the pictures, though. And I really dig the whole 91 days project — you guys dig deeper than a lot of travel blogs I’ve seen. Keep up the good work. :)
July 6, 2012 at 5:20 pmSara
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Oh well now I HAVE to go to Korea! Looks incredible, and if you hadn’t guessed I’m a huge Peanuts fan.
July 17, 2012 at 5:18 pmgeorge souza
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i was stationed
in busan in 1969 as an army draftee.
i’d love to go back to see this and all the other changes.
July 17, 2012 at 11:20 pmJuergen
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George, thank you for the comment. You should do that, I’m pretty sure you won’t recognize the city at all anymore!
July 18, 2012 at 6:50 amGeoff Swenson
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Peanuts was very funny and sometimes profound in the sixties. But Shultz ran out of ideas in the early 70s. Now that they are running Classic Peanuts, they haven’t run any of the good old ones, perhaps because a lot of them are lost.
July 19, 2012 at 12:06 pmPaulus The Grey
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There could be a franchise opportunity here!
July 19, 2012 at 8:07 pmChris42
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But you DO like Snoopy, right? Juxtapose “Peanuts” with “The Family Circle” (The one I love to hate) and Peanuts won’t seem so bad- at least you won’t have a sugar OD.
July 19, 2012 at 11:33 pmTimothy Chow
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None of the old Peanuts comics strips have been lost (except that the original colors of some of the Sundays strips may have been lost). They are currently being systematically reprinted by Fantagraphics in a 25-volume series entitled The Complete Peanuts.Though I’m a rabid Peanuts fan myself, I’d agree with Geoff Swenson that the first 25 years were significantly better than the last 25 years (but in the late 1990′s, I’d say that Peanuts regained some of its earlier profundity in the character of Rerun). If the characters seem one-dimensional to you, that may be because you’ve only been exposed to the TV specials and four or five strips. Peanuts revolutionized newspaper comics precisely because it showed that a comic strip could explore real human emotions with depth and sensitivity. Most other comic strips were either escapist fantasies or gag-a-day throwaways.Here’s one example that I particularly like that is not so well known: The story about the kids filling out application forms not to go to camp. Start at the following link and continue through to July 9 (skipping the Sunday strips):http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1974/06/24Prior to Schulz (note the correct spelling of his name, by the way), I don’t think that any other comic strip artist would have had the courage or the imagination to explore the territory that this storyline covers.
August 2, 2012 at 5:21 amLittleInsect
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I think one of the most touching cartoons that I have ever seen, is the one published the day after Shulz died (which he drew shortly before his death). I’m sure you Peanuts fans will know which one I mean
October 7, 2012 at 11:54 amJRogue
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Would you know there operating hours? We will be going to Busan next week and I have seen a lot of places to go to through your blog ^_^
October 7, 2012 at 3:23 pmMike Powell
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I’m not sure what the opening hours are for the Charlie Brown — cafes in Busan normally stay open pretty late, though; usually until at least 9pm.