[2] After World War II, Alain Saint-Ogan also created a daily cartoon for the front page of the Parisien libéré, hosted a radio program, produced television programs and wrote several books, including two memoirs.
Shortly before his death in 1974, he was named the honorary president of the first Angoulême International Comics Festival.
His production of colonial propaganda, both by commission from the French government and in his own private enterprises, spanned a wide variety of genres and disciplines, and he was particularly involved with the 'Exposition Coloniale' of 1931.
Negative racial stereotypes were also used, a prominent example of this being the story line where Zig and Puce visited the Exposition Coloniale, as mentioned above.
Saint-Ogan's involvement with France's imperialist mission should not be overlooked, as it was a prominent and harmful feature in his body of work.