Saturday, October 3, 2009
Daddy's Home: These school forms are ludicrous...
Family Circus: A stop sign always has eight sides.
Prickly City: It's going to be OK, isn't it, Carmen?
Beetle Bailey: Wait! You forgot your briefcase.
Friday, October 2, 2009
Family Circus: Okay, I'm ready now. Go ahead and play your new song.
And Dolly's (adorable!) cruelty remains unparalleled, as poor Billy will never play the trumpet ever again.
Betty: Whap!
Brewster Rockit!: Rescuing the doughnut people...
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Family Circus: Since your new camera never runs out of film, does it run out of digitals?
9 Chickweed Lane: I'll be in my room. And I'm locking my door.
Arlo and Janis: Dad, I think we should buy Gus' sailboat!
Born Loser: Sigh. I'm not good with computers.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Family Circus: Mommy, am I finished with my bath?
Jaime Weinman tweets:
Who can explain Jeff Keane's compulsion to show his alter-ego's naked butt? http://joshreads.com/?p=4585 A psychiatrist? @JustinFowler? Who?A psychiatrist is clearly in order, but here are a few theories:
- As previously discussed on this fine blog, Jeff Keane is using the family cartoon as an outlet for his repressed exhibitionist--and possibly oedipal--urges.
- Jeff Keane views his alter-ego's ass as some sort of Platonic ideal by which we should assess all other asses.
- Jeff Keane is hoping that gratuitous nudity will distract readers from noticing his cartoon's obvious lack of artistic quality.
- Jeff Keane is attempting to appeal to a new demographic.
- Jeff Keane usually goes pantsless and is just trying to be true to life.
Betty: One interesting thing about an online newspaper is access to past editions.
Marmaduke: We don't have a three-second rule. Food's never on the floor that long.
From time to time, Marmaduke will reveal his true, demonic nature. In so doing, he also gives us a clue as to the setting of the cartoon. This is what Hell is going to be like, people.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Pluggers: The plugger detour.
La Cucaracha: The Beandocks
Monday, September 28, 2009
Frazz: Mostly I just like making the deal.
It's probably not worth pointing out every time Frazz homages Calvin and Hobbes seeing as Frazz's entire existence is basically a Calvin and Hobbes homage. But whatever. I always enjoyed the running gag in which Calvin would invent disgusting stories about his lunch and cause Susie to lose her appetite. Jeff Mallett gives us a decently clever variation on that here.
Lola: Morning, Mom. What's going on?
Family Circus: The only parts I don't like about school are the the subjects.
Daddy's Home: Studying the Great Depression, huh?
Pluggers: Pluggers believe that the "Greening of America" begins in their own backyard.
Today's installment of Pluggers is especially brilliant because one needs to break it into two parts to truly grasp its message. It also shows why it's so important to read Pluggers every day.
The first point this cartoon makes is that pluggers are lazy. This is illustrated by the length of the grass, suggesting that the bear has eschewed yard work all summer long. It is also illustrated, however, by the fact that this cartoon is nearly identical to one that ran last Sunday. That's just a little nod to the die-hard fans right there from Gary Brookins, from one lazy plugger to another.
The second point is what really raises the stakes though, recasting laziness, which some have labeled a defect, as a positive quality. After all, it is laziness, claims Brookins at his most audacious, that will save the planet from the threat of global warming.
That is, of course, only if you accept that global warming is an actual threat. Because Brookins is building a world here--surely you don't believe that Pluggers is just an outlet for his personal opinions!--he has demonstrated in prior cartoons pluggers that clearly disagree with the ethos of laziness. Indeed, one of them appears to be the dog in this very cartoon! The dog, having performed yard work, therefore must believe that global warming is a myth, given that he refuses to do nothing to stop it.
And this is why we read Pluggers. No other comic strip tackles the philosophical preoccupations of the day in more nuanced or objective a manner. We can only imagine the calm, reasoned, common-sensical debate taking place right now between the lazy bear and the hard-working dog. It's downright Aesopian. Except, of course, that Brookins is no cheap fabulist, and there are no easy morals here. Brookins just raises the questions. It's up to us, the bears and dogs of Pluggerville, to find the answers.
The first point this cartoon makes is that pluggers are lazy. This is illustrated by the length of the grass, suggesting that the bear has eschewed yard work all summer long. It is also illustrated, however, by the fact that this cartoon is nearly identical to one that ran last Sunday. That's just a little nod to the die-hard fans right there from Gary Brookins, from one lazy plugger to another.
The second point is what really raises the stakes though, recasting laziness, which some have labeled a defect, as a positive quality. After all, it is laziness, claims Brookins at his most audacious, that will save the planet from the threat of global warming.
That is, of course, only if you accept that global warming is an actual threat. Because Brookins is building a world here--surely you don't believe that Pluggers is just an outlet for his personal opinions!--he has demonstrated in prior cartoons pluggers that clearly disagree with the ethos of laziness. Indeed, one of them appears to be the dog in this very cartoon! The dog, having performed yard work, therefore must believe that global warming is a myth, given that he refuses to do nothing to stop it.
And this is why we read Pluggers. No other comic strip tackles the philosophical preoccupations of the day in more nuanced or objective a manner. We can only imagine the calm, reasoned, common-sensical debate taking place right now between the lazy bear and the hard-working dog. It's downright Aesopian. Except, of course, that Brookins is no cheap fabulist, and there are no easy morals here. Brookins just raises the questions. It's up to us, the bears and dogs of Pluggerville, to find the answers.