Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Quibbles, ethics and decency

091917ClayJones_Claytoonz(Clay Jones)

Rogers
(Rob Rogers)

I wasn't sure which of these to lead with, so here's a Juxtaposition in alphabetical order, on the topic of bringing out Sean Spicer as the punchline to Stephen Colbert's Emmy monologue, which you can see here.

You can scroll back from there and watch the whole monologue, but I thought it was pretty standard award-show schtick and hardly comparable to his legendary "truthiness" performance at the White House Correspondents Dinner.

Jones lays it out straight: This ain't funny.

Thing is, there's a certain school of "how dare he!" outrageous humor that was central to Colbert's ongoing portrayal of a clueless, button-down conservative, but that often strays over into what is simply poor taste. 

When it consists of making the joke no-one dares make, or illuminating the evil behind someone else's polite-sounding opinions, it can be brilliant stuff. 

But it's dangerous ground and, when you cross a certain line, you get the response Clay Jones provides, of simply "That's not funny," because, as he points out, Spicer wasn't simply lying about crowd sizes.

KeefHe was lying about things that matter, and, if Jones is more restrained in his response than Keith Knight, you have to remember that Knight has dedicated a huge amount of his energy lately to Black Lives Matter issues.

When governments lie, people die, and it's hard to find much humor in that, or much potential redemption in those who made it happen or even in those who let it happen.

I mean, Albert Speer may have regretted his role and accepted his guilt, but he was still sentenced to, and served, 20 years. 

Rob Rogers digs a little deeper, not only condemning the appearance but condemning the way in which staging it normalizes Spicers' role in assisting a government to lie to its people.

And I'm sure Keef is right and that all the henchmen will get nice publishing contracts, but I hope he's wrong in thinking we need to be told not to buy them.

Though I'm also sure we'll have one more lie to swallow when the books are bought up en masse in order to make phony best-sellers out of them.

But that's normal. Happens all the time. What's the big deal?

 

 

And this quibble

Margulies
I like Jimmy Margulies' cartoon reminding readers to shop locally, but I'm gonna quibble over his choice of victims.

I have trouble summoning up a lot of pity for Toys R Us, which is the kind of corporate big box store that comes into midsize cities and wipes out locally owned specialty shops where someone who loves toys has carefully chosen good things, along with some fun little gifts and gadgets.

Just as, by the way, the chain bookstores began wiping out small independent bookstores while Amazon was still building itself up to, in turn, wipe them out.

Ah, but here's the thing: Toys R Us is headquartered in Wayne, NJ, and Margulies draws for AMNewYork, which makes this a local event, even though its impact stretches across the country.

Fair enough. But it's a local cartoon.

Ain't nobody out here in the hinterlands weeping for chain stores.

Quibble, quibble, quibble.

 

This is not a quibble

Lu170921
I really hesitate to comment on today's Luann, but I'm not simply offering wise-guy snark, and I'm not giggling over a double-entendre.

I like the strip, I like Greg and Karen Evans' work.

But if anyone has a less damning explanation of Luann's dialogue in the second panel, please leave it in the comments, because I've got nothing but the obvious, appalling one.

Luann is still (apparently) a virgin, though only by the grace of God and an ill-timed phone call. Still, she has to know what "spending the night" entails at the college level. 

And I know that Luann and Tiffany dislike each other, but — even in setting up an arc about compassion — she cannot have been meant to suggest this, and I'm genuinely wondering how it wasn't picked up either in the creative process or by an editor.

 

Won't quibble or question this one

Usb_cables

Well, one quibble with this xkcd:

He should have drawn a jumble of black spaghetti with the labels pointing to various ends poking out.

Took me a minute to recognize them, all nice and untangled like that. Nothing like that in my junk drawer.

 

Elsewhere in the ethical universe

Edison
Judging from today's Edison Lee, I think John Hambrock is watching too much daytime TV.

I just began watching in the daytime a few months ago; I bought a small smart TV for the kitchen and have been watching CNN while I did dishes and prepared dinner and, boy, you sure can tell who's home during the day.

Of course, lawyers were once forbidden to advertise on TV, as were peddlers of prescription drugs, so that all you saw during the Idiot Hours were ads for the Pocket Fisherman, and then cable exploded and someone realized you could have a whole channel that sold useless crap 24/7 and today there are several.

Leaving the regular channels to the ambulance chasers and (prescription) snake-oil salesmen.

Yesterday, I saw an odd convergence:

There was an ad encouraging you to start a retirement fund so you don't run out of money in your old age. Fair enough, though I suspect it was a package-buy on CNN rather than something targeted specifically to people who are sitting at home at 3 in the afternoon wondering what to do with all their excess income.

It was followed immediately by a more daytime-on-purpose ad, which was intended to get older couples to sell off their life insurance because they don't need it once their kids are grown and gone.

Which I guess makes sense if they took the advice in the first ad about 30 years ago and are floating in retirement funds.

Or plan to die at the same time, and soon.

 

Now, this classic ode to daytime TV

 

Previous Post
CSotD: Wednesday Short Takes
Next Post
CSotD: Trumping Decency

Comments 5

  1. I thought the “quibble” on the Toys R Us one was going to be how there are essentially two types of coverage of it.
    One, like in this panel, where the only fact pertaining to Toys R Us is that its filing, then maybe other facts about other companies as it becomes an option piece on the death of retail stores. Some, may mention the fact that Toys R Us has some debt… but they tend to gloss over it in a way that might imply that it was just a result of the fall.
    The other is articles that talk almost exclusively about the Toys R Us situation in specific. They’ll talk about how it still rakes in tons of money, it just doesn’t have any to invest because of the debt. Debt that was piled on them by their equity/asset managers (or what ever they’re all calling then now) about 10 years ago… and the filing isn’t about their inability to make sales, but in that they’ve been crippled by the likes of Bain Capital. Which you might well remember from 2012 as being co-founded by Romney and being the sort of company you want to be very wary about if it gets involved with yours. Really the difference between doing business with Bain and Trump, is that if Trump tells you there’s a fire in the next room, you should probably go check before believing him (and if he says “everything’s fine, believe me” you should check immediately). But if you hear that the likes of Bain is anywhere near the building, you should probably assume that if there isn’t a fire in the next room now, there probably will be soon enough, and start to leave.

  2. The Luann thing threw me a bit too, until I realized she’s insanely jealous of what she sees as Tiffany’s getting anything she wants. Money? Power? Sex? Yep, it all goes that girl’s way — and even when it goes south, at least she’s taken the risk to make it happen, while Luann would just stand there and wait. And wait. And wait. And the waiting is driving her nuts because, despite what she says, Luann really wants to be someone like Tiff.
    So I kinda get what’s going on here, and I’m sure — as Gregg always does — it’ll all come out the way we think it should…. which could be why the editors at GoComic probably didnt flag it.

  3. Reference to a young woman having sex with 40 or so people? That’s pretty hard core for a family paper, whatever revelations will be coming next.

  4. And agreed, Brent. Also, it’s only Chapter 11. That’s just a timeout, and not the kind where they bring out the stretcher. The kind where he walks off under his own power.

  5. Kind of blipped over the football team thing in Luann because I was concentrating on the body-shaming. I hope maybe Tiffany has just stopped starving herself to live up to a false ideal.
    But yeah, where are the editors?

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