Comic Strip of the Day Comic Strips

CSotD: A Few Laughs Between International Disasters

If anybody any older than Thandi has any doubts about this, we’ll deal with it tomorrow. Naivete is charming, but not knowing this is well beyond either naivete or charm. However, let’s be gracious, if not out of decency then for practical reasons: You don’t convert people by insulting them, so I haven’t put a T on the end of MAGA for some time now.

I think those of us who can be reasoned with have arrived at the point where we’d agree with this fellow. And those who can’t be reasoned with are why, but news is developing and we’ll deal with it maybe tomorrow.

Onward, laughing all the way.

I can either feel very old or very wise over this one: Neither Hilary Price nor Rina Piccolo are old enough to remember that there was once a fellow named Dilly Dally, though you’ll note that he spelled the family name differently than his more flamboyant brother.

Dilly Dally starred on the Howdy Doody Show, along with Mr. Bluster, Clarabelle and Princess Summerfall Winterspring, who left the show and did Jailhouse Rock with Elvis. She was more photogenic than Dilly Dally or even Flubadub.

I suppose if he’d spelled his name Dili Dali, he might have gone farther, but there’s no point in vanity, in regret or in vain regret.

Interesting timing on today’s Frazz, because yesterday’s Science Fridays on NPR had a segment on Einstein, Heisenberg and Schrodinger hanging out together and discussing quantummy stuff, though it wasn’t clear if all three were actually in the same room at the same time and doesn’t that seem appropriately uncertain?

My argument is that you don’t have to go to one of Those Schools to wind up with a Nobel, though if you’re that fixated you probably would, because of the 90% perspiration factor Edison mentioned. But I was at a mid-range school, and I certainly didn’t have genius grades to get in because genius and grades aren’t necessarily related. But I had a friend in college who I thought was pretty smart and interesting, but I didn’t know he was a genius until several years later when he discovered one-cell fossils.

Point being that I never had a class with him. I just knew him from the campus snack bar and hanging out at his house, which is why it makes me sad to see people just go to college for the classes when the real learning is happening between classes. Or even instead of classes: Jef Mallett doesn’t have a degree but he is full of ‘satiable curtiosity, and if you don’t know where that comes from, that’s my point.

If you can only do one, skip the classes and hang out at the campus snack bar. And if you hear three guys talking about quantum physics, go sit at their table.

And be particularly careful not to hang out with unimaginative people who think there are hard and fast grammar rules. There’s nothing superior about “12 Items or Fewer” nor is there anything wrong with “12 Items or Less.” One describes the size of the purchase, the other describes the number of items in the purchase.

In fact, if you’re buying a six-pack of soda, “12 Items or Less” is preferable, because it counts the soda as one item rather than six, and wouldn’t you be surprised if the clerk considered a bag of navel oranges to be 12 items?

There are grammar rules that matter because they change the meaning of a sentence. My own bête noire  is people who can’t distinguish “may have” from “might have.” But such things are rare and you would do best not to make yourself look foolish, for instance, by correcting Jane Austen’s use of the language.

Though I’m quite sure she wouldn’t mind.

I prefer to ponder imponderables, and appreciate Harry Bliss clearing up this matter. If the Rainbow Bridge people are right, I am destined to have at least a dozen dogs following me around heaven and I’ve worried about scooping.

I’m even more concerned about what happens to them if they all make it — as I’m sure they would — but I don’t?

And I might not. After all, I had to do a quick search of Rubens to see that he did, indeed, paint zaftig ladies with their clothing on, and discovered he did, but I’m not sure poking around on Google Images is the best way to ensure your salvation.

I don’t disagree with this one, but I had the opposite problem when I was coaching young journalists. You’d think they were shooting film, the way they’d take three or four pictures and assume that part of the assignment was complete, despite the way I begged them to shoot a billion or so.

Of course, film or electronic, if you take 1000 shots, the best one will be among the first three, but if you shoot three dozen, none of them will be any good. Wayne Gretzky used to say you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take, but I know people who miss 100% of the shots they do take.

Like the time I was shooting Yoko and John at an opening of one of her art shows and thought “I must be getting to the end of the reel,” only I wasn’t because the film had torn when I loaded it.

But that was only 54 years ago. I’m sure I’ll eventually get over it.

Special award for this one. I still see cartoonists do the “Whoops! Upside down!” modern art gags that I think began a century ago. Good to see someone find a new, original, genuinely funny punchline.

But a particularly magical special award for Paul Noth, who discovered one of his most often reproduced cartoons in a test that he admits he probably couldn’t pass himself.

And he uses it not to say academics are fools — which would be a reasonable takeaway — but to discuss the mysteries of humor and to admit he doesn’t always know why his stuff is funny. It’s a conversation not to be missed, on a Substack you ought to be reading anyway.

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 17

  1. It’s wonderful to see that someone else knows exactly what “‘satiable curtiosity” is (and also how to spell it correctly).

    1. I was also punished for it, like him.

  2. The quality of my photography has gone way up since I switched to digital, though the ratio of good to bad pictures has gone way down. Every time I clicked the shutter release it cost me fifty cents and I didn’t have a lot of money back in those days. (Come to think of it, I still don’t have a lot of money, but never mind.) One of my best selling photographs back in the days when I did craft shows was a gull flying over the ocean at sunrise, bifurcated by a bright orange cloud. That took me something like fifty shots. A picture of a gull lifting a crab out of the water took maybe 200 shots, a tripod, and a long lens. Knowing that the incremental cost of taking a picture is somewhere around zero gives me a lot of freedom to play around.

  3. Einstein, Heisenberg and Schrodinger were in the same room at the same time at least once, at the Solvay Conference in 1927. There’s a famous photo of the conference attendees–all the smartest minds of early 20th century science–with the caption usually focusing on the fact that Marie Curie is both the only woman present and the only attendee who won two Nobel Prizes in different disciplines (physics and chemistry). But the three dudes were there, too.

    Your Rubens search sounds like one of those you hope someone doesn’t find in your search history after your sudden unexpected death. I have a friend who writes mystery novels and worries about that–he spends a lot of time looking up various poisons, weapons, and corpse-disposal facts, and he has also had a heart attack. Fortunately, he also has an understanding wife with the presence of mind to wipe his drive if necessary.

    I sometimes wish photos cost money to take these days, so everyone wouldn’t be taking them all the time, but I’m as bad as anyone. “It’s only electrons!” I mutter as I click away. Still, I remember looking through packages of prints or contact sheets in the old days, and even then the ratio of decent photos to bad was maybe 1 to 10. On balance, I like this particular digital revolution.

  4. Einstein, Heisenberg and Schrodinger: there is a group portrait of them together. Did you know that Einstein was a good friend of Marilyn Monroe, or that he was puzzled about children’s expectations during his first Halloween at the Institute of Advanced studies in the town (not university) of Princeton so he pulled out his violin and played for the trick-or-treaters?

    Speaking of Halloweens: children were brought up to the jack o’lantern decorated stage to participate in one of the early Howdy Doody shows. As the show progressed one of the little boys made it obvious to Buffalo Bob Smith that he sorely needed to urinate. Bob pointed him to the side stage exit but the boy misread and proceed to unzip and put out the candle in one of the jack o’lanterns. According to Bob the child grew up to become a fireman.

    I knew Bob because, before i first cared for Mom in her final illness to help my parents avoid medical bankruptcy and then put myself through college as an adult, i had a career in retail management and on the side for mini-vacations i would intermittently do things like assistant stage manage (i.e. be gofer) for oldies concerts. Bob often MCed those. Once when the company transferred me to a new location Bob was also doing a show locally and called to invite me to dinner. My very startled district manager picked up the phone and heard Bob’s distinctive, “Howdy Doody, Boys and Girls!”.

  5. Thanks folks. Some very interesting comments today. My life has been remarkably ordinary.

  6. Sorry, I know this is a “no politics” day but doesn’t this confirm that DJT considers himself to be king of the US? Headline from the AP: “Trump issues executive order requiring CFP to avoid broadcasting conflicts with Army-Navy game”. Maybe it should be broadcast at 3 AM Sunday morning? Next, he’ll issue an EO requiring the broadcaster to televise the game in split-screen with himself occupying half of the view for the entire game. And then another EO requiring all broadcasters to run reruns of “The Apprentice” during viewing prime time hours. When will this stop?

  7. Remember: stalagmites might hang from the ceiling, but they don’t.

    1. StalaCtites on the Ceiling, stalaGmites on the Ground. A Red Indian Thought He Might Eat Tobacco In Church. Georgie Evans Old Grandfather Rode A Pig Home Yesterday.

      1. My easy way to remember: like ants in your pants, the mites go up and the tights come down.

    2. Stalacrights turn clockwise, and stalaglefts twist with the sun.

  8. When I was downsizing to move to a home less than half the size I was sitting in, I found boxes and boxes of photos. Many of them were from our days in California, but also quite a few were taken in Colorado. I spent many evenings watching tv and throwing away piles and piles of photos. And most of the photos were still in the paper sleeve they came in.

    Back in the day you shot a roll of film over the course of what could be months or years. Once the roll was finished you sent it off to be developed. But wait! Those crazy photo developer companies offered TWO for the price of ONE!

    What the heck was I thinking? Every Thanksgiving for as long as I owned a camera, I took numerous photos of the turkey, and the table, and some of the people. Now double those and OMG, it was rediculous! And, who were those people in my home anyway?

  9. “Heaven is the place that when you get there, all the dogs you’ve ever loved come running to greet you.” – Robert B. Parker

  10. The joys of ‘live’ Sixties rock. Did anyone else notice on that Beau Brummells track that the harmonica player put the instrument away about two thirds of the way thru the song, yet the harmonica is going full blast until the end?

    1. Oh, and nobody lip synchs on TV anymore?

  11. I also share the same problem as the Elephant’s Child. It gets me into trouble, as well.

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