Comic Strip of the Day Comic Strips

CSotD: Even More Monday Merriment

Between commentary on a holiday now past and pending legislation now passed, the political folks need to do some catching up. Meanwhile, the funny people have done fairly well lately.

I’ve somewhat given up on chopsticks, though I got good with them in the 70s when authenticity seemed important and we were eating short-grained brown rice, which is more chopstickable than white long-grain.

However, it was a melding of two cultures, one in which people move food from table to mouth using forks and one in which it is perfectly normal to lift the bowl part way to the mouth and use chopsticks.

I’ve reached an age where combining Western etiquette and Eastern utensils strikes me as being, at best, impractical.

And it’s hardly the only thing I used to be good at but have lately given up.

I also don’t understand backing into parking spaces, but I’ve never understood that. It seems harder to back in between two cars than to back out from between them, but, even if it isn’t, you’re simply swapping one for the other.

I will grant you that, in pulling out face-first, you have a better view of oncoming traffic, but they’d probably stop anyway and, if they don’t, better they should smack into your backside than into you.

Another thing I don’t understand is how anyone got away with calling that game “Cornhole,” since (for nice folks who don’t know such things) the corn hole is where the corn cob is applied in the sense here jested upon.

It remains jarring to me to hear the term coming from respectable people, since we always used it as a deliberately crude anatomical term.

And besides, all you need to play horseshoes is two stakes and a set of horseshoes, while cornhole requires dragging around large, clumsy ramps.

You need a blacksmith to make horseshoes, however, since they aren’t found lying around on the ground anymore, while cornhole can be set up by anyone with a basic knowledge of woodworking and stitchery.

But of course that element of charm has become obsolete in a world where everything is for sale.

Gonna disagree with this one, and I don’t often disagree with Ben. But interaction with a human should be more fun than interaction with a machine, and he did stand a chance, back when the parents could have placed some restrictions on screen time and offered more personally involving alternatives.

But I’m arguing from the privileged position of someone who had kids when being home with them full-time was practical, plus the technological advantage of them having reached middle-school before Genesis and Sega and so forth existed.

I do, however, know contemporary parents who limit screen time and establish a regular pattern of interaction with their kids.

Had an interesting conversation at the dog park yesterday — all my in-person conversations happen at the dog park — about actors who ruin the movies they’re in. Glenn Close’s name came up, and someone argued that she’d been good in 101 Dalmatians.

My response was that (A) that was an unnecessary remake of a better movie and (B) it was a role that called for massive, unbridled chewing of the scenery, there being things you can do with animation that are hard to replicate in live action.

Which, instead of leading to a discussion of unnecessary remakes, shifted into a discussion of the pluses and minuses of type-casting.

Meanwhile, the dog park being in a bowl the size of three football fields that had been packed the night before with people celebrating the Fourth of July and fireworks over the Connecticut River, my dog was conducting a painstaking grid-search of the entire place, finding stray bits of popcorn and fragments of potato chips, but mostly, we guessed, exalting in the exotic smells left behind by the crowd.

Dogs’ high-sensory capabilities must make their lives like a permanent acid trip, which would also explain why so many of them find firecrackers terrifying.

Constant Readers will anticipate how much I loved this Reality Check.

First of all, I think you should either embrace being an omnivore or give it up entirely and am puzzled by pretend-meat.

I understand pretend-beer, because it’s nice to have something in your hand, and during an extended period of teetotalling, I drank a lot of tonic-and-lime. On the other hand, I know people who avoid meat and eat very well without pretending.

As for that “plant,” I’m also critical of people who do eat meat but believe it is some non-descript pink stuff that comes in plastic foam trays.

Less industrialized people were deeply aware of the sources of their meat and acknowledged their shared consciousness. I’m not sure you need to go that far, but if you don’t know where it comes from, I suppose it might as well be made from soybeans.

Constant Readers also know that I’m critical of a lot of people. And that I swiped the term “Constant Reader” from Dorothy Parker, whose writing makes me seem like a font of generous tolerance.

The Holy Trinity: Dorothy Parker, Molly Ivins and Jane Austen.

Arlo always mirrors me, and as he and Janis prepare to downsize, I’m doing much the same, though I’ve been downsizing by increments and am now down to a bedroom, kitchen and living room, which I’ll be swapping for a studio apartment.

I’ll still have to get rid of a third of my furniture and a whole lot of other stuff, which is okay because the kids sure won’t want it.

About a year ago, I took five bankers’ boxes of books to a used bookstore and it made a dent but there’s more to go. I’ve still got half a shelf of cookbooks and there are just two recipes I still look up on paper, one for red beans and rice, and one for kielbasa z czerwonq kapusta, both of which I only consult to confirm that I could make them blindfolded.

F Minus provides the perfect capstone for today’s completely non-judgmental, neutral collection of tentative theories.

And here’s how I feel about Cruella: The original, not the plant-based version:

Previous Post
Arnold Arnam – RIP
Next Post
Pat Bagley Leaves Trump’s ‘Merika

Comments 25

  1. As a rule, I don’t back into parking spaces, but if I can pull forward into the space adjacent to the one I drove into, I will. Backing out from between a Ford Leviathan (“For The Sport Of It!”) and a Chevy Deathstar, I might as well be blindfolded until my car is three quarters of the way into the traffic lane.

    And while someone wanting to wait for the space I’m vacating might stop and wait for me, a driver eager to take a spot closer to the store might not. As for pedestrians on their phones while juggling armfuls of packages while their kids run ahead, forget about it.

    1. Wow, I must be much older than I realized. I thought the Ford SUV lineup was still the Exploder, the Excretion, and the Exhibition. And that Chevrolet had stuck with the Ultimate Unglamorous Model, the Suburban, for which no satiric nickname could be less complimentary.
      And speaking of terrible actors, I was driving through Las Vegas in the days when I had to, to get to an airport, and saw a car with the bumper sticker “I Saw Top Gun 8 Times”. I did not feel safe on the same highway with THAT guy, believing it was the worst movie ever made, despite its close resemblance to a low quality comic without the excuse of being one.

  2. That live-remake excuse about copyrights makes no sense. A copyright on a movie is currently 95 years. Spending hundreds of millions to add five or ten years to a copyright might make sense to someone who cares what their company will care about in 100 years. Besides, you can’t extend the copyright on a movie by making another movie with the same title. The two movies have separate copyrights.

  3. I and the Great Cornholio agree with your comment about the popular game. To cornhole someone was a mighty vulgar phrase when I was young. Long ago. Very long ago.

  4. Damn, thanks for the harsh reminder that live-action remakes have been a thing since the late 90s.
    Even as a kid, when the live-action 101 Dalmatians movie came out I was like “Who tf wanted this?” and my opinion really hasn’t changed over the last two decades.

    Despite being on the verge of middle-aged, and despite having grown up in a world filled with computers and video games, part of me will always be something of a Luddite.

    When offered the choice between gaming and going out with family and friends, the latter wins every time. I can play whenever I want, but opportunities to socialize are becoming increasingly scarce. It disturbs me how often I see people with their eyes glued to their phones when out for a walk and a beautiful day.

    Hell, the only reason I carry my phone with me 24/7 is that we live in an era where it’s no longer an option. I stopped going to the gym when they required that I download their app in order to sign in rather than simply scan a key fob. I don’t like having my phone with me at the gym, it’s one less thing to worry about, not to mention it getting lost or broken.

    Likewise, my mom used to work in libraries and bookstores. Even though it’s more “convenient” to have hundreds or even thousands of books on an Amazon Kindle, I will always prefer the real thing. It’s not like having tons of old video games downloaded onto your PC, since much of that hardware no longer works as well as they used to anyway. Books don’t need an update. There’s nothing like the feel of a real book in your hands, the left side getting thicker and the right thinner as you turn the pages. I’ve made it a goal for this year to spend less time on the internet and more time reading actual books.

  5. Had to search for the kielbasa recipe since your link took me to a cookbook for sale. All the recipes that I found were in Polish, of course, but I enjoyed the translations. Example, pertaining to the cabbage: after browning onion and adding other ingredients – “Fry everything. When the cabbage is warm, water it with red wine.”

    1. Getting the cookbook would have saved you translating. The other book linked has wonderful recipes, but not too practical if you aren’t already in the Gulf, since so many assume you can get your hands on oysters and suchlike without taking out a second mortgage. And, for the record, I’m in favor of watering everything with red wine, particularly the cook.

  6. I’ll always give Glenn Close a pass because I loved Garp (the book) and thought she and Robin Williams did a good job in the movie. And Irving got to be in the movie, which is nice.

    And I lucked out with my rather huge collection of old vinyl. My son took them all…he liked the cover art.

  7. Thankfully, some artists who used to do album covers can now do beer cans.

  8. For anyone who’s reducing the burden of their ‘things’, don’t forget about freecycle. The askers have to come pick up, and you get rid of ‘stuff’. You’re offering for free, they do the work.

    Oh, and be sure to get a phone number of the person who is supposed to show up – it inhibits them from being a no-show.

    1. My favorite recycle request is “can you deliver?” I do realize that some folks don’t have access to vehicles or vehicles large enough to carry some items, but…no. My favorite recycle was way back in the 80s when we were getting rid of a sofa bed (in pretty good shape!) by putting it out at the curb. A young lady knocked on our door and asked if she could have it…we said sure, and she asked if we could deliver it. After a kind but firm no (we didn’t have a proper vehicle either) she asked to use our phone, made a call, and went out and sat on the couch until helped arrived. Necessity is the…

  9. I thought the bag-tossing game was beanbag, as in “politics ain’t beanbag”

    “Politics ain’t cornhole” is inelegant, and in many senses inaccurate

    1. there is a Cornhole in the white house right now.

      1. Dear Liza, dear Liza

  10. I once worked at a factory that required everyone to back into parking spaces (and had islands in the parking lot preventing pulling through). The given rational was that workers tended to arrive over a wider range of times for their shift, but at the end of the shift all the workers would be leaving right away. Thus, it was safer to pull out facing forward than reversing when everyone was leaving. Personally I thought the rule was because one of the higher-up people really didn’t like to look at car-butts.

    Similarly, this same company decided that 7:12 am was the ideal start time for the daytime shift, supposedly based on a study of the local traffic patterns, with all the other shifts’ start and end times similarly shifted off the top or bottom of the hour.

    I do still prefer being able to pull out forward in situations where a lot of people will be leaving at the same time, like after a school event, sporting event or concert, especially if there will be a lot of children walking around, and will back into spaces when I anticipate that’s going to be the case.

  11. Backward parking: I’ve heard that this is supposedly the preferred method for Israeli Mossad agents. Maybe there are a lot of secret agent wannabes.

    Chopsticks: I eat ramen noodles with a fork. Much easier.

    1. well it is faster to pull out so it would help if you are in that line if work.
      …. and I use a spoon.

  12. One source of pride for me through the years was my ability to use chopsticks. Alas over the last few years I have developed a condition known as essential tremors which has made it impossible to use chopsticks. And I’d really like to know just why they’re essential?

    1. I guess they are like the “oils”??

    2. I found the easiest way to use chopsticks is to not think about the steps you need to do to use them, just to go ahead and use them with a blank mind. Works every time for me; the second I think about the process I start to screw up and make a mess.

  13. The last comic has amusingly been referred to as “Schrödinger’s @sshole” – they show up in the workplace often.

  14. Amazingly good animation in 101 Dalmatians. The wife is drawn to be Julie Andrews, and done so marvelously. Modern CGI is too complex . This style of animation is detailed yet simpler and always satisfies. Wish animation would go back to this moe 2-D style.

  15. I totally agree with the cornhole in the White House comment. We are now cursed. Also, I injured my back when I was 48 at work, got referred to a butcher surgeon who did a neck fusion on me from C2-T1. I woke up in pain, and have been in pain ever since. I say all this because it is extremely painful to me to this day (I am now 70) to turn my head that far to have to back in anywhere! Any institution that requires that of me will not receive my business!

  16. In a distinct minority of cases, where city streets have angle parking, making them back-in spaces where bicycles share traffic lanes makes it significant safer for the cyclists. And improves visibility for the parker to see oncoming vehicle traffic. Plus, there is the behemoth SUV issue already noted .

  17. Well, I *heard* the reason they back in – is so police/parking police can’t see that their car registration is out of date. Also, in the states that don’t require a front plate, the car owner/registration can’t be scanned at all. (This is So. California info.)

Comments are closed.

Search

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get a daily recap of the news posted each day.