Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Old wine in new skins

Interesting day to see how some familiar gags can be repackaged:

Mt130304
Monty has been on a trip through time and has, yet again, found true love. I know this is not breakthrough comedy, that the gag is a variation on all sorts of others, but there is something about Jim Meddick's artwork and timing that knocked me off my stool this morning.

Thing is, there aren't very many untrodden paths. The trick is not to find new things but to do things well, and he does. I love this.

I'd suggest they stay in this arc for awhile, because there have been several good laughs in it. But, then again, I loved the first season of "It's About Time," and, man, that show jumped the shark fast. Best to mine all the good gags and then recite "Twizzle, twazzle, twozzle, twome; time for zis vun to come home."

And meanwhile, in the real world, here's another gag that doesn't break any new ground but puts a spin on an established source of pointless marital conflict:

Lockhorns
Leroy Lockhorn is onto something here: Guys need to be more pro-active on this issue. Go on the offensive!

"Up" is the default position. I don't know what just happened in there, but, if Leroy didn't notice until it was too late, well, that's why "up" should be the default position. And, if you put the seat down, flies can walk around on it, and centipedes and mice and … you know, all kinds of things could happen on that seat. You could end up with dust on your butt, and spider webs.

In fact, there used to be toilet seats in public places that automatically went up if nobody was sitting on them. Wise engineering.

Have I ever sat on the porcelain? Yeah, once or twice. I've also sat on a closed cover once or twice. And I know what caused it, and, while I'm not always smart enough to look down before I sit on something, I am smart enough not to tell anybody about it when I wasn't that smart.

Or to blame them for it.

If "up" isn't the default, then "cover closed" should be. And some women know this, so they put fluffy covers on the toilet lid so it won't stay up and you have to stand to the side and brace it with your knee. So the idea that the lid should always be closed is not a male fantasy.

And I'd add that you can't complain about kitchen cupboard doors being left open if you aren't closing the toilet lid consistently, dammit.

So, remember, guys: The proper response to "Does this make my butt look fat?" is "You mean to the point where you won't be able to see what you're about to sit on?"

If that can be established as the reason people don't realize what they're about to sit on, I promise this issue will disappear completely.

And don't worry about the gap in your relationship if that happens: You can always quarrel over proper orientation of the toilet paper roll.

No nit is too small to be picked, and it's not good for sleeping dogs to get too comfy.

Now, shifting gears, here's an argument that isn't pointless, but not many seem to be able to find it:

Morin
Yes, Jim Morin, that's why I'm disappointed with Obama.

The difference between "Mr. Smith Goes To Washington" and "Mr. Obama Goes To Washington" is that Jimmy Stewart eventually got wise to the fact that he was dealing with genuine crooks and that his political opponents did not believe all that stuff about patriotism and the public good and how things are supposed to work.

I'm willing to let the first year pass, all the naive ideas about putting Republicans in the cabinet and working across the aisle for the good of the American people. But, come on, man.

Morin has it right.

But, beyond that gem, going through the political cartoons lately has been pretty disheartening.

As said before, the "everybody is to blame" approach stems from either ignorance or cowardice.

Meanwhile, apart from blaming the president for the sequestration — while insisting that the cuts are insignificant, while also insisting that they are significant enough to save the economy — opposition cartoonists have run out of new points to make and have recently even stooped to recycling Teleprompter jokes. Really?

Now they've taken up the cause of poor, misunderstood Bob Woodward, who was threatened or, at least, was warned or perhaps given a friendly tip that he was drilling a dry hole or barking up the wrong tree or something. Poor fellow.

It's not unusual to have Jon Stewart point out the emptiness of one of these drummed up "scandals," but how embarrassing it must be to turn in a "poor Bob Woodward" cartoon on Thursday and, by Sunday, have Tom Brokaw calling out the story as "an intramural fight in a high school cafeteria."

Tsk tsk.


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 9

  1. Mike, as friendly as our relationship has been, you touch on something today that I take very seriously and must take issue with. If it ends our friendship, so be it. I recently had occasion to do extensive research on this matter–I mean, I can’t tell you how much research I did on this matter, seriously–and concluded that the proper form of Mr. Wizard’s incantation is “Drizzle drazzle druzzle drome.” Admittedly, his vaguely Germanic accent makes it hard to tell, but I think most scholars in the field would back me up.
    Otherwise, today’s post is OK.

  2. His name is “Vizard.”
    If you can’t get that straight, how can I trust your research on anything?

  3. I checked Wikipedia (not a way to get a definitive answer, but at least a starting point… it should be noted the entire Tooter Turtle page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tooter_Turtle both “needs additional citations for verification” and “may not meet Wikipedia’s general notability guideline”) and it supports “Twizzle Twazzle Twozzle”, but also states the character’s name was “Wizard”. I’m in the “Drizzle Drazzle Druzzle” camp myself; a quick Googling shows 532,000 results for the “Dr-” spellings and only 31,100 for the “Tw-“. Don’t even start about “this one” vs. “zis vun”…
    I had responded to the passing of Buck Biggers, co-creator of Tooter Turtle and a few other characters like Underdog, with a lengthy, embedded video-loaded post on my own oddly-named site
    http://tooned.in/2013/02/26/beyond-the-underdog/
    and there’s stuff about Tooter & Mr. Wizard in there.
    I’m acquiring a couple books about Total TeleVision Productions (one written by Biggers & Stover) to clear up some of my childhood recollections that Wikipedia disagrees with, and will update you on this one.

  4. And regarding Bob Woodward: this controversy (and the fact that it started because he made the “threat” public) can only be good for his future career. When the Washington Post goes down the tubes with the rest of the newspapers, he can get a job with Fox News.

  5. I was thinking of a friend of my ex-wife whose father had a regional accent of some sort in which V’s and W’s were somehow indistinguishable, which made his son very self conscious about the old man but then doubly humiliated when he found out the automobile was not pronounced Wolwo. In which case it wouldn’t matter whether the lizard spelled his name “Vizard” or “Wizard” because it would be pronounced the same. Or mispronounced the same.
    I encountered Leonardo Lion at an age when I was young enough to enjoy the cartoons but old enough to catch many of the winks. What with Rocky and Bullwinkle, Dudley DoRight and a number of similar comics hitting the market, it was a good time to be that age.
    However, I continue to confuse Leonardo Lion with Linus the Lion-hearted, which is a real insult to Leonardo, since Linus was such a blatant 30-minute cereal commercial that it eventually sparked an FCC crackdown.
    Linus wasn’t the only lion out selling cereal, though Champy was short-lived:
    http://youtu.be/v8wGMlf6Ps4
    And if you think only cynical Madison Avenue cartoon characters were shilling for the cereal companies, never mind Buffalo Bob and Welch’s grape juice or Captain Kangaroo pushing Schwinn bikes and Tootsie Roll Pops. Here’s the real heartbreaker:
    http://youtu.be/62A-Homjvzs

  6. The only “Mr Wizard” I remember wore a tie with a white shirt, sleeves rolled up, and talked about science. Am I Geezer Tagged?

  7. Our Mr. Wizard was “Mr. Wizard the Lizard” over in the “stupid immature cartoons” section. You probably never went over there. It was … not nice.

  8. I guess I’m stuck in Naivete mode.
    The last time I looked, the House of Representatives was the only place revenue bills could start. Spending bills can start in either chamber. The President executes the laws enacted by Congress. Essentially, his only real power* is to veto the bills presented to him. If he vetoes a bill, the Congress can pass it over his objections.
    So how, exactly, the current impasse the President’s fault?
    * He

      could

    decide a law is unconstitutional and then refuse to defend it court, I guess.

  9. (I really should look at the HTML standard, to learn the difference between “unnumbered list” and “underline.” 🙁 )

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