Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Purely Personal

"It's like you're looking through our windows" is a comment that cartoonists who specialize in family and relationship comics often hear from readers. It isn't a cliche, but rather a sign that they're hitting the target.

Comics that connect on a personal level are particularly welcome in the midst of a political crisis when it all becomes wearisome, and today I'm taking a break from deep thought for comics that hit me on a personal level rather than touching off some great societal ponderings.

But I'll ease you into it with this one, which touches both bases …

Marcej
I'm of two minds on the topic of "forced diversity," but in full agreement with Richard John Marcej on the topic of the futility of arguing with nitwits.

I would rather see new characters introduced than see established characters change race, sex or both, though I'd make an exception for inherited mantles like Dr. Who or the Phantom.

Now, yes, the Phantom has been literally inherited and Rex is waiting in the wings, but it wouldn't take much of a plot twist to have Rex decide he'd rather hang onto his throne and for the current Phantom to pass the title on to one of the locals, male or female.

Meanwhile, the kerfuffle over the Doctor's latest incarnation is simply stupid. Change is inherent in the series.

I do feel deciding established characters are not who you said they were seems lazy, even in a business that generally peddles established product in place of fresh concepts and thinks of "art" in graphic, not philosophical, terms.

Granted, people don't want New Coke, they want their old familiar Coke, and if you want to introduce a new product, you risk failure, but I remember when Mountain Dew was a new product. They've done pretty well with the same demographic comics aim for.

None of which has much to do with the futility of arguing with trolls and knuckleheads. Or of commenting at all on anything that has more than a dozen responses and expecting to be heard. 

I note that Baltimore's City Paper has gone out of business, long after its prized wise-ass column put targets for trolls on the strips that ran in the Sun.

You can still find people who consider themselves witty trolling those strips, many of which have changed artists and writers and been completely reborn since they were first singled out for hipster/lemming abuse.

This is turning into a rant, and I have one lined up for how you can't love "Animal House" and yet denounce GamerGate and other evidence of sexist, racist bullying.

Stay tuned while I stay light.

 

Wprep170805
Reply All reminded me of all the really cool clothes I had over the years, but then it occurred to me that it would take an expanding closet to hold them for future use.

No, not a closet whose capacity increases. A closet in which the clothing itself expands.

Staying light in mood is easier than doing so literally.

 

Prc170805
And speaking of my younger years, Scott Stantis has been rerunning Prickly City strips from 2005 in which Winslow was wooing a tortoise, and today's reminded me of a date I had in college with a striking countercultury blonde with hoop earrings, a paisley kerchief and fringey leather jacket, and we got to the local coffeehouse just as it was opening. 

So we ended up standing around talking with the proprietor, a campus celebrity of noted charm, who ostentatiously handed her a carnation and then turned his attention entirely to our (his and my) conversation. However, I soon noticed that he seemed distracted, and turned to realize that the young lady being ignored had begun to pick the petals off the flower and eat them.

It was a far better response than trying to force her way into the conversation.

She was one of the coolest people I ever went out with.

 

Pj
Pajama Diaries has been pinging more recent memories, as Amy begins her college search and her senior year in high school, both of which feel very familiar.

I will say, though, that the boys didn't touch me up for money once they had cars and jobs. Their allowances continued, and they had rarely touched me up for supplemental funds even before they were working, but certainly not after, which I think was a combination of their pride and their knowledge that I was about as broke as they were.

What I particularly remember about their senior years was getting up on a winter morning and finding three feet of snow in the driveway and a young man out there with the shovel because his car was buried right next to mine.

Sigh. Just about the time they become worth having around, they leave.

 

Lio170805
And Lio reminds me that the Perseid showers are next weekend, which in turn reminds me that I may not be battling city lights, since that's also when my high school holds its annual reunion deep in the Adirondacks.

I'm only day-hopping the trip, but I'll still be on the road and in the woods by dark, and I may have to pull over and enjoy the show for a bit.

 

The Book Nook

Comix
Mike Beede emailed to point out this charity fundraiser by HumbleBundle, in which you can pay what you want, with some very low minimums, and the proceeds go to charity while access to $395 worth of some pretty outstanding Fantagraphics comics goes to you.

I'd suggest that you pay more than the minimum and less than the retail price, and watch the calendar because the promotion doesn't last forever.

 

Franken
And, finally amidst this personal commentary, here's the best autograph I've ever scored.

My mother and younger son conspired to have Al Franken, who was out selling his new book, sign a blurb from a review I wrote for "Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot" back in 1996, which was used in the paperback edition.

Très cool, eh?

 

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Comments 16

  1. Re the whole Doctor Who kerfuffle…
    The thing for me was that here you have a show that’s been on for a half century, and in every iteration of the good doctor, he’s been this middle-aged-to-slightly-elderly white guy. Then, all of a sudden, the Beeb decides to bring in a very pretty, not-so-elderly-at-all blonde actress and suddenly say “Oh, the Doctor can be anything!”
    Now perhaps I’ve missed something in my casual viewing of Who for all these years, but in all that time, no one really mentioned his shape-shifting abilities all that much, save in going from one middle-aged-to-slightly-elderly white guy to another. He was never, for example, an eight-armed, pink-skinned G’horf’at or, if one needed something more “relatable”, anything other than white.
    Nope, he’s gone from a middle-aged-to-slightly-elderly white guy…
    … to a hot, blond, white chick…
    But we wont call it stunt casting. Nope, not us.
    I would have applauded the Beeb more if they brought in some version of Miss Marple to play the role instead of an actress whose sole purpose appears to be so that the producers can ride the bandwagon of “female empowerment!” From my humble POV, this was — again — just stunt casting to shore up a show that’s been jumping a few sharks of late. If, instead of the doctor’s other tradition of a sartorial style that leans towards casually ill-kempt, she shows up in a fairly tight cat suit, you’ll know I’m right. But no one will admit it.

  2. The autograph is indeed very cool. And worth more when he runs for president…. 🙂

  3. Very cool with the Franken autograph!
    The only thing that may come close that I have, is an autograph from Sergio Aragones, which is not only his signature, but came with a personalized caricature.

  4. No disagreement there, Sean, because you could say the same thing if he’d brought in a young, athletic white guy. And made him a snappy dresser.

  5. Well, Doctor’s 10 and 11 were not by any means “middle-aged”.

  6. And I would have. Frankly, I”m surprised we havent seen action dramas on the CW that star 12 year olds. It’s certainly headed in that direction because of “market forces”. 🙂

  7. I love the Franken autograph, great idea! My sisters asked him to inscribe a book to me, and he wrote “Hey Brian: Nice sisters!” That was nice; your “Genius!” is better.
    Marcej’s strip hit a slightly different spot with me. I know the numbnuts aren’t worth engaging, I know no reasonable argument has ever changed an unreasonable mind, but it aches to just let lies and garbage fester unchallenged, with the result that anyone stumbling across that comment thread might believe *everyone* feels that way. Not engaging is definitely correct, for both sanity’s and civility’s sake, but I’m beginning to wonder if simply stating “I disagree” might be worthwhile in a “stand up and be counted” way. Just letting the bile pile up seems cowardly, and gives the numbnuts more comfort than they deserve. I’m mulling.
    I like the Lio strip. Just want to note that, despite a meme currently rocketing around the Web, this Perseid shower will NOT be the brightest in history, nor will it light up the night sky as brightly as the sun. It’s just a nice meteor shower. That’s good enough.

  8. Huh. TIL that someone who’s still adorably boyish at age 33 is “middle-aged to slightly elderly.” As is, apparently, someone athletic and handsome at age 27.
    I’d hate to see what I’d be considered by this set of standards, since I’m in my 60s. Doddering, perhaps? Decrepit? Wizened?

  9. (And btw, Jodie Whittaker is 35.)

  10. (And I still think Jodie Whittaker was on “Family Affair”)

  11. I didn’t have a whole lot to do with that autograph. Delighted that the one who did also got an excellent autograph for me but she did the hard work. I remembering hating those who called themselves “idea” people and left the work for others. And yet, here I am…

  12. The TV nerd in me knows that it was Johnny Whitaker who played Jody on “Family Affair”.
    As for the whole female Doctor Who kerfuffle, I never understood it.
    We’ve HAD a female Time Lord (Lady?) already, Romana. Sure, she wasn’t the Doctor, per se, she was his companion, but she was still a Time Lord (Lady?) and actually regenerated at least once during her run on the series.
    Of course I realize that this happened ALL the way back in the 1970’s, which I’m sure to many of the angry Who posters, since it happened before they were born, it never happened.

  13. How long has it been since you actually read The Phantom? Or, did it simply slip your mind that the Phantom has twin children, Kit and Heloise, and Kit has been the presumed heir for some time now?

  14. Ha! A very long time. I did know about the twins and it occurred to me that, if Rex turned the gig down, one of them would be the heir presumptive, but didn’t want to weigh down the conversation with that detail.
    But the same thing applies. I could see a black Phantom take over the gig.

  15. There is no indication that they are ever going to let anyone succeed the current Phantom, who has held the job for 81 years. If they did, one way they could do what you are suggesting is to have the new Phantom marry a native woman.
    They are actually running into a time compression problem. The current Phantom is the 21st. But there was an animated series, Phantom 2040 who was the 24th Phantom. Either they will just ignore the continuity of the series (most likely), or Kit and his son will have very short terms as the Phantom. Chances are, the current Phantom will still be active in 2040. Yes, I do think about things like this too much.

  16. http://kipwblog.blogspot.com/search?q=bandar
    Toon River Anthology, part 8
    NO NAME*
    [*in the Bandar tongue]
    I was born to follow the proud destiny of my father
    And his father, and his father, and all their fathers
    All the way back to the first Phantom in 1536.
    I trained rigorously for years, learning science,
    Languages, literature, martial arts, armaments,
    Just as my fathers had before me.
    But our fathers could not teach us who to love,
    Or teach a heart to weigh consequences,
    And because my father followed his heart, rather than tradition,
    I was not suitable for my own destiny. I was miscast.
    Father seemed not to notice. Perhaps he was acting too,
    Perhaps he was truly oblivious. I played my part.
    He was pleased with me right up to the day of his death.
    And then I did what I had to do. I looked around
    And found another who could fill the role I couldn’t,
    And avenge my father’s death.
    I franchised my destiny. I gave my birthright to another
    For the sake of the legend of the undying Phantom.
    I found one, light-skinned, well-formed, strong, quick-thinking, ruthless.
    Now his dynasty will continue the work my forefathers did.
    Though I’ve grown fat and bald, I continue to advise him
    Behind the scenes. It’s best this way. After all,
    Who could ever believe in the myth of the eternal Ghost
    When confronted by an undersized half-Bandar
    With a round head made to wear a lampshade?
    originally published at the Comics Curmudgeon

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