Comic Strip of the Day Comic strips

CSotD: Comical Complaint Dept.

We’ll start in a good mood with a cartoon that hits several bullseyes. It’s the time of year where, if you haven’t got your woodpile already set up, you’re in trouble because green wood invites chimney fires.

And, yes, chopping wood is such a practical, important task that you can fool yourself into thinking it’s necessary and worthwhile if the alternative is banging your head against your desk hoping for inspiration.

I laugh at the size of his stack because I’ve been there, only I just piled up clean dishes. Cutting wood is better for you.

Well, getting to work is better for you, but never mind.

And here’s Scott Fitzgerald, flailing as he struggles to come up with clever phrases he can drop into his next novel. So many people have praised Gatsby that I gave it a second chance recently, but, having read Fitzgerald’s notebooks, I recognized some of his clever phrases and felt the disjoint elsewhere as he broke pace to drop in another prefab gem.

Fitzgerald was a very good writer, but great writers achieve a flow which may include a particularly memorable phrase or two. Memorable phrases, however, can’t be your goal and you can’t pile them up in advance like firewood.

BTW, this talk of firewood reminds me of one of my favorite quotes from Twain:

Write without pay until someone offers pay. If nobody offers within three years the candidate may look upon this as a sign that sawing wood is what he was intended for.

Which brings us here:

I wish I’d had today’s Pearls the other day when I wrote about people telling my young reporters to follow their dreams. Pig makes the critical point, which is that there is a very great difference between vague nostrums and genuine criticism and advice.

There is something you’re really good at and would enjoy, but maybe you need to knock the stardust out of your eyes before you can see what it is. I used to ask kids what someone should do who loved sports but would never be a pro, but who also had fun babysitting, and they would quickly suggest a job teaching phys ed and coaching.

If being a high school coach is your goal but you end up quarterbacking an NFL team, you’ll get over it. The trick is to flip that plan and still come out smiling.

The only complaint here is the number of cartoonists making back-to-school seem like total misery. I was always happy to get back with my friends, but there was often something I hadn’t gotten around to, which was less a cause for disappointment than a springboard for dreaming of next year.

A kid’s reach should exceed his grasp, or what’s a summer for?

Okay, here’s a complaint: Eldest son lives on a hilltop farm several miles from the nearest streetlight, and even further from the nearest little town, and Harry Bliss lives in JD Salinger’s old hideaway not so far from there. They get fabulous lightshows nearly every night while I’m down in town between buildings that would block the stars if the ambient lighting didn’t cancel them out anyway.

Red and Rover is set in an indefinite past in which I think even kids who lived in town could see the sky at night. Unfortunately, we’ve nearly all had to come in since then.

Fortunately, some people are working on the problem.

Now for the truly petty gripes

I remember when the Sporting News’ World Series coverage included declaring a “goat” and a “hero” for each game. It triggered a lot more interesting and passionate conversations than does arguing over who is the “Greatest Of All Time,” mostly because YA Tittle and Otto Graham played a very different game than Tom Brady and Joe Montana.

And also because most of the people passionately declaring GOATs aren’t old enough to have seen Tittle and Graham.

Well, yeah, the good men will all be taken if you wait that long. I wouldn’t mind seeing what Leroy and Loretta looked like when they were young, and I assume they’ve been married since the dawn of time, given how tired of each other they seem to be now.

I was — to borrow a term from Jed Clampett’s mother-in-law — a hairy little goomer when I got married at 21. By the time I was bald, I was at a stage of life where, if I’d wanted a second chance, I’d have been awfully darn choosy.

Love is lovelier the second time around
Just as wonderful with both feet on the ground
It’s that second time you hear your love song sung
It makes you think perhaps that love, like youth, is wasted on the young

Hair is also wasted on the young, but nobody writes songs about that.

Kids show up for the first day of school with a brand-new box of Crayons, a notebook, a calculator and a box of Kleenex, but kids staggering under backpacks filled with books should be coming from the building, not heading towards it. But to include the school requires — or at least suggests — this layout.

Similar perspective issue: The layout of a horizontal strip dictates left to right, but putting them in the near, righthand lane would cut off the 18-wheeler.

If this cartoon were set in Japan, McCoy wouldn’t have faced the problem, because we’d read the panel right to left. Flipping the direction would provide space to put everyone on the correct side of the road.

Except that, in Japan, they drive on the left, so this layout would work anyway.

Not sure about those helmets, but I’m more distracted by remembering a TV show about nuclear war, which I thought was Playhouse 90’s adaptation of Alas, Babylon, but reading the summary of the story makes me think it was something else.

Whatever it was, it involved having a fallout shelter and having to lock out your neighbors and extended family, which I think led a lot of people to decide survival might not be worth it, even if the shelter’s built to code and actually works.

Perhaps “especially if.”

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Comments 23

  1. I always find it a bit confusing when people use “GOAT” in the newer sense, because I grew up with the old sense. But now, I like to say that Charlie Brown is the GOAT goat.

  2. I was confused the first times that I heard a top athlete being called the GOAT.
    Because I always remembered Charlie Brown being the goat. “Baaaah!”
    Every time they lost a game.

  3. Red & Rover – Where I live, the best you can see is the Big Dipper in the summer and Orion in the winter, and a few random stars too disconnected from any other to tell what constellation they’re in.

    Prickly City – Most public schools can’t afford textbooks, so kids have to bring their own.

    The Duplex – “Why does Japan drive on the left side of the road?” more like “Why does America drive on the right?” we’re just about the only country in the world that does so. We also still use the ridiculous Imperial system instead of Metric, because yay tradition?

    1. Have never heard of kids in public schools furnishing their own texts. Examples??

      1. In the 60’s, early 70’s, we had to buy our own texts in southern Indiana.

    2. I’m also curious where in the US the elementary schoolchildren are required to provide their own books. I’ve always thought of that as a private school thing.

      1. I’d like to think those tomes the kids are bringing to school are the summer reading list books that some school systems require their students to read before September begins.

        (speaking as a former bookseller who would get inundated with requests to order books in late August that the kids should have had in June…)

    3. A quick search says that 174 countries drive on the right side and 78 countries drive left side. Since 174 is much greater than 78, and in any event is nowhere close to 1, your “just about the only country” claim seems to be unsupported.

      Also, right side driving is objectively better, the reason being that, assuming the driver will be seated on the center-of-the-road side of the car, this puts the driver’s right hand toward the center of the car. Since about 90% of people are right handed, this makes manipulating other controls (radio, heater, coffee cup) easier for most people.

      1. 174 + 78 =252. AI says that the generally accepted number of countries is somewhere around 195, give or take a couple. Places like Bangalla are not real countries.

  4. The Shelter(Twilight Zone, Season 3, Episode 3)

    1. Sounds right, and about the same time as Alas Babylon. I’d have been 10 for Playhouse 90 and 11 for this, old enough to understand the lesson, young enough to get a scar. And young enough to forget exactly where it came from. Thx!

  5. You might be thinking of the Twilight Zone episode titled “The Shelter,” about a man who won’t let his neighbors into his shelter and the bad behavior it brings out in everyone.

    I enjoyed both getting out of school for the summer and going back in the fall. It still makes me happy to see school supplies in the stores and, for a moment, thinking about what notebooks and such I’d buy.

    That “Red and Rover” is lovely. It’s one of the best strips currently running.

    Your mention of the “very great difference between vague nostrums and genuine criticism and advice” reminds me that more people want vague nostrums than you’d expect. I am occasionally asked by young cartoonists for my opinion of their work. I learned early on that very few people are interested in genuine criticism and advice. Maybe one out of twenty. The other nineteen only want to hear that they’re terrific, they don’t need to change a thing, and I can get them a book deal (spoiler: I cannot). So I very quickly size a person up and, if I think they have a professional attitude, I treat them like a pro and give it to ’em straight. Otherwise, they get vague nostrums and go away happy. (I also always say that my opinion is just mine, there’s a fair chance it’s wrong, and they should feel free to ignore it if it’s not helpful.)

    1. “I could have been kinder, but we needed the firewood.”

  6. As to what side of the road it should have been…I immediately took it for an Interstate Highway and the semi was (very) slowly passing the car on the right and holding everyone up. That used to bother me when I was driving to or from work (I had long commutes for most of my working life). Now I just shrug. The panel doesn’t really suggest that, but we interpret everything in our own way.

    1. Car on the right appears to be oncoming.

      1. On closer inspection, indeed it does…but that’s not what I saw when I just took it in. Post traumatic driving disorder, I guess. (Driving in Ireland was the scariest thing I’ve ever done. Just like the Motorcycle Song…I could go into the mountain or over the cliff whenever a bus came at me. And having to concentrate so hard was…hard. Not to mention looking the correct way when crossing the street.)

      2. @BenR: I found driving in Ireland not scary, but also not easy. It helped to have adult son riding in the left seat, reminding me (sometimes with urgency) not to drift too far to the left. (Inattention causes your brain to want to be in its normal position to the left of the center of the lane, not to suddenly drive on the wrong side.) Only casualty was the left outside mirror (against a telephone pole) on the second day.

  7. I, too, remember when “goat” was a bad thing to be. Of course, the editor in me recognizes the difference between “goat” and “GOAT”. My high school chemistry teacher would sometimes be open to joking and laughter in class, and other times had no tolerance for it. She signaled her moods with a stuffed animal. If the frog was out, all was well. If the bull came out, watch out! Someone who who crossed her threshold would be sent to the principal’s office with an infraction, and the cause would just be the word “goat.” It may not have been the person who deserved it, but the office knew the teacher’s methods and knew that the student was simply the scapegoat for the class.

  8. My wife was a high school English teacher, and she shared with her class that when her classmates got rowdy (never her, of course!) in kindergarten the teacher would put masking tape on their mouth. Couldn’t get away with that now!

    Anyways, when her class got loud she’d firmly say “Masking tape on!” Worked like a charm, oddly enough.

  9. I don’t remember where I saw it, but a sportswriter opined that a better term than GOAT (Greatest of All Time) was GOTT (Greatest of THEIR Time).
    How do you compare the game played by George Mikan with the one played by Michael Jordan to the one played by LeBron James?
    Or compare Sammy Baugh (who threw an elongated pumpkin) to Tom Brady (who threw a slightly deflated football) to yardage machines like Marino and Fouts?

  10. There are some great books out there on three-point perspective.

  11. I’m a bit surprised to see kids pictures with textbooks at all—my kids have all their lessons in some form of iPad app with the occasional worksheet—I didn’t see a physical textbook come home until my oldest took AP history his senior year.

    Now, if the cartoon kids had their backpacks loaded down with cases of Kleenex it might be more accurate.

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