Comic Strip of the Day Comic Strips

CSotD: The Attack of the Dreaded ‘Actually’

Here’s one of my favorite “actuallys,” because modesty is the least of the Invisible Man’s problems, starting with the fact — and I use the word “fact” recognizing that we’re starting a long way from facts to begin with — but starting with the fact that, actually, in order to be invisible, he’d have to fast and do a more rigorous system cleanse than a mere colonoscopy prep.

But he’s got a bigger problem to deal with, since having transparent retinas would give light no place to focus, rendering him totally blind.

I realize I’m supposed to back off and enjoy an Invisible Man movie, not nitpick it to death. I think it was Sophocles who wrote, “Just repeat to yourself ‘It’s just a show, I should really just relax.'”

There is a “willing suspension of disbelief” required to enjoy much of the entertainment media, and Siskel & Ebert used to speak of “idiot plots,” which were movies in which having one intelligent character speak up would have resolved the whole thing. It’s not just science fiction and action movies in which you can pick things apart and ruin it all; screwball comedies rely on everybody in the movie actually being a screwball.

Knowing how hard it is to hit anything with a pistol shouldn’t keep you from enjoying an action movie in which the heroes are deadshots and the villains can’t quite hit anything. But when the hero hangs onto a jet in flight, well, now the idiot factor is not in the script but in the audience.

I’ve no doubt you could produce action flicks with AI and they’d be just as popular as handmade ones, because Weenus and Eight Ball are right: Original material is neither expected nor demanded.

I cited Topkapi the other day as the granddaddy of heist films, but what difference does it make whether all those replicated plot elements were scraped by AI or ripped off by a roomful of hack writers?

Check it out yourself: Watch the original 1968 Thomas Crown Affair with Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway, and then watch the 1999 remake with Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo and ‘splain to me why an AI version would be any more derivative and inartistic.

Wiley offers a more challenging mindgame, which is finding the crossover points that delineate belief, agnosticism and atheism.

Most of the Founders seem to have been Deists, which means they didn’t believe in harps and clouds, but suspected there was something out there, or at least had been at the beginning.

But there is also a type of agnostic who behaves morally just in case there’s an afterlife, which suggests that, like the Deist, he skews vaguely towards belief without committing.

Meanwhile, there’s actually no difference between an atheist and a fundamentalist: They’re both absolutely certain about something neither one of them can prove.

Juxtaposition of the Day

I’m seeing a lot of chatter about bear/human interactions, which may be a real issue or it just might be something getting more attention than it used to. This pair illustrates all you need to know, which is that blackies are mostly a nuisance but polar bears, like grizzlies, can actually be a threat.

Which is why, while we used to drive up to the dump at sundown in our own cars and toss marshmallows to the blackies, if you go to Churchill to see polar bears, you’ll find yourself in something a great deal less ursine-accessible.

Black bears are like moose, in that while they’re mostly harmless, “powerful” and “stupid” can be a nasty combination. The dumps are all closed now, and you don’t want to encourage them to hang around your house, because it never works out well, the operative phrase being “A fed bear is a dead bear.”

Actually, most wildlife is best appreciated at a distance.

Juxtaposition of the Day #2

Speaking of nuisances, marauding black bears don’t begin to compare with leaf-blowing neighbors. There are places, notably California, in which gas-powered leaf blowers are banned or restricted, but not here and, since my house backs up on commercial properties, I get to hear them start at about 7 a.m. so they can be done by opening time.

Apparently they’re legal in Australia, where both Jess Harwood and Cate Blanchett live. Which disrupts Australia’s reputation as a place safe from abuses the rest of the world must endure.

Wallace the Brave either read the long-range weather predictions or had an exceptional stroke of luck, producing a story arc about trick-or-treating in the rain, which kids around here will be doing in a few hours.

I don’t know if it’s a sign of climate change, but I remember several Halloweens as the first snowfall of the season, and our costumes always had to fit over snowsuits.

However, I grew up in the Adirondacks, and now live in the more temperate Connecticut River Valley. I just looked up the weather prediction back home and, actually, they’re predicting snow to start at 5 pm, which is just as I remember things.

Gonna have to hit Trudeau with a charge of Old-Fartism here. It’s kind of like, when same-sex marriage first became legal, asking people “But which of you is the husband and which one is the wife?”

It’s not quite a dumb question, but, in retrospect, it seems awfully naive and we ought to be well past both issues by now.

The next-generation hyphenation quandry was widely discussed back in the mid70s/early 80s when couples first began hyphenating, but their kids are now closing in on 50 and mostly all dealt with it long ago.

Some hyphenated kids dropped one name, some without hyphens each kept their original names, but I don’t know anyone who double-hyphenated. What I know is that there have been some parental knickers in a knot over how their kids resolved the matter.

But, actually, I can’t think of a better way to begin a marriage than by accepting those knotted knickers as a healthy opportunity to establish that, if you’re old enough to marry, you’re old enough to make your own decisions.

If you want your love to last.

Previous Post
Michael Heath, Senior Stripper
Next Post
The Reverend Mister Cartoonist

Comments 31

  1. Sorry, but you’ll take my leaf blower from my cold, dead, fingers . . . . . .

    Not that I use it that often. For about a four week period a hit the driveway every 4-5 days to clear it (there’s this little matter of fallen leaves and a touch of rain are like black ice to a motorcycle), and by 15 November both my deciduous trees in the front yard have cleared their branches completely. So out comes the lawn mower with bagger, a load a huge garbage bags, and in one afternoon fall leaves are a memory.

    1. I was going to come on for my yearly old-man rant about mowing your leaves. I have a battery powered mower so it isn’t even loud! And we have a compost here in near-Madison, Wisconsin, so I just load up the garbage cans and go add them to the pile (the leaves, not the plastic garbage cans); no bags needed. I do keep around an old leaf blower to clear out the the leaves in the gutters once or twice a year; don’t know what I’ll do once that gives out. I also use it occasionally to clear out the bushes, etc. I must admit to being lazy rather than conscientious. Less snow here in Wisconsin means that our snow blower is feeling like Puff. Ooooh…a new name for an inanimate object!

  2. I now live on a gravel road, in rural WI, where I jokingly say that we sometimes have two cars go by during a day– the mail person going by and the mailperson going back. I raked wayyyyy more leaves when I lived in the city, to the point that the grass died on my terrace died because the leaves were piled hip deep for weeks until the city picked them up.

    Now, I have woods around my property, but not tight to the house. We mow twice during autumn when the leaves blow into our lawn.

    1. I’ve always said my ideal house would be the second to the last house on the road. The last house is where the guy lives who drives the town plow.

  3. Thanks for the Mystery Science 3000 reference! Happy Halloween.

  4. Many of the atheists I run into on the internet (as opposed to the ones I know in real life) seems to have BEEN Christian fundamentalists. And they’ve changed the details without actually changing the black/white was of thinking. They’ve gone from “There’s something wrong with you if you aren’t a Christian!” to “There’s something wrong with you if you aren’t an atheist!”

    1. That also seems to apply to people who begin as hardcore conservatives and become hardcore radicals. They believe in absolutes, such that, if they lose faith in one, they’ll adopt its polar opposite.

      1. Im an agnostic but the problem I run into is, I have to explain the term.
        Oh so you’re an atheist.
        No, there’s a difference. (I try to explain).
        They get a confused look and wander off.

  5. >Most of the Founders seem to have been Deists<
    This is not so. There were a handful of Deists – Jefferson, Franklin, maybe a few others.
    Jefferson never self-labeled himself as such. Most of the founders were 'Anglicans' who became 'Episcopalians' after Independence. With some Presbyterians, some Quakers, and some Baptists.

  6. >Meanwhile, there’s actually no difference between an atheist and a fundamentalist: They’re both absolutely certain about something neither one of them can prove.<

    This is not so. No 'belief' is required to be an 'atheist'. Anyone who is not a theist, is an atheist. An affirmative belief in the absence of deities is not a required property for the class. Merely the absence of a belief in any deity is sufficient. Lacking belief is NOT the same thing as believing in the lack.

    It's a big tent. You can believe in spirits and chakras and reincarnation even, but if you don't believe in any *deities* – like Zeus, Thor, Osiris, Jehovah, Baal, or Shiva then you're an atheist.

    1. hmmm…guess I’m a deist. I believe in the baseball gods that regularly crap on the Brewers. They’ve gone from decades of giving me no hope for my Brewers to teasing us with a string of hopeless post seasons. I’m not sure which is more cruel.

  7. you know the invisble man was just a really good hypnotist, dont you?

    1. Source? Wells doesn’t seem to have mentioned it.

    1. My wife’s cousin (a generation younger though), avoided hyphenating by merging – first syllable of one’s last name coupled with the last syllable of the other’s last name.

  8. We bought a battery operated blower rated for high flow and low noise. it works as advertised to clean off our deck but my wife didn’t like it at first. She thought it wasn’t moving as much air as it should because it didn’t sound like an F-4 taking off.

  9. Those in areas with neighbors who are not getting paid or are worried about SNAP may want to give out some nutritious food along with the candy tonight.

  10. The Tick has a unique crime-fighting partner: the “Visible Man”. His skin is invisible, so you see his muscles, tendons, eye sockets, lower intestines, etc. His superpower is that when bad guys see him, they stop in their tracks because they’re so disgusted, and the lengthy time it takes for them to try not to retch enables law enforcement to swoop in for the uncontested arrest.

    1. Wasn’t the Visible Man a plastic model we could buy in the 70s? 😉

      IIRC, it looked just like the sidekick you describe.

      1. Yes, and a Visible Woman also, who could be switched between pregnant and not pregnant.

    2. There’s also the Invisible Boy of the Mystery Men, who’s only invisible when you’re not looking at him.

  11. Oh but you don’t really seem to know the atheists I do (well most of them). Mine (and I among them) just say: well it’s extremely unlikely there’s a god and that they don’t believe in them but sure, if you can show me there is something out there, go ahead. Until you do I’m just going to keep not believing. And as of yet, nobody has proven anything. I suppose there are fundamentalist atheist out there that need everyone to think their way but not all of us are there.

    And you are so totally wrong about both atheists and agnostics behaving morally because there might be an afterlife. We just behave morally because that’s what decent people do, never mind whether there’s karma or we get punished or paid. This is actually one of my biggest pet peeves with Christianity, the God-fearing aspect of it. If you only do good because you fear you’ll be punished if you don’t that really means you’re not a good person.

    1. I’d consider that to be more agnostic than atheist. Agnostics: show me! Atheists: a don’t care what your evidence is. God doesn’t exist.

      I don’t have a source, but it’s probably from one of the Jeremy Hardy Speaks to the Nation shows: “They say that all morality comes from religion. That’s true–I’m an atheist and I don’t understand all that right and wrong stuff.”

      1. Not sure about that, in my mind an agnostic is really one who would say, well, I suppose there might be something out there I doubt it but won’t rule it out. Atheist is pretty sure there’s nothing but would possibly change their mind if there was evidence. A thin line to draw though, I suppose.

    2. Carrots and sticks are fine for training donkeys. Humans, not so much.

  12. An agnostic I used to work with told me their creed was “Oh God /if there is a god/ Save my soul/if I have a soul/from Hell/if there is a hell/

  13. A commenter at Go Comics remarked on Non Sequitur that St Peter looked an awful lot like Alan Ginsberg.

  14. I am a fundamentalist who is committed to treating everyone kindly and politely, includingcentrist. might disagree with me. I discuss my beliefs with my atheist son, without either of us having killed the other.

    His rejection of the Bibliical God is moral. He does nor feel that God is what he would describe as good.

    We are both good citizens, helping the less fortunate and powerless, and appalled by the hatred so commonly seen.

    FWIW, his politics are far left, mine are centerist.

  15. That comic about leaf blowers is too nice. Of course people who use them know that their neighbors hate them. It’s like doing an explainer for people who drive on your bumper or have loud-as-sin anti-mufflers on their trucks.

Comments are closed.

Search

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get a daily recap of the news posted each day.