Frazz by Jef Mallett for October 12, 2014
Transcript:
Caulfield: Why do I have to show my work? I got the right answer. Mrs. Olsen: God is in the details, Caulfield. Caulfield: You know who said that? Mrs. Olsen: It doesn't matter who said it. Caulfield: Minoru Yamasaki said that. You know what else he said? Less is more. Frazz: Yamasaki didn't say those. Miles Van der Rohe did. Caulfield: I didn't have to know the right details. I just had to know more of them.
LeoAutodidact about 10 years ago
It is nice of Mallett to “straighten out” the attributions.
(I wonder what the “Most Quoted” Comic Strip is?)
Chrisdiaz801 about 10 years ago
Mr. Contradictor of the month: Caufleld!
KZ71 about 10 years ago
Is it a scary thing that I knew Mies van der Rohe said that even before Frazz’s punchline?
nosirrom about 10 years ago
elysummers about 10 years ago
Perhaps Caulfield should realize that mostly right is NOT right. You can’t bake a cake with MOST of the correct ingredients. He has a long way to go . .
bsqnbay about 10 years ago
In answering Caufield’s question, the proper response should have been, “Because I am requiring you to show your work.” He does not need to know her motive.
M O'Driscoll Premium Member about 10 years ago
The attribution to Ludwig Mies van der Rohe is wrong. The full version is “the good God is in the detail” by Gustave Flaubert. Flaubert died before Rohe was born. Obviously we need to know this because “God is in the detail” and because all these faulty attributions on the Internet are a complete pain in the …..
unca jim about 10 years ago
“If you cant dazzle them with brilliance, then baffle them with BS” seems to be Caulfield’s mantra.
Fido (aka Felix Rex) about 10 years ago
Watch out there, Ms Olsen — using “God” in class will get you into trouble. You may have some litigious-minded atheists in your little charges.
puddleglum1066 about 10 years ago
“Less is more” is also the basic evolutionary strategy of bacteria, which shed genes pretty much the instant they are not immediately useful. So if you want your buildings to be like bacteria, it’s a great strategy.
Bill D. Kat Premium Member about 10 years ago
If Frazz is so smart, why can’t he get a better job than janitor?
Stephen Gilberg about 10 years ago
Caulfield needs a new teacher. She’s too easy for him.
lynnskay about 10 years ago
It has always been “the devil’s in the details” where I come from. This is the first time I ever saw it written (or said) with “God” in the details. Sounds strange to me. I never really gave it much thought or wondered who said it first, just another idiom passed on with little consideration to what it might mean.
Having given it a little thought, (If you’re not interested in my thoughts you may go on to the next comment now.) I think it could not be God. He is not interested in the details, He is interested in Faith deserving of Grace. The devil, however, would be interested in pushing detail to the extent of causing confusion and failure. I will stop now because if I go on you will call it preaching and that is not my intent, nor is this the place for it.
Mary McNeil Premium Member about 10 years ago
“Caulfield, you have to show the work in math to prove you understand how to solve the problem, and that you did your own work. Because, while I know you are smart enough to understand the process, I also know you are lazy enough to just copy off someone else!”
jondelfin Premium Member about 10 years ago
Point of order: Mies was quoting Robert Browning (“Andrea del Sarto”).
Nick Danger about 10 years ago
Caulfield’s last line is the mantra of political ad-makers everywhere…