Frazz by Jef Mallett for March 10, 2017

  1. Linkingbookchannelwood
    toahero  almost 8 years ago

    Early to rise and Early to bed,Makes a man healthy, but socially dead.

     •  Reply
  2. Figaro 1
    Wilde Bill  almost 8 years ago

    If you repeat something enough times, people start to believe it.

     •  Reply
  3. Bluedog
    Bilan  almost 8 years ago

    Franklin probably never went to bed early in his entire life.

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    KenTheCoffinDweller  almost 8 years ago

    From what has been written about him in the past several decades, not alone at least.

     •  Reply
  5. Boston
    MS72  almost 8 years ago

    and how much of “the comics” is just to meet deadlines

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    tcumming  almost 8 years ago

    Oh NOoooo o o …. daylight savings time starts Sunday

     •  Reply
  7. Ron guitar avatar
    StratmanRon  almost 8 years ago

    Early to bed, Early to rise starts enforcing itself the older I get. But I don’t mind – I’ve always been a ‘sunrise’ kind of person!

     •  Reply
  8. Watermelon avv
    car2ner  almost 8 years ago

    Early to bed, early to rise means you don’t get to run video game dungeons with team mates in later time zones

     •  Reply
  9. Perspective from below
    Eliezer  almost 8 years ago

    As with many aphorisms, the converse is more interesting: Late to bed and late to rise makes you sick, poor, and stupid.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    Stephen Gilberg  almost 8 years ago

    “Early to bed and early to rise/Makes a man stupid and blind in the eyes.” —Mazer Rackham, written by Orson Scott Card

     •  Reply
  11. Tf 117
    RAGs  almost 8 years ago

    Early to bed depends on how you set your clock.

     •  Reply
  12. Large steve45
    JP Steve Premium Member almost 8 years ago

    “Early to bed and early to rise is for the birds and uncivilized.”

     •  Reply
  13. 580x557xwill rogers copy 600x577 jpg pagespeed ic eupwtvdnol
    mauser7  almost 8 years ago

    Some history, most of those were created to full the space on a page back in the days of hand set type, and continued into the time of offset presses (see Readers Digest back in the last century). If a story was to long to fit you could edit (cut) it to fit. BUT if it was a little to short, you couldn’t always add more to it. Hence the use of a short pithy saying or trivia, or odd facts to fill the space. Usually at the bottom of the story/page.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frazz