Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for March 04, 2021

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    BE THIS GUY  almost 4 years ago

    He can call himself a mixologist if he can make a decent Manhattan.

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    Aldew Yellowson  almost 4 years ago

    A mixologist is a glorified bartender.

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    Baarorso  almost 4 years ago

    A "mixologist* is a “bartender” that gets better tips. ’D

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    BasilBruce  almost 4 years ago

    “Barista” was invented by people who were ashamed of having to work at Starbucks.

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    Templo S.U.D.  almost 4 years ago

    is Rat going to rub it in every time he’ll frequent to Nick’s bar… pub… tavern… whatever you call it?

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    wiatr  almost 4 years ago

    There is a plethora of times I’ve used that term.

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    Concretionist  almost 4 years ago

    Can he mixolydian? (I dunno, hum a few bars)

    https://musictales.club/article/7-songs-featuring-mixolydian-mode

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    PICTO  almost 4 years ago

    Do real estate agents have a plethora of lots…?

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    Packratjohn Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    El Guapo : Would you say I have a plethora of pinatas?

    Jefe : A what?

    El Guapo : A plethora.

    Jefe : Oh yes, you have a plethora.

    El Guapo : Jefe, what is a plethora?

    Jefe : Why, El Guapo?

    El Guapo : Well, you told me I have a plethora. And I just would like to know if you know what a plethora is. I would not like to think that a person would tell someone he has a plethora, and then find out that that person has no idea what it means to have a plethora.

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    GROG Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    It’s like callling yourself a sanitation engineer rather than a janitor.

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    artsyguy65  almost 4 years ago

    Days like today are why I’m an aficionado of this strip.

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    tudza Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    I had a mixologist license for a couple years. Means I passed a state test on when to cut people off and had nothing to do with making a decent Manhattan.

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    ronaldspence  almost 4 years ago

    People can use any description they want for themselves but the proof is in. the product…

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    Caldonia  almost 4 years ago

    Oh, don’t be such cranks. Neither of you even have jobs. These characters are pretty elitist sometimes.

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    jmarkoff2  almost 4 years ago

    “Escape artist? I don’t paint with the stuff! I’m an escapologist!”

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    nosirrom  almost 4 years ago

    When I worked as a programmer they gave us fancy titles like:

    PA – Programmer Analyst

    SA – System Analyst

    SPA – Senior Programmer Analyst

    Personally I always thought of myself as an Application Software Specialist.

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    Sanspareil  almost 4 years ago

    After he uses the word "Plethora’he delves into the word “Dearth”

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    AndreasMartin  almost 4 years ago

    He could also add ‘psychologist’, ‘therapist’ and ‘professional poison murderer’.

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    iggyman  almost 4 years ago

    Just like a sewer worker is called a “Sanitary Engineer”!

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    pekelopan Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Cute strip today. It gave me a laugh. Will have to make some room on the refrigerator for a new addition.

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    TampaFanatic1  almost 4 years ago

    Like an exotic dancer = stripper, domestic engineer = housewife or house husband, custodial engineer = janitor, adjunct professor = part time instructor without benefits and $h!t wages (I work with some of these good people and many colleges and universities really bone these people and a lot of them were the first ones who got cut when class enrolments dropped during the pandemic) and sewage plant worker= biological waste management engineer…..

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    Walrus Gumbo Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    And they only wait on hotties that use made up words like, “ginormous”.

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    Gent  almost 4 years ago

    I guess Jef the cylicst calls himself as fitness freakologist these days. Well, he a freak anyways.

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    cdward  almost 4 years ago

    Apparently, pig is the type who says “plethora.”

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    Imagine  almost 4 years ago

    Words. I have the best words.

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    James Wolfenstein  almost 4 years ago

    Don’t get me started on the “baristas”…

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    some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    I want to draw the line at “musicologist”, but I find I cannot.

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    MayCauseBurns  almost 4 years ago

    Now there’s a job for a robot.

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    WoodstockJack  almost 4 years ago

    I’m a bartender who just got a raise.

    I’m a mixologist who didn’t get a raise.

    Alternative compensation sucks.

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    backyardcowboy  almost 4 years ago

    Dermatologist who drives a taxi?? Taxi-Dermist

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    Purple People Eater  almost 4 years ago

    We have a few things like that in Icelandic. There was a group of people who used to be called “cleaning ladies”, but now their called “cleaning technicians”. I think the main reason for the change was money. Technicians get paid more than cleaning ladies.

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    cracker65  almost 4 years ago

    Employers seem to want to give their employees important sounding titles. I guess factory worker, or bartender doesn’t sound glamorous enough.

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    mjb515  almost 4 years ago

    He is a bartender who is also a pretentious git.

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    Imagine  almost 4 years ago

    Soldier instead of cannon fodder.

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    Ignatz Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Polysyllabic verbosity provides the mixologist a rationalization to bluster.

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    Andrew Sleeth  almost 4 years ago

    He and Jef the Cyclist should team up.

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    Nuliajuk  almost 4 years ago

    Plethora pants look just like leather from a distance, on a cloudy day.

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    Ellis97  almost 4 years ago

    You just made that up to make you sound smart.

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    Aladar30 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Pretty much.

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    monya_43  almost 4 years ago

    Used to be a secretary now an executive assistant. Same paycheck for the fancy title.

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    elbow macaroni  almost 4 years ago

    Open season on a good vocabulary.

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    david_42  almost 4 years ago

    I don’t do mixed drinks much. Give me a bartender who can put a pint of beer in a 16 oz glass.

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    Gameguy49 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Plethora is a better substitute for lots than is tons. I hate when, on an HGTV show where they say the windows let in TONS of light. That’s as absurd as gallons of apples or miles of pudding.

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    Eristic  almost 4 years ago

    I’m a ‘myriad’ man myself.

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    rickseg  almost 4 years ago

    There was a super market chain around here that called their butchers “meat preparation specialists”. They actually had that spelled out on their hats. Cracked me up every time I shopped there.

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    FassEddie  almost 4 years ago

    He’s the one who says utilize in place of use. Don’t waste my time, Squirrel-bait!

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    Cozmik Cowboy  almost 4 years ago

    A “mixologist” is a bartender who:

    1) Wears a huge beard & ironic hat

    2) Only knows how to make the various “martini” drinks the hipsters so seem to dig (and that have nothing to do with a martini except the glass they’re served in), and

    3) Neither tells jokes nor laughs at yours.

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    rickseg  almost 4 years ago

    One of my favorite changes in titles was for the Graphics department where I worked to “Visual Communications.” Followed a few weeks later by the change of “Maintenance” to “Facility Operations”. I believe this all started back in the 70s when they changed the “Personnel” departments of various companies and organisations to “Human Resources”.

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    gigagrouch  almost 4 years ago

    Meh. Just another artiste.

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    Louis in Joliet  almost 4 years ago

    My father, long since retired, has decided to start working from home during the pandemic. What does he do, now? He is a bartender.

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    John Mason Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    At least there’s no fourth panel. Pastis couldn’t help but trot out “Thanks, that means a lot”.

    https://punstoppable.com/plethora-puns

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    Mr. Snuffles  almost 4 years ago

    A “mixologist” is a millennial version of a bartender

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    joefearsnothing  almost 4 years ago

    Pastis uses lots of pun plethora! ;o}

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    Otis Rufus Driftwood  almost 4 years ago

    So where did garbage men calling themselves ‘sanitation engineers’?

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    Lee26 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Had a dad who frequented a bar called Don’s Tavern. It wasn’t fun having an alcoholic dad, but it made me disdainful of ever going into a bar and drinking….which was a good thing. I have a low opinion of all bars as a result.

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    StratmanRon  almost 4 years ago

    Hey, c’mon! ‘Plethora’ is an AWESOME word!

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    mike75035  almost 4 years ago

    He’ll probably be elected to Congress in New York.

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    Squoop  almost 4 years ago

    The answer is indubitably in the affirmative.

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    Squoop  almost 4 years ago

    It all started back when stewardesses became flight attendants.

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    raybarb44  almost 4 years ago

    Oui…..

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    Bookworm  almost 4 years ago

    I once knew an arrogant mixologist / who looked down on us barkeeps, the lot of us. / What we did with his title / Made it quite vital / That he seek the aid of a proctologist.

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    Carl Rennhack Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Back in the 1970s Dear Old Mom worked at some taverns in Glendale, NY. Most of her daytime customers were retirees whose idea of a “mixed drink” was a shot of Fleischman’s Whiskey & a Rheingold chaser. One day she got stick with a rookie who had graduated from “bartending school” & who insisted on being called a “mixologist”. The guy didn’t last more than two days!

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    gbars70  almost 4 years ago

    I have a plethora of comments concerning my mixology abilities, however, sadly I feel they would not be welcomed here at this time.

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    Perkycat  almost 4 years ago

    I love the word ‘plethora’ and use it when I can. I guess I’m one of those people. But that’s okay ~ my friends and family put up with me.

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    WCraft Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    I prefer words which are sesquipedalian.

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    Greyhame  almost 4 years ago

    IIRC, the practice can be traced to Napoleon, who passed out fancy titles instead of promotions.

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    KEA  almost 4 years ago

    he got the title instead of a raise

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    stamps  almost 4 years ago

    There’s a distinct dearth of humor in this strip.

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    the lost wizard  almost 4 years ago

    Internet Influencer.

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    khcm1157  almost 4 years ago

    Indubitably.

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    Ratkin Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    I just dinged an author on a book review I wrote for repeatedly using cerulean. There are other ways to say blue. Another word in novels that bugs me is sallow. Does anyone ever use sallow in real life? I was in law enforcement for 26 years and heard complexions described often, (light, dark, pale, pasty, acned, Hispanic, etc.) but never as sallow. Would you recognize a sallow complexion if you saw one?

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    Jack Dawson  almost 4 years ago

    The difference is one charges twice as much for the same drink.

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    57BelAir  almost 4 years ago

    He’s mixed up.

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    Ukko wilko  almost 4 years ago

    I don’t trust mixologists. I drink straight on the rocks.

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    rshive  almost 4 years ago

    What if one has lots of pleths?

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    BeniHanna6 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Better title is ‘pompous arse’,

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    TSRaman  almost 4 years ago

    “Plethora” has the connotation of “excessive” — a very large amount of something, usually more than is needed or can be used. “A lot” does not have it.

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    Publius10608218  almost 4 years ago

    I can’t decide if Rat is the voice of reason or harsh reality.

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    ilovecomics*infinity  almost 4 years ago

    I mean, if that was my job I would definitely prefer to wake up every morning as a mixologist!

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    Ginny Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    I love the word “plethora”. Sounds so much more precise and elegant than “lots”. So, call me an elitist!

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    garcoa  almost 4 years ago

    I am proud to call myself a “mixedupologist”.

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    TonysSon  almost 4 years ago

    I like the expressive glasses.

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    zeexenon  almost 4 years ago

    If you don’t want a conflagration in your edifice, you’ll shave, use deodorant, brush your teeth, put on a tuxedo, move to the other side of the bar, and get us bowls of popcorn.

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    Ka`ōnōhi`ula`okahōkūmiomio`ehiku Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    OK, let’s see that diploma.

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    knight1192a  almost 4 years ago

    One’s accurate, one’s merely PC to make it sound more important. Surprised he didn’t claim to be a mix engineer

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    cromwelljones53  almost 4 years ago

    What kind of martini would rat drink?

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    commerce1943  almost 4 years ago

    What do we call him if he can FIND a decent Manhattanite?

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    Sisyphos  almost 4 years ago

    Neighbor Nick (did Bob die again?) works in one of those trendier places the younger crowd fancies. He is a mixologist. When he is old, decrepit, and working for minimum wage and tips in a neighborhood bar, he will revert to “bartender”….

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    Thehag  almost 4 years ago
    Why stick to a limited amount words when our language is so descriptive? Go for a wild, large vocabulary and keep conversation interesting!
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    The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Bulbous bouffant! Plethora! Macadamia! Bamboozle!

    http://www.wepsite.de/bulbous%20bouffant.mp3

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    Robert Pratt  almost 4 years ago

    If he says plethora for “lots” he’s doubly off. Plethora means “too many” not many.

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    Swirls Before Pine  almost 4 years ago

    I prefer a whiskey-loving Irish gal who’s on a cocktail voyage of discovery. TRY to guess who.

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    Pgalden1 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    As in…a plethora of puns… ;)

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    The Waffles are my friends  over 3 years ago

    Is this the same guy that appeared a few strips earlier?

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