FoxTrot by Bill Amend for November 01, 2009
Transcript:
Andy: Let's see...One food calorie is the energy required to heat one kilogram of water by one degree celsius...If a child weighs 75 pounds, that's 34 kilograms, of which about 60 percent is water...Normal human body temperature is 37 degrees celsius...Jason, can you come here for a second? Jason: Whatcha need? Andy: I'm trying to get a sense of how much Halloween candy you've eaten.
tbree about 15 years ago
You’ll need to compute the answer in metric tons.
BigChiefDesoto about 15 years ago
The fallacy in this is that the body is extremely inefficient at converting calories to heat!
landshark67 about 15 years ago
That would have been a great costume.
possiblekim about 15 years ago
Jason always wanted to become Human Torch and now he is one. :D
Allan CB Premium Member about 15 years ago
I didn’t realize that Amed wasn’t American … don’t Yank’s use °F and pounds?
hildigunnurr Premium Member about 15 years ago
Allan yes they do - that’s probably why she said kilogram not gram :D (or calorie, not kilocalorie)
cdward about 15 years ago
^She’s using metric primarily because that’s how calories are calculated, and that’s what she’s interested in.
Silentknight7 about 15 years ago
I agree with Land shark and possible kin if Jason Had saved that all next year, he could of gone as Flame.
I don’t think I got that much candy though.
Ray_C about 15 years ago
Some chemistry books spell the “1 gram” energy as calorie, and the “kilogram” energy or “kilocalorie” as Calorie (with a capital C). That wouldn’t show up here with the text all capitals. I once read an article by a guy who claimed that the heat your body needs to melt the ice in a cocktail uses up all the calories in the booze and whatever else. But he was using regular calories for the heat and kilocalories for the calories in the drinks, so his conclusion was off by a factor of 1000.
rdh288 about 15 years ago
We Americans use the stupid English system for everything but science, but put our feet down there and actually use… both, making it more confusing! But we do it OUR way. :)
Charles Brobst Premium Member about 15 years ago
Flame on, Torch!
RavennaAl about 15 years ago
His mom is wondering how much candy Jason ate. The answer is obvious. He ate all of it.
kfaatz925 about 15 years ago
LOL! Spontaneous human combustion (in a slightly different manifestation.)
bazookaboy about 15 years ago
come on baby light my fire
jaiel about 15 years ago
FLAME ON!!!
JacaByte about 15 years ago
While the human body is extremely efficient at converting sugars into energy, its ability to convert energy into heat is not, since heat is a simply by-product of the processes used to break down the sugars. For Jason to get that hot, he’d have to work out like there was no tomorrow, and his temperature increase still wouldn’t account for 5% of the sugars he burned.
sylphslider about 15 years ago
I’m quite surprised that with all that talk about Kcals and CvF none of you twigged to the fact that she’s using the adult male percentage of water in a human body. Jason’s only 10 and clearly has no muscle mass - his percentage of body water should be closer to 62%. Maybe 63%. And Amend IS American. Not all Americans shun the metric system.
ninmas about 15 years ago
so jason weighs 75 pounds, now i wish we could find out his height…….
Rakkav about 15 years ago
Another addition today to the “cartoon physics” pile! Incredible.
BigChiefDesoto about 15 years ago
Hi Allan,
Unlike the rest of the world that can only divide by ten because they happen to have ten fingers, we’re actually smart enough to be able to use either system. (Or at least some of us are.) If you can’t divide by 16 or 12, you need a bonehead course in arithmetic, not a new measuring system!
JellyBreadz about 15 years ago
thought the catchline was going to be he ate sour / spicy candy
Keith Messamer about 15 years ago
At least candy doesn’t go for the direct conversion of matter to energy—E = mc^2.
callak about 15 years ago
I wish I had that much candy after Halloween.
Potrzebie about 15 years ago
Well, all those calories come in the form of fat and carbs, right? So THAT ends up being stored. Trust me, as 43 year old I know that one bar of chocolate adds one pound to my gut.
autumnleaves about 15 years ago
You are forgetting…this is just a cartoon…it doesn’t have to be able to happen in real life. That’s the beauty of it. Flame on, Torch!
Aurion about 15 years ago
Halloween Candy: a clean burning energy source. Who’d have thought? Great for toasting marshmallows, too!
DerkinsVanPelt218 about 14 years ago
I think if you eat so much candy that you turn into Johnny Storm, you’ve had too much.
iFerrarifan over 13 years ago
200 degrees, that’s why they call me mr. farenheit.
callak over 9 years ago
Much easier to do the math using the metric system, then convert.
colBoh about 9 years ago
Human skin catches fire at 1400°F (760°C). Assuming syphslider is right, I’ll say Jason’s body is made up of 2/3rds water, meaning 50 lbs. (22 2/3 kg). By the logic of this strip, that means he’s eaten over 16,000 calories’ worth of Halloween candy.
Minecraft Puppies over 4 years ago
FLAME ON!
BrenHanks over 4 years ago
I would have been born tommaro
TraverseIce over 4 years ago
Jason weighs 75 pounds? I thought he weighed like 10
Unicorn55 (Happy New Year 2022!) over 3 years ago
I think Jason ate too much Red Hots. The unicorns ban red hots.
No One in Particular over 2 years ago
Wait, Jason’s 75 pounds? How can he skip across water??