A person shouldn’t have to “think” about a comic strip. you should be able to look at the cartoon with an open mind and enjoy the strip in all it’s simplicity. Who cares if there’s a “message” whether it be political or otherwise.
johnnypar91 says:
“A person shouldn’t have to “think” about a comic strip. you should be able to look at the cartoon with an open mind and enjoy the strip in all it’s simplicity. Who cares if there’s a “message” whether it be political or otherwise.”
It you dislike comics that ask you to think, there’s always Garfield to fall back on. You might want to skip anything which might sometimes “challenge” you like, say, Peanuts or Calvin and Hobbes or Bloom County or Cul de Sac or (God forbid) Doonesberry or Stone Soup or Sylvia or Prickly City or Real Life Adventures or Cathy or Krazy Kat or Pogo or Barnaby or Little Nemo or Mr. Boffo or Non Sequitur or Heart of the City or Jump Start or Zits or… By all means, let us only have comics that we can grasp instantly, chuckle over momentarily, and then forget.
Has ANthony finally realized the futility of her/his comments on McCoys political cartoons and decided to sacrifice stripping her/his goal of pointlessness?
I love how the leftists of the group can’t get enough of McCoy? They’re closet McCoyians. It’s okay, those of you who have had the humor gene sucked out of you like a late-term abortion, you can laugh. McCoy won’t tell.
riley05 over 15 years ago
Whoa, wait!
Has McCoy finally realized the futility of his awful political cartoons, and decided to sacrifice this strip to his pointless goals?
farren over 15 years ago
This particular strip has always been half and half. I suspect it’s Glenn McCoy who’s the Neanderthal, and his son Gary the mostly reasonable one.
johnnypar91 over 15 years ago
A person shouldn’t have to “think” about a comic strip. you should be able to look at the cartoon with an open mind and enjoy the strip in all it’s simplicity. Who cares if there’s a “message” whether it be political or otherwise.
fritzoid Premium Member over 15 years ago
johnnypar91 says: “A person shouldn’t have to “think” about a comic strip. you should be able to look at the cartoon with an open mind and enjoy the strip in all it’s simplicity. Who cares if there’s a “message” whether it be political or otherwise.”
It you dislike comics that ask you to think, there’s always Garfield to fall back on. You might want to skip anything which might sometimes “challenge” you like, say, Peanuts or Calvin and Hobbes or Bloom County or Cul de Sac or (God forbid) Doonesberry or Stone Soup or Sylvia or Prickly City or Real Life Adventures or Cathy or Krazy Kat or Pogo or Barnaby or Little Nemo or Mr. Boffo or Non Sequitur or Heart of the City or Jump Start or Zits or… By all means, let us only have comics that we can grasp instantly, chuckle over momentarily, and then forget.
pbuckland Premium Member over 15 years ago
fritzoid: You seem to dislike comments that ask you to think.
eardroppings over 15 years ago
Anthony. ubba-dubba-dooba, blah, blah…
Has ANthony finally realized the futility of her/his comments on McCoys political cartoons and decided to sacrifice stripping her/his goal of pointlessness?
eardroppings over 15 years ago
I love how the leftists of the group can’t get enough of McCoy? They’re closet McCoyians. It’s okay, those of you who have had the humor gene sucked out of you like a late-term abortion, you can laugh. McCoy won’t tell.
riley05 over 15 years ago
eardroppings, my comments aren’t that futile. Not only do you read them, you even responded.
And I’ve often praised McCoy’s humorous cartoons, both The Duplex and The Flying McCoys. It’s just his political cartoons I find pathetic.