Cul de Sac by Richard Thompson for May 10, 2012
Transcript:
Alice: So Dill told his brother? Who works at the grocery store? About the grocery cart in the culvert? And Dill's brother pulled the cart out of the culvert? Alice: And then he pushed the cart? Back to the store and his boss? Shook his hand? And said he's Employee of the Month? And Dill got a coupon? For a free doughnut? And then? Petey: To answer all your questions-DO I CARE? Voice: PETEY!
margueritem over 12 years ago
Quit being a big brother, Petey.
Wallaby over 12 years ago
Love it! Especially the differences between what Alice and Petey have in front of them!
pouncingtiger over 12 years ago
Mini-generation gap.
neatslob Premium Member over 12 years ago
Petey doesn’t eat doughnuts anyway – they have holes in them.
William Bednar Premium Member over 12 years ago
Petey should do well in Geometry. Just look at how he partitions his food on his plate! I’ll wager a very large bet that each food group, however Petey defines a “food group”, is precisely 60 degrees from the other!!
GROG Premium Member over 12 years ago
I’m with you, Petey.
DCStark over 12 years ago
This is EXACTLY how my daughter talked for years! Every sentence ended with an uprising vocal inflection, sounding like a question. And, oh my, how that girl could talk . . .
reese828 over 12 years ago
Alice is a budding “Valley Girl.” She has the rising inflection at the end of every sentence down pat. All she has to do is interject “like”, “whatever” or “totally” between every few words, and she’ll be proficient in Valspeak.
brick10 over 12 years ago
“There once was a boy named Pierre (Petey),And all he could say was, ‘I don’t care,’”
In memoriam- Maurice Sendak
ajn90280 Premium Member over 12 years ago
Re: Making every sentence a question, I’ve always thought that it’s a cadence that you often hear from very young children, particularly when they’re trying to rattle off a lot of sentences quickly.So when I read today’s strip, I imagined that Alice was speaking like that kid from “Animaniacs” who always had a story to tell about Randy Beaman:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KXnMLoE7yak
kjs9 over 12 years ago
The rising statement thing is widespread. I think it’s done in an are-you-with-me-? sorta vein. The kiddies around here do the “and then…and THEN…and THEN..” method combined with the “and then, guess WHAT” interjection.
richardcthompson Premium Member over 12 years ago
This is called “uptalking” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_rising_terminal
I first heard the word in a comment on my blog – http://richardspooralmanac.blogspot.com/2008/09/oswaldo-twee.html
J Quest over 12 years ago
I actually found Alice’s account quite riveting. I wonder what kind of doughnut Dill received? Perhaps they prepared one with paste in his honor?
mike_slmi over 12 years ago
Petey sounds like Pierre. RIP Maurice Sendak
lecrenb over 12 years ago
Exactly like growing up with my little sister!
tazz555 over 12 years ago
Im with petey on this one? well at least on the part of what must every sentence end with question mark? Its weird? I hate when people do that?
Stephen Gilberg over 12 years ago
“Zits” covered this first.
Popeyesforearm over 12 years ago
better finish that scribble on your plate. There are children in Africa starving for scribble. Boy, when we were kids we’d fight over the scribble-gizzard. Good eatin’.
Popeyesforearm over 12 years ago
Foggy: “That boy makes more noise that a skeleton dancing on a tin roof.”
Sisyphos over 12 years ago
Sweet Alice? Uptalking? Didn’t know that term? Thanks, Richard!(Feeling like a big, old, Petey.)P.S. Went back in the Blog to read the Oswaldo Twee sequence of strips there (from before I found Cul de Sac here on GoComics). Hilarious; loved red-faced Petey!
GregTrail_ImaDillo over 12 years ago
Hello, Cul de Sac fans!.I’m currently in the middle of six day tribute to Cul de Sac, being held at the site of my Sherpa strip,I’m a Dillo! I was very impressed with all of the cartoonists who pitched in for Richard several weeks ago, and I wanted to show my appreciation for Richard Thompson as well..I’ve just uploaded the fourth of six tribute strips. If you’re at all interested, I would love if you came to check it out!.http://www.gocomics.com/i-m-a-dillo
-Greg Trail
segullah over 12 years ago
We Canadians end our sentences with “eh? eh! or eh”…ya gotta have the eh in there and not just a ?.
Gokie5 over 12 years ago
I’ve lived in the deep South some, but people there didn’t say “You know what I’m saying?” I went to school in Buffalo one summer, though, and a young woman from New York City kept saying, “Know what I mean?” She’d keep at it till you told her whether you knew what she meant. Drove me nuts.
GregTrail_ImaDillo over 12 years ago
I’ve heard that Australians talk like that. I’m not sure if that’s true or not..But anyway, I love this particular strip- it’s fun to see strips that are just funny all the way around and don’t need a specific punchline at the end..And I loved the very first time you used this idea, Richard, about Alice and Oswaldo Twee. (Especially Petey’s face in the last panel!)