Dog Eat Doug by Brian Anderson for February 20, 2010

  1. Emerald
    margueritem  almost 15 years ago

    Quiet, Sophie, we want to hear the story!

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    tabbylynn  almost 15 years ago

    Yea, What Marg Said!

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  3. Emerald
    margueritem  almost 15 years ago

    Hi, Tabby!

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  4. Wolf3
    COWBOY7  almost 15 years ago

    And now, here’s………………………………….The Rest of The Story!

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  5. Grog poop
    GROG Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Ahh shut up a yo snout, Sophie. (Sorry I just got that song in my head and it won’t go away)

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  6. A mothers love
    Cymbol  almost 15 years ago

    Look at the expression in the bloodhound’s eyes! I literally had to force myself to move on to the third panel. I can’t wait to see how the ‘tale’ progresses. When it’s done I know I’ll be clicking back to read it all over again in one session.

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  7. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Bad puppy, Sophie! You should know better than to step on another dog’s tale!

    FYI: Late yesterday, notinksanymore asked whether Anderson is making this up or whether there’s a precursor somewhere.

    Googling the phrase “demon cat georgia” turns up no clues. “Devil cat georgia” brings up lots of references to the Devil Cat Art Gallery in Duluth GA, but nothing (that I saw) about any sort of traditional legend. Maybe Anderson’s working in an oblique plug…

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    cleokaya  almost 15 years ago

    Beware of cat scratch fever.

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    newworldmozart  almost 15 years ago

    It’s weird, as the dog is talking I swear I hear Jimmy Stewart in my head.

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  10. Erroll for ror
    celeconecca  almost 15 years ago

    Newworldmozart: Me too!

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  11. Cat asks you to sign a contract
    notinksanymore  almost 15 years ago

    The dictionary definition (yes I looked it up) of “tale” is “a type of story.” So if the bloodhound isn’t telling a story, he cannot possibly be telling a tale.

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  12. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    It’s about a cat, so maybe it’s a yarn…

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  13. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Naw, commerce, it just reminds me of a comment made a long time ago by another Georgia boy, a certain turtle with purty gold-speckle eyes:

    “These silhouettes sure saves a mess of drawin’.”

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  14. Me 3 23 2020
    ChukLitl Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    The old religion’s gods often become the new religion’s demons.

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  15. Satyr d
    ottod Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Doctor Toon said:

    Ji2m - He’s a bit “tetchy” about being called JAD too.

    Easier to list the non-tetchy things, but I think he was going for a homophone (tale/tail) pun. Course, I’m probably wrong and that’ll be one more tetch.

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  16. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Where it seems to me that you’re falling down is that you’re using imagery and symbolism, whereas the genuine article hews closely to literalism ad absurdum. A paragraph on how we should know that the tree in the final panel is a cypress, followed by pointing out that pigs rather than dogs have snouts and the older dog should have told Sophie to shut her muzzle would have been closer to that particular form of irrelevance.

    I love the line “Small items have been disappearing”, though. It’s paranoid, without explicit accusation…

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  17. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    The etymology of “manifest” is unclear, but apparently is a combination of Latin manus - “hand” and festus - “struck.” Something is manifest when it is obvious, clearly apparent, or “within a hand-strike”; as such, I quibble whether an abstraction such as a “disappearance” can be called “manifest.” The items themselves, certainly, are no longer manifest, being rather its opposite.

    But granting the fact of the items’ disappearance, there remain the questions of agency and/or motive. Not “Where is my cheese?” (it has been moved), but “Who has moved my cheese?” and “Why has my cheese been moved?” Even if the small items reappear, these are serious questions. Quantum mechanics might account for spontaneous de- and re-materializations, but only if the items are truly small indeed. Qui bonum? Storm clouds gather on the horizon. A King will forsake his Kingdom; Life and Death will clash and fray; the Oldest Battle begins once more.

    I suppose, though, I might have read a connecting thread between the three paragraphs of your post (black and white, Apocalyptic undercurrent, disappearances) of which you had no intent. Maybe I’M the one who’s paranoid. That’s what you’re all thinking, isn’t it? That’s what you want ME to think, isn’t it?

    Have you read Eco’s Foucault’s Pendulum?

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  18. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    I had cheese, but then somebody moved it. It was nacho cheese. I know that, because as they took it away they shouted “Fritz, this is nacho cheese!”

    There are only three mentions of cheese in the Bible, and all three are in the Old Testament: 1 Samuel 17:18, 2 Samuel 17:29, and Job 10:10. Of the three, the last is the only verse with poetic (as opposed to documentary) value. Job says to God ”Hast thou not poured me out as milk, and curdled me like cheese?” In the context of the rest of the chapter, it’s unclear to me whether this is plaint or praise, but the Book of Job is notoriously heterodox in its interpretations.

    When they moved MY cheese, I suffered as Job suffered…

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  19. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    The only book I ever recommended that cost me a friendship was J.G. Ballard’s Crash. In my defense, I asked her whether she could handle “disturbing”, and she said “Yes.”

    I don’t relish relish, sweet or otherwise. Nor mustard, mayo, onions, pickles,… A cheeseburger (rare), just ketchup or Tobasco, that’s what works for me.

    I’m reasonably catholic when it comes to cheeses, though. Feta, Gouda, Edam, Jack (the only major varietal of cheese to have been originally developed in the United States, or so I’ve heard), Camembert (I don’t care how expletively runny it is), Mozzarella (the good stuff, made from buffalo milk), Parmesan, Provelone, Cheddar, even American and Velveeta (I ain’t proud). Bleu, teu, in small quantities. But I don’t care for Swiss… (There’s a “holey/angels” joke to be made there, but I’m not up to finding it.)

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    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Doc T has two subjects which sap him of his comedy powers: cats, and his lady love. I “toon” him out (HAH!) when he gets gooey like that. I’m also not a fan of the Nuclear Coffee theme, but others seem to like it…

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    fritzoid Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    Oh, I also had a HUGE argument with a close friend over Madame Bovary, but we patched things up and agreed to disagree.

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    aaronbarth131  almost 15 years ago

    How RUDE to that little dog!!!

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