Shoe by Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly for June 29, 2013

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    pawpawbear  over 11 years ago

    Maybe not. That title is sure to raise eyebrows.

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    edclectic  over 11 years ago

    Do the name Ruby Begonia…

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    g55rumpy  over 11 years ago

    RIM SHOT; “But seriously folks…”

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    Vermont Premium Member over 11 years ago

    The gag doesn’t work perfectly. Amos was the cab driver; Andy was the big cigar-chompin’ guy. And it was an excellent series. Terrific actors. The actress who played Sapphire was one of the best comediennes of the early television era. IMHO.

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    jgcartnal  over 11 years ago

    And there’s today’s joke for senior citizens! ;)

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    mwaidelich  over 11 years ago

    I wonder how many know who Amos & Andy are? I did, but I used to listen to them live.

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    Bargrove  over 11 years ago

    Hello dar, Saphire

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    Sportymonk  over 11 years ago

    I enjoyed it when I was young. Still remember an argument between the Kingfish and his wife (Loretta??) having to do with her always scraping the toast to get the burnt part off.

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    KEA  over 11 years ago

    I tried NOT to read the second panel… but I did. woe is me.

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    KEA  over 11 years ago

    Lighten up. Anyone with a brain knew that A&A was about as true to real-life as cartoons are to consequences of violence.

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    ColonelClaus  over 11 years ago

    AAAHHHOOOOGAH! AAHHHHOOOGAH! REBOOT REBOOT!

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    ColonelClaus  over 11 years ago

    Holey Macklela dere! An ta tink de o-rig-in-al acters wuz white!

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    danlarios  over 11 years ago

    where’s safire when I need him?

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    Russell Sketchley Premium Member over 11 years ago

    “Amos and Andy” was first a radio series. In that series, which was far better-known than the TV series, the black characters were all voiced by white actors. That’s where most of the racism cries come from now. The actors themselves never thought of themselves as racist and had simply created many characters over the years, finally deciding these were the ones that worked best in the radio format.

    The shows were well-written, often hilarious, and tremendously popular in the 20+ years that the show ran on radio, but when I do my old time radio broadcasts on our local station I am reluctant to play “Amos ’n Andy” because of what – by today’s standards – is easily perceived as racism.

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    marjac35  over 11 years ago

    Great Play on words I am still laughing!!!

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    curmudgeon68  over 11 years ago

    When you finally figure out that you’re the problem, would you please go back and delete all your inane repetitive comments.

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    dzw3030  over 11 years ago

    I had this prob with three comics yesterday. I checked back several hours later and the comics were back. Go figure…

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    LV1951  over 11 years ago

    We actually have a tape or 2 of the old Amos & Andy shows. Hilarious! “Ohhh Andy!” :lol!

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    llong65  over 11 years ago

    I’ve transferred some of their old radio shows to cd

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    Robert C. Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Maybe you’re BANNED< FOR POSTING THE SAME STUPID ALL-CAPS WHINE…on every strip’s comments…don’t you get it ???…It ain’t a “gocomics” failure….Sheeesh !

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    Reppr Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Where is Fozzy Bear when you need him?

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    Dry and Dusty Premium Member over 11 years ago

    WELL ASIDE FROM ALL THIS DIATRIBE ABOUT AMOS AND ANDY Take NOTICE that the FIRST PANEL references MENNONITE the last panel references AMISH I live in an area with both SECTS! Quite a BIT OF DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO!

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    tigerchik32  over 11 years ago

    I do. But I don’t like it since its kinda un-PC.

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    The Life I Draw Upon  over 11 years ago

    Groan.

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    westny77  over 11 years ago

    Don’t quit your day job.

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    Vermont Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Having done quite a bit of research over the years on the Amos ‘n’ Andy tv series, I need to clarify a few matters. One, most black audiences who watched the series loved it. For one thing, the acting was terrific – for example, Spencer Williams, who played Andy Brown was a respected and successful film actor, director, editor, and writer before coming out of retirement to play Andy – and Tim Moore had a long and respectable career as an actor and comedy writer before becoming known as The Kingfish. And two, what many people fail to realize is that, the clownish characters aside, this tv program marked the first time black people saw themselves portrayed on the screen as judges, doctors, professors – professional people! And it was the first time that most white Americans ever saw blacks portrayed as serious, hard-working individuals who weren’t domestics, slaves, servants, or thugs. True, the language was crudely done and sometimes downright insulting to blacks; but you should know that the creators of the radio show were on the set for the first filmed episode trying to tell the actors how to say their lines. The actors were livid and had Gosden and Correll banned from the set for the rest of the show’s run. As Tim Moore recalled, " We had white men telling black men how to sound like white men impersonating black men." By the way Tim Moore loved playing Kingfish so much that he wore the Kingfish’s hat home every night; and people in his neighborhood always called him Kingfish.

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