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My Lovely Horse posted:When I was a kid and Burton's Batman came out, I'd never heard of Batman, and this is exactly how I saw the ubiquitious symbol. Just wandering around town all the time wondering what the weird symbol with the oddly spaced round teeth was about. Back in the day there was a t-shirt design with the Bat-Signal as the Joker's mouth laughing. Couldn't find it in a quick Google search, too many other Jokers and different logo designs since then.
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# ? Feb 19, 2025 09:15 |
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Mr. Boop, a comic that I have saved on my work computer. Big 'ol ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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Alhazred posted:Zelda ![]() ![]()
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That would make a pretty good "Disaster Lesbian" avatar.
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Family Circus![]() Rose is Rose ![]() One Big Happy ![]() Foob ![]() Compu-Toon ![]() Bizarro ![]()
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Docks![]() ![]() Retail ![]() ![]() Dick ![]()
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Mämmilä![]()
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Cheer Up Boss Dharma![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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Mikl posted:Classic Kevin and Kell (January 1-5, 1996) Hack alarm is going off
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Love to see abusers invade their child's space, move their stuff, and almost certainly read their diary and throw out anything they randomly deem to be inappropriate.
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Vintage Valiant (Jul. 28, 1940)![]() ![]()
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Medenmath posted:Vintage Valiant (Jul. 28, 1940) Venice is traditionally considered to have been founded at noon on March 25th, 421; this is a story passed down through generations, though, the exact details of the founding are lost to time. However the city was born pretty much from the situation depicted here, the people living in the plains were getting real tired of being raided by barbarians every so often, so they moved and settled a group of islands in a lagoon just off the coast. Since the peoples who were doing the raiding were lousy sailors, they usually passed by on to easier and more enticing targets, ignoring the burgeoning city.
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Pondus![]() ACE ![]() ![]()
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Garfield![]() Heathcliff ![]() Overboard ![]() Monty ![]() Rae the Doe ![]() Rae the Doe's web archives Stand-Up ![]() Robotics Club ![]()
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Modesty Blaise![]() ![]() Destroy History ![]()
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The Far Side Pickles ![]() Zits ![]() Somebody fucked around with this message at 23:08 on Jul 25, 2022 |
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Every once in a while you get these reminders that even newer comic strips are like 40-50 years behind culture.
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Pastry of the Year posted:Arlo and Janis sweeperbravo posted:I know it's not outside of the comic's typical repertoire, but can't help but read some of these more recent F Minuses as some low key megaburns. F Minus ![]() Not today though. I don't think. Mark Trail ![]() Andy only likes to kill after he's gained the trust of his victims. Mary Worth ![]() They really should be asking Madi what she wants to do. The Phantom ![]() Pooch Cafe ![]() Rex Morgan MD ![]() Andertoons ![]() Apartment 3-G ![]()
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Johnny Walker posted:
Doesn't seem like that feminine handwriting put her at ease.
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The Lockhorns![]() Brewster Rockit Space Guy ![]() On The Fastrack ![]() Safe Havens ![]() Kevin & Kell ![]() Mother Goose & Grimm ![]() Hagar The Horrible ![]() Sherman's Lagoon ![]() Ella Cinders ![]() Zorro ![]()
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2017 Spiderman![]() 1978 Comics ![]() ![]() ![]() Dick Tracy ![]() Locher Tracy ![]() Origins of the Sunday Comics ![]() Footrot Flats ![]()
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Alhazred posted:Doesn't seem like that feminine handwriting put her at ease. She's been standing out there for hours. Phantom is kind of an rear end in a top hat for pulling this poo poo. That's a classic power move tactic.
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FrumpleOrz posted:Ella Cinders This seems to be a repeat.
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Huxley posted:I let most of these slide off my brain, but what the heck is this supposed to be? He likes to make pictures that are devoid of context, like turning on a television and the station it's on is in the middle of a movie or series that you've never seen before and you have zero context as to what's going on. B Kliban ![]() ![]()
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B. Virtanen![]() ANSU ![]() This one is possibly my favourite cartoon in the entire book. There's just something excellent in the minimalistic aburdity. ![]()
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Huxley posted:I was always told precut, shrink wrapped produce is for people who can't safely use knives. Like, people with Parkinson's. It's an accessibility thing. I'd never heard this but Ed not just wasting food by letting it fester on a shelf ALSO loving with people with disabilities is very on brand. Bonus, completely clueless about it! super meta. Resident Idiot posted:I wonder what the good people who actually read Dustin willingly made of this one? Donate blood/plasma... this hits too close to home.
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i love Ansu, thanks for posting it
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Bongo Bill posted:This seems to be a repeat. Whoops, sorry! Here's the right one. ![]()
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Comic Strips 2020: Mickey Mouse's erect penis
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https://twitter.com/NoobtheLoser/status/1290751270639341568?s=20
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Conan the Barbarian Apr. 28th- May. 4th, 1980![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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Hwurmp posted:Comic Strips 2020: Mickey Mouse's erect penis This mouse's penis is erect.
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![]() davidspackage posted:This mouse's penis is erect.
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Transmodiar posted:Modesty Blaise ![]() FrumpleOrz posted:Whoops, sorry! Here's the right one.
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Kennel posted:Dustin Hayden shares the same attitude about sushi as adults did 30 years ago
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you broke my grill posted:Hayden shares the same attitude about sushi as adults did 30 years ago The "raw fish?!!!! yuck!!!!" bit is such a fossil of a joke. You can get sushi at Kroger. It hasn't been an unusual food in America for decades. Dustin making me mad is also old news, but oh well
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Ok, I've been back from camping for a few days and have finally tidied up my work area and dug out my DtWOF books. Dykes to Watch Out For #90 (1990) -Alison Bechdel ![]() ![]() MO DON'T YOU DO IT. Anyway, Mo is referring to yet another litany of ills on the first page. I've already gone over Oliver North-- although initially indicted on 16 felony charges in 1988, and convicted of three in 1989, in July 1990 all charges against him were vacated and by 1991 they were formally dismissed. The little square-jawed tick has gone on to a lucrative career as a conservative activist and talking head. Richard Nixon's presidential library was dedicated on July 19, 1990 in Yorba Linda, California. Nixon was still alive at the time and while I wouldn't call him popular with progressives today by any means, in the 80s and 90s he was loathed with an intensity that has been somewhat diluted in the past thirty years by two Bushes, Trump, and a more broad consensus on how disastrous Reagan was. Former presidents getting presidential libraries is of course business as usual, I think Mo here is more upset about Nixon as a general cultural figure-- one who was still omnipresent in the national imagination as a complex but largely perverse and nightmarish figure: see Robert Altman's 1984 Secret Honor, or the John Adams/Alice Goodman opera Nixon in China which debuted in 1987. Works like this treated Nixon as a somewhat mythological or archetypal figure-- a sharp contrast to works created during or more shortly after his presidency, like Pablo Neruda's poem Incitación al nixonicidio y albanza de la revolución chilena which is both more strident and more materially concerned with Nixon as a concrete political actor and a metonymy for American policy rather than, as in Altman and Adams, more of a metonymy for problems in the more general American psyche. The typically pious and congratulatory ceremonies surrounding the opening of his library would then understandably, to somebody like Mo, feel delirious and discordant in a way that might not communicate quite so well today. I'm not going to pretend to be able to explain the Savings & Loans crisis or even that I totally understand it. Suffice to say it was a tremendous white collar scandal in which, from the mid 80s through to the mid 90s, many of the US' S&L institutions collapsed, largely due to predatory and unregulated speculating (I think?). I'm really out of my wheel-house here and I wish Mo would talk about Diane di Prima or something. I also have to say that I'm used to therapists in pop culture either being cartoonishly inept or supernaturally good at their jobs. Mo's therapist feels believably insightful and a good fit for Mo and her problems. I really like the strips about her.
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How Wonderful! posted:I'm not going to pretend to be able to explain the Savings & Loans crisis or even that I totally understand it. Suffice to say it was a tremendous white collar scandal in which, from the mid 80s through to the mid 90s, many of the US' S&L institutions collapsed, largely due to predatory and unregulated speculating (I think?). I'm really out of my wheel-house here and I wish Mo would talk about Diane di Prima or something. The gist of it is, starting in the late 1970s, Savings & Loans were deregulated so they could make loans without having to have sufficient financial reserves relative to the loan balances. So a S&L could, even with only $20 million in assets or so, could make loans for however as much as they wanted to, say $200 million. The idea was that because inflation had caused interest rates to rise and it was no longer profitable for S&L's to loan money at prime rates, they could make up the losses with subprime financing. S&L's became the lender of choice for real estate speculators and junk bond financing, because even if the loans defaulted, the US Government had guaranteed the loans, so there was very little risk for the lender (in theory) or the borrower. When the real estate market crapped out in '83 or so, combined with the oil bust and the early 80's recession, S&L's suddenly had a mountain of bad debts they couldn't sell or hope to collect on, and the US Goverment had to step in and cover the losses; othewise the savings of millions of Americans would have been wiped out. I think the final price tag was $100 million and change. Throw in some good measured kickbacks and bribes to state government officials, toss in some US Senators who may not have done anything technically illegal but still looked guilty as hell (The Keating Five), and you have a financial crisis that was the worst in history at the time.
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LazyQ posted:Mämmilä Remind me, all this fuss is because one Arab businessman said he wanted to buy a million juniper beads?
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# ? Feb 19, 2025 09:15 |
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BigDave posted:they could make up the losses with subprime financing. ![]()
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