CSotD: Monday Comics
Skip to commentsIt doesn’t take much to make me laugh over a poke at Facebook, but the level of gallows humor in this Joy of Tech gibe makes it more thought-provoking than funny.
Will future generations one day look back with the same sense of “What the hell were they thinking?”
Of course, the Greeks and Romans had limited choices, though copper would have been a better one. But lead was plentiful and easy to work with, and, most important, they had no idea what it could do to them when it leached into their drinking water.
Those consequences were left for historians to ponder.
By contrast, while Facebook is certainly cheap and plentiful, it’s only been around for 17 years and we can plainly see what it’s done to us, both personally and politically.
In “No Exit,” Jean-Paul Sartre proposed the idea that Hell is other people, which formed the basis for the Seinfeld finale, in which the worst punishment possible was for Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer to be locked up in each other’s company.
But Sartre, and the Seinfeld writers, were thinking small. Zuckerberg has managed to impose that ghastly sentence on millions and millions of people.
I have friends who have bailed out, but the numbers don’t suggest any great societal reform.
Maybe more ridicule would help. Joy of Tech is doing what they can.
If there is a segue from that to Big Nate (AMS), it has to do with societal dysfunction, because this gave me a flashback to junior high and the horrors of record hops.
I’ve heard girls complain, in later years, about the custom that boys asked girls to dance, so they had to wait, and hence the term “wallflower” for those who were never asked. As Phil Ochs wrote:
Wallflower is waiting, she hides behind composure.
She’d love to dance and prays that no one asks her.
Then she steals a glance at lovers while her fingers tease her hair.
And she marvels at the confidence of those who hide their fears.
Then her eyes are closed as she rides away with a foreign legionnaire.
I’m pretty sure girls these days are free to ask boys to dance, though I suppose impossible dreams of romantic partners persist despite what can be seen on the other side of the gym.
But speaking from that cluster of adolescent nebbishes, I can tell you it takes courage to ask someone to dance and risk rejection, which is why most of the guys were tucked in corners giggling or out in the boys’ room having a cigarette.
I’m happy to have passed that stage of life, chiefly on the principle “That which does not kill me makes me stronger.”
The segue to Pooch Cafe (AMS) is easy: Poo Poo is in a state of constant social anxiety that would do a seventh grader proud.
The theme of dogs hating mailmen (letter carriers, please) is old and well-established, mostly because a lot of dogs do at least announce, if not object to, people coming on the property, as they should.
Most of the dogs I know bark, but then wag and accept a cookie and register the encounter as a highpoint in their day. My last ridgeback considered the mailman a delightful source of treats despite the fact that we had a PO box and the mailman never came to our door.
Didn’t matter. He met him on the street, got a cookie and they were friends for life. In fact, my dog extended the amity to UPS and FedEx drivers, who also carry cookies, and he would go nuts anytime, anywhere he spotted one.
But what’s the fun in that?
You could, of course, write a book of comic strip tropes that don’t exist in real life.
When, after all, was the last time anyone cooled a pie by setting it on an open window ledge?
Funny, not funny
One of the oddities of getting up at four in the morning to write this is that, because of the time difference, the top of my newsfeed is filled with things from Australia and New Zealand, and I often start to get outraged at some politician I’ve never heard of, then check out who posted it and realize why.
But it does yield some unexpected gems, and this morning First Dog in the Moon was having fun with a TV host who flew all the way from Sydney to London to interview Adele about her new album, but hadn’t listened to it.
That sent me to Google News, where I found a more detailed explanation, and it’s a contest between the cartoonist and the reporter as to who can provoke the most laughs, because it’s an absolutely outrageous screw-up.
There is, however, a significantly not-funny side to it.
As a woman quoted in that news article says, “There are thousands upon thousands of highly qualified, talented reporters waiting in the wings who would kill for Matt Doran’s position.”
And, indeed, I used morning soft-news shows as an example of bad interviewing when I was mentoring young journalists, because the hosts are so often totally unprepared for the interview and unable to go beyond their production assistant’s list of questions.
You don’t have to be Terry Gross or Jon Stewart, but having some basic grasp of who is sitting across from you would be nice.
It doesn’t matter that much with Adele, granted, but, then again, if you can’t prep to interview a pop star, how on earth can you hope to interview someone about climate change or the economy?
Read the rest of First Dog’s cartoon here, and then go here and pick up on the details, and then weep, twice.
Once with laughter, once for the future of journalism.
Sunday’s Macanudo (KFS) brought to mind those middle-school journalists I used to mentor.
I did it long enough that some of them are in their mid-20s now and, yes, they’ve turned into some really worthwhile pebbles. I have a lot of faith in Gen-Z.
ANDREA DENNINGER
ANDREA DENNINGER
ANDREA DENNINGER
Fred King
Mark Jackson
ANDREA DENNINGER
Mike Peterson
Jason Baumbach
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David Nelson
Michael Dooley
Mike Peterson (admin)
Jessica Szyd?owski