The Answer May Surprise You
Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Q: What did Jenna Jameson learn from The Answer May Surprise You?

A: Just a few months after my public plea that she change her ways, Jenna Jameson is quitting porn. She's even had her implants removed, which is sad, because based on those Oscar photos, I think that would have to include the entire front side of her head.

She says she's now going to be focusing on doing a comic book, I assume because her last industry didn't make her feel publicly ostracized enough. Unfortunately for Jenna, it's already been done.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Q: Remember back when not everyone was ashamed of the president?

A: I know, it seems like a million years ago, especially with Bush's approval ratings dropping further into the mid-20s1. But it was less than two years ago (Sept. 20, 2005) that the following Tom Tomorrow comic made infuriating sense.

'Deep Undercover' from This Modern World by Tom Tomrrow[click to enlarge]


Mission accomplished, you dirty hippies.

You know, if we'd known back then the Bush administration would implode under its own tons of crap as it has and is, we totally would've expected it to be way more fun than it actually is. Instead, it's just kind of boring and sad; just ask political cartoonists. Patton Oswalt said much the same thing in his recent interview with Terry Gross. Political satire loses its edge when nearly every human being on Earth agrees with you.

Incidentally, Oswalt's latest comedy album, Werewolves and Lollipops, hits stores today.


1 As Sully notes, these polls were largely conducted prior to the Scooter Libby commutation. I know C.W. says the conservative base supported the get-outta-jail-free card, but T.A.M.S.Y. calls bullshit. How much more straw can these dumbass camels take? Expect to see another two or three points of approval erosion, minimum, when this week's polls hit.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Q: From what country could this cartoon have possible emerged?

A: You get three guesses. And they should all be "Germany."

'Bush's best friends,' by Rainer Hachfeld, Neues Deutschland, Germany
It's "Bush's Best Friends,' by Rainer Hachfeld! Via the always surprisinger, often perplexinger international cartoonists @ Cagle Cartoons.

I find it sort of odd how only the non-U.S. media is properly emphasizing that Paul Wolfowitz is yet another boneheaded Bush appointee, and that perhaps his flagrant abuses of power aren't so unexpected.

But I always found it very odd that hardly anyone in this country complained when Donald Rumsfeld's bloodlusty number two was inexplicably appointed head of an organization that wields billions of dollars in funds for the benefit of developing nations.

It must have been announced on a Friday afternoon or something. At the time, the U.S. media barely seemed to notice the appointment, let alone question its logic (at least, that's how I remember it. I would confirm that, but I'm still too sick to be expected to do anything challenging or responsible).

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Q: Garfield gay???

A: Get real! Sheesh! NNNNNNOOOOOOOOOOOO WWWWWWWWWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYY!! Or anyway, that's how this guy feels about it.

Jon Arbuckle and his gay lover, GarfieldWhy not? You've already got a beard.

Money quote:
I can't explain it here, but Garfield has been a very important part of my life for a very long time.
Oh newsgroup members. What won't you say?

I found Jym Dyer's life-ruining story via the always-content-rich comments pages over on the always-awesome Comics Curmudgeon (whom The Week has shrewdly named its Blogger of the Year). The same post also contained "Protectors of the Earth," a solid nugget of stoner-comedy gold:

click through to watch this video, biotech

But hey, I'm kind of a sucker for jokes about Mark Trail. And cougar sound effects.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Q: Is "300" worth its weight in baklava?

300: King Leonidas at home300: It's like Zorba but with harder abs.

A: T.A.M.S.Y. saw 300 Sunday night, and to be perfectly honestopolous, it was not much better than just fine. The battle scenes might be worth the price of admission on their own (true to Spartan tradition, Snyder takes great pleasure in the big fat Greek bloodletting), but overall, the flick takes itself way, way, way, way too seriously.

It's a spartan story in every sense of the word. And despite the crushing heaviness and the many sternly delivered speeches, I'm still not clear of what the film's POV was meant to be, aside from being (a) accidentally pro-troop surge1 and (b) unabashedly pro-Sparta.

Subtract the eye-popping visuals, and you're left with a lot of draggy yammering — mostly alpha males sounding off furiously, signifying nothing.

T.A.M.S.Y. and the moviesGRANTED: We Greeks do take ourselves too seriously sometimes, and we're a big fan of the dramatic, unannounced gestures, particularly if we're on our seventh ouzo. But behind all the drama and the epic poetry and the nationalism and the carousing and the fatal pride, the Greeks love a good joke. Or at least a few smashed plates.

The filmic Sin City, behind the direction of Robert Rodriguez, was carried by its gallows humor: Death was its joie de vivre, and immorality its POV. Snyder does well in translating the Miller-esque visual brilliance of Sin City to ancient times, but he fails to find a suitably epic substitute for Robert Rodriguez's sociopathic glee.

300: the sexy, sexy Oracle at DelphiDelphi hot: One sexy piece of oracle.

The flashes of levity in 300 are few + far between (even counting the running gag about how awesome it is to give your life for Sparta, which is about as hilarious as Jim Lehrer). But the flashes of real gravity are even fewer and far betweener.

HOMER SAYS WHAT? The problem at the heart of 300 is that it confuses epic-ness with self-assurance. It celebrates King Leonidas' pride as fatal, but refuses even to consider that it might be a flaw. Anyone who dares question the logic of waging war is either a traitorous pussy or a corpse waiting to happen (usually both).

As the ancient Greeks will tell you, loving war doesn't mean never having to say you're sorry. Snyder and Miller seem to have ignored that what makes a violent epic epic is the reflective eye at the center of the storm, the traitorous pussy voice inside every hero that pauses to ask What does it all mean? Here and there, even Achilles felt like a heel.


IT'S ALL GAELIC TO ME: I did enjoy 300's characterization of the Greeks as civilization's breadbasket of awesomeness — but why were the Greeks themselves all played by dirty fooking micks?

Seriously, the Greeks haven't been so badly screwed over by the Irish since Frank Costello framed poor Jimmy Pappas.

DISCUSS AMONGST YOURSELVES: I'm pretty sure that the crowd pictured in the film's final shot would have required more people than were actually alive on Earth in 500 B.C.


ELSEWHERE: Film blog Solace in Cinema compares shots from 300 the film to Miller's original illustrations from 300 the graphic novel. Very cool.

Hungry like the wolf: Comparing the imagery of '300' the film to that of Frank Miller's original graphic novelJuice is like wine: Kid Leonidas, hungry like the wolf.


EARLIER: Why do filmgoers so love the Greeks?

1 It's funny, by which I mean strange, that the film's to troop surge or not to troop surge suplot so closely mirrors current Congressional debate. I haven't read one of Frank Miller's hotheaded soapboxes in nearly a decade, but based on everything I know of the man from my fanboy days, I'm certain he must despise George W. Bush with every fiber of his being. Miller's favorite topic is freedom of speech, and protecting our freedom's is not exactly W.'s strong point.

So it's even funnier, by which I mean stranger, that 300 aims to glorify democracy and freedom through violently stifling debate. Do Snyder and Miller realize they're trying to make an epic hero out of Karl Rove?

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Q: War! HUH! Good God, y'all! What is it good for?

A: Absolutely nothin'! More terror, more violence, more human misery.

Of course, we already knew that — but this political cartoon, by Greece's Michael Kountouris, gives me chills anyway.

'War makes more terrorism' | political cartoon by Michael Kountouris[Oct. 17, 2006; via definitive pol'toon aggregator Cagle Cartoons]

Proving once again that, when it comes to artful portrayals of the absurdities of war, you just can't beat the Greeks.


RELATED: God Punishes France With Global Warming, Giant Hornets [Wonkette]. And check out the HILARIOUS, HILARIOUS PUN in the comments. I have no life.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Q: And you thought unemployment was unproductive!?

All Mary Worth has is questionsA: If I had a job, when would I have time to win such glorious honors?

All I need now is a New Yorker cartoon anti-caption contest win and a night in Gawker's Gold Star Motel and I'll have won all of the finest non-monetary prizes in nerddom.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Q: Is our brothers aging?

A: A couple days ago, a commenter on The Comics Curmudgeon brought to my attention The Garfield Randomizer. Based on the theory that "Garfield comics make just as much sense if you throw random panels together," the Randomizer mashes up old strips into an endless cavalcade of new ones. Like, for instance:

Garfield had a dream about food
Good times. Anyway, after a little while randomizing, a comic appeared that struck me as particularly appropriate for the times — given that my brother, Dimitri, hits the quarter century mark today:

Happy 25th birthday, Dimitri!
Happy birthday, bro!

We tried to call you, but I assume you're still drunk or whatever. (And to the approximately 300 other people I know whose birthday is today or tomorrow, consider this a birthday card to you, too. I hope you're 25.)

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Q: What's sadder than being alone on Valentine's Day night?

A: Being alone on Valentine's Day night and taking this quiz.


Bonus points awarded if you masturbate to this quiz. Which reminds me, thanks to Scotty Jay for the link.

RELATED: Sullivan posted this video, for the benefit of the dateless.

VIDEO: Kim Jong-Il feels your pain.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Q: Is "Ghost Rider" going to suck?

A: The answer will in no way surprise you. I mean, even Johnny Blaze saw that coming...

Nicolas Cage IS Johnny Blaze in 'Ghost Rider'
[link via Journalista's Dirk Deppey]

Friday, December 8, 2006

Q: Great dad, or total dick?

Coal for ChristmasCoal humor: This time of year, it's a popular punchline.

Some dude on eBay is selling an empty box for the Nintendo Wii [UPDATE: Auction cancelled, unsurprisingly]. These sorts of things are usually scams targetting drunks, but in this case, the thinking behind the sale is made quite clear:

I have kids that have been real bad that last couple of years, especially during Christmas time. They would yell and scream and whine every single day for some expensive present that i absolutely refuse to buy but they eventually get because their mom buys it for them. All those years i've had the idea of just buying the box of the toy but have nothing in them and giving it to my kids.

Well, last Christmas, that was what i did. They had desperately wanted a
Nintendo GAMECUBE that i refused. They'd been misbehaving throughout the year and i was not going to give in to their demands. But, I was smarter this year. I knew my wife was going to get it for them since they were getting to be pretty cheap so i pretended to give in. Absolut NaughtyI bought an actual brand new GameCube and showed it to my wife so she wouldnt go out and buy another one. She was happy! The next day i opened it up and took out the actual system and cables and everything and donated it to the children's shelter. Put some rocks to weigh down the empty box and wrapped it neatly in wrapping paper and stuck it under the tree. My wife was so proud of me.

Christmas day came and my kids were so excited, like they somehow
knew they were gonna get the GameCube. They unwrapped my present frantically. The look on their face when they see their dream toy followed by their crushed faces when they find out there was NOTHING in them and the HORRIFIED face of my wife while i laugh hysterically had beaten ANY Christmas present i'd ever gotten. They cried and cried while hugging the walls like they were being tortured. Imagine that N64 kid on YouTube...

This video cannot be viewed by your current browser, hombre.
...then imagine Jesus in Passion of the Christ.

Now guess what? my kids actually have been pretty well behaved this year so i ended up getting them an early christmas present, the Nintendo Wii.

The anguished tears of a child deprived of his WiiI could not get off my mind, however, they countless parents in the U.S. that have bratty whiny little kids this year that would love to see them crushed in the heart as they find out their present is empty. Now it's time to pass the torch. What an ultimate lesson this would be to teach your kids to behave. I guarantee they will learn from this and be a whole lot better next year.

I am donating 20% of the total final auction price to the CHILD ABUSE PREVENTION FOUNDATION. I am strongly against physical child abuse but temporary emotional damage is a-ok with me.

A: I can't decide for sure, but I'm leaning heavily towards the latter. Suffice to say, this probably won't inspire a piece in Wondertime.

Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Q: What isn't DC Comics telling us about Batman?

A: It's the details of Batman's origin Frank Miller forgot to mention, newly revealed by Jay Pinkerton and Peter Lynn.

Batman's secret origin (a parody by Jay Pinkerton & Peter Lynn)
Link via the Comics Journal's blandly titled but content-rich daily comics blog, Journalista -- a blogroll must-have for any discerning lover of pop-art.

Wednesday, November 8, 2006

Q: Have you seen the new Ubuntu release?

A: Via SexyTeenageSusie and xkcd:xkcd is not really into PokemonBy the way, I thought Ubuntu was like an art-house filmmaker. Still funny. Also funny, also via Sooze (and ToothpasteForDinner):Toothpaste for Dinner is disenfranchised