The Wisdom of Daily Cartoons

Recently on Facebook, a terrific human being named Burt Weisberg, who happens to be my longest lasting living friend – since junior high, or was it even earlier than that, Burt?) mentioned that he’d always known I was going to be a successful writer but never thought it would be on the Hollywood side of the Biz.

Knowing of my love for comic books, Burt expected me to make my mark – or at least become a professional – as a writer for Marvel or D.C. And the fact of the matter is that I tried to push myself into the comic book world but never got very far. (I did, however, win a Shazam award back in the 1960s for best amateur short story or some such, finishing ahead of another new writer, a guy named George R.R. Martin. Whatever happened to him?)

One of the reasons I didn’t pursue the comic book business with as much energy as I should have was that I found a terrific agent who sold that winning short story and several others to The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and introduced me to a genuine Hollywood agent, who got me a film deal and a whole lot of other film and TV work when I was a mere pisher of twenty-three.

Over the years I became way too busy writing and spending the $$$ brought in by writing to read much of anything, let alone comic books, which I greatly regretted, but now that I’ve retired I’ve found another type of panel art that often just blow me away.

I’m talking about the often overlooked/taken for granted art form known as the Daily Comic Strip. (AKA, cartoon.)

In the last couple of weeks I’ve sampled a ton of daily strips and been absolutely stunned by the unexpected wisdom I’ve found in them.

Of course, my definition is along the lines of “Aha! Something I myself feel/am dealing with/have personally experienced, etc” but let’s not go there right now.

Instead, let’s go to the strips that have recently made the biggest impression on me.

Brace yourselves:


 

The other Coast by Adrian Raeside

 

Mannequin on the Moon by Ian Boothby & Pia Guerra

 

Man Overboard by man martin

I’ll have a few more tomorrow because I know, know, know that y’all can hardly wait. And y’all now of course now why you’ve been seeing so many daily comics in this blog since it began not that long ago.

 

LYMI,

LB

LB: Live! From Paradise #218 “Animal Talk”

(The Intro above is from this column's previous web incarnation)

by Larry Brody

Here on The Mountain, the animals are restless.

“I need to talk to you,” Huck the Spotless Appaloosa said early this morning as I rolled the hay cart to the corral.

“He really does,” Rosie the Romantic Arabian affirmed, stamping her hoof. “It’s important.”

“I want you! I want you now!” Ditsy Dixie the Yellow Lab yelped from the dog yard.

“And me! And me! And me!” Emmy the Bold, Decker the Giant-Hearted, and Belle the Wary called out as they pushed their way past her to the fence.

“When you have a minute there’s something we need to talk about, boss.” That was the biggest of the unnamed Silky chickens, calling from their pen. (Unnamed because chicken have a tendency to expire when you least expect it, and giving them names made their deaths much harder to bear.)

The only Cloud Creek Ranch animal inhabitant who didn’t push himself into my usual morning reverie was Bob the Careful Tuxedo Cat. In fact, when I awoke and reached out for Gwen the Beautiful and found my hand on his furry little rump instead he responded with a sound somewhere between a hiss and a sigh and slipped off the bed. Bob had never wanted me for anything in his life, and that wasn’t changing now.

But the others

“Things are way out of kilter around here,” Huck said.

I tossed the hay over the fence, figuring that, as usual, Huck and Rosie would dig in. Instead, they pinned me with sideways gazes.

“He thinks it’s unacceptable,” Rosie added.

“What’s unacceptable?”

From the porch, the dogs filled me in with loud, staccato barks.

“You’re not giving us enough attention! You’re not playing—”

The rooster I was now thinking of as the Silky King (uh-oh, that’s the same as naming him, isn’t it?) interrupted. “You’re not singing to us! You’re not doing that Mozart thing when you throw us our bread!”

“You don’t talk to us anymore!”

And there it was, the same complaint, from three different directions and seven different breeds of Not-Supposed-To-Be-But-Nevertheless-Sentient-Beings:

Oh, man, I was in Trouble. With a capital T.

And they went on:

“Why don’t you pay attention to us? Why don’t you come outside like you used to? Why are you hiding in the house? Is it something we’ve done? Have we hurt you? How? Tell us!”

I looked around the clearing at the Cloud Creek Crew. Let out a breath I hadn’t realized I was holding.

“It’s not you,” I said. “I love you all. It’s—”

“What? What?” Dixie cried.

“It’s July.”

“July? Who’s that?” Belle said.

“It’s a ‘when,'” Decker growled. “A month.”

“Not just any month,” I pointed out. “It’s a month when the temperature lives in the 90s and the humidity’s even higher. A ‘now’ when I’m covered in sweat by the time I walk across the front porch. A ‘when’ when flies swarm and chiggers burrow and ticks suck—”

“No ticks or chiggers or flies here, boss,” the Silky King called. “Anything like that comes in this pen and it’s lunch.”

“Ah,” I said, “you love the summer weather in Paradise, don’t you?”

The Silky King answered with a crow. I shook my head.

“But I don’t,” I told everyone. I looked from one animal to the other. Tried to explain. “This weather wipes me out,” I said. “It leaves me weak and exhausted and itchy. Look at these welts! I wake up scratching and go to sleep the same way.

“When it’s cooler you know where to find me. Outside. Making my phone calls from the front porch. Working at my laptop on the back porch. Hanging out with you.

“But in the summer—I’ve got to hide,” I said. “And you’re not who I’m hiding from. It’s the weather, that’s all.”

The animals were silent. Thinking. (I think.) Then:

“People!” Huck snorted. “You’ve got some serious problems.”

“Bad breeding,” nickered Rosie.

“And you call yourselves the planet’s top dogs?” Emmy said.

The horses dipped their heads down into the hay.

The dogs flopped down on their bellies on the grass.

The chickens scratched in the dirt.

Our conversation was over. I went back into the house and up to the bedroom. Gwen was still sleeping. Bob lay on my pillow, but he was awake. “Everybody out there feels sorry for you because you’re a human,” he said. “Do you feel sorry for yourself too?”

I thought about it.

“Only when I itch,” I said, scratching away.

Happy Today, Everybody!

(Ah, classic Calvin and Hobbes. I love it. Hope you do too!)

HAPPY! MERRY! ETC.!

In showbiz it’s common to take as much time off as you can in the time period between Thanksgiving and New Year’s. Being an independent-minded son of a bitch myself (and no longer considering myself in the biz anyway),  I’ve been posting on this blog daily since November 24th anyway.

However, in the interests of health and sanity (mine, assuming I’m sane), I’ll be taking the coming week off for R & R but will be back posting January 2. 2023. In the meantime, my thought for the day is also the “Featured Image” of the day that should appear above.

And if you have problems seeing WordPress featured images via whatever way you connect to the interwebs, here it is again:

LYMI LB

(trying to look like ExistentialComics.Com Camus)