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CSotD: Thoughts of Self and Others plus Dogs

Terri Libenson has a talent for illustrating serious points with ironic humor, and today’s Pajama Diaries is a spur towards more in-depth thought. And if Jill’s dismissal of her own talent with “I got lucky” is the germ of the problem, I did get lucky in that Terri provided enough of a clue that I […]

CSotD: Sunday Short Takes

Let’s begin where we left off yesterday, with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s bizarre boycott of their own cartoonist. See yesterday’s blog posting for background, see JP Trostle’s cartoon above for a response I like.And here’s Rob’s latest cartoon. What the hell, if his own paper won’t print them, I will. And they’re still paying him, last […]

CSotD: Catchatwentytoo

Michael De Adder penned this brilliant cartoon back in late August, and I wish it had gone out of date but it is more relevant by the moment.I also wish, I suppose, that fear of the mob were the only thing motivating media moguls, because, when it is conflated with their own Murdockesque goals, it’s […]

CSotD: Friday Funnies

Timing is everything in humor and, with a hat tip to DD Degg at The Daily Cartoonist, here’s one I missed yesterday — an Over the Hedge written two weeks ago — and here’s Michael Fry’s commentary on the serendipity.That was cool. Now do it again. Arlo & Janis offers a look at the gracious past, and […]

CSotD: Only Disconnect

Bizarro touches on a nerve, because I’m never sure where my Old Anti-Tech Man intersects with common sense, but I really don’t get texting ahead for a cup of coffee or for McDonalds.Even if you adore technology, the difference — as Wayno suggests — between texting your order or just saying it is pretty small, […]

CSotD: Hitting’em where they are

I really like Steve Sack’s commentary on the rollback of banking regulations.If you remember back when post-Depression banking regulations were first eased under Carter and Reagan, there was a lot of talk about how it was okay because they wouldn’t make the same mistakes that had been made in the 1920s. And we promptly fell into […]

CSotD: The Cosmetics of Comedy

Ann Telnaes’ new comic, Mo, posted its second edition yesterday, as scheduled, but we were back in 1918 yesterday, so I held it.I also clipped it, because the format is ginormous enough that you should go read the whole thing yourself. Constant Readers will know I’m a longtime fan of Telnaes’s work, but this new thing […]

CSotD: Memorial Day 1918

Since Memorial Day cartoons seem predictable, I thought I’d go back a century and see what they were doing then, when it was still called Decoration Day. E.A. Bushnell kicks off our coverage. The US was in the middle of the World War, on the verge of having a million men in Europe and not far […]

CSotD: Cultural Notes

Start with the news, from DD Degg at the Daily Cartoonist via Tom Heintjes of Hogan’s Alley, with the smiling, self-posted face of Mark Parisi, who won the “It’s Not Actually A Reuben” award last night in the category of Newspaper Panels for Off the Mark.Here are the rest.Only the big one at the end […]

CSotD: The Fire Next Time

I’ve criticized — perhaps even “railed against” — young cartoonists for either misinterpreting history or presenting it as some new discovery when it’s always been there for anyone who wanted to know it.It’s only fair, then, to praise this piece from the Nib, “1968: The Revolution That Almost Was,” by Julia Aleksayeva, who looks at 1968 […]

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