Comments

  1. robro says

    That was my attitude when I was a young adult. I was convinced I would not live to be old. Turned out I didn’t die of disease or war, but kept living. Now I’m almost 76, I’ve been on Social Security and Medicare for nearly a decade. Yet I’m still working full-time. It’s a good job and interesting, but primarily what keeps me working is health insurance for my wife, who isn’t eligible for Medicare until next year, and our 32-year-old son who has never had a decent job.

  2. christoph says

    Not exactly on topic, but I remember seeing Ernie Bushmiller’s name on a list of people dolphins are definitely smarter than. This was way back in the 70’s.

  3. robro says

    cristoph @ #4 — “I remember seeing Ernie Bushmiller’s name on a list of people dolphins are definitely smarter than.” I wouldn’t think of judging Bushmiller’s level of intelligence versus dolphins but I can say that among a certain group of hippie-era comic writers he’s kind of viewed as a hero. One of them has a book out about Ernie. I don’t understand the fascination, but so be it.

  4. says

    Well, it turns out Sluggo didn’t have a future — I haven’t seen him since Nancy changed hands. (And he never grew up much before either.)

  5. Akira MacKenzie says

    @ 1

    I never knew so many bad times
    Could follow me so mercilessly
    It’s almost surreal
    All the pain that I feel
    The future ain’t what it used to be
    It doesn’t matter what they’re thinking
    It doesn’t matter what they’re thinking of me
    It’s always so cold
    I’m to young to be old
    The future ain’t what it used to be
    Were there ever any stars in the sky
    Did the sun ever shine so bright?
    Do you have any dreams I could borrow
    Just to get me through the lonely night?
    Is there anything left to hold on to
    When the rivers wash it all away?
    Is there anyone left to hold on to
    Is there anything left I can say?
    Say a prayer for the falling angels
    Stem the tide of the rising waters
    Toll a bell for the broken hearted
    Burn a torch for your sons and daughters
    The endless night has got a hold of me
    Dark days are pulling me forward
    And all the tears are washing over me
    I’m crying, lost forever
    In a future that ain’t what it used to be
    No more no more no more

    —Jim Steinman

  6. imthegenieicandoanything says

    “christoph
    21 March 2024 at 1:01 pm

    Not exactly on topic, but I remember seeing Ernie Bushmiller’s name on a list of people dolphins are definitely smarter than. This was way back in the 70’s.”

    On the other hand. EB’s Nancy is considered by other cartoonists to be among the most rarified refinements of the cartoon strip form – and of humor at its most elemental.

    The last few years of Nancy became – I’m not kidding – almost transcendental at times. I grew up mostly ignoring it, like EVERYONE, and suddenly noticed that the strip had become very… bizarre.
    I actually started collecting the best ones, which added up quickly, and pressing them on my friends, art students, artists and science majors among them.

    Then I noticed the exceptional artistic power he’d bring to what looked almost bare.

    You may not be an asshole, but you’re ignorant as mud about Nancy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernie_Bushmiller

  7. birgerjohansson says

    When you wrote ‘Ernie’ I associated that to another cartoon where ‘Uncle Sid’ and ‘Dr. Pork’ could serve as a symbol for today’s MAGA ideology.
    And since these dishonest characters are also really dumb, the symbolism would be quite apt.

  8. woozy says

    @7 Sluggo’s been in the new Nancy a bit. He hasn’t done much but for a while “Sluggo is Lit” was a thing. Peewee and Rollo seem to be missing in action (but I can’t say I’ve been looking very hard)

    The last few years of Nancy became – I’m not kidding – almost transcendental at times. I grew up mostly ignoring it, like EVERYONE, and suddenly noticed that the strip had become very… bizarre.

    You know… people say that, but I just don’t see it. It’s kind of become a culture wars thing that either you are left and think Jaimes as a post-modern feminist genius, or …. you are right and you think Jaimes is a post-modern feminist genius. But to me she seems… benignly dull.

    But “Sluggo is Lit” was kind of funny.

  9. StevoR says

    Remidns me of an old cartoon I once saw back in the Cold War era where an adult is askinga young child what they’d like to be when they grow up. The child’s reply – “Alive.”

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