
So… bears go in the woods and therefore bulls go in the front yard? And somehow methane plays a role here?
No clue.

So… bears go in the woods and therefore bulls go in the front yard? And somehow methane plays a role here?
No clue.

I don’t think there’s a single part of this that I understand.



Would you/did you “go ballistic”? It’s long been my opinion that comic strip parents (even more so than other comic strip characters) tend to go ballistic as default reaction.
(Spoiler: when my older son was just about Peter Fox’s age…)

(And no way in the world this was originally published as late as 1993)
April 6: This is what the site of Manhattan’s flagship Automat looks like today (well, yesterday, technically)


I don’t think there is or has ever been a teenage boy who, after hearing the vague “physical probs/problems” would feel the slightest inclination to ask follow-up questions.

Okay, not quite Geezer material because, you know, the Beatles. And not quite synchronicity (Andréa sent them to me as “Synchronicity?”).
But while I see what Mr. Rubin was getting at in the first one, I’m not really clear what the joke is. And the Dogs of C-Kennel has me completely stumped.

