Back in college, we sometimes did crosswords by committee (or “tag team”). I once passed the paper over to a roommate, saying that he could finish the crossword. Five minutes later, he handed the paper back to me: every square had been filled in… with gibberish, little drawings, tic-tac-toe games, and other idiocies. It was brilliant, and I almost wish I had saved it, but it’s probably better that I didn’t, because my memory of it is almost certainly better than it actually was.
The only thing I can come up with for the Id comic is that the king is so full of {bleep} that his chamber pot is heavy enough to cause the tower to lean. I would love to hear a less eeeeewie explanation.
Sorry, Mike, but your explanation is exactly what the cartoonist intended.
Presumably the panels or Wizard of Id are the lead in for a sunday strip.
Yes, woozy, but the main portion of the strip had nothing to do with these panels and therefore was not invited to join us.
Back in college, we sometimes did crosswords by committee (or “tag team”). I once passed the paper over to a roommate, saying that he could finish the crossword. Five minutes later, he handed the paper back to me: every square had been filled in… with gibberish, little drawings, tic-tac-toe games, and other idiocies. It was brilliant, and I almost wish I had saved it, but it’s probably better that I didn’t, because my memory of it is almost certainly better than it actually was.
The only thing I can come up with for the Id comic is that the king is so full of {bleep} that his chamber pot is heavy enough to cause the tower to lean. I would love to hear a less eeeeewie explanation.
Sorry, Mike, but your explanation is exactly what the cartoonist intended.
Presumably the panels or Wizard of Id are the lead in for a sunday strip.
Yes, woozy, but the main portion of the strip had nothing to do with these panels and therefore was not invited to join us.