Is the pillow accent intentionally hard to pin down as coming from a particular other language? I think I see some Spanish, some French, some nonspecific Eastern European.
The NYPD is pretty lax about Peter Parker catching criminals and otherwise swinging into their turf, but no way would the National Bar Association tolerate this guy practicing law without a license!
Well, that’s sort of how you get power of attorney. The lawyer doesn’t have to be radioactive and he doesn’t have to bite you, but he writes up a document and people sign it and there you are.
All of these are pretty good!
Is the pillow accent intentionally hard to pin down as coming from a particular other language? I think I see some Spanish, some French, some nonspecific Eastern European.
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It’s pretty clearly French to me.
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The NYPD is pretty lax about Peter Parker catching criminals and otherwise swinging into their turf, but no way would the National Bar Association tolerate this guy practicing law without a license!
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It *looks* like he’s practicing law, but really he’s just exercising his powers-of-attorney, which a layman can do.
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Yeah, but his powers stem from the fruit of the bite of the poisonous lawyer…
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How is “Frank and Ernest” not disqualified from the Oy tag when the strip is based on puns as its regular source of humour?
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Well, that’s sort of how you get power of attorney. The lawyer doesn’t have to be radioactive and he doesn’t have to bite you, but he writes up a document and people sign it and there you are.
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I thought “power of attorney” was something that most people are born without:
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Yeah, well, when Dad’s an attorney, you can expect him to cover the bases.
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Bob, only the GOOD terrible puns earn the Oy tag.
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Who’s the woman between Thor and Captain America?Is that supposed to be Black Widow?
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Is that supposed to be Black Widow?
Yes.
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More ‘accent’ pillows . . .

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