Boise Ed sends this in: “Here’s nother imaginative use of the Fourth Wall idea.”


I seem to remember Dagwood used to talk to the dog for this type of monologue, not directly to the reader.





Boise Ed notes, “You don’t get much more fourth-wall than this one.”
In the BC at the end, one might say that it’s the 2nd and 3rd walls that need concern!
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True. Strictly speaking, it’s only breaking the fourth wall to acknowledge the audience.
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Is the dog in a prison cell? Looks like bars on the window.
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Thor is no danger to the Kool-Aid Man.
Oh, yeah.
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Blondie: September 8, 1930. Created by Chic Young, the strip initially featured Blondie as a flighty flapper dating Dagwood, the playboy son of a wealthy millionaire.
they married on February 17, 1933. Dagwood’s upper-crust parents strongly disapproved of the marriage, disinheriting him and forcing the couple to live a middle-class, suburban life.
Dagwood and Blondie are closing in on 120 years old. Lucky if she can find her house let alone her “cell phone”.
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Pete: “Is the dog in a prison cell? Looks like bars on the window.”
Pretty much. The strip is set in a concrete animal shelter. The bars are often seen.
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Over in Gasoline Alley, Walt and Skeeziks are heading to Hootin’ Holler for Snuff Smith’s 107th anniversary, after he came to theirs. So, fourth wall or meta-comic or something. In the past they have visited the Old Comics Home.
https://www.gocomics.com/profile/Brian/collections/50656
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