Sunday Funnies – LOLs – December 14, 2025

Darren throws us a nice compliment: “I consider CIDU our humor professional!

I guess there is a minor question of the text. Best I can do is:
“And this is why you never ever invest in a platypus””




Did I post this before? I thought I had, but it was still in my “to be posted” folder, and I can’t find it in recent posts. If you saw it before, you’re now seeing it again!

Fourth Wall Fun

By one definition, “4th wall comic refers to a comic book where characters become aware of their own fictional existence and address the audience directly. This concept, known as the Fourth Wall, separates the characters from the readers, allowing them to comment on the narrative and its limitations.” By that definition, not all of these fit. In some of these, it’s that the cartoonist lets us acknowledge the cartoonist’s existence, while the characters remain unaware. Is there a separate term that should be used for that?








Labor Day: Do Cartoonists Work?

Some examples of cartoonists taking it easy on Labor Day. That’s not accurate, of course, because these comics would have been drawn some days ago.

Nancy steals from the future.

Arlo and Janis hearken back to an older Nancy comic:

Tank McNamara could just put new dialogue into the radio show form he often uses.

Gasoline Alley often just closes down.


Independence Day

It’s interesting that the white character in this comic from 1976 is named Nate. Much later, Nate Bargatze will have a similar theme in this now well-known SNL skit:







On a serious note, it is always worth pondering the end of Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Speech:

“With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”


Ewwww?

Dirk the Daring sends this in: “I had to go to the comment because I didn’t understand it, fortunately it seems to be explained there.  The old phones I get, look at the date, but the “Ewww” didn’t make much sense.”

Cleats is in reruns; this comic appeared on July 4 some years ago.

Saturday Morning OYs – May 31, 2025

Boise Ed sends this in.


Flagging the third one as a comic fan’s OY, but need to do two earlier ones in the series as a setup:



Mitch4 sends this in:


And while we’re on the subject of Freud, Mitch4 also sends this:


Freud’s unconscious cravings had more to do with sex, if I recall correctly, but there are other unconscious cravings.

JMcAndrew sends this in: “Why does he have the giant poster of a fly to begin with? Is he going to start eating anything vaguely associated with fruit? This isn’t a comic I normally read.”


Happy Valentine’s Day

Danny Boy sends this in.






JMcAndrew sends these two in. “Not only does this comic end with a rabbit about to hook up with a shoe but it also manages to slip in a joke about the title character from the movie “Babe”in a relationship with “Oscar Mayer””

“There’s also this one suggesting a relationship between Madonna and Sandra Bernhard and OJ Simpson with Lorena Bobbitt”

Peanuts Redux

The first “Peanuts Day” retrospective ten weeks ago seemed to be reasonably popular, so here is another collection of Peanuts references and parodies, in honor of what would have been Charles M. Schulz’s 102nd birthday.


Back when it was originally published, Aaron submitted this Tom Falco comic, which was part of the 100th birthday tribute:



It’s pretty clear that Jason needs what Lucy is selling.


Nomen est omen:


This “Cleats” strip was published early in the 2004 season, back when Kevin Brown was still a popular new acquisition for the Yankees, months before he became the notorious losing pitcher in game 7 of the ACLS (which at one point the Yankees had led 3:0). Kevin Brown retired just 16 months later, before the start of the 2006 season; I think Charlie Brown would have understood how he felt.



Only one of those three characters on the wall is actually missing.


Mark Parisi frequently references Peanuts in “Off the Mark“. To his credit, he produces extremely accurate renditions of all the characters:



Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it:


Various cartoonists seem to enjoy letting Charlie Brown have his moments of retroactive glory:


Snoopy finally gets his due as well:


If Charlie Brown had only known what was really happening:


And finally: