

Mitch4 sends this in: “Nice job, the pun is two words onto one.”



The cage bottom is lined with the newspaper.


Mitch4 sends this in: “Nice job, the pun is two words onto one.”



The cage bottom is lined with the newspaper.


Kedamono sends this in: “And maybe a wee bit of “Ewwww”.”


Where do you find the magazines in a chemistry library? On the periodical table.
Kedamono sends this in: “For the life of me I don’t get the joke made by the alien, Odom. And I can see the word balloons.”

The construction is curious. Is the yellow character (the editor isn’t fully familiar with this strip) supposed to be seeing/hearing some of the word balloons but not others? Is the joke just going over their head?







Just as in TV shows and movies, we don’t see people on the toilet, there must be part of the Santa experience they don’t show.




Yes, Fuzzy Math Gurus, there is a Santa Claus.
There are “facts” floating around the internet, “proving” that one Santa just couldn’t do it all, but they fail too see the obvious conclusion — FRANCHISING! This also explains why “Santa” is often known as “Santa Claus”.
Let me explain:
1. Yes, it’s true Santa would need to make 822.6 visits per second, or 2,961,360 per hour. However, if we assume that there are 740,340 worldwide Santas (the exact number is known only to the Salvation Army), then each Santa has to make 1 visit only every 15 minutes.
2. Roughly speaking, this is
5 minutes for travel (footnote below)
1 minute for sorting out that house’s gifts
1 minute for chimney diving / lock picking
3 minutes for gift arranging
2 minutes for cookie eating
1 minute for exiting premises and returning to sleigh
2 minutes “slack” time for unforseen events (most commonly, large dogs)
—
15 minutes
3. “Santa” is, of course, a very sought after title, and the geographic franchises to be the local “Santa” are subject to yearly adjustments due to population shifts. The changes in the legal paragraphs governing geographic territories in the “Santa” agreement are called “Santa Clauses”, a term which eventually has been commonly applied to “Santas” themselves.
Thanks for the opportunity to clear this up.
Footnote: The travel time has been reduced considerably in this century by the use of “jet sleighs” manufactured by Boeing. The original model 7 sleigh, in fact, is what gave the Boeing corporation its name. Elves, noticing how the new sleighs (with, sadly, aluminum reindeer) bounced from housetop to housetop, cheered “Boing! Boing!”, which in an Elvin accent sounded like “Boeing! Boeing!”.
[Mike Kruger, December 2003]
A collection of some fourth wall comics.


Mitch4 sends this one in: “The “fourth wall” aspect is that only we, seeing his shout spelled out, can really tell which homophone he is using, though the other character claims to know.”






Putting this one is for that 4th panel. Lucy as a princess fits.

Dan Sachs sends this in, as a Geezer Alert. When was the last time any of us saw a set of Burma Shave signs?

Usual John sends this in: “I get that Venus tried to say something off-color, presumably a play on “dangling participle,” but what was it? Based on the statement by El Jefe (the figure in armor, I believe a personification of the cartoonist), I take it that the remark may have been not safe for work.”

A trifecta from Andréa:



Andréa asks “and wasn’t there another ‘outlet’ one I sent?” The answer is Yes, and we saw it last week, but why not an echo?:




A Meta-OY from Andréa:





Thanks to Andréa for this MythTickle:
