Greetings to our blog readers in Australia, Hungary and Russia.....
This week, we slightly depart with our survey of comic strips from the Sunday edition of "The Washington Post" with a look at our top ten favorite comic strips from "The Denver Post" (May 3rd edition).
The newspaper is one of the few which carries Chris Carpenter's great strip "Tundra," set in his native Alaska, which this week featured a gag about a guy who is on the low end of a totem pole. "Closer to Home" by John McPherson featured a TSA agent who decides to use an air passenger's spray deodorant. "Sherman's Lagoon" features a squabble between married sharks about what to watch on. In Jim Toomey's last strip panel, the reader wants the male shark to change people, which made us think he just might be watching something like "Swamp People."
Here is our top ten from "The Denver Post:"
1. Tundra
2. Close to Home
3. Sherman's Lagoon
4. Bound and Gagged
5. Baldo
6. Pearls Before Swine
7. Rhymes with Orange
8. Jump Start
9. Dilbert
10. Frazz
http://www.denverpost.com/comics
Showing posts with label Close to Home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Close to Home. Show all posts
Friday, May 8, 2015
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Our Favorite Strips from Sunday, Jan. 18th "Herald-Journal" (Spartanburg, SC)
Greetings to our blog readers in Moldova*, South Africa and Egypt.....
Normally, we list our favorite comic strips from the Sunday editions of "The Washington Post" and "The Roanoke Times," the weekly newspaper in Roanoke, Va. But, today, we adding "The Herald-Journal," which is the local daily newspaper serving Spartanburg, SC, a city that is one and a half hours south of Charlotte, NC, and known for its BMW factory and race track.
Our top ten favorite comic strips from this Sunday's edition of that paper include "Bizarro," a single-panel comic strip in which a woman calls her neighbor to ask if the giant outside her home has gotten or if her house has gotten smaller. There is now a small house movement in many parts of the United States and perhaps in other countries as well (see top image).
It is sort of a running joke here on the blog that "Get Fuzzy" always finishes second, and that is the case today, with a strip poking fun of how lucky one can get playing a scratch lottery ticket (center image).
And, in third place, the single-panel comic strip "Close to Home" pokes fun of the process in which scientists name the latest medications, in this case, it is from taking the first three letters of their dogs' first names. (Prozac, an anti-depressant, is our bottom image).
Here is our top ten from "The Herald-Journal"
1) Bizarro
2) Get Fuzzy
3) Close to Home
4) Gasoline Alley
5) Snuffy Smith
6) Dustin
7) The Family Circus
8) Dilbert
9) Doonesbury
10) The Phantom
NOTE: This is the rare week when "The Family Circus" was funnier than "Doonesbury" or "Dilbert," that may not happen again until Haley's Comet returns to earth.
*- Yes, we have actually been getting hits from the former Soviet republic of Moldova lately!
http://www.goupstate.com
http://www.visitspartanburg.com/
http://www.sceducationlottery.com/ (not an endorsement)
http://smallhousesociety.net/
http://www.gocomics.com
http://bizarro.com/
Normally, we list our favorite comic strips from the Sunday editions of "The Washington Post" and "The Roanoke Times," the weekly newspaper in Roanoke, Va. But, today, we adding "The Herald-Journal," which is the local daily newspaper serving Spartanburg, SC, a city that is one and a half hours south of Charlotte, NC, and known for its BMW factory and race track.
Our top ten favorite comic strips from this Sunday's edition of that paper include "Bizarro," a single-panel comic strip in which a woman calls her neighbor to ask if the giant outside her home has gotten or if her house has gotten smaller. There is now a small house movement in many parts of the United States and perhaps in other countries as well (see top image).
It is sort of a running joke here on the blog that "Get Fuzzy" always finishes second, and that is the case today, with a strip poking fun of how lucky one can get playing a scratch lottery ticket (center image).
And, in third place, the single-panel comic strip "Close to Home" pokes fun of the process in which scientists name the latest medications, in this case, it is from taking the first three letters of their dogs' first names. (Prozac, an anti-depressant, is our bottom image).
Here is our top ten from "The Herald-Journal"
1) Bizarro
2) Get Fuzzy
3) Close to Home
4) Gasoline Alley
5) Snuffy Smith
6) Dustin
7) The Family Circus
8) Dilbert
9) Doonesbury
10) The Phantom
NOTE: This is the rare week when "The Family Circus" was funnier than "Doonesbury" or "Dilbert," that may not happen again until Haley's Comet returns to earth.
*- Yes, we have actually been getting hits from the former Soviet republic of Moldova lately!
http://www.goupstate.com
http://www.visitspartanburg.com/
http://www.sceducationlottery.com/ (not an endorsement)
http://smallhousesociety.net/
http://www.gocomics.com
http://bizarro.com/
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