Author Archive

Toto, Tonto, let’s call the whole thing off

August 11, 2024

Today’s Dan Piraro Bizarro, in three panels: an odd title panel that seems to be mostly about phallicity in the mythic Old West, and two Toto / Tonto confusion panels: the Lone Ranger and Toto (with a glancing allusion to Little Orphan Annie); and Dorothy and Tonto — to which I’ve added a Gershwin song in my title for this posting — to make a rich stew of American pop culture, covering the comics, jokes, movies, radio, tv, and popular music:


(#1) It’s a Sunday panel, so it’s by DP, not Wayno, and it’s a horizontal strip rather than a vertical one-panel gag (if you’re puzzled by the odd symbols in the cartoon — Dan Piraro says there are 7 in this strip — see this Page)

I’ll look at things panel by panel, then comment on my title for this posting — but first I’ll point out that

— the second panel, set in the desert of the mythic Old West, is from the Lone Ranger world, but with the dog Toto (intruding from the Wizard of Oz world) in place of the faithful Indian companion Tonto (Toto in effect punning on Tonto)

— while the third panel, with Dorothy confronting the Wicked Witch of the West (accompanied by one of her evil flying monkeys) on the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City of Oz, is from the Wizard of Oz world, but with Tonto (intruding from the Lone Ranger world) in place of Toto (Tonto in effect punning on Toto)

Here I’m carrying over my analysis, in yesterday’s posting “Harry’s scaffolding”, of one type of absurdist cartoon as involving an anchor world and an intrusive world; the second panel of #1 stands on its own as one such absurdist cartoon, and the third is another. The special delight of these panels is that the two absurdist cartoons are converses, conceptual mirror images of one another.

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Harry’s scaffolding

August 10, 2024

From New Yorker bob (Bob Eckstein) — a regular visitor on this blog — in the West Side Rag (in NYC), as reproduced in his 8/9 newsletter The Bob, this charmingly absurdist cartoon:


(#1) Into an ordinary living room obtrudes one of the banes of urban street life, the often years-long scaffolding for construction projects — highlighted here by showing not just the scaffold structure of pipes, but also some green protective sheeting for the project (this in an otherwise b&w cartoon, so it’s shriekingly obtrusive)

Very roughly, cartoons and comics hinge on either word play (very commonly, punning) or the humor of situation. In turn, the humor of situation either comments on social, cultural, or political matters, or displays an absurdity — like surrealistic art, depicting discordant, inappropriate, ambivalent, or inexplicable elements of some situation, as if in a dream. And then, a lot of absurdos (absurdist cartoons) depict scenes that seem surreal because they unfold simultaneously in two different worlds, in what I’ll call an anchor world and an intrusive world.

The cartoon in #1 is a two-world absurdo. The anchor world is a modern middle-class living room, inhabited by three characters all sitting on comfortable furniture in the room: two women engaged in conversation about the third character, Harry, who’s engrossed in reading something. The trouble with Harry is that he’s covered in scaffolding, as in the intrusive world, a city street where construction is going on.

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For the quiet room, the loudest food

August 9, 2024

An Asher Perlman cartoon in the 8/12 issue of the New Yorker — deliberately contrived so as to present a puzzle in cartoon understanding:


(#1) Where are we? Who are those guys? What’s “the quiet room”? What’s “the loudest food on the planet”, and why would anyone want a bucket of it?

I ask these questions because it took me a while to get the cartoon; I was just baffled at first, distracted (as Perlman no doubt wanted me to be) by “the quiet room” and “the loudest food”, and so missed the counter with things for sale under it, and the machine with bits of stuff shooting into the air … oh, a popcorn machine! And then it all fell into place.

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Flavor of the Week

August 9, 2024

The New Yorker cover for the August 12th, 2024 issue is a great big Roz Chast cartoon. With the accompanying cover story, “Roz Chast’s “Flavor of the Week”: The artist’s enticing (and not so enticing) tweaks to one of summer’s enduring pleasures” by Françoise Muhly on 8/5/24:


(#1) Along with plain Vanilla, there are strangely modified real flavors, in it for the alliteration (Microchip Mint, First Avenue Fudge); actual food names not especially attractive in an ice cream (Lard Swirl, Hardtack, the potato variety Yukon Gold); and lots of totally non-food allusive names (Placebo, Bitcoin, Tumbleweed, Amnesia, Tsunami, and the noble gas Xenon)

For the cover of the August 12, 2024, issue, the cartoonist Roz Chast — who has delighted readers since 1978 with her opinionated and peculiar takes on life’s indignities — gives ice-cream makers some suggestions for new flavors. “There are a lot of things I like about ice-cream stores aside from the ice cream itself,” Chast said. “I like looking at the different colors and patterns of all the bins. I like comparing cones: wafer flat-bottom or pointy classic? And the names of the flavors: the more preposterous and baroque, the better.”

(There’s a Page on this blog with links to my postings about Roz Chast and her work)

Preposterous and baroque naming schemes run riot in several domains: famously, for colors, especially of paints and of fabrics; and then widely in the word of ice cream flavors, where many frozen-confection firms exult in their naming practices. I’ll comment on just three US companies, with three different approaches: Häagen-Dazs, Baskin-Robbins, and Ben & Jerry’s.

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A homo thesaurus

August 8, 2024

An alert yesterday from Ernesto Cuba about the Homosaurus project: an LGBT thesaurus, with a portmanteau name

homosaurushomo(sexual) + thesaurusthesaurus from Ancient Greek, meaning ‘treasure, storehouse’

and a logo featuring a mascot apatosaurus (aka brontosaurus):


(#1) The Homosaurus mascot is a huge but herbivorous (hence unthreatening, user-friendly) dinosaur, and it comes with an accompanying Pride rainbow

— all these creatures with names  incorporating the formative saur(us) (ultimately from Greek again, and meaning ‘lizard, reptile’ ), utterly unrelated to thesaurus but irresistible as a source of verbal and visual play, as in #1.

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Former Frog in Fableland

August 7, 2024

Today’s Wayno / Piraro Bizarro, in which a prince grouses, over a tipple, about his amatory career, to a nobleman, one of his courtiers:


It seems the prince was once a frog and could rake in the chicks with nothing more than a few commanding ribbits; those were the days of easy scores (if you’re puzzled by the odd symbols in the cartoon — Dan Piraro says there are 3 in this strip — see this Page)

What do women want?, the princel wonders with a whine, recalling that once upon a time a short squat body, moist smooth skin, and long hind legs for leaping used to drive them into an osculatory frenzy. It’s all so damn unfair. (Wayno’s title for the cartoon: “Unhappy Ending”.)

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Lowry, Looking Back

August 7, 2024

Like my earlier “Sparky Schulz and the least of us”, this was not my intention for a posting today, but you work with what you get, and what was delivered to me this morning was a paperback copy of Lois Lowry’s Looking Back: A Book of Memories (the 2017 revised and expanded edition; the first edition came out in 1998). The looking in the title alludes to the organization of the brief sections of the book around snapshots of LL, her family, and related subjects. In addition, apposite quotations from LL’s works head many of the sections.

The cover and the publisher’s blurb:


The cover of the book: a snapshot of LL and her sister Helen as girls, looking awkward in monstrously unflattering bathing suits

In this moving autobiography, Lois Lowry explores her rich history through personal photographs, memories, and recollections of childhood friends. Lowry’s writing often transports readers into other worlds. Now, we have the opportunity to travel into the real world that is her life. This edition features a refreshed design, an introduction by bestselling author Alice Hoffman, and material from Lois from the past twenty years, including the making of The Giver movie.

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Sparky Schulz and the least of us

August 7, 2024

(Not my intention for a posting today, but you work with what you get, and I happened to have a piece of (what I think of as) Jesus’s DEI Sermon sitting on my desktop, waiting for a suitable occasion. Which came this morning in a lead from Henry Mensch on Facebook that took me to a website of Peanuts cartoonist Charles Schulz’s widow Jean; from Jean Schulz’s Blog “The Circle Continues”, on 2/23/19:

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The sensuality of the male nude

August 7, 2024

(Visually over the line for kids and the sexually modest)

The sensuality of the male nude, at least as painter Ron Griswold — a recent Pinterest discovery — sees things. Which means not shrinking from the sexual element in the genre, but embracing it (NOAD on the adjective sensual: ‘relating to or involving gratification of the senses and physical, especially sexual, pleasure’), and that includes full frontal nudity in compositions where it seems appropriate to  him (especially in paintings of male couples). And, in turn, that means everyday-sized penises, rather than the ascetically small genitals on heroic statues of classic antiquity and in Renaissance paintings in this tradition. RG brings us hot dudes with noticeable (but not obtrusive) cocks, yes, but they’re in high-art paintings depicting the beauty of the male body and the affection of lovers, and the paintings lavish as much attention on the faces of the men in them as on their packages.

I’m going to show you only one of RG’s male couples, but felt I had to justify flouting the WordPress ban on genitals by claiming the High-Art Serious-Intent Exemption for it — while warning my readers what’s about to come, so that they can opt out of viewing it if they wish; the painting (Nella Foresta) will come last in my three examples.

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Silver Bob and Wooden Bob

August 6, 2024

Silver Bob. From Max Vasilatos Rasmussen on Facebook yesterday:

It’s lived as a piece of carved poplar at Arnold Zwicky’s house since the 1990s.

It’s taken a lot of years to get around to the cast piece.

Here is Bob in sterling silver, waiting to go to Arnold’s to complete the circle.


(#1) Silver Bob, soon to join his poplar brother; Max says: I’ve left him not entirely finished, so his sprues are showing, and he’s a little oxidized, which I think is good

(sprue ‘a channel through which metal or plastic is poured into a mold’ (NOAD))

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