We had a totally useless med school class where some psychosociological type actually used Family Circle cartoons as a teaching aid (shudder).
The strip cited in the OP is less awful than usual. Don’t worry though - Neutered Mom, Blank-Faced Dad and the cute widdle weasel children will be back to their usual high standards of nauseating pablum tomorrow.
A Jack Chick-style Family Circus might be amusing though.
Family Circus is only funny when they make their way into The Comics Curmudgeon. Scroll down to the one where Grandma is looking through the trunk in the attic. I laughed out loud.
I was just discussing with my mom how awful some comics are. The worst is Fred Basset. This “brilliant” strip is life garfield, only with a dog instead of a cat. Today’s strip had the owner ordering a couple of items from a delivery place. His wife, in the next room, shouts out that she wants (combo numbers) “Eighteen, twenty one, and thirty four!”. The big punchline comes when we see Fred’s thought bubble: “And fifty two!”
Ha! The dog wants delivery too! How do they come up with this stuff?
The only thing more mystifying than people who find Family Circle funny are people who found those stupid soap opera type cartoons like Mary Worth even slightly interesting…you could read that cartoon for months on end with absolutely NOTHING happening.
You don’t understand. Only is someone, anyone, thinks the strip is funny, the seal is broken.
Bill Keane has struggled for decades to publish a non-offensive and completely unfunny single panel strip to hold back the forces of darkness. Now, thanks to Baldwin, we are one step closer to Armageddon.
There’s only one way to enjoy “Family Circus.” Draw intersecting horizontal and verticle lines in the circular panel. Now it looks like a telescopic scope on a rifle. See how close you can come to a head shot!
There’s a vocal contingent of newspaper readers who don’t want new or unique or fresh. They want familiarity. They want to open that paper and see the same strips they saw as a youth. Whether they’re good or not is irrelevant. And they’ll raise holy hell if they aren’t there.
Fred Basset suffers from the “original creator is dead, but let’s milk it for all it’s worth” syndrome. It was a fairly good strip in the 60s and 70s, but after Alex Graham died in 1991, it lost everything that made it good (if somewhat low-key).
I’ve been reading the same paper for 40 years and yet I had to double check just now to see if Judge Parker and Mark Trail are still included in the comics section.
Yup, still there. Such is my mental block.
(For me, the only time TFC came close to being funny was once back in the late 70’s when Dolly explained to Jeffy, “You call a lady ‘Mrs.’ if she’s married, ‘Miss’ if she’s not married, and ‘Ms.’ if it’s a secret.”)
I haven’t read the newspaper comics in years. Partially it’s because I canceled my newspaper delivery several years ago but I actually stopped years before that. Once Calvin and Hobbs stopped I was down to only reading Doonesbury and it just wasn’t worth the bother. They are all, every single one of them, awful. They should just eliminate the whole fucking genre*.
*By that I mean newspaper comics. There are good web comics of course.
You have no idea how right you are. At the newspaper I work at they changed the TV guide from being in Sunday’s paper to Friday’s. For weeks on end I’d get calls about how much people hate it. I still get one or two a day.
My favorite though was when a woman who’d be out of town called and asked about it. I told her and she said, “Well, I don’t like it!” Then hung up.
How does she know she doesn’t like it? She hadn’t seen the new layout, she barely heard about it ten seconds ago, when I told her.
Oh, I have a pretty good idea. I’m one of those cartoonists miserably clinging to what few papers I have, wishing Mary Worth would keel over so I could have her apartment.
[nitpick]Bloom County, not Mad Magazine. It was in a newspaper insert from one of the books. The same one that had the Ask George Will column.[/nitpick]