Random Panel: Often thought, rarely said out loud

dynamo-5-20-jay-faerber-mahmud-asrar-mudfight

(Last panel from “Dynamo 5″, number 20, ©2009, Jay Faerber and Mahmud Asrar. Which you should probably buy just for this entire War Chest sequence, it's a hoot.)

7 Responses to Random Panel: Often thought, rarely said out loud

  1. HalLoweEn JacK says:

    That they both responded simultaneously suggests that they have both either had that thought before or heard other peopel propose the idea and are really sick of hearing it – the immediacy of their response suggests further that it is such a common thought/proposition that they don’t even have to think before reacting.

    I would suggest they tried it once and it didn’t go well, and now they resent even the mention of it.

  2. Jose Inoa says:

    I agree, JacK.
    Their battle-gusto suggests that their breakup was a bad one. 😛

  3. Frankie says:

    Who does that dumbass think he is talking and seeing with no face?

  4. Cavalier says:

    Oddly, I just read this same joke in a Terry Prachett novel. I wonder where else it floats around.

  5. HalLoweEn JacK says:

    @ Cavalier

    The joke exists wherever there are men, women for men to fantasise about, and and kind of commonly available viscous substance like mud or jelly.

    In short, everywhere.

    Jeff, please draw a one panel cartoon of a courtroom with a femal defence lawyer and prosecutor and a male judge, and transplant the dialogue from the above panel.

    Or if I win the caption contest, draw that for me.

  6. HalLoweEn JacK says:

    Hmmm… other situations in which this dialogue could be applied…

    – On any reality tv show (except Biggest Loser)
    – In parliament
    – At a presidential press conference (imagine a reporter asking that question during a press briefing on Iraq with Hillary!)
    – It applies EVERYWHERE!

  7. HalLoweEn JacK says:

    Final thought – looking over the war chest images, I think it’s funny that she’s a deliberately large breasted superhero, yet still more anatomically correct than a ‘serious’ Liefield woman.