As the World Thorps
Gil Thorp, 8/29/22
Seems its new author is transforming Gil Thorp from one of newspaper comics' few remaining sports strips into a full-blown soaper, and at breakneck speed.
In just five weeks, we've seen Gil ambiguously flirt with Barkeep Bethany and mysterious blonde "Ms. Holmes," and Coach Ms. Coach Thorp disappear with the kids on the one weekend Gil would be in town, explaining (?) that "I need Coach Gil to be more at home sometimes." Luke Martinez, new coach at Valley Tech, is a thoroughgoing jackass who drunkenly insults Gil in a bar, libels him in a Marty Moon podcast, compulsively brags about his own athletic, coaching, and intellectual prowess, and here humiliates his teenage son ("Haha! Dad! Haha! You asshole!"). His wife Francesca humblebrags about being "just a heart surgeon" and subtly negs Mimi about being a "stay-at-home mom." All the ingredients of an explosive melodrama!
Hey, maybe instead of the Homecoming celebration we'll get an emotional bonfire this fall!
Crankshaft, 8/29/22
Let me save you a couple brain cells looking for a joke here: searching "kids play servers" will get you mostly family-friendly Minecraft sites, and "restaurants where the waitstaff also babysits" are very rare, imagine that.
My real interest here is Max and Hannah's car. I get a strong "1996 Hyundai Accent" vibe, which fits their "failed movie theater entrepreneurs living with his parents" demographic. The odd thing is, everybody in Centerville and Westview seems to drive the exact same car. Check out Crankshaft himself, Ralph Meckler, and the Winkerbeans:
Crankshaft, 7/10/22 and 7/9/18; Funky Winkerbean, 8/24/22 (panels)
Did they get some sort of group discount? Was it part of Hyundai's Rust-Belt marketing strategy? Do they pass cars back and forth between the strips? Does the Ohio UAW's "Buy American" office know about this? Maybe they all just share one car? That last one wouldn't surprise me; I mean none of them is going anywhere.
Curtis, 8/29/22
Free availability of an essential good mitigates absolute poverty but ruins local suppliers and distorts unrelated markets as families reallocate spending. Next up: "Ma, the rent is too damn high for no good reason," brought to you by Ray Billingsley and Thomas Sowell.
9 Chickweed Lane, 8/29/22
When these two aren't talking about sex, they're talking about nothing. It's an improvement!
--Uncle Lumpy