Heresy, hats, etc.
Beetle Bailey, 12/17/24
A thing that fascinates me is that deep in the DNA of the daily comics is the idea that their artists conceive of them as a black-and-white strip where the blacks and whites represent a platonic natural-color "reality" one conceptual layer down, even though probably the majority of their readers see them in a form where someone (not the original artist) has added color to the strip in ways that don't or can't reflect that "reality". I realize that was an extremely complicated sentence, but a simple way to illustrate it is that Beetle Bailey's Miss Buxley, in "reality," wears a red dress to work, as depicted in the Sunday strips where the artists do the coloring themselves, but in the black-and-white dailies this solid color is represented by black, even in strips that subsequently have color added for online display.
Anyway, I bring all that because the Zero's red hat is clearly a bit of whimsy added by the colorist rather than something intended by the original artist, though comics are a collaborate process and I enjoy what everyone brings to the table. According to an article on the Smart Hospitality Supplies website (and who am I to argue with the severely underpaid content drone or, possibly, large language model-based AI that wrote this), a red chef's hat "can signify passion, power, and determination. It might hint at a chef who is fearless in their culinary experiments, pushes boundaries and isn’t afraid to spice things up. This could translate into bold flavour combinations, innovative techniques, or a drive to keep service running smoothly and effectively in the kitchen." Is writing a phone number in whipped cream an "innovative technique"? We'll allow it. We're also told a blue chef's hat "can represent tranquillity, depth, and wisdom," so clearly some thought was put into adhering to Zero's character here.