Libya was an ITALIAN colony, you imbecile machine
Crock, 8/23/24
An interesting phenomenon in the daily comics is that often during the strip's genesis, the creators come up with an odd conceit or bit that is genuinely funny at the time, but then the strip runs for literal decades and they want to do jokes that are not about that bit, using the characters and scenarios they've established that are based around the bit, which produces odd results. Shoe forgetting its characters are all birds is a prime example. Crock is in an even weirder boat, where Grossie and Maggot's son Otis (whose name I could not for the life of me remember for the longest time, and Google was no help, and every once in a while I check out to see if ChatGPT can do the thing it claims it can do, and it told me his name was either "Mongoose" or "Qaddafi," so no, it very much cannot do the thing it claims it can do) is best friends with a vulture. Indeed, the vulture is his only friend, which is why he's excited to talk with him about what he's learned about human reproduction. However, this joke, which would be mildly funny if it were part of a conversation between two normal human children, becomes profoundly weird when it's part of a conversation between a normal human child and a talking vulture. Like, if you knew talking vultures existed, maybe you'd find the idea that storks delivered babies more plausible! On the flipside, if you were a talking vulture and you heard this story about storks, you might have some inside information on storks and their ways that could confirm or deny the details. Anyway, I'm dwelling on all this because the alternative is thinking about how not long before the action in this strip occurred, a vulture dad told his vulture son about vulture sex in great anatomical detail, and I'm not doing any research on vulture reproduction but I'm just going to go ahead and assume that the whole process is pretty gross.
Beetle Bailey, 8/23/24