The dog smells the chicken and wants to eat it, simple as
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith, 12/2/24
I had never really thought about it, but if you had asked me before today, I would've told you I was pretty sure that the chickens Snuffy steals from his neighbors by stuffing them into a patchèd sack in the dead of night were still alive when he got home. Like, obviously they get killed eventually but, I dunno, I assumed it was right before the Smifs ate them. But surely if the lumps in that bag represented a live chicken, it would've been prompted to move around and squawk a bit by all the commotion in today's strip, so I guess Snuffy just strangles the birds before they even leave the coop he's stealing them from, the better to make a silent getaway. Not sure why that makes this whole scene so much grimmer, but I think you can agree that it really does.
Dennis the Menace, 12/2/24
I'm on the record as hating the running joke where Dennis slags on his mother's cooking all the time. I thought I hated it because of its underlying gender politics, but it turns out I hate it even more because it set up today's panel, in which Margaret is acting out an ambiguous wife/mother role as she and Dennis "play house" and Dennis experiences good cooking for the first time ever, and it's so baffling to him he doesn't even have a coherent vocabulary to describe it, which will change the nature of their relationship forever.
Hi and Lois, 12/2/24
Ha ha, we all know that regular guys (old) are constantly avoiding listening to their wives by watching the "big game" on TV. But what do younger guys (45 and under, a demographic into which Hi Flagston falls) do when their wife wants to "talk about her feelings or experiences that are meaningful to her" or whatever? What if I told you that they avoid all that by watching the "big game" on their [record scratch] PHONES????