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By the way, in case anyone is interested I compose my poems starting at 1:05 am est when the strip first appears in the East coast. I donāt cheat like others who prepare it an hour in advance by going to other sites and getting a head start. LOL!
Good morning, reunited friends and incarcerated villains !
I knew since a ways back that Tim and Peggy would wind up friending again. They all look like they are where they should be except that dirty dog Pouch who slips through the wire yet again.
For now, a few impressions of todayās concluding strip:
Itās good that they wrapped up some loose threads, but they actually seem to have introduced a couple of new ones. Pouchās client was āinvisibleā but his shooter wasnāt. What does that mean? Does it mean that the guy who took the hand-off of the balloon wasnāt the actual client? Maybe he was a go-between hired specifically to shoot Pouch. I would have liked a clearer explanation as to what that line actually means.
Oscar: āā¦ but he wonāt walk for assault and attempted murder.ā I find that a little confusing. Does that mean he wonāt be prosecuted for embezzling, but only for assault and attempted murder. If so, I wonder why. I suppose the remark that he was a serial embezzler means that he was embezzling from more than just Auntie Bellum.
Iām actually a little surprised that all the residents of the house are charged with drug possession or trafficking. Mr. Wildman said (February 3) that he suspected that most of the new people at the house were users, so I figured there were probably still some of the old people there and that not all of the new people were necessarily users. The police, apparently, think otherwise.
Itās nice to see Peggy with Tim Wildman, but I donāt remember every seeing that woman behind Peggy before. It seems a bit strange to me to be introducing a new character in the last frame of the story. I wonder who she is. Timās wife, maybe?
Overall, I have to say that Iāve really liked this story. There were no crossover characters from other comics, the characters were a little more three-dimensional in personality than the ones in really short stories, and I think that Tracy did a fair amount of investigating, even if some readers wish he would have done more. I will have to verify, but I believe that this is the third longest story that the current Team Tracy has done. I hope they do more like it, and thereās no reason they canāt do even better.
I agree, this has been an entertaining and involving story, with many twists and turns- and some comic relief with B.O. and Gertie! Glad to see wrap-up details, too. But I still want to know more about Pouchās activities.
What about Cheesecake? For that matter, it seems like it would be hard to charge any resident for possession when they werenāt there when the cops showed up.
Not that the story wasnāt engaging and all the other stuff Neil said.
But the core of the story was problematic, as demonstrated by the summary, that all the residents of the Timothy Leary house were charged as druggies. Indeed, that was my complaint from the beginning: All druggies are bad and all hippies are druggies.
Also unsatisfying: Peggy donates the house to charity. I canāt think of a better way to hand the house and property over to developers ā the very thing I thought she and Alex were trying to avoid.
But now, with 20/20 hindsight, āI give upā was indeed the train wreck ending this story, and it is time for moving on.
I promised artsyguy65 that I would try to hunt down a sample strip that Mike posted showing his pencil layout. Someone asked him if he could post a sneak peek of his (at the time, upcoming) new character, Morning Gloria.
He replied, āI can post my pencil versions of her, but she might look different when Joe gets to her,ā and then āRemember, these are MY pencils, not Joeās. Joe may change her look before we get to print.ā This is Mikeās pencil of the strip with the final published strip below it for comparison.
http://worldofdt.info/img/20110808stages.png
You can learn quite a lot by just comparing the two, but Iād like to make note of a few things. Some comics writerās type their dialogue, but Mike seems to write it by hand, storyboard style.
There were a few minor changes in the dialogue, but there is one thing that is quite interesting. Sometimes, Shelley misreads Mikeās handwriting. The greenhouse owner was supposed to be George Decopolis (corrected from Decapolis here), but it ended up being printed as āDecopolusā because the āLIā was misread as a āUā.
The first panel was mirrored to improve the sequential placement of the word balloons, but the composition is otherwise essentially the same as Mike wrote it. Joeās pencils are much more detailed and precise than Mikeās storyboard sketch, but Joeās pencil art for this strip was not posted (and hadnāt even been drawn yet at the time).
A bit abrupt in my opinion, at least one if not two days to go before this. Being that the we shouldāve got an extra day at the hotel and or questioning and charging.
Great wrap-up! Canāt believe we actually got a full-length story with violent bad guys, real crimes, sub-plots and all the loose ends tied up (except for who shot Pouch, which can be answered later in another story). I really enjoyed the story, even though I didnāt expect to.
A very good story, but I wish it didnāt wrap up so quickly. Some dialogue between Tracy and Aquarius, or Auntie Bellum and Aquarius would have given it more closure.
Oh, come on Dick. Itās just you and your old partner. Stop using last names, and, titles. When itās just the two of you, it should be Dick, and, Pat.
1-DT: With online Sport Betting sites such a hit, it was just a matter of time before a āGUILTY OR NOTā website showed up.
CHIEF: Yeah, yeah. Just give me the craic, boy-o. Me wee one needs a new pair-o-shoes!
DT: OK. We got Frenchy with a dead body on tape. Go with GUILTY. AND for a better pay-off, go with FIRST DEGREE MURDER. I think I can āconvinceā Mel T. Face to testify to thatā¦
2-ā¦Now this moron ā Iād definitely lay big money on a GUILTY for embezzling. And maybe make a long shot bet on 20 to Life due to extenuating circumstances.
3-CHIEF: But what about Attempted Murder? DT: Thatās a SUCKERS BET. The best witness for that is a drug dealer. Iād be surprised if the prosecutor even brought those charges but if he does ā NOT GUILTY.
4-DT: Speaking of, a GUILTY verdict is guaranteed for drug dealing for Narky with me testifying against him But because of that, it wonāt pay off much. As for Moe, I suspect the prosecutor wonāt charge him for anything more than Visiting A Public Nuisance. No money in that.
CHIEF: Tis a grand lot of tips, me boy but they better not go arseways. I aināt had a win in donkey years.
5-DT: Well, instead of gambling, you could instead make a legitimate investment in Oklahoma Texās new Elder Care Facility which was formerly an organic farm. He only has one client but heās charging her a fortune.
CHIEF: Donāt care. But keep an eye on it. I think weāll be seeing him on GUILTY OR NOT on a swindling charge soon.
Instead of trashing Mikeās balloon gimmick, give it some respect: Mike needed a code only an over-the-hill hippie with UV lights might stumble over without Pouch realizing it. So we have loads of material for another story: who passed the code to Pouch to sell; who shot Pouch; what crime was the code key to; and will Alex try to sell his knowledge about the operation?
I think this is the first time since I started following on Go Comics, where a Dick Trace case (excluding āMinit Mysteriesā which I think of as comic relief (no pun intended)) had a clean wrap up, with out a reference to the next case hidden in the action.
What happened to the balloon that was getting all kind of arrows pointed to it? Story got so long artists got lost. Maybe next arc will have some fresh freaky like characters and something that might put Dicko and friends in Jeopardy. Please, no Minit Mystery, crossover or retreads.
I wonder where the usual display screens, with the unusual curved sides, have disappeared to. Up to now, they have always been the means of projecting an enlarged image of whoever the cops are currently talking about.
Great wrap-up by Nick & some other commentators. I generally agree that overall this was one of Mike & Joeās better narrative efforts in the past few years, although it could have been tightened up a bit. Iām still wondering why so much narrative time was spent on Pouch & the blue balloon, maybe it was just a plot device to get Auntie Bellum out of the commune & into the hotel room where Oscar could try to off her, but that Oscar plot line could have taken place back at the commune, seems to me. Will we ever see a resolution of Pouch & his shooter? Honestly, when it comes to resolving dangling plot lines down the road Joe & Mike do not have a great track record. Still, tis was an enjoyable Tracy tale.
Pequod almost 4 years ago
All is swell that ends so well. Now justice shall be served
Embezzler. Dealer. Trafficker. Most got what they deserved.
No Bogota for Oscar, who skimmed up so much cream
In a spartan prison cell. His life now a bad dream.
Age of Aquarius at an end. Farewell distinctive threads
Auntie gave away her digs. She eases off her meds.
Tiger gets no mulligan. Manslaughter involuntary
Has time to contemplate his deed locked up in solitary.
Ty receives a lighter touch. Penalty for that lid
Pouch now limps away unscathed. Few know what he did.
Harsh punishment was meted out for blue balloon delayed
Pouch walks the earth in gratitude that he was spared, not slayed.
DaJellyBelly almost 4 years ago
I wonderful end to this case!
Brian Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Then the charity sold the property to Stephan and it all worked out.
seanyj almost 4 years ago
So this case is finally over. I hope they donāt give us one of those Minute Mysteries for the next two weeks.
avenger09 almost 4 years ago
Ah, how sweet
The story is complete
The end has arrived
Is anyone really surprised
Sure we had more weeks
Hills, valleys and peaks
Characters that were new
And balloons the color blue
But after all was done and said
And this story was put to bed
The train it sprung a leak
The ending again was weak
And off the rails it went
Despite the noblest intent
A six is the final score
It wasnāt a total bore
avenger09 almost 4 years ago
By the way, in case anyone is interested I compose my poems starting at 1:05 am est when the strip first appears in the East coast. I donāt cheat like others who prepare it an hour in advance by going to other sites and getting a head start. LOL!
jonahhex1 almost 4 years ago
This was the best case in a long time. Hope this is the start of a trend.
ChucklinChuck almost 4 years ago
Kinda sad to see it end. For me the best case in years.
Gweedo -it's legal here- Murray almost 4 years ago
Good morning, reunited friends and incarcerated villains !
I knew since a ways back that Tim and Peggy would wind up friending again. They all look like they are where they should be except that dirty dog Pouch who slips through the wire yet again.
Neil Wick almost 4 years ago
Good morningā¢, summationists!
For now, a few impressions of todayās concluding strip:
Itās good that they wrapped up some loose threads, but they actually seem to have introduced a couple of new ones. Pouchās client was āinvisibleā but his shooter wasnāt. What does that mean? Does it mean that the guy who took the hand-off of the balloon wasnāt the actual client? Maybe he was a go-between hired specifically to shoot Pouch. I would have liked a clearer explanation as to what that line actually means.
Oscar: āā¦ but he wonāt walk for assault and attempted murder.ā I find that a little confusing. Does that mean he wonāt be prosecuted for embezzling, but only for assault and attempted murder. If so, I wonder why. I suppose the remark that he was a serial embezzler means that he was embezzling from more than just Auntie Bellum.
Iām actually a little surprised that all the residents of the house are charged with drug possession or trafficking. Mr. Wildman said (February 3) that he suspected that most of the new people at the house were users, so I figured there were probably still some of the old people there and that not all of the new people were necessarily users. The police, apparently, think otherwise.
Itās nice to see Peggy with Tim Wildman, but I donāt remember every seeing that woman behind Peggy before. It seems a bit strange to me to be introducing a new character in the last frame of the story. I wonder who she is. Timās wife, maybe?
Overall, I have to say that Iāve really liked this story. There were no crossover characters from other comics, the characters were a little more three-dimensional in personality than the ones in really short stories, and I think that Tracy did a fair amount of investigating, even if some readers wish he would have done more. I will have to verify, but I believe that this is the third longest story that the current Team Tracy has done. I hope they do more like it, and thereās no reason they canāt do even better.
L Silverman almost 4 years ago
Does anyone know the significance of the first panel, the peace symbol over a hill of grass? Or is it just a case of the artist being artistic?
blunebottle almost 4 years ago
I agree, this has been an entertaining and involving story, with many twists and turns- and some comic relief with B.O. and Gertie! Glad to see wrap-up details, too. But I still want to know more about Pouchās activities.
Ida No almost 4 years ago
A regular rogueās gallery of āwhoās who.ā Now, can anyone tell us whatās what, and whatās when?
Brian Premium Member almost 4 years ago
What about Cheesecake? For that matter, it seems like it would be hard to charge any resident for possession when they werenāt there when the cops showed up.
Cheapskate0 almost 4 years ago
Called it. Sweatbox ending.
Not that the story wasnāt engaging and all the other stuff Neil said.
But the core of the story was problematic, as demonstrated by the summary, that all the residents of the Timothy Leary house were charged as druggies. Indeed, that was my complaint from the beginning: All druggies are bad and all hippies are druggies.
Also unsatisfying: Peggy donates the house to charity. I canāt think of a better way to hand the house and property over to developers ā the very thing I thought she and Alex were trying to avoid.
But now, with 20/20 hindsight, āI give upā was indeed the train wreck ending this story, and it is time for moving on.
Neil Wick almost 4 years ago
I promised artsyguy65 that I would try to hunt down a sample strip that Mike posted showing his pencil layout. Someone asked him if he could post a sneak peek of his (at the time, upcoming) new character, Morning Gloria.
He replied, āI can post my pencil versions of her, but she might look different when Joe gets to her,ā and then āRemember, these are MY pencils, not Joeās. Joe may change her look before we get to print.ā This is Mikeās pencil of the strip with the final published strip below it for comparison.
http://worldofdt.info/img/20110808stages.png
You can learn quite a lot by just comparing the two, but Iād like to make note of a few things. Some comics writerās type their dialogue, but Mike seems to write it by hand, storyboard style.
There were a few minor changes in the dialogue, but there is one thing that is quite interesting. Sometimes, Shelley misreads Mikeās handwriting. The greenhouse owner was supposed to be George Decopolis (corrected from Decapolis here), but it ended up being printed as āDecopolusā because the āLIā was misread as a āUā.
The first panel was mirrored to improve the sequential placement of the word balloons, but the composition is otherwise essentially the same as Mike wrote it. Joeās pencils are much more detailed and precise than Mikeās storyboard sketch, but Joeās pencil art for this strip was not posted (and hadnāt even been drawn yet at the time).
GoComicsGo! almost 4 years ago
A bit abrupt in my opinion, at least one if not two days to go before this. Being that the we shouldāve got an extra day at the hotel and or questioning and charging.
Aladar30 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Happy end for Mr. Bellum. But just for her.
crobinson019 almost 4 years ago
Not the usual Shoot āEm Up but good policing none the less. The story dragged in places; but Iām gad to see things resolved.
WGillete almost 4 years ago
Great wrap-up! Canāt believe we actually got a full-length story with violent bad guys, real crimes, sub-plots and all the loose ends tied up (except for who shot Pouch, which can be answered later in another story). I really enjoyed the story, even though I didnāt expect to.
kantuck-nadie almost 4 years ago
Well a fine ending to the case.
Major Matt Mason Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Mammy and Pappy Yokum?
Ignatz Premium Member almost 4 years ago
A very good story, but I wish it didnāt wrap up so quickly. Some dialogue between Tracy and Aquarius, or Auntie Bellum and Aquarius would have given it more closure.
Chris almost 4 years ago
and she couldnāt be any happier.
WilliamVollmer almost 4 years ago
Oh, come on Dick. Itās just you and your old partner. Stop using last names, and, titles. When itās just the two of you, it should be Dick, and, Pat.
Another Take almost 4 years ago
1-DT: With online Sport Betting sites such a hit, it was just a matter of time before a āGUILTY OR NOTā website showed up.
CHIEF: Yeah, yeah. Just give me the craic, boy-o. Me wee one needs a new pair-o-shoes!
DT: OK. We got Frenchy with a dead body on tape. Go with GUILTY. AND for a better pay-off, go with FIRST DEGREE MURDER. I think I can āconvinceā Mel T. Face to testify to thatā¦
2-ā¦Now this moron ā Iād definitely lay big money on a GUILTY for embezzling. And maybe make a long shot bet on 20 to Life due to extenuating circumstances.
3-CHIEF: But what about Attempted Murder? DT: Thatās a SUCKERS BET. The best witness for that is a drug dealer. Iād be surprised if the prosecutor even brought those charges but if he does ā NOT GUILTY.
4-DT: Speaking of, a GUILTY verdict is guaranteed for drug dealing for Narky with me testifying against him But because of that, it wonāt pay off much. As for Moe, I suspect the prosecutor wonāt charge him for anything more than Visiting A Public Nuisance. No money in that.
CHIEF: Tis a grand lot of tips, me boy but they better not go arseways. I aināt had a win in donkey years.
5-DT: Well, instead of gambling, you could instead make a legitimate investment in Oklahoma Texās new Elder Care Facility which was formerly an organic farm. He only has one client but heās charging her a fortune.
CHIEF: Donāt care. But keep an eye on it. I think weāll be seeing him on GUILTY OR NOT on a swindling charge soon.
WGillete almost 4 years ago
Instead of trashing Mikeās balloon gimmick, give it some respect: Mike needed a code only an over-the-hill hippie with UV lights might stumble over without Pouch realizing it. So we have loads of material for another story: who passed the code to Pouch to sell; who shot Pouch; what crime was the code key to; and will Alex try to sell his knowledge about the operation?
hwmj almost 4 years ago
Cool
retropop almost 4 years ago
This storyline ran on a bit too long ā how many weeks was it?
h.v.greenman almost 4 years ago
I think this is the first time since I started following on Go Comics, where a Dick Trace case (excluding āMinit Mysteriesā which I think of as comic relief (no pun intended)) had a clean wrap up, with out a reference to the next case hidden in the action.
MuddyUSA Premium Member almost 4 years ago
After a long, long story line, with a flood of characters, it is all wrapped up in just 5 panels! Hmmmmmmmm?
Richard Klinzman Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Iām still wondering about the story involving the notorious āblue balloon.ā What was that all about?
trimguy almost 4 years ago
So Pouch goes back to selling balloons and continues to be an information broker
buckman-j almost 4 years ago
What happened to the balloon that was getting all kind of arrows pointed to it? Story got so long artists got lost. Maybe next arc will have some fresh freaky like characters and something that might put Dicko and friends in Jeopardy. Please, no Minit Mystery, crossover or retreads.
Ken in Ohio almost 4 years ago
I wonder where the usual display screens, with the unusual curved sides, have disappeared to. Up to now, they have always been the means of projecting an enlarged image of whoever the cops are currently talking about.
BreathlessMahoney77 almost 4 years ago
Great wrap-up by Nick & some other commentators. I generally agree that overall this was one of Mike & Joeās better narrative efforts in the past few years, although it could have been tightened up a bit. Iām still wondering why so much narrative time was spent on Pouch & the blue balloon, maybe it was just a plot device to get Auntie Bellum out of the commune & into the hotel room where Oscar could try to off her, but that Oscar plot line could have taken place back at the commune, seems to me. Will we ever see a resolution of Pouch & his shooter? Honestly, when it comes to resolving dangling plot lines down the road Joe & Mike do not have a great track record. Still, tis was an enjoyable Tracy tale.
Sisyphos almost 4 years ago
Thatās a wrap!
Thanks to Tracy and Chief Patton (and Mike and Joe and all Team Tracy) for taking this Sunday to tidy up the dangling bits of this excellent story!
Black76Manta almost 4 years ago
Iām glad that Miss Bellum ended up with good company!