It needs to “doff” its “crown” in respect.
Little known fact: the captain of the Titanic didn’t tip the iceberg, and we all know how that went.
Tip your hat has you pass. Since it’s your hat, you get to keep the tip.
Going rate is 20%.
Some icebergs automatically charge a gratuity now.
AI iceberg?
New tipping guidance: If you are standing you don’t need to tip.
Groan…
You made me laugh out loud with this one, John…
…almost as much as Michelle Obama did the other night, as depicted in your other cartoon today! Thank you for both!
It’s got a healthy cash floe.
20% minimum, or we sink you.
When you get milk, don´t tip the cow.
Tipped the scale with this one…
Fun fact: icebergs (and ice cubes, for that matter) float with 10 percent above the water level, and 90 percent below. So if you see a mammoth iceberg (in person or on a documentary), you’re only looking at one tenth of it!
John Deering and John Newcombe
John Deering
SHAKEDOWNCITY 28 days ago
It needs to “doff” its “crown” in respect.
oldpine52 28 days ago
Little known fact: the captain of the Titanic didn’t tip the iceberg, and we all know how that went.
tudza Premium Member 28 days ago
Tip your hat has you pass. Since it’s your hat, you get to keep the tip.
Ubintold 28 days ago
Going rate is 20%.
tudza Premium Member 28 days ago
Some icebergs automatically charge a gratuity now.
Huckleberry Hiroshima 28 days ago
AI iceberg?
Retrac Premium Member 28 days ago
New tipping guidance: If you are standing you don’t need to tip.
LeftCoastBoomer Premium Member 28 days ago
Groan…
Jody H. Premium Member 28 days ago
You made me laugh out loud with this one, John…
…almost as much as Michelle Obama did the other night, as depicted in your other cartoon today! Thank you for both!
Frank Burns Eats Worms 28 days ago
It’s got a healthy cash floe.
Mike Baldwin creator 28 days ago
20% minimum, or we sink you.
Jml58 28 days ago
When you get milk, don´t tip the cow.
Jeffin Premium Member 28 days ago
Tipped the scale with this one…
wildlandwaters 28 days ago
Fun fact: icebergs (and ice cubes, for that matter) float with 10 percent above the water level, and 90 percent below. So if you see a mammoth iceberg (in person or on a documentary), you’re only looking at one tenth of it!