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Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson for December 21, 1988
Transcript:
Calvin: Read me "Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie." Dad: Oh, I don't want to read that again. Let's read something different tonight. Calvin: No, I want to hear "Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie." Dad: C'mon, Calvin, I've read this a thousand times. Calvin: Read it again. Please? Please? Dad: All right, all right. Calvin: You'll do the squeaky voices, the gooshy sound effects, and the happy hampster hop, won't you? Dad: Look, can't we read something else?
yow4zip Premium Member about 11 years ago
Your discomfort is half the fun, Dad!
bmonk about 11 years ago
Thatâs the problem with doing something with full effort once around a kid. . . . .
alexzinuro about 3 years ago
My advice to Calvinâs Dad: sir, why not read him The Witches (1983), by Roald Dahl? Calvin has provided ample evidence that heâs looked at it once or twice in the library, and that itâs something that heâd enjoy. According to Dahlâs interpretation of ârealâ witches, they have extra-large nostrils, so to them, a clean child smells like dogsâ droppings (and something tells me that when Calvinâs clean, thatâs how he smells to Hobbes), which is why witches are determined to use their magic to get rid of children. Clean children emit âstink-wavesâ that only witches can smell, so can you imagine what Dahl would have said if heâd known about Hobbes? âApparently, the Grand High Witch has concocted a formula that enables American witches to bring toy animals (and the occasional bike) to life. Why else would Hobbes come to life when only he and Calvin are together, and why else would he believe that âlittle boys donât smell so goodâ?â. Calvinâs aversion to baths is an indication that he believes in real witches. Also, American witches can turn children into hot dogs, and when Calvin wanted Hobbes to use the transmogrifier gun to turn him into a Pteranodon (he ambiguously says âPterodactylâ), and Hobbes turned him into a chicken instead because it was almost lunchtime, Calvin was âGLAD HE WASNâT HUNGRY FOR A HOT DOG!â. Calvin used the expression ââŠyou should have seen the sparks flyâŠâ when discussing with Hobbes a conflict that heâd had at school with Susie. In The Witches, when the English witches (who are masquerading as the so-called RSPCC, or âRoyal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Childrenâ) have their meeting at a hotel, the Grand High Witch, who is Norwegian, sends white-hot sparks flying from her eyes to kill a witch who argues with her.