Frazz by Jef Mallett for April 26, 2015
Transcript:
Caulfield: I saw an ad for a sale that said...Save up to 50% or more! Is it just me, or is that information completely useless? Mrs. Olsen: Caulfield, you are wasting valuable time I could be using to talk about social studies. Caulfield: I guess it wasn't completely useless.
TheSkulker over 9 years ago
Or math!
Kroykali over 9 years ago
My favorite was, “The more you buy, the more you save!”
bsqnbay over 9 years ago
Those ads usually say “save up to X percent on selected items” to lure shoppers into the store. Only to find selected items are not very desirable.
Pocosdad over 9 years ago
Or my favorite “One-Day Only Sale on Saturday – with a Preview Day on Friday.” I’m sorry, that’s a 2-day sale!
Al Nala over 9 years ago
All those ad writers read “Advertising For Dummies”.
trollope'sreader over 9 years ago
I just noticed Jef has given Caulfield a special needs classmate. Is he a new student?
Fido (aka Felix Rex) over 9 years ago
Sorry to disappoint you Caufield, but there is some important information in that ad — the fact that there is a ‘sale’. Now get back to your social studies lesson. You never know when you’ll have to spout some date or something.
dja1701 over 9 years ago
All advertising is intrusive irrelevant BS.
meowlin over 9 years ago
A carpet store here used to advertise, “Some items slashed up to 50%!”.Gotta wonder what they were thinking, phrasing it that way…
Stephen Gilberg over 9 years ago
I’ve also seen a site claim that it has been viewed “more than [large, nonround number] times.”
Jayneknox over 9 years ago
“I just noticed Jef has given Caulfield a special needs classmate. "
Jef is a class act. Thank you, Jef!
Carl R over 9 years ago
“Social Studies” is a subject that probably should never have been invented. I personally think it would be better if students had more exposure to the meat of “History”, “Civics”, and “Economics” rather than a soft blend of the three mixed together.
hippogriff over 9 years ago
The Wolf In Your Midst: We frequently do..Carl R: True enough, but it is obvious why state politicians abolished civics.
Marathon Zack almost 8 years ago
As an elementary school teacher, who teaches all subjects, she should have used that as an opportunity to teach them about math. There’s a learning opportunity in every question if you’re willing to look for it. Maybe even a history lesson on when marketers started misusing math, an economics lesson on how sales really work, and even a grammar lesson on combining “up to” and “more” in the same ad.
DKHenderson about 1 month ago
Mrs. Olsen has the desks lined up in an interesting way.