Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for January 08, 2010

  1. Woody with beer
    WoodEye  almost 15 years ago

    Anything they say has to be wrong.

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    TlalocW  almost 15 years ago

    I knew what wainscoting is thanks to the Monty Python skit about Killer Sheep.

     •  Reply
  3. Lady with a bow
    ejcapulet  almost 15 years ago

    Wow - he’s clever!

     •  Reply
  4. Stewiebrian
    pouncingtiger  almost 15 years ago

    (Response to TlalocW) “Ow! One’s got a gun!”

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    brewwitch  almost 15 years ago

    This touches on a deep philosophical question:

    If a man has an opinion in a forest, with no woman there to correct him, is he still wrong?

     •  Reply
  6. Opus45
    poppy1313  almost 15 years ago

    Wainscoting was used a lot in Kitchens and dinning rooms in the 1940s.

    Paneling up from the floor about 3 feet or so with a big molding at the top. Same height as the top of the kitchen chairs to keep them from marking up the wall.

    Who says reading the funny’s is a waste of time?

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    kreole  almost 15 years ago

    She’s Audrey, Hank William’s wife.

     •  Reply
  8. Carnac
    AKHenderson Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    I’d like to see the guys who answered “A” explain the etymology…is the wain the part of the body that gets coated, or is it what it gets coated with?

     •  Reply
  9. Avatar
    ArtyG  almost 15 years ago

    That’s right poppy you buy 4X8 sheets of it and cut it to three 32” pieces then top it with rabbited chair rail molding. Makes a cheap house look custom for very little money if you do it yourself.

     •  Reply
  10. Gocomicsavatar
    aardvarkseyes  almost 15 years ago

    Wayne Scotting - was he not a third baseman for the Mets in the 1940s?

     •  Reply
  11. Large dolphin1a
    DolphinGirl78  almost 15 years ago

    I think alot of us still need to be on vacation… :D

     •  Reply
  12. Fallsfixed
    FresnoDude  almost 15 years ago

    This is a question a guy is likely to miss by his psychology, body painting would be about female physical attraction and of course sports is a guy thing while wainscoting is home decoration which is a female thing. Joe was warned that this is a Kobayashi Maru question so he is going to have to be creative in answering it.

     •  Reply
  13. Globe eagle anchor
    ben_david  almost 15 years ago

    Yeah, it’s a guy thing.

     •  Reply
  14. What has been seen t1
    lewisbower  almost 15 years ago

    Wainscoting—The apron he will soon be wearing if he doesn’t RUN!

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    geezer1  almost 15 years ago

    ArtyG, wainscoting is not the same as beadboard. Beadboard can be used for wainscoting, but other woods are more traditional.

     •  Reply
  16. 5f3a242a feac 42cc b507 b6590d3039f7
    Plods with ...™  almost 15 years ago

    @brewwitch

    Yes we are

     •  Reply
  17. Grog poop
    GROG Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    I didn’t have a clue I like Joe’s process of elimination.

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    spok27  almost 15 years ago

    geezer1: while your description of wainscoting is correct, the beaded paneling is what most people use out here. It’s become a generic term, like band-aid or kleenex. Beadboard, out here, anyway is another term for white styrofoam sheeting. In any case wainscoting looks wonderful if done properly, and is currently driving me nuts after seeing an episode of Trading Spaces. My wife still insists it would look great in our basement. Sigh

     •  Reply
  19. Yikes
    grinstoya  almost 15 years ago

    I don’t know about you guys… but Joe’s ability to think, deduce and answer like a woman is beginning to scare me. But then again he does live with Danae and Kate.

    And I could have sworn that Wainscoting hit .289 in the summer of 74.

     •  Reply
  20. 20141103 115559
    Potrzebie  almost 15 years ago

    aren’t all of those used to hide joint tape and gaps in the plaster?

     •  Reply
  21. Artrazz 2
    fredbuhl  almost 15 years ago

    Maybe he could use it to plaster her inside a wall somewhere and take an extended vacation.

     •  Reply
  22. Honk if you hate dallas
    briankblough  almost 15 years ago

    poppy1313- and therefore, you also defined “chair rail”

     •  Reply
  23. Dirt bed
    CliffG.I.Woes  almost 15 years ago

    Dump her and get on to somethig more creative.

     •  Reply
  24. Missing large
    rdclark53217  almost 15 years ago

    I still harbor a sneaking suspicion that Victoria is Brenda with a new look that she adopted so that Joe doesn’t see her as his childhood bud…

    But then, I’ve read WAAAY too many Shakespeare comedies.

     •  Reply
  25. Kitty at sunset
    wicky  almost 15 years ago

    “she” will “give” him points, she needs to rinse out that overinflated ego of hers and go find someone in san francisco, thas what.

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    rmbdot  almost 15 years ago

    “Wayne Scotting - was he not a third baseman for the Mets in the 1940s?”

    Mets didn’t exist then.

    I found a Wayne Scott Rosenthal who was a relief pitcher for the Rangers in the early 90s. Also, a Scott Wayne Feldmen who has pitched for the Rangers since ‘05 (deemed by at least one group of supporters to be “The greatest Hawaiian-born Jewish baseball player to ever set foot on the mound.”)

     •  Reply
  27. Bob 65
    Droptma Styx  almost 15 years ago

    wainscoting … what a strange, strange word … waaaainscoting …

     •  Reply
  28. Hawaii5 0girl
    treered  almost 15 years ago

    Scott Wayne Feldmen, SWF? conspiracy? also, is it ok to say that Joe “connected the dots” (or lack there of)?

     •  Reply
  29. Missing large
    artybee  almost 15 years ago

    That’s as far as I every got in “the theatre” – painting baseboards and rocks on walls. Didn’t have much talent for that, either.

     •  Reply
  30. Missing large
    Fables  almost 15 years ago

    Is that Richard Nixon in the suit at the counter?

     •  Reply
  31. 2739613122 31ee17f261
    COGNIZANT  almost 15 years ago

    I’ve been out of touch with this strip for awhile, but it sure looks like Richard Nixon.

     •  Reply
  32. Yeenaghu
    Redkaycei  almost 15 years ago

    I wonder how many times people will have to explain that Joe’s brother looks a lot like Nixon?…lol

     •  Reply
  33. Computerhead
    Spyderred  almost 15 years ago

    What I’m waiting for is Joe’s questionnaire to her.

     •  Reply
  34. Grandpa s truck
    Bany39  almost 15 years ago

    answer to brewwitch————-of course

     •  Reply
  35. Willy wonka factory
    dsom8  almost 15 years ago

    I’d like to know how knowledgeable Victoria is about body-painting and the ‘53 Red Sox. She may not be all that bad!

     •  Reply
  36. Redfoxava
    reynard61  almost 15 years ago

    Wayne’s Coating: A local brand of paint?

     •  Reply
  37. Satyr d
    ottod Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    ”,,,standard rules of English…”

     •  Reply
  38. Marvmartx
    Dmajor  almost 15 years ago

    Run, you dumb bunny! Run like the wind! Flee!

     •  Reply
  39. P 00316s
    James Lindley Premium Member almost 15 years ago

    At least he was smart enough to know that none of the guys at the bar would know the answer.

     •  Reply
  40. Missing large
    NightOwl19  almost 15 years ago

    Would Brenda have taken points for the Star Trek reference? (I certainly wouldn’t have…. I think I would have taken points away if he DIDN’T get the reference….)

     •  Reply
  41. Photo  1
    thirdguy  almost 15 years ago

    I had no idea there were so many geeks, getting so high, and still reading this strip. Oh, and if anyone of you had ever watched “This Old House” you would know what “Wainscotting” is,

     •  Reply
  42. 0 800
    Jiblet_VT  almost 15 years ago

    Wainscot derives from the 1300’s (The Middle Ages) . It was originally not an over application, but an instead of application. Wood board paneling would be cheaper than plastering, which was labor intensive, used 3/4 of the amount of wood anyway and horsehair to hold the plaster together. Now we use relatively cheap gypsum board and dress it up with thin veneers instead of real boards to simulate what people used to do out of low tech necessity.

    Here’s a definition from http://www.m-w.com.

    Main Entry: 1wain·scot Pronunciation: \ˈwān-skət, -ˌskōt, -ˌskät\ Function: noun Etymology: Middle English, from Middle Dutch wagenschot, probably from wagen wagon + schot shot, crossbar Date: 14th century

    1 British : a fine grade of oak imported for woodwork 2 a (1) : a usually paneled wooden lining of an interior wall (2) : a lining of an interior wall irrespective of material b : the lower three or four feet (about one meter) of an interior wall when finished differently from the remainder of the wall

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Non Sequitur