A dog is a dog, is a dog…..I’d drop kick that mutt into the back yard and be done with it. And….if one of my kids referred to me as the dog’s “grandma”, I’d drop kick them into the yard too. Oh that we had this kind of patience with real children, instead of the four legged variety.
Hey…we can pooh pooh this all we want, but if there were not a grain of truth in it….it wouldn’t be funny. I for one, don’t buy anything unless it is during a gift-with-purchase campaign. I have more duplicate lipsticks than I can use. but I love getting something for nothing….or thinking that I am getting it for nothing.
Since Cathy is not a real person, but her creator is….maybe this is just a fabulous way to illustrate our own self-absorption. EVER THINK OF THAT…..before we all rush to comment on a non-existent life? I am begining to be more captivated by the comments than by the strip.
I believe that the reason pockets are sewn shut prior to purchase is to keep them from opening and getting misshapen, as they often do with a lot of use.
You are supposed to pull the thread and open them before you wear the garment.
From what I hear, replacing a car key in the US costs about the same ($100). Someone I know lost their second set of keys that came with the car, and wanted to replace them….they were quoted $100.
Cathy Guisewite should be congratulated on her uncanny ability to mirror the Baby Boomers, in Cathy and Irving. It is amusing to read the comments generated by this strip, it is obviously hitting home, and we don’t like it.
Too funny.
Keep up the creativity Ms. Guisewite…..I don’t think you’ll run out of material any time soon.
LOL……your responses gave me a belly laugh, but come on guys, let’s not throw in the towel just yet, Cathy and Irving are too funny and self-absorbed to notice anything amiss in their relationship.
A dog is a dog, is a dog…..I’d drop kick that mutt into the back yard and be done with it. And….if one of my kids referred to me as the dog’s “grandma”, I’d drop kick them into the yard too. Oh that we had this kind of patience with real children, instead of the four legged variety.