My mom showed me this cartoon when she was finished reading the funny papers. By the second panel, I guessed (wrongly) that it was going to end in a corny pun.
By the third panel, I started laughing out loud. By the penultimate panel, I was laughing so hard that I had tears in my eyes.
Thank you, Stephan, for such a funny comic! Have a blessed Easter.
According to a PDF flyer I once saw, “nine out of ten aliens speak Esperanto.” (You can google that phrase to find the flyer.)
The flyer even has contact information in the Quux alien language.
So my guess is that they’re either speaking Quux or Esperanto (with a different character set, of course). And if it really is Esperanto, there are plenty of books to help you translate.
(Disclaimer: Don’t take this comment too seriously.)
I didn’t find today’s cartoon particularly “ha-ha” funny, but the setup (Garfield wearing refined clothes, drinking coffee with his pinky extended) made it stand out for me.
This superhero reminds me of “Stardust The Super Wizard” by Fletcher Hanks, a comic back in the 1930’s and 1940’s. Because of his vast interplanetary knowledge, Stardust is the most remarkable man every lived.
He uses rays (just like the “Power Ray” used above) to apprehend all the bad guys. The stories are not very profound, but they are fun read to get a feel for the Golden Age of comic books.
(If this interests you, many of his comics are in the compilation “I Shall Destroy All the Civilized Planets” by Fletcher Hanks and Paul Karasik.)
My mom showed me this cartoon when she was finished reading the funny papers. By the second panel, I guessed (wrongly) that it was going to end in a corny pun.
By the third panel, I started laughing out loud. By the penultimate panel, I was laughing so hard that I had tears in my eyes.
Thank you, Stephan, for such a funny comic! Have a blessed Easter.