Calvin and Hobbes (Sadly no longer running)
Funny comic with a biting view given by a 7 year old and his tiger.
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Pearls Before Swine.
Wierd, funny, and unconventional, with a very distinct tendency to go for strips with really bad puns at the end.
Plus they make fun of other comic strips. Satire, social commentary etc.
http://news.yahoo.com/comics/pearlsbeforeswine
Calvin and Hobbes (Sadly no longer running)
Funny comic with a biting view given by a 7 year old and his tiger.
![]()
Last edited by 1369; 10-24-2008 at 08:12 PM.
Peanuts.
When I figured out that the strip was essentially Charles Schulz' diary it took on a lot more meaning.
daisy owl!
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Last edited by Bigzax; 10-24-2008 at 02:55 PM.
Get Fuzzy
Get Fuzzy is my favorite too. But anyone with a teenaged son can appreciate Zits.
+1
I loved Calvin and Hobbes!!![]()
Far Side....
Pearls before swine, because its very clever.
Most comics these days aren't even funny.
Bizarro is also one of my favs.
Calvin & Hobbes easily
Foxtrot.
Sadly, he's only doing Sunday strips now.
wow, what the are those baseball comics in pearls before swine mean? i think the name is clever, it's a popular phrase, but the comic sucks.
most of your choices suck.
my favorite is http://www.qwantz.com/
and
http://www.nuklearpower.com/daily.php?date=010506
Last edited by MiamiHeat; 10-24-2008 at 07:37 PM.
http://xkcd.com
There's the comic strip giggle and the mouse-over guffaw. And sometimes it's like he lives inside my mind:
http://xkcd.com/245
Calvin and Hobbes. I grew up on it, and the lines "It's a magical world, Hobbes, ol' buddy. C'mon, let's go exploring." and "I think we dream so we don't have to be apart so long. If we're in each other's dreams, we can play together all night!" still tug at my heartstrings.
Asterix has always been my favourite comic strip since growing up.
I liked it as a kid because of the hilarious illustrations and I like it now because of the historical data brought in a hilarious package.
I don't know if you know about it outside Europe.
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Pearls Before Swine
and
F Minus
It seems almost cliche' to answer C&H in this thread now, but alas, I have no other option.
I actually used this answer on a test one time when given the "in your own words" opportunity (while also knowing my audience/teacher would appreciate it), and he actually gave me full credit. It was a good day.
I'm an engineer, so Dilbert is my favorite. It's so true in many cases that its scary sometimes.
Calvin and Hobbes- just because of the depth and breadth of it's philosophy- they aren't named Calvin and Hobbes on accident. A strip about Santa's legitimacy turns into a philosopher's rumination on Pascal's Wager. A strip about the bully Moe isn't really about bullying and a strip about homework isn't really about homework, but more about the existential connection we have to an unfair and hostile world. A strip about riding a wagon down a wooded hill and off a cliff is actually a shrewd metaphor about enjoying the ride even though the consequences, maybe terrible, lie in the future.
Plenty of strips avoided the philosophy altogether and went right into condemnation of environmental destruction, human greed and the like. Which was amazing- because besides Doonsbury, not too many comic authors have the courage to be outspoken politically.
Peanuts did the same thing in way, but in a generational sense, I don't think it pulled me in the way Calvin and Hobbes did. As a kid I identified with Calvin; I too sat in classrooms daydreaming about bombing the school with an F-16, I too spent summers rummaging around in the woods and I too was a kid who imparted philosophical skepticism into everything. It's not just a comic strip, it's a reflection on existence and all of its contradictions, parsed into the head of a hyper-active six year old. One of the great 20th century works of writing.
Hands down. I started reading that strip when I was about 10 years old.
I have all the books. All of them.
Havent read them in long while, but I can still recite some -isms.
My favorite one...
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