(webcomix)
Jun. 3rd, 2006 06:36 pmIt's a couple days old, but when I caught up, I have to say I cheered.
http://www.daybydaycartoon.com/Cartoons/06-01-2006.gif
I didn't cheer as much as I did with this:
http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=564
But, I gotta wonder. My original fear that Martin's and Dora's anxieties would soon cause unnecessary angst (unnecessary as in preventing any sort of happy relationship) is so far unfounded. The angst is there, and it's dumb, but that's what being in your 20s is all about.
With Sam and Zed, they have the maturity to make it work.
Perhaps, with me 14 months from Four-Oh, I identify more with Zed than Martin, though I love them both. Oddly, I like Dora more than Sam, perhaps because of the optimistic entrepreneurism.
If you get into webcomics, both are interesting. Questionable Content is about a bunch of modern 20-somethings hanging out and figuring out who they are. Sort of Friends-meets-Seinfeld-meets-GenX (the book, not the generation), but updated to modern Emo/Indie/Post-Goth. Day By Day is a modern reverse-Doonesbury. It is hailed as a conservative comic, but I think it's more libertarian -- it happily satires Bush's over-reaching follies as gleefully as it does any reflex-liberal.
This webcomic geekiness was brought to you by the letter L and the number 5.
http://www.daybydaycartoon.com/Cartoons/06-01-2006.gif
I didn't cheer as much as I did with this:
http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=564
But, I gotta wonder. My original fear that Martin's and Dora's anxieties would soon cause unnecessary angst (unnecessary as in preventing any sort of happy relationship) is so far unfounded. The angst is there, and it's dumb, but that's what being in your 20s is all about.
With Sam and Zed, they have the maturity to make it work.
Perhaps, with me 14 months from Four-Oh, I identify more with Zed than Martin, though I love them both. Oddly, I like Dora more than Sam, perhaps because of the optimistic entrepreneurism.
If you get into webcomics, both are interesting. Questionable Content is about a bunch of modern 20-somethings hanging out and figuring out who they are. Sort of Friends-meets-Seinfeld-meets-GenX (the book, not the generation), but updated to modern Emo/Indie/Post-Goth. Day By Day is a modern reverse-Doonesbury. It is hailed as a conservative comic, but I think it's more libertarian -- it happily satires Bush's over-reaching follies as gleefully as it does any reflex-liberal.
This webcomic geekiness was brought to you by the letter L and the number 5.