Showing posts with label ARTHUR NORRIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARTHUR NORRIS. Show all posts

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Cartoons I don't get 12

Bill Wenzel
Fun House, February 1980
Punch October 27, 1915
I know, this is just what it says. They must be really dumb if they think the play is using real champagne.
Adam, May 1973
This is It #22
Gregory D'Alessio
Army/Navy Fun Parade, April 1953
Hello Buddies, Summer 1954
I guess the male fantasy of the age difference between the mother and daughter being three years apart existed back in the fifties too.
Punch December 8, 1915
Good Humor, c. 1964
Oh, never mind, it's a joke about breasts. It must have gone over my head because there are so few gag cartoons with double entendres. Especially ones about female anatomy.
Esquire, June 1934
Morrie Turner
Jem, June 1957
Maybe the old man thought the director was referring to him when he was talking about the donkey.
Stray comment: The director looks like he's older than the old man. He also looks like Groucho Marx in his final years.
Bill Hoest
Man, April 1966
Why would his mother not know she has a grandchild yet? And if it's a prostitute and not his fiancee, wouldn't she already have methods of birth control? And if she's already committing one illegal act, wouldn't it follow she would commit another (this was pre-Roe v Wade)?
Pic, November 1952
Are these kids all related? And if so, wouldn't the parents go through this every day?
Hello Buddies, June 1952
“Old fashioned” used ironically because it's caveman days? And as an aside, we can also see from the dinosaur bigger than a mountain that The Flintstones was not the first example of creationist propaganda.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Cartoons I don't get 3

Syd Hoff
Esquire, January 1934
True War, July 1958
Bob Barnes
Hello Buddies, Winter 1950
Punch October 6, 1915
Bo Brown
Adam, May 1973
Sam Gross
The Gent, January 1965
The Dude, January 1957
Sid Harris
Man, October 1971
Punch December 8, 1915
Sir Knight, c. 1959
The Dude, November 1956
Richard Decker
Playboy, July 1968