Where the Emphasis Goes

Link to today’s strip.

Bleah, more Harry Dinkle.  Becky no longer mentions the “volume three” part, as it no doubt made (potential) customers say, “Three volumes from that old shriveled husk?!  Why, he must be even more of a pompous windbag than he looks!  He must talk non-stop, when he’s not clutching a book with his teeth!”  Of course, even at one volume it’s still the story of a pompous windbag, so (like yesterday) I’m guessing from that stack that sales are not brisk.

I like thinking they’ve sold absolutely no books at all.  “I’d rather the whole school close down forever than buy that book.  That book is so awful that throwing it in the garbage is the highest critical praise it’ll get,” is probably the usual response.  Other responses:  “Sorry, I don’t have a table that has a short leg, and I don’t have a toddler who needs his booster chair augmented.”  “My birdcage is lined with quality newspaper, thank you very much.”  “How well does it work to get my fire started?  I thought so.”  Followed by SLAM!  SLAM!  SLAM! etc.

Hey, does this week’s story mean that Harry is now on a tour promoting his book?  He gets more and more like Les all the time!

Another thing I like is how the falling leaves look like Harry is surrounded by flies seeking his rotting, purulent flesh.

The best part of this one is imagining how Brad DeGroot from Luann is pronouncing his sentence.  “I thought you’d be selling a turkey,” with the words going down in pitch from “thought.”  In other words, “this is a very bad thing you want me to buy, and it isn’t even edible.  Its one use seems to be to neutralize the arms of that horrible old man you’re with, and I don’t have a horrible old man, so get lost before I shoot you with my 38 special and then burn your bodies in the yard and consider my Christmas wish has come true.”

Okay, maybe that last little bit wasn’t really implied in Brad’s sentence.   Much.  As the British say, “No ‘arm in tryin’.”

What the L

Link to today’s strip.

Yesterday I mentioned that there’s one Funky Winkerbean character that I loathe almost as much as Les.  Well, speak of the Devil, and his horns appear.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Harry L. Dinkle.  I have no idea what the “L” stands for, but it wouldn’t surprise me if it stood for “Les.”  Two more horrible characters cannot be imagined.  Oh, you can talk about your John Howards and your Darrin Fairgoods, but for my money nothing is worse than these two.  Thank whatever God you hold that they have, so far as I am aware, never worked together.

Like Les, Dinkle is filled to the brim with his own self-importance, and is convinced of his own brilliance.  Unlike Les–and I can’t believe I’m saying something favorable about Mr. Moore–he makes no attempt to hide his sense of superiority behind a mask of false humility.  No, the act of sad-sack martyr is not one that Dinkle assays with any regularity–not when he can play the smug, pompous blowhard with such aplomb.

Look at this creep, who has managed to write a third volume in his autobiography, smirking about “culture.”  If he was speaking of “culture” in the sense of a mass of deadly, flesh-eating bacteria, he is very close indeed.   The one bright spot is, weighed down as he is with books, it demonstrates that he has sold none of them, meaning that the citizens of Westview are at long last awakening from their long slumber and are no longer going to put up with such fools.

Just kidding.  They’ll all die alone and afraid.  And as the oncoming darkness surrounds them and enshrouds them, and the lights go out all over the world, they can smile to themselves, and think, Ha ha ha, I only bought the first two volumes of that bastard’s life story.

I win!

And the final curtain goes down.

 

Bull’s Story

Link to today’s strip.

So, the dreaded Les at last makes his appearance just to rub Bull’s disappointments into his face.  This is why this comic strip is nowhere near reality, because in reality, Les would have been murdered long ago…by the entire town.  When the cops came, it would be like that scene in Spartacus.  “I am Les Moore’s murderer.”  “I am Les Moore’s murderer.”  “I am Les Moore’s murderer.”

There should be an eighth panel in today’s strip:

It would have shown panel six’s wagging finger snapped off and jammed down Les’ throat.  Bull would stand behind, arms folded.  “Yeah, Les,” he’d say, smirking.  “You know exactly how I feel.  You were given massive amounts of money, took two years to do your job, were flown out first class to Hollywood, were wined and dined and fawned over.  You whined and moaned the entire time until you managed to kill the production, and you got to keep the money, all because they wanted to make your sacrosanct story into one that people might actually be interested in seeing.  I, however, did everything I was supposed to do, and got screwed over by Fate.  So, yeah, you sure know exactly how I feel.  Now you know how Frodo feels.”

It just seems pointless to remind Tom Batiuk, Author, that Les gleefully killed the production of “Lisa’s Story.”   The job of Hollywood Screenwriter was his for the taking and he threw it away because it made him a little fish in a big pond, where he just wasn’t special anymore.

Mr. Batiuk, when you yourself can’t even remember the details of your own work, I feel absolutely no guilt in mocking it.

There’s just something evil about Les in today’s offering.  Look at him happy and smirking in panels three and seven (I’m counting the masthead), looking so pleased with himself that he can dig into his old nemesis’ wounds and jerk a little pain out.  The fact that he still lives makes this strip far more of a fantasy than Starbuck Jones could ever aspire to achieve.

Of all the characters in this strip, few inspire as much sheer hatred in me as Les Moore.   There’s one other who comes close, and you’ll never guess what my Guest Host Superpowers are revealing to me even as we speak!

A Bigger Blight

Link to today’s strip.

Not much to say about this one, as the Bull-DUI arc sputters to a halt, shuddering, wheezing and leaking oil.  I’m honestly not sure what to make of Linda, here–I get that she’s trying to cheer Bull up, but it really sounds (in the context of this strip) that seeing Bull lose big-time is a genuine turn-on for her.  Ewww…creepies, Mudhead!  I guess since they have two kids…well, let’s see…Bull’s father must have died of cancer, and his mother in a car accident?  Or maybe Bull lost a couple of toes, or has glaucoma?  Something tragic, right?  Something to get those old fires burnin’?

Bull as a character is nowhere near the loathsome levels of such cyclopean blasphemies as Les Moore, Harry Dinkle or John Howard.  I never think, “Oh God, no,” when he shows up, and I rarely feel like I should be smashing him with a bat.  He’s just really, really boring and nothing of his world is presented as interesting.  (Yes, I know you could say that about every scenario in the strip, including those which clearly engage Tom Batiuk’s interest.   It just seems more obvious where Bull is concerned.)

Like almost all of the female characters, Bull just seems like a sad, stupid lump that gets tossed around by fate without any real understanding of the forces working against him.  He never progresses and, naturally, never learns.

And there’s always that nagging feeling radiating from the strip that he somehow deserves it, that his past as a bully (whether that’s been ret-conned or not) has set his fate in stone.

If only he was a comic-book fan.  That way–the path of the Sacred Book–lies salvation, and even an old sinner like Bull might find his destiny written within those Pages.

If only the damned old bully could read.

A Dash Of Hope

Link to today’s strip.

Here we see the problem with Mr. Brian Steinberg’s piece on Funky Winkerbean, much discussed over the past couple of days.  The claim was made that Tom Batiuk likes to handle the tough issues, and here we see how he does it–after weeks and weeks of build-up, the “Diversity University Ironton” story is deflated with its defining moment happening off-stage.  All we get is the pitiful aftermath.

So, yeah, there’s the Tom Batiuk we all know and love.   No matter the story or the theme, it’s always the same–let’s build up the hopes of someone who isn’t Les over and over, and then, in an instant, let’s dash those hopes to the ground, so that they can never be reassembled.  Make those characters know their place.  As I’ve said on many occasions, I believe Tom Batiuk really hates these characters (except for the ones named Moore) and today’s offering looks like more evidence.

Contrast this with the loathsome Les Moore, on whom fortune shines at all times, and to whom giant checks come calling regularly.  Les’ disappointments are all those of the Superior Man confronted by those incapable of appreciating his Genius and Insight.  Which sounds, so, so familiar, and quite frankly isn’t helped by pieces such as Mr. Steinberg’s telling Tom Batiuk that he is on an exciting course into uncharted territory.  Again, no disrespect is meant to either Mr. Steinberg or Mr. Batiuk, but I sure don’t see any better with this vision.

About that aftermath.  I’m assuming–always a bad idea–that Bull was told by DUI that they were considering other candidates, and he passed this info along to his wife, who therefore had no reason to mail a resignation letter…but that’s making an awful lot of assumptions for an idiot like Bull and a shrew like Linda.  If DUI didn’t tell him this, then that seems pretty shady.  I wonder if, in a month or two, we’ll hear (third-hand, of course) that DUI is being investigated for various things and is probably going to be closed down.  It’ll give Bull the chance for a smirk if nothing else.

If the letter went out, will the board let Bull keep his job anyway?  Probably, as he has just won a championship…but I bet they’d eye him askance from now on, since he has indicated he would jump ship in a heartbeat in the middle of the semester.  (I’m assuming Westview has things like signed contracts, and they tend not to tolerate them being casually violated.)

Bull’s lack of loyalty actually gives him something in common with the unseen and unnamed fellow who scored the DUI job–they’re both opportunists who cannot be counted on and have no loyalty to anyone.  Which seem like sound survival traits in the Funkyverse.