Community Page
- truckbearingkibble.com Jump to website »
-
Subscribe -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Popular Threads
-
Recent Comments
- That is such an informative post. I'm looking forward for your next post, so keep on posting!
- Now this is something different. A black Michael Jackson in a comic strip! I've never seen any other. On another note, R.I.P. M.J.
- If you look, they're already riding it in the second panel, and falling off of it in the third.
- Actually it is, but your knowledge of ophidian diet is fairly impressive.
- You've just added character to those muppets, deep and very dark characters!
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
funny, though.
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
Slugs smoke when getting in contact with salt? i thought a slug melts?
also whats with the goat? goats dont eat slugs?
why is there some halo-ish glow aroud the goats head?
somebody please explain it any further!
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
BUT I LOLD
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
A salt lick block on a table top might have made the setting a bit clearer. Farm animal salt licks are normally about a foot square (and bright blue), not three foot high rectangular white stylized blocks as we see here. I love the beautiful detail on the snail! Well done!
10 months ago
10 months ago
I'm pretty sure the slug dies because the salt removes all the moisture from its body. For accuracy's sake the slug should be shriveling, but it's funnier this way.
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
And I always love goats.
Very funny!
10 months ago
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goat#Diet
10 months ago
10 months ago
-slug on a white block. Salt lick? No granularity visible even in panel 2. Also, it makes slugs smoke. Also, it's not uncomfortable for the slug to be on this block, because it's still smiling after three panels have gone by. None of this suggests any better answer than "salt lick, with consequences not well thought out".
-Then the wider scene...okay, on first glance, it's a barn. With white light streaming in the windows. And a pitchfork leaning against the wall. And a light-grey goat licking its lips. Is the goat going to eat the slug? Do goats eat slugs? It's looking at the viewer more than at the slug. Goats and pitchforks are associated with Satan/Hell, plus if the slug thinks it's in heaven maybe it knows that it died, which we otherwise have no way to know...on the other hand, if this is slug hell, why does it look like a barn, and why is the pitchfork leaning against the wall and not being wielded by demons? (Besides which, it's not a very suitable instrument to hurt slugs with.) And why is there white light streaming in the windows? And why is the salt not hurting the slug? Natural or supernatural, it doesn't really work.
10 months ago
which is to say: I think the joke works perfectly, especially since it becomes even funnier/more satisfying when you make all the connections.
(the goat is definitely an animal representation of Satan, the pitchfork is there to help you make this connection, the salt *is* hurting the slug though the steam/smoke could be seen as just the trail, and the white light is probably there to explain the slug's mistaken belief that this is heaven, Satan was the angle of light... oh and barn => again with the theme of "animal hell" and that being where goats/satans dwell. probably.)
Also: amazing art work as always.
10 months ago
10 months ago
In constructing fiction, an author selects actions and events in order to produce some effect on the reader, but also provides explanations for them in terms of the story's fictional world, in order to cover up the manipulation. The basic goal is to produce a world with its own logic and its own coherent system of cause and effect.
If we ask "why did character X do this" and the answer is too obviously "to make the reader feel Y", the author is having a bad day.
The goat is a representation of Satan...to human readers. The pitchfork, as you say, "is there to help [the reader] make the connection"--it serves no purpose within slug hell, only within the comic. "The white light is probably there to explain [to the reader] the slug's mistaken belief that this is heaven"--that is, to make the joke possible. "Satan was the angel of light"...with the power and inclination to make light stream in through the windows of any room he's in, even after his fall? The barn...if real goats live in real barns, then hellgoats must live in hellbarns...run by hellfarmers...regulated by the hellUSDA? The only point in making a hellbarn is to make things ambiguous for the reader by making the scene look sensible when it's viewed in non-supernatural terms.
It would be possible to fudge up reasons for these things within the fictional world. Maybe the white light is there in order to fool the slug itself, momentarily, in order to make the final realization of its fate more painful by contrast. The point is, if we have to look too far and make too many ad-hoc assumptions in order to find in-story explanations, the illusion will have broken long before then, and that's what happened here, and that's why it wasn't funny.
When I said "not hurting the slug" I meant "not causing the slug pain".
And yeah, the art was great as always.
Jake: assuming that pain in the afterlife still relies on the nervous system, having a less advanced nervous system might limit the amount or complexity of pain that could be felt, but having less processing to do should reduce the amount of time before the full effect is felt if anything. And yeah, neurotransmission speeds vary, but that slug shouldn't still by smiling by the last panel.
10 months ago
it's a little intense
got too much time on ur hands?
go read the threads about the spy on the motor boat
10 months ago
salt lick :
a place where animals go to lick salt from the ground.
a block of salt provided for animals to lick.
( ref : The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 2008, originally published by Oxford University Press 2008. )
so in every barn there's a salt lick, so no slugg eating...
always nice jokes btw, big fan of the site ! keep up the good work !
10 months ago
http://homepage.databank.com/~gakramer/slugland...
blast!
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
And sorry, but I can't help but disagree with Daniel's tirade. Assuming that everyone agrees with your definition of humor and the effect of different symbols on your conceptualization of it, maybe the comic is trash. But despite your efforts, you've yet to prove scientifically that it isn't funny. And please tell me more about neurotransmission speeds in slugs. Where do you get your funding?
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
Daniel: Seriously, it's a comic. Neurotransmissions in slugs? God god man! Granularity in the salt lick? Isn't a salt lick so finely grained due to the manufacture process that a hand-lens is needed to make out the crystalline structure? It's not like a lump of sugar!
Regarding the timeline, I am in agreement with Jen and it is my personal interpretation that the three panels all take place in the same moment of time. Therefore neurotransmission speed speculations are rendered a moot point. The first panel, in my interpretation, is a close-up of the slug's face and his ironic comment. The Second panel clues us into the fact that all is not as it seems. The third panel is the same instant of time as the first panel but a wide-angle view showing is the REAL predicament with the satanic imagery and expanding upon the irony of the comic. The only piece of evidence that may contradict this is the angle and placement of the slugs' eyes - the curvature appears different in the first and last panel indicating some movement of the eyes between first and last.
The changes to the strip to incorporate the characteristic 'foaming' have been well executed and the last panel additions clarify this well.
Earlier comments suggest that some clarification of the slugs' death would be beneficial to the perception of the comment. I concur to a degree. Perhaps a minor change of wording to something along the lines of 'What? Where am I? This must be Heaven!' may clarify that death (or indeed a change of location via some supernatural means) had occured. Then again, this being TBK, that would be labouring the point far in excess of the nature of the comic to encourage our own speculation and interpretations.
10 months ago
Interestingly, the slug's line was going to be very close to what you suggest. On my original storyboard sketch I've got the line "Where am I? Is this heaven?" When I was finishing it up, though, I thought that "This must be Heaven!" implied that the slug didn't know where he was in fewer words, which is always preferable.
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
10 months ago
9 months ago
No matter what happened, it's an amazing example of dramatic irony. The reader/viewer knows something that the protagonist doesn't.
For all of the people who are thinking about this too hard:
Slug+Salt=Fizzle
Goat+Salt lick=Snack time
The slug just landed in an unfortunate spot, right as the goat felt like getting some of the salt off the lick.
9 months ago
9 months ago