Thursday, August 6, 2009

Comic 620: Crashing Back To Earth

i still don't know if i will care enough to make this a regular thing. But - as long as I'm here -

1) i thought the newest SMBC Theater, "Ultimate Staring Contest" was better than the first four - I was astounded at how much they made the live-action skit feel like a cartoon (it was the labels on everything that made me think this, then, spoiler alert, the exploding head). But I thought it was funny, in cartoony, loony-tunes sort of way.

2) i took a picture for you guys. Specifically, for Amanda. Amanda: I don't know why you want to rebel against me but consider this picture a plea for you to stick around.

update: Hm, Dragon whatever hasn't sent me a post yet. Come on, Dragon whatever! I'm going to assume he is dead, and, rather than rely on the kindness of strangers, like last time, I'm just going to write the damn post myself. I'll add yours if you send it though. if you are even alive.

so what do we have today.

shits
Those of you who read this blog regularly probably already reacted to this comic in the same way that I did: with the simple phrase, "picto-blog!" Click that link for a full explanation, but in short, we've noticed that sometimes, Randall Munroe has genuinely interesting ideas. But unfortunately, he does not run an Interesting Idea Blog, Illustrated With Pictures. He runs a webcomic, and so he takes these ideas and he jams jokes onto the ends of them, and it just ends up as a big old pile of fail.

And today is no exception. Testing out possible flight conditions on other planets/moons is awesome. I can see that easily. But like he so often does, the punchline is fucked up quite badly.

The joke, as I see it, is in the similarity between ancient greek guy Icarus trying to fly, and falling and failing, and Our Hero, trying to fly, and failing, and specifically, the physical humor of the modern day Icarus having his work (not to mention himself) come crashing down to earth. That the well read reader makes this connection in his head is the source of laughter, if such laughter occurs.

The issue is that this connection should come after you read the end of the comic. The punchline should not be in the third-to-last panel. For those people who did not get the reference to Icarus, the joke is merely in the "HEAT LAMP" shot, which is also not the last panel. The last panel that we get is the dude falling; which really is just a forgone conclusion after the two previous panels.

A much better - but still not best - variation would be Way Walker's edit that he links to below. I would still add one thing though - the Greek Mythology line (or some reference to Icarus, perhaps Randall's original phrasing was a bit awkward) should be added, by the off-panel woman, in the final frame. Then you get the joke at the end, and it makes sense. I also like the elegant concision of merging the top three panels with the wide white spaces of the big bridge shot.

Oh and come on: Icarus's problem was that he used wax, which melts at a fairly low temperature. Hot glue is hardly the same - sure, it can melt, but if you've ever used a hot glue gun and accidentally touched the hot part you know just god damn fucking hot it has to be, and how at that heat Our Hero has bigger problems than falling a few feet, like having his skin burn off. God knows how Mr. Hat is surviving operating what is essentially a small star. Mr. Hat appears to be less into greek mythology and more into being a giant douche.

Hypothetical question: If the main character had succeeded is flying, what would he have done with that power? Does he have a way to get to Titan and try it out there?

not related to anything update: You know what I just remembered? Back when I started reading webcomics, I could list the ones I read, all four of them, in a nice little rhyming couplet. It was -

Dinosaur Comics and xkcd
Perry Bible Fellowship and Married to the Sea

isn't that INTERESTING?

99 comments:

  1. xkcdsucks cuttlefish cookout?

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  2. I have a serious beef with XKCD.

    It's often that I read a comic, and think to myself: hey, this comic might have been funny! Or at least giggle-worthy! Or at least mildly amusing...

    ...if only the pacing wasn't so screwed up.

    Today's comic wasn't one of those comics. Well, I mean, the pacing was bad, but also, I thought the punchline came too out-of-nowhere. Oddly enough, though, it was the alt-text that made me smile more than anything else.

    That's all I have to say about that.

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  3. Another horrible comic. We had the same joke 2 strips ago, except this time it's Icarus instead of the Little Prince. Also I think it would've been much better if he cut out the joke-explaining dialogue at the end:

    Fixed version

    That way you get a simple slapstick gag out of nowhere and it would be at least somewhat amusing, unlike the original.

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  4. So this is basically another entry for the picto-blog (you can fly on titan!) with an actual joke crudely pasted on the end. At least he tried to make one and plus black hat guy actually gets to do something rather than just be talked about so that's a plus.

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  5. "We had the same joke 2 strips ago, except this time it's Icarus instead of the Little Prince."

    Okay, WHAT.

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  6. Yeah, I'm with Fernie on this one. Timofei, that is ridiculous. Mythology reference vs. literary reference, and the jokes are completely different. I mean, I didn't like the comic(I did up until the "punchline"), but stick to assertions that aren't retarded. In fact, that goes for everyone on this site.

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  7. Interesting, not funny. I concur that this belongs on the picto blog. It's just not funny. Neither the original, nor the fixed version.

    Asides from that, there isn't much to say about this one. It has the usual pitfalls, but it gets a meh from me. It's boring, that's it.

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  8. In both comics you have a several panels buildup of the usual nerdy xkcd stuff, then *BAM* a totally unexpected reference from some old book! Same joke.

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  9. That's a very simplistic view. Like I said, one is a literary reference while the other is a mythology reference. There is no mythology book like there is a Little Prince book or ever a Bible or Koran. And the jokes are completely different. In the Little Prince comic, people are congratulating themselves while be completely unaware that they are destroying someone's home. There was not out of nowhere in that one. In this one, someone is explaining some obscure gravity stuff and then out of nowhere someone is deliberately harming him. The end does not follow from the set up, really.

    I mean, if you wanna say that they're the same because they a buildup and a punchline then just about all of his comics are the same. Seriously, this comic was bad for so many reasons, so pick one of those. But, they are not the same joke.

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  10. Some old book... How old are you? Twelve? Thirteen?

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  11. The worst part is that comic #620 doesn't even make sense, if you look closely and apply basic physics. Remember that since 91% of the stickman's weight is being held up by the bricks, his acceleration is only 9% of what it would be without the bricks (actually, it's even less than that, because of friction from the pulleys and air resistance). So if he fell from a height of sixteen meters (which seems reasonable if you assume that the comic is drawn to scale and that the stickman is about 1.6 meters tall), then his speed at the bottom is (0.09•g)•√(32/g)=5.32 m/s (where g = 9.81), which is the same speed that he would reach if he fell from a height of 1/2•g•(5.32/g)^2 = 1.44 meters. As I mentioned above, this does not take air resistance or the pulley friction into account. Also, it would take him six seconds to fall, so he would have more time to brace himself for the impact.
    The funny thing about all this is that Randall has a degree in physics. The least he could have done to avoid the contradiction here is to have made Mr. Hat cut the rope or something, but then it wouldn't have worked very well with the Icarus theme (not that the comic works well as it is). Either way, this comic doesn't make much sense, physically.

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  12. @ 7:36 Anon

    Well the book came out in 1943, I think we could qualify that as old. After all you wouldn't call someone who was 66 young.

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  13. Not to mention, "...if you have a heat lamp strong enough to melt hot glue, the person's skin would probably be peeling off." -Anonymous comment from previous post.

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  14. Kevin,
    I believe that Anon was referring to him saying both "books"(mythology isn't a book) are old, and therefore saying the jokes are the same. Such a simplistic view would be indicative of someone with a simple mind, or a young person.

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  15. So I haven't read this blog much, so I'm probably restating a comment that someone has undoubtedly made in the past. Besides the fact that I understand most of the jokes, I (and I'm sure all or most of you) haven't really laughed at an xkcd comic in ages (whether aloud or even in your head). For me, the most jarring reason for this--over and above the main reasons you have all explained time and again--is that I can't get rid of the "meta" when I'm reading it. That is, with something like SMBC, I am immersed (for the few seconds that it takes to read it) in the situation of the comic itself. Like watching a cartoon, you're involved with the plot or story or whatever and that's where the humor comes from. With xkcd I cannot read it without imagining Randall contriving the comic, smirking to himself as he draws. I dunno, it ruins it for me to feel so sure of Randy's motives and what he's trying to accomplish. Maybe it's the minimalist style that reeks of non-effort, but I just can't shake off that disgusting feeling that it's like I know Randy better than I know his characters. It's like watching Dane Cook. Yeah.

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  16. "...if you have a heat lamp strong enough to melt hot glue, the person's skin would probably be peeling off."

    This was my first reaction. That stuff is some crazy plastic-rubber hybrid, not easy to melt.

    My second reaction was, "Your friend is a jerk."

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  17. 1) carl i knew you still had feelings for me, i can still feel the spark too

    2) ambergris you have found the main reason I hate xkcd now too, I always knew it was there but I could never figure out what it was

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  18. Spencer,
    I think the joke is that his friend is a dick and would melt his wings, not so much that he intends to cause him bodily harm by making him fall(we don't see him fall, only his wings breaking apart). I still don't find it funny, though.

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  19. Spencer,
    Anon 9:02 again. Also, I got the impression that he took off from the ground. Like, he pulled the bricks up several feet and started from there. If he were jumping off the bridge(which I assume you assumed) why wouldn't he just rig everything from the top of the bridge and lower the bricks? Why go to the bottom?

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  20. Spencer - I admit to being confused as to what your calculations have to do with anything; and where the contradictions are. Your math checks out on my quick double-check, but the point of it does not. Was the comic edited in the night or do you have some assumption that I don't have (eg. "this guy has to die like Icarus too").

    Also, let me just add to the WTF-pile on calling Icarus a "reference to some old book".

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  21. First of all, his friend is indeed a dick, but it isn't that difficult to imagine Mr. Hat causing bodily harm to anyone, considering some of his past episodes. Secondly, I also assumed that he started from the ground.
    You were correct in guessing that I assumed that "this guy has to die like Icarus too". In retrospect, I realize that this may not have been Randall's intent, but the Alt-text ("Please do not try any of this and die or get arrested") suggests that that's what Randall may have been thinking. Although, he could have mentioned the possibility of death merely because of the general danger of the situation.

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  22. Although the delivery did have Randall's usual spelling out of the joke, I enjoyed this one. I enjoyed the fixed one more, but it's good to see Mr. Black Hat going back to his classier ways. I didn't think too hard about the physics, as it's 0315 here and it gets in the way of the joke.

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  23. I didn't enjoy this one. Not that I hate it or find it offensive, but it was just atrociously bland, not funny or clever at all. But the "fixed" version manages to be even worse, somehow.

    The art was quite good, though, but that doesn't save the comic.

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  24. As atrocious as I thought this comic was, comparing it to the Little Prince one on the basic that they both have references to "some old book" makes no fucking sense whatsoever.

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  25. Wait, he fixed the comic overnight? What did he change?

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  26. The "fixed" version was posted here. It's in the third comment in this post.

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  27. "The art was quite good, though, but that doesn't save the comic."

    God. Damn. Right.

    No art would save that joke.

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  28. @Fernie

    Ah, gotcha. I'm just so used to Randall fixing his goofs overnight and then acting like nothing ever happened, I wasn't sure.

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  29. Better joke:

    - It works!
    - Except you have two problems.
    - What?
    - You used hot glue on your wing joints.
    - And?
    (Panel with black hat and heat lamp)

    The "fixed" version doesn't have enough build up in my opinion. The ultimate failure is improved by adding the beat of success. Think of a Road Runner cartoon. Wile E. Coyote's failure wouldn't be as sweet if not for him thinking he'd succeeded a moment before. Actually, the humor here is very much like in the Road Runner, and removing the explicit Icarus reference makes it implicit and not the focus, just some icing on the cake, as it should be.

    As for the physics, yeah, he could've taken into account friction in the pulleys. However, the friction should only make his success more probable since it will take that much more force to pull the bricks up with his own weight.

    Over all, I like it. Actually, the past couple weeks of xkcd have been pretty good.

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  30. To be fair to Timofei, we only know about the myth of Icarus because it was written down in some old books.

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  31. "The art was quite good, though, but that doesn't save the comic."

    You mean to say that the art is quite good by XKCD standards, because Randall decided to actually illustrate the situation instead of having two stick figures talk about it. It could be much worse, though. We could have had stickman (I guess that's supposed to be Randall, but I wouldn't know, based on the way he's drawn) in a body cast saying something along the lines of what's in panels 1-3 to the girl (let's just call her Megan). She would ask him what happened, and he would say something about "hot glue" and "friends into Greek mythology" and let us infer the rest, like he often does.

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  32. Anon 12:36

    Or because of oral tradition.

    Either way, it is a simplistic comparison, and shows what is usually wrong with this blog: people make stupid assertions in favor of grounded flaws in the comic.


    Anon 1:03

    I think I've seen one "fixed" comic that was actually better than Randall's, and this ain't that one.

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  33. Eh, I just kinda wanted to see what Way Walker's suggestion might look like.

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  34. Awww... how cute!

    Carl just confirmed Ann Apolis' theory!

    Hold on a second, was Amanda in on this? And Ann Apolis? And was Rob in on it, or was that just a happy coincidence? I do notice he hasn't posted on this thread yet...

    Important questions! Damn, you people are all sneaky.

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  35. I am so confused. In on what? Confirmed what theory?

    IMPORTANT QUESTIONS HERE TOO

    Anyway I had threatened to leave the blog beacuse of Carl's callous and spiteful treatment of this blog, and he accused me of never loving him, ever. Well not really.

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  36. Heh, thanks, I was too lazy to do it myself. I still feel like she should say "two problems" because it makes it a little less like she's in on melting his wings and more like she observed a problem. I do like the idea of cutting out the first row of frames, but I'd rather keep the exposition intact. If it really is a picto-blog, then we need the idea there and I like having a bit more of a lead into his flight. I also like switching the last two panels.

    Putting it all together, here's another "fix".

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  37. That is a better fix.

    Also, FUCK the picto-blog idea. Seriously, come off it.

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  38. "I am so confused. In on what? Confirmed what theory?"

    Oh, come on, Amanda, do you not read every single comment on this blog with your face glued to the computer screen?

    Wait, you seriously don't?


    ...



    Weirdo.

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  39. you know what fuck you covizawhaddevva we can't all be as cool as you

    Also Way Walker, that is a very nice edit. Well done!

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  40. I have loads of theories. My current main one is "parklife won the 1994 mercury prize, but one of the m people went back in time and changed the envelope".

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  41. Another one for Randall Monroe's illustrated picture blog?

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  42. I hear the latest Linux patch allows users not to be complete faggots! Oh wait, no, that patch doesn't exist yet.

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  43. Vlad I would like you more if you spoke like that robot from Achewood.

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  44. "you know what fuck you covizawhaddevva"

    You seriously want... ?

    Oh, wait, you're being sarcastic.

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  45. Well maybe, send a picture of yourself and I might reconsider. If you don't think you are at least half as attractive as that cuddlefish... don't bother.

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  46. also two things that irk me about this comic are also in the last two comments (12am anon and sam horn) of the blogging equivalent of pure evil

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  47. People keep calling me by my full name thus it is time to shift into super-casual mode

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  48. Sam: you're lucky people don't misspell the second half of your name.

    Here you go, Amanda.

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  49. Whoever writes the entry for this one, please mention the fixed versions too. They eliminate the part of the set-up I disliked ("It's hard to do experiments when your friends are assholes!" "Whuh?")

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  50. Sam Horn: can I still call you Sam Horn tho

    Coviza: you are a polar bear.

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  51. Today was "good". It was only a technical good.

    The pacing was so screwed up, and the setup so faulty that it really didn't work at all.

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  52. Something tells me the guy writing todays guest post learned everything he knows about icarus from the comments of this blog.

    Icarus didn't fail repeatedly. His father warned him not to fly too close to the sun, and he did anyway.

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  53. Answer to hypothetical question: geek cred. "Banned in China" = "able to fly on Titan".

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  54. Person #1: there was no guest post, I said that I hadn't gotten one e-mailed to me so I wrote it myself.

    But I didn't say that Icarus failed repeadetly. I remember the story and learned about it a long time ago. So...where are you getting that from?

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  55. I think they may have misread "falling and failing" as "failing and failing".

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  56. anyone notice that he didn't do anything to account for the difference in atmospheric pressure on titan? minor thing, just bugged me a bit.

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  57. Okay, two things in defense of randall. Sorry to you haters, but there is some quality among the crap. First, heat lamps are damn random things. I'm pretty sure that most any comic would label them, and could probably get a few laughs out of the audaciousness of it. Second, when he makes you assume what is going to happen you whine, but when he goes and draws the conclusion you also whine. Seems like either way you just want to say FUCK RANDALL. Also, dont fuck Randall, it would just add to his sexual dysfunction and hed probably make a comic about it. -M

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  58. you (as in some generic anon) post that in every thread. Where have we whined about him being too vague?

    Carl, Sorry I did indeed read it wrong.

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  59. I only complain if Randall does too little or too much. Too little is saying "Wow, you sure caused quite the ruckus!" without showing us what the ruckus was or giving us enough to go on. It's skipping the part where you have to make up something funny, and just acting like something funny has happened but the reader has to imagine what it is. That's not the case here, because by mentioning greek mythology in the context of men flying, that's enough to go on to know about what will happen.

    WHAT NOW, BITCH?

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  60. Holy fuck I am tired. Sorry if this comment is not as thoughtful as you, my loyal readers, have come to expect.

    -M, let me break it down for you.

    Telegraphing the joke = bad. Reasons for this should be obvious.

    Spelling the joke out = bad. Reasons for this should be obvious.

    "Noodle Incident" jokes = bad. Reason for this is because a Noodle Incident is not funny in and of itself. It's the character's reactions to it that are funny. Randall does not seem to understand this.

    When Randall shows too much, it falls into the first two categories. When he shows too little, it falls into the third, and he does it badly. If it seems like we're criticizing him no matter what he does, it's because he always does it wrong. Sorry if that sounds snide.

    I admit that on this blog sometimes we kind of reach for reasons that a comic sucks. Doesn't mean the comic doesn't suck. Just means there's no single cohesive reason it sucks. So we come here and bitch and two people will come up with two different reasons. Some say Randall shows too much, some say too little.

    Take this comic for example. It's not that Randall telegraphs the joke. It's that it's just not funny. The art isn't funny because there is no art. The girl's dialogue is not particularly funny. And the situation of melting the glue on the guy's wings doesn't do anything for me either.

    So I'm not laughing.

    It's hard to come up with an all-encompassing reason each comic sucks, for hundreds and hundreds of comics. Sometimes they just suck. That is all.

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  61. As Freud didn't say, "sometimes a suck is just a suck".

    And, frankly, let's be grateful that he didn't.

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  62. Can someone just slap a "He is Randall Munroe" somewhere on today's comic? It is crying out for it.

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  63. its 12:20 am

    where is the new comic?

    FUCKING LAZY ASS CUNT SHIT

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  64. It's up. Unless you mean to say the new one isn't really much of a joke ... yeah.

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  65. Is this the second or third time he is basically copying the format of a commercial and replacing it with nerd (or previous XKCD) references?

    Also: I love the original commercials this is based off of, but I thought the humor in the original is from clever misuse of wordplay. But here we see the basic outline of the joke, but none of the thing that actually makes the joke funny. It might have been good had he put more time in the comic and came up with some clever wordplay on his own, but he probably put the whole thing together in a few minutes.

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  66. It took me ten minutes after reading this comic before my mind wandered back to it and I realized the new comic is supposed to be a parody of movie trailers. This has been done so many times before, there are websites just for this sort of thing. I feel like he might as well have thrown up a Chuck Norris joke.

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  67. @anon 943
    621 is a parody of the Dos Equis "most interesting man in the world" commercials. It wasn't executed all that well but I thought it was one of Randall's best comics in a long time.

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  68. I think most of the sort of "hehe" I got from this comic was from the fact that he's mocking something which is already funny. Meh!

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  69. Oh, sorry. I'm getting out of touch with television commercial pop culture because the only two TV shows that I can't watch on the Internet haven't shown new episodes in six months.

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  70. I can't comment since I haven't seen the original and am therefore out of the dreaded TARGET AUDIENCE but this seems like one tier away from a joke about "you're gonna love my nuts".

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  71. Today's comic just seems like Randall's describing himself.

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  72. Our Hero has bigger problems than falling a few week

    Do you mean "feet"? Or like is he falling so fast that he's falling through time?

    Also! Carl feel free to ignore the rest of this comment it doesn't concern you anyway

    Rob: OMG I FIGURED OUT WHY CRANDARL IS DOING THE SUMMER OF MADNESS
    me: !
    WHAT
    Rob: well he was so busy doing the blog and the webcomic
    that he couldn't get his book out
    so he was like 'I WILL DO GUEST POSTS'

    YOU GUYS THIS IS SO CRAZY IT MIGHT BE TRUE YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS TOTALLY TRUE OKAY BELIEVE IT

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  73. None of the Icarus edits suggested here work. None. Not even Carl's. The whole concept of the joke is just flawed. What should have happened is that Randall should have toyed around with the idea, shaved the rough edges off it, turn it upside down, let it set a while and then he should have discared it to the fucking bin, with maybe a note in his notebook going "Flying on titan - Icarus?"

    Sometimes a joke just doesn't work and you should bin it instead of "Eh, it's awkward but it'd be a waste not to do anything with it."

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  74. Also, now I have to look up those Dos Equis or whatever commercials on Youtube, because I've never seen those. The trouble is that I already know that they won't make the comic any better. So it's basically an excercise in bringing myself more pain.

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  75. Haha, Ramsey, you win.

    Well, let's see. That has never been done before. A parody where they take something that gets talked about very enthusiastically and make it boring. That's a really old joke. And it's not funny.

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  76. I just read the alt-text and it seems as though Randall implying that TF2 is boring. I take exception to this.

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  77. http://img19.imageshack.us/img19/9523/randyg.png

    I'll just leave this here

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  78. What is the point of the "Superlative" comic? I don't get it.

    It's another case of KFJ (Kan't Find the Joke)

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  79. Today's strip is an idea that could have worked well. Unfortunately, it didn't.

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  80. He's already countered by 91% his weight in bricks, so it won't even hurt if he fell. He'd hit the ground with 9% his weight in force. To make him fall, Black Hat would have to cut the rope. You might say it's nitpicking, but in a comic that's already so heavily engrossed in physics, it's quite a glaring oversight.

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  81. @ Sam - I think it's more him saying that people who talk about games in general are boring. So, talking about a WoW raid or TF2 kill or whatever, all equally tedious to him, and therefore it must be tedious to everyone!

    In other news, to be interesting in Munroetowne, you apparently have to keep drinking after you start wanting to throw up. So... be on the look out for that.
    And be careful when someone loves you.

    Captcha: phant. The aftermath of a terrible accident at the zoo.

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  82. Re: ultimate staring match. I watched it with the sound off, so maybe this was explained, but.. why were they putting the scarabs and antimatter in their own faces? Isn't the point of the contest that you make the -other- guy blink?

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  83. It was to psyche out the other guy.

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  84. Captcha: phant. The aftermath of a terrible accident at the zoo.

    haahhahahahah

    omfg

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  85. Amanda: Please stop giving away my secrets, and calling attention to my typos. I have a reputation to maintain.

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  86. no fuck you carl you don't own me

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  87. "You have friends into Greek mythology" = "Your friends want to murder you in a manner depicted in a greek myth"??

    RANDALL THIS IS NOT THE WAY PEOPLE TALK AND BEHAVE!!!

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  88. i'm into lord of the rings so i threw a hobbit into a volcano.

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  89. That doesn't make sense, Carl.

    Are you talking about Gollum? Gollum was not a hobbit.

    You're not a true fan at all...

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  90. Also I'm pretty sure hobbits don't exist.

    Unfortunately.

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  91. Gollum was described (or Smeagol, at least) as "almost hobbit-like" or something like that. Also, I didn't want to make it too spoiler-y. Also, sometimes i wanted someone to push Frodo into a volcano. Also SHUT UP STOP ASKING ME QUESTIONS.

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  92. I actually found the joke rather funny. I didn't understand the titan part, but the idea of his friend being such a dick strikes me as rather amusing. I can't really explain it, and it would be wasted time if I did anyway.

    But hey, I do have a question, I know it's on the FAQ, but your answer was retarded, thus I wish for a reasonable answer. If you do not like the comic, simply ignore it. Actually that's not a question, but a valid point. Here, I'll help you.
    Step 1: Open browser.
    Step 2: Do not go to XKCD.com
    Step 3: Success!

    No, you can't simply "not ignore it". You are simply being picky. Webcomics cannot appeal to all, XKCD is a very popular, witty comic, and many people find it funny. Because one douche simply can't stop stroking his own ego with a blog based around the comic, is...
    Oh forget it, no matter what I say, someone's just going to say "Oh, you're defending him because you love him!"
    And well, I'd defend anyone if someone was being a moron, even Tim B^Uckley. So...Just stop it.

    In fact, if you get adblock, you can block XKCD and never have to read it again.

    Please, you can do so much with your supposed intelligence, don't waste it on douchebaggery.

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  93. If it were so easy to ignore xkcd, I would. But alas, it's not just a matter of leaving xkcd.com. I see xkcd when I go to digg, or when other bloggers link to it to show how cool they are, or when my friends print them out and put them up everywhere. You can't just ignore it. So I'd rather just make a little place in my corner of the internet where we haters can feel better about ourselves.

    HA HA that's a lie, i don't have friends.

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  94. If you do not like the blog, simply ignore it. Actually that's not a question, but a valid point. Here, I'll help you.
    Step 1: Open browser.
    Step 2: Do not go to xkcdsucks.blogspot.com
    Step 3: Success!

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  95. Ah, Carl, that makes a lot more sense.
    And Jesus Jack, reposting things people say and editing them to be 10x more retarded is always funny :D_b

    Whatevs, you people continue to dedicate your days to XKCD. I'm going to go do something a little less pointless.

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  96. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  97. If "Don't like, don't read" applies to xkcd, it applies to the blog too. Retard.

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