I am deeply offended! I expect a stunning photo of a real living creature. In protest I will go diving on my local reef and find my own octopus or something.
What could there possibly be to fear in such a glorious creature? Those dinnerplate eyes, those tree-trunk arms, that steel-shearing…hungry…beak…
Crap. Betrayed by my inner mammal.
Peter Ashbysays
The Electron Microscope unit I inhabited through much of my PhD was festooned with Larson’s work. On the door of one of the scope rooms was the one where 1 caveman is sitting atop a huge stone microscope under which is a mammoth. He is saying to caveman 2 ‘It’s a mammoth’ and entitled ‘Early Microscope’. Sheer genius.
Reading Larson’s published books of cartoons was one of the sheer delights of my late High School and early College years. They’d have me howling with laughter and my mom would want to see just what was so funny. Seemingly invariably, she never “got” the humor. At all. My mom’s reasonably well educated (retired school librarian), but most of Larson’s stuff was just over her head, while it never failed to tickle my funny bone.
What I noticed was that all of us in the family considered 10% of Larson’s cartoons to be laugh-out-loud funny, it was a different selection for each person. But “Squids can sense fear” is a general favourite.
Evolving Squid says
One of my favourite cartoons of all time.
Fernando Magyar says
A CARTOON of a cephalopod?!!
I am deeply offended! I expect a stunning photo of a real living creature. In protest I will go diving on my local reef and find my own octopus or something.
forsen says
The Far Side has always been the cartoon of preference for science geeks. The Thagomizer comes rather naturally to mind.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thagomizer
Andrew says
Gary Larson is my idol. I’ll never forget the thagomizer.
Such a shame he stopped drawing and asked for his babies to be returned. ie for his cartoons not to be posted on the internet. :-(
But at leat he is properly honoured..: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strigiphilus_garylarsoni
rrt says
What could there possibly be to fear in such a glorious creature? Those dinnerplate eyes, those tree-trunk arms, that steel-shearing…hungry…beak…
Crap. Betrayed by my inner mammal.
Peter Ashby says
The Electron Microscope unit I inhabited through much of my PhD was festooned with Larson’s work. On the door of one of the scope rooms was the one where 1 caveman is sitting atop a huge stone microscope under which is a mammoth. He is saying to caveman 2 ‘It’s a mammoth’ and entitled ‘Early Microscope’. Sheer genius.
Luis Brudna says
I copy to my Science Humor website. ;-)
More…
http://www.sciencehumor.org
JJR says
Reading Larson’s published books of cartoons was one of the sheer delights of my late High School and early College years. They’d have me howling with laughter and my mom would want to see just what was so funny. Seemingly invariably, she never “got” the humor. At all. My mom’s reasonably well educated (retired school librarian), but most of Larson’s stuff was just over her head, while it never failed to tickle my funny bone.
Monado says
What I noticed was that all of us in the family considered 10% of Larson’s cartoons to be laugh-out-loud funny, it was a different selection for each person. But “Squids can sense fear” is a general favourite.