Garfield's "NO FEAR!" cheer, a proclamation of true grit normally applied to sporting contests and dangerous living, is incongruously applied to two guys who are going to eat as much gross pizza as possible. In the joke-logic world, the pizza toppings are so disgusting, or will render Garfield and Jon so smelly, that they actually will be a danger, and arguably gorging yourself on melted cheese is not the safest of dietary choices. This isn't actually far removed from normal Guy Behavior, where eating and drinking contests, and feats of consumption fuel good times and liver problems alike, all the time.
The slight difference is that Jon and Garfield, for no reason besides sheer contrarian mischief, decide to go for broke with their antisocial behavior. What else is there to do when your personal habits and desires — be it nasty pizza toppings, bad music, cigarettes, weird haircut — are being attacked? Even if social standards require only the smallest of personal compromise? Even if the reasons to cooperate are for entirely logical, understandable reasons? Garfield advises not only to let one's freak flag fly, but to crank up Here Comes Garfield and blow smoke in the face of oppression. Of course, this only applies when personal appetite is at stake. This is less War on Freedom than "Don't Crowd Me".
Show me the ultimate end-product of American individualism, and I'll show you a cat with garlic breath.
7 comments:
Is Garfield even able to eat the pizza? Onions can make a cat very sick.
Whoever writes this blog thinks way too deeply about Garfield.
Funny, my first thought was "Where's Liz?" I didn't think the food was for Garfy, but rather assumed that the disgusting pizza was another Arbuckled date plan. True, he isn't wearing the obligatory "bad date outfit", but who doesn't dress down for a night on the couch with some bad movie rentals and a pizza pie??
Also, it's nice to see the phone from the front, finally. I'm relieved to know that Jon has rocketed into the pushbutton age. I always imagined it to be a telephone of the rotary variety.
oh. i guess that by "imagination", i meant "memory".
"Show me the ultimate end-product of American individuality, and I'll show you a cat with garlic breath."
Anyone else catch the reference? Or do I just remember way too many of the early Garfield strips?
"Show me a good mouser, and I'll show you a cat with bad breath."
Though of course, this is, at best, one of many reasons, and at worst, not even a reason. Here, he's going to be eating onions and garlic, and his Trademark Favorite Food is not exactly known for its lack of garlic, either. Other times, the true reasons for not eating mice come out: he dislikes their flavor, and he has to expend too much effort to catch them.
Come on its that day to go for the gold
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