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How to Appear Far More Knowledgeable Than You Are

August 21, 2019 by Scott Meyer

I used to work the front desk at a hotel in Florida. As you may suspect, it got hot. There were a few small fans supplied for all of us at the front desk to use, which helped a bit. It would have helped more, but two of the most senior front desk employees claimed two of the fans as their personal equipment, would set the fans up so that only they benefited from the breeze the fans generated, and eventually went so far as to hide the fans when they left for the day so that nobody would “steal” their fans to use in their absence.

The rest of us complained to management, who agreed that it was asinine, but did nothing.

This might seem like a case of evil (or at least stubbornness) triumphing over good but think about this: while those two knuckleheads didn’t get fired, they also damn well never got promoted. Knowing how that place works, most of the rest of the staff has probably turned over four or five times by now, but those two are still there, behind that same oven of a desk, feeling like they won because they’ve got those same two fans pointed at their faces. And, because management didn’t deal with the problem decisively at first, they’re still putting up with it to this day.


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August 21, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Speak an Unpopular Truth

August 19, 2019 by Scott Meyer

As I write this, I just finished watching a documentary about the first ten years of David Bowie’s career. It focused on the long string of failed bands, low-selling albums, and unsuccessful singles he had to persevere through before he finally got some real traction with Ziggy Stardust. It’s tempting to think of him as this towering pop-culture colossus, but he was just as fallible as the rest of us. The documentary really did a great job of humanizing him.

In fact, it could be argued that the photos from the period when he was working as a mime might have humanized him too much.


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August 19, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Explain Why Star Wars Is Much Better Than Star Trek

August 16, 2019 by Scott Meyer

If the analogy in the third panel had held, The Last Jedi would have ended with Luke selling the force texts in the tree to Rey for a hefty profit. Some of the fanboys might have preferred that.

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August 16, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Explain Why Star Trek Is Much Better Than Star Wars

August 14, 2019 by Scott Meyer

“Good enough is good enough” would be a great first needlepoint or cross-stitch project, because any imperfections in the workmanship would support the idea being expressed.

 

Note from Missy: is it weird that this is giving me the urge to try out needlepoint?

As always, thanks for using my Amazon Affiliate links (US, UK, Canada).

August 14, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Find Hope for the Future of Humanity

August 12, 2019 by Scott Meyer

All true. I witnessed two young boys engaged in the described epic-mouth-stretching-duel at the entrance of a Disney resort where I was working at the time. Their mother saw me watching them and apologized for their behavior. I told her it was one of the best things I’d ever seen.

She looked at me like I was insane.

Me!

Who’s she to judge? She’s the mother of two mouth stretchers!

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August 12, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Figure Out Your Next Move

August 09, 2019 by Scott Meyer

We like to pretend that the cats have some idea what we’re saying, but if we’re being honest, at most, they recognize their names. Like most cat owners, we get around this by calling the cats by a rotating selection of cutsey nicknames, ensuring that they will understand no part of anything we say.

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August 09, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Answer a Hypothetical Question

August 07, 2019 by Scott Meyer

When I was a kid, my brothers and I would make spaceships out of LEGO and then have pretend battles. I was always coming up with new, powerful weapons, like a laser that used only visible wavelengths so it could go through any forcefield people could see through, or a souped-up Starfleet transporter that just transported parts of the other ship’s engine or hull away, causing massive damage. It was great. I could give my spaceship any weapon just by imagining it and saying that I had used it.

Sadly, I learned that my brothers could neutralize any weapon I imagined, simply by saying, “It didn’t work!”

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August 07, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Play the Field

August 05, 2019 by Scott Meyer

So, you know how sometimes you have a situation where you have to remember something and there’s only two choices, like whether you turn left or right, or a switch needs to be either up or down for something to work, and you will remember with 100% certainty that one of the two choices is correct, and then later you find out you were wrong?

Yeah.

I knew the difference between the male and female symbols. I had used them before in the comic when I made the logo on the Moon-Minion’s uniform. Yet somehow, when I made Man-Crush’s logo, the first version used the female symbol instead of male. The only way I can explain it is that my brain was sabotaging me.

In my brain’s defense, the version with the female symbol was a better logo.

Note from Missy: For some reason, “Girl-illa” is just slaying me right now.

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August 05, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Disguise an Insult as a Compliment

August 02, 2019 by Scott Meyer

You see, back when most of us only had 4 channels on TV, Saturday afternoons were a kind of dead zone filled with old movies and ABC’s Wide World of Sports.

The thing that strikes me about Wide World of Sports when I think back on it now is that its “world” was maybe a bit too “wide.” Among the things it labeled as “sports” were billiards trick shot competitions (essentially bar gambling), performances by the Harlem Globetrotters (essentially a multi-person basketball themed juggling act), and Simon Says (no essentially this time; it was literally just some funny old guy leading a group of people in a round of Simon Says).


As always, thanks for using my Amazon Affiliate links (US, UK, Canada).

August 02, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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How to Defend Your Taste in Art

July 31, 2019 by Scott Meyer

As is often the case, this comic was based on an actual conversation. I had the wallpaper image shown in panel 2, which is from a promotional image for the classic film Forbidden Planet. A coworker felt that it clearly depicted a robot attacking a scantily-clad woman. I pointed out that in the film the robot was the scantily-clad woman’s friend, and was helping her in the image, but that did not impress my coworker.

Really, in my experience, explaining the finer points of a sci-fi movie plot pretty much never impresses anyone.


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July 31, 2019 /Scott Meyer
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