Lynn's Comments: I always enjoyed the opportunity to pop a bit of rhyme into the text of FBFW. I love to read and write poetry, and am partial to poetry that rhymes. A comic strip, like the dialogue in a play, has to have a cadence: a rhythm so as to move the audience smoothly along. Excessive commentary, even a single word out of place, can take you out of the moment and weaken the punch line. ie:
"What do you call a dog with no legs? --.
It doesn't matter. He won't come anyway."
(This works.)
"What would you call a dog if it didn't have any legs"
--It doesn't matter because he wouldn't come if you called him anyway!"
(This one you stumble over.)
It takes time to learn how to write with an economy of words; to be able to engage your audience thoroughly and not waste precious seconds on "roadblocks." More after dinner speeches should be written this way!
About This Strip:
Originally Run: 1986-05-26 Appearing:Elly, Susan Location:library
"What do you call a dog with no legs? --. It doesn't matter. He won't come anyway."
(This works.)
"What would you call a dog if it didn't have any legs" --It doesn't matter because he wouldn't come if you called him anyway!"
(This one you stumble over.)
It takes time to learn how to write with an economy of words; to be able to engage your audience thoroughly and not waste precious seconds on "roadblocks." More after dinner speeches should be written this way!