Transcript:
SCENE: A police officer and someone else (probably also a police officer) firing their handguns at someone or something off-panel.
COP #1: Darn it! that last Kiss comic was funny! So laugh!
COP #2: I hate firing readers!
1965 Art: Jack Keller Color: Diego Jourdan Pereira
DJP.lk448
1965 art by Jack Keller from the story “Highway Halfwits” in Teenage Hotroddeers #15, November 1965.
↓ Transcript
SCENE: A police officer and someone else (probably also a police officer) firing their handguns at someone or something off-panel.
COP #1: Darn it! that last Kiss comic was funny! So laugh!
COP #2: I hate firing readers!
1965 Art: Jack Keller Color: Diego Jourdan Pereira
DJP.lk448
1965 art by Jack Keller from the story "Highway Halfwits" in Teenage Hotroddeers #15, November 1965.
COP #1: Darn it! that last Kiss comic was funny! So laugh!
COP #2: I hate firing readers!
1965 Art: Jack Keller Color: Diego Jourdan Pereira
DJP.lk448
1965 art by Jack Keller from the story "Highway Halfwits" in Teenage Hotroddeers #15, November 1965.
“Course, if you hit that monkey or that kid named Spridle, no harm done.”
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Scene ftom the alternate ending of Speed Buggy: The Last Ride
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I had heard there were problems during the Tour de France this year. But this is ridiculous.
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In Taos, New Mexico, even grandmas in wheelchairs have to obey the posted speed limit
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Example 1 of why it’s a bad idea to have sex with the police commisioner’s daughter in the back of your Ford Explorer
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“Remember men! If we don’t stop them here, they’ll make another The Fast and The Furious movie!”
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“Now it was about that time them Duke boys were thinkin’ to themselves,’What tha ☆☆☆☆ man?!?'”
It was quietly amusing.
It was quietly amusing
Why the shift from right handed shooting to left handed shooting?
I was just trying to make the word balloons flow better, Dave. In general, I want the first balloon to be on the left-hand side of the panel and/or higher up than the next speaker’s balloon. The reason is that readers generally read left to right and from top to bottom.
There are ways to get around that and exceptions to the rule. But generally left to right, top to bottom is the easiest.
I get into trouble, though, on rare occasions when I flip a panel and don’t realize that it can change the content. The most obvious of these is when a panel shows someone driving a car. Suddenly, they go from having the steering will on the left-hand side of the car to the right. So, now the person must be driving in some place like Great Britain rather than the U.S.!