Cartoon Review: Dave Walker’s Cartoon Church

27 04 2009
I love these cartoons. I am not a churchgoer, religious, a believer, a practicing anything, but I find them hilarious. The best cartoons often have the characteristic of referring to a very specific environment but managing to have a universal appeal through the humour.
return on investment

return on investment

peace be with you

peace be with you





REALLY?! Magazine Exclusive

20 04 2009
exclusively for you

exclusively for you





Ideas for my bestseller

16 04 2009
Would you read this?

Would you read this?

Are we talking a series?

Are we talking a series?





More web cartoons I like in the best tradition of stick-men: xkcd.com

15 04 2009
I am a fan of the web cartoon xkcd, described as “a webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math and language”,  for the stick-men that don’t even have faces, and for the humour which often manages to be gnomic and highly accessible at the same time.
well

well

I had to include this second cartoon because it’s about electrical engineers. (Although Marco would argue that he’s an electronic not an electrical engineer.

urgent mission

urgent mission





What is authentic happiness?

14 04 2009

It’s a website  promoting “positive psychology” that really annoys me and which inspired this cartoon. NB: the names of the tests, surveys and inventories are REAL.

membership refused

membership refused

Since publishing this post about authentic happiness and the annoying positive psychology website, I have been asked things like “Did you actually take those personality tests?” and “Why don’t you like that website? You should try harder to join.” (This, from my boyfriend.) Also, “That cartoon shows a lot of self-awareness.”

So the answer to the first question is “no, I didn’t do the questionnaires.” Also, in case this is not absolutely clear, you don’t actually have to “pass” these tests to join the International Positive Psychology Association, although I’m sure they’d encourage you to take them for self-awareness/development purposes.

I dislike personality, psychological and aptitude tests, as I have a long history of “failing” them. For my statistics class at University, we did a lot of these tests to generate data to analyse. I was always an outlier – at the “thick” or “uh-oh, mental!” end of the normal distribution.

There’s a horrible personality test called the Big 5, which evaluates you along 5 dimensions: Openness (a.k.a. “Intellect”), Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism. What I learned about myself from this test was that I was “surprisingly naïve”, “lazy and undependable”, an “introvert” (which apparently means: “more likely to turn out to be a serial killer”), a “potentially high-maintenance pain in the neck” and “emotionally unstable”, i.e. most likely to end up an unemployable spinster.
For a long time after my statistics course, I adopted a strategy of minimizing self-awareness, of refusing to recognise the nature that had been revealed to me in these tests. This worked quite well, and I managed to earn a living and have relationships by convincing potential employers, boyfriends and sometimes myself that I was outgoing, easygoing and completely committed to whatever it was they were proposing. However, this was exhausting, and I just couldn’t keep it up over time, my true nature eventually always asserting itself.

I was helped to come to terms with my true nature by the “Myers-Briggs Type Inventory,” which like the Big 5 test evaluates you along a series of dimensions, but unlike the Big 5 has positive opposite ends of the dimensions: rather than going from good to bad, it goes from good to differently good. Thanks to this test, I was able to reframe my “unemployable spinster” nature as “independent woman who is better suited to self-employment.”





Web cartoons I like: “The Order of the Stick”

10 04 2009
The Order of the Stick

The Order of the Stick

I love “The Order of the Stick” for the deceptively simple graphics, the multi-layered humour, the quality of the scripting and dialogue. The storyline parodies Dungeons & Dragons-type fantasy role-playing, something I have no experience of, but which hooked me from the first page (shown in this post). It’s also a parody of  childhood drawing and story-telling conventions: the use of stick-men to tell the story (e.g. the enemies of “The Order Of The Stick” are known as “The Linear Guild”); in the second printed book, the author re-caps what happened in the previous story by drawing the characters as finger-puppets; stories providing historical background are drawn with wax crayons; etc.

You can read all of the story to date on the website, which might take a while as he’s posted 644 cartoons to date, or I recommend signing up to receive his posts 3 times a week through rss feed.





The Adventures of Marco the Electronic Engineer – part 33

9 04 2009
secondary sexual characteristics

secondary sexual characteristics





The Adventures of Marco the Electronic Engineer – part 32

8 04 2009
manuel the chemical engineer

manuel the chemical engineer





The Adventures of Marco, The Electronic Engineer – part 31

6 04 2009
exotic charms

exotic charms





The Adventures of Marco, the Electronic Engineer – part 30

1 04 2009
customer and supplier power

customer and supplier power








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