Been another week of talking about comic strips on my humor blog. That and getting near the end of whatever the heck The Rangers of NIMH Part II was all about. Here's the tally for the last week:
- MiSTed: The Rangers of NIMH II, Part 9
- I Suppose It's Also Possible I Plugged the Stove in Backwards
- Statistics Saturday: Funny-Animal-Comic-Book Superheros of the 1950s
- Peter Parker Trapped in Neer-Ending Cycle of Ever-Deeper Dream States
- It Might Also Say ‘Weird, but, All Right'
- What's Going On In Mark Trail? Wait, is Sally Scorpius an established character? May - July 2023
- TCM Is Showing _Skippy_ This Friday
- MiSTed: The Rangers of NIMH II, Part 10
Some more Anthrohio photos from Friday of the con. I took fewer than usual that day, on the grounds that every photo of a panel room or a furry dance looks the same, but don't worry, by the end of the con I'll have seven thousand very slight variations of a glow stick twirling on a dance floor.

Lunch! I forgot the grease truck on Friday was selling pitas. I miss pitas.

Someone spilled a bucket of geese all over the green space outside.

They're also ready for a captive balloon ascent, in case one should be needed.

Odd little felt astronaut set on one of the tables outside the elevator doors.

And here is Velveteen, all ready to be put on ... soon.

And here, at last, is Velveteen, getting ready for her first outing, all set to disapprove of whatever comes before her!
Trivia: New Jersey Avenue was reduced from 110 feet in width to 100 feet when a survey in August 1791, during its layout, revealed it would pass within seven feet of the newly-built home of Daniel Carroll, one of the commissioners of the committee to survey and acquire land for the District of Columbia. Source: Washington Burning: How a Frenchman's Vision for Our Nation's Capital Survived Congress, the Founding Fathers, and the Invading British Army, Les Standiford.
Currently Reading: Cartoon Confidential, Jim Korkis and John Cawley.