"Winfrah Oprey!"
originally published in Cracked Magazine #233 (January 1988)
story by Peter Bagge
art by Bill Wray
Here's another hidden gem from the Golden Age of Cracked - this one is interesting because besides the Oprah character, most of the incidentals in this strip are Wray adapting Bagge's own art style, probably from some preliminary sketches at the scripting stage.
This is genuinely the most pathetic scum of the earth tweet I’ve seen all year. Your mother is right and is grieving her mentally unwell child. Blasting your mom on Twitter likes this makes you a turbo scumbag.
This is so extremely obvious to anyone with even the faintest understanding of history.
The future is extremely dire unless we deport millions of people whilst we still have the numbers.
CGI and AI really is putting animal actors out of a job
They wouldn't even hire him anymore, he wouldn't have a career. They'd just CGI a bird for a movie or AI one for an ad
I keep seeing people retweet this saying, “This is why Pride exists.”
Sorry, but that’s a bit basic.
The correct answer is: this is why the UK, the West, and Western values and culture exist.
Pride didn’t create the freedoms that made gay rights possible.
The ability to organise, protest, campaign, and live openly as a gay person didn’t come from Pride.
Those freedoms come from broader Western values — liberty, free speech, democracy, equality before the law.
Pride exists because those values were already there. It didn’t produce them.
The point is, those values aren’t guaranteed. If we’re not careful, they can absolutely disappear.
*This also applies to women's rights*
@ArchRose90@Caroleball77974 We are now second class citizens confirmed!
Whites are put to the bottom of the pile.
It’s time to fight back against this DEI and kick all these minorities out. We don’t want imbeciles that shag their own cousins!!
Not a good look for Britain and our trust in the law.
Attack a police officer, walk away unpunished despite clear as day on CCTV.
Get stabbed and die bleeding after being falsely accused of racism.
The UK looks like an unserious country right now.
In 1996, Microsoft made a chatroom that turned your conversations into comic strips.
It was called Microsoft Comic Chat.
Instead of a normal text box, your messages appeared as speech bubbles over weird little black-and-white characters. The program would automatically pick poses, facial expressions, panels, and layouts.
So you could be arguing with strangers online, but it looked like a newspaper comic drawn by someone having a breakdown.
For a few years, the future of online chat looked like this.