Barney & Clyde by Gene Weingarten, Dan Weingarten & David Clark
- March 09, 2013
- Previous feature
-
- Next feature
- Current
Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this plus any other comic strip delivered to your Personalized Comic Page, Daily. With a free account you will be able to build a Comic Page filled with the Comics you want to see each day.
With the largest collection of Comics and Editorial Cartoons online there is plenty to choose from. Upgrade to a GoComics Pro account (Only $.99/Month) and have unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
Customize Homepage
Daily Comics Email
Comment, share, interact with other comic fans
Barney -- J. Barnard Pillsbury -- is the billionaire founder and CEO of Pillsbury Pharmaceuticals. Barney thinks he has it all: power, wealth, a pampered existence with a statuesque trophy wife – until he meets Clyde Finster, an intelligent, entertaining (and possibly crazy) street person. Clyde's satisfaction with his circumstance surprises and confounds Barney, whose success in life has been hard-fought and won. For Clyde, Barney's acceptance is validation of a life lived without compromise.
© Weingartens & Clark - All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2013. Universal Uclick, All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy

Comments (8) (Please sign in to comment)
Rod Gonzalez said, 2 months ago
Yep, that’s messed up, all right.
Blackwolff9
said, 2 months ago
Don’t forget,her mad math skills more than make up for her not-so-mad joke-telling skills.
Arye Uygur said, 2 months ago
I had a friend who always messed up jokes by giving away the punchline at the beginning of the joke.
yousir said, 2 months ago
Ok. So these three gold coins melt into a bar…
Jen said, 2 months ago
My grandmother messing up the joke was often funnier than the original.
Night-Gaunt49 said, 2 months ago
I know I can’t tell jokes so I don’t.
calimesajim said, 2 months ago
What she lacks in brains, she makes up for in bust.
WytZox1 said, 2 months ago
She’s messing up a classic brain teaser that was once used on a Columbo episode.