Frog Applause by Teresa Burritt for April 13, 2018

  1. Mug1
    waycyber  about 6 years ago

    He’s gib-bon to orang-utaning a mornin-g cappucin-o

     •  Reply
  2. Medical logo red white
    SumoSasquatch (aka a boy named Su)  about 6 years ago

    Get out of Frog Applause, too, Bernard. Out!

    … or Happy will come hopping after you with murder on his mind.

     •  Reply
  3. 7831c9a4 3d01 43f0 af20 333f72f4f2c7
    Howard'sMyHero  about 6 years ago

    Matter / Antimatter … poof !

     •  Reply
  4. Medical logo red white
    SumoSasquatch (aka a boy named Su)  about 6 years ago

    What has Bernard done to the neighborhood squirrel population? Are they so traumatized by him that they are disguising themselves as spider monkeys?

     •  Reply
  5. Xnxbluow bigger
    weeksfive  about 6 years ago

    https://medium.com/@atarkowski/monkeys-martians-robots-the-non-human-copyright-value-gap-d814c96f3f35

    https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/01/07/462245189/federal-judge-says-monkey-cant-own-copyright-to-his-selfie

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_selfie_copyright_dispute

    https://pdnpulse.pdnonline.com/2017/07/appeals-court-skeptical-monkey-selfie-copyright-claim.html

     •  Reply
  6. Duck1275
    Brass Orchid Premium Member about 6 years ago

    Moral of the story? Keep the squirrel secret. And try to avoid being sued for infringement by Warner Brothers Television, who currently holds distribution rights for Secret Squirrel.

     •  Reply
  7. Zippy56995996595959995956959599956956599569511111122222333333
    Hugh B. Hayve  about 6 years ago

    Yeah, yeah…everybody’s got something to hide…….

     •  Reply
  8. Colt2
    coltish1  about 6 years ago

    Boy, what some people will try just to get out of having to work. … Can’t really say that I blame them, though.

     •  Reply
  9. Colt2
    coltish1  about 6 years ago

    Isn’t that Drew Carey applying for a patent?

     •  Reply
  10. Td  2
    Rotifer NOT GETTING RUBEN BOLLING’S PIN Thalweg Premium Member about 6 years ago

     

    Frog Applause™ 1 – Infinite Monkey Theorem 0

     •  Reply
  11. Agent gates
    Radish the wordsmith  about 6 years ago

    All the monkeys aren’t in the zoo, everyday you see quite a few.

    Hyping Hens is a new sensation, sweeping the nation.

     •  Reply
  12. Pirate63
    Linguist  about 6 years ago

    Maybe not monkeys, but I’ve known several jackasses who’ve obtained copyrights – and a couple of horses asses, too !

     •  Reply
  13. Sea chapel
    6turtle9  about 6 years ago

    Just corporatize the monkey, problem solved. It’s the only way to be truly free anyway.

     •  Reply
  14. Sea chapel
    6turtle9  about 6 years ago

    If a monkey wears a suit, is it called a monkey suit or a business suit? Business and monkey being diametrically opposed, would the resulting implosion be a barrel of laughs or a corporate kick-back? Who is laughing all the way to the bank?

     •  Reply
  15. Zoso1
    Arianne  about 6 years ago

    “I WANT TO CO-

    PYRIGHT MY HYP-

    HENATION TOO!"

    I’m seeing Grace the Face chucking acorns and fool’s gold at a frantic Chicken Little.

     •  Reply
  16. Thinker
    Sisyphos  about 6 years ago

    Fractured English in the Pa-tent O-ffice!

    I cannot bear it! It offends every grammatical fibre of my Official Grammar Police* being!

    *As commissioned by Sister Teresa right here in Froglandia, my primary jurisdiction. And, yet, I cannot cite Sister. The very frog-gods forbid!

     •  Reply
  17. Agent gates
    Radish the wordsmith  about 6 years ago

    Prices for the pieces vary: Paintings by cheetahs, penguins and other species at the St. Louis Zoo go for up to $100 each; Houston Zoo animal paintings command $250 each. But the revenue can be significant. Paintings by brush-wielding seals at the Virginia Aquarium, for example, generated $15,000 in less than two years from gift shop sales in 2007. For a nonprofit organization, every thousand dollars counts, and art by animals can be an important source of income.

    But are animals really “artists?” And is this really “art?” That depends on your definition. If art is in the eye of the beholder, then Congo’s sweeping blazes of color can rival those of Jackson Pollock. If your notion of art is an exterior expression of an inner self, then maybe Chandra the Oklahoma City Zoo elephant’s paintings reveal less about her subjectivity than, say, how she might communicate through sounds and movement as the matriarch of a group of elephants in the wild.

    But for primates such as Washoe, a chimpanzee who was raised like a human child by American scientists and died in 2007, the case may be different. Like Washoe, a few other primates have lived bicultural lives in human worlds as the subjects of language and cognition research, and can “talk” to us through signs and symbols. We may see something different in their creations, especially when they can title them themselves.

    .

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2016/09/07/zoos-make-money-selling-paintings-made-by-animals-are-they-art/?utm_term=.a3637f9bbfa4

     •  Reply
  18. Orangeme
    lrope  about 6 years ago

    Can we really be sure that it was a squirrel disguised as a monkey? Isn’t it also possible that another animal was disguised as a squirrel disguised as a monkey? This could go on for days since each animal might really be in disguise as another animal disguised as another animal disguised as another animal disguised as another animal… then, finally, disguised as a squirrel disguised as a monkey.

     •  Reply
  19. Naturalhairmecartoon
    Nicole ♫ ⊱✿ ◕‿◕✿⊰♫ Premium Member about 6 years ago

    https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/09/12/550417823/-animal-rights-advocates-photographer-compromise-over-ownership-of-monkey-selfie

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frog Applause