Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for February 01, 2015

  1. Missing large
    Squizzums  about 9 years ago

    Gravity always wins.

     •  Reply
  2. E067 169 48
    Darsan54 Premium Member about 9 years ago

    You know, I’ve never understood it either. My wife and I go to the movies.

     •  Reply
  3. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  about 9 years ago

    Leave it to Goat to spoil the fun. Anyway, let’s go, Seahawks Corporation!

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large 2
    Phatts  about 9 years ago

    I recently read an article that explains it. It’s all very scientific. Rooting for a team gives us something to identify with. It makes us feel part of something.There’s more to it than that of course, but I don’t remember most of the article.Suffice it to say, this is why we never look at the cold, hard facts, ever. It leads to disillusionment and getting us tossed out of parties.

     •  Reply
  5. Right here
    Sherlock Watson  about 9 years ago

    I’m siding with Paris Goat on this; if it weren’t for all the wild commercials, I probably wouldn’t watch the Super Bowl at all.

     •  Reply
  6. 1988 06 05edit
    awgiedawgie Premium Member about 9 years ago

    I’m one of those guys who never gets invited to the parties. I couldn’t care less which rich guy’s company wins. In fact, I don’t even know which rich guys’ companies are competing.

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    parellel3  about 9 years ago

    The Seahawks are my last corporate affiliation. That and the Dodgers.

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    Alfkowitz  about 9 years ago

    Whenever someone at works asks me who won the football game I always reply “Probably one of the teams”.

     •  Reply
  9. Idano
    Ida No  about 9 years ago

    Rat: “Some people you just don’t invite to Super Bowl parties.”Pig: “Anyone with a measurable IQ?”Rat: “That’s why I invited you here.”

     •  Reply
  10. Chainlightning
    electricshadow Premium Member about 9 years ago

    Wow, a literal spoilsport

     •  Reply
  11. Missing large
    KeepKeeper  about 9 years ago

    A good football game is like a ballet in many acts.

     •  Reply
  12. Black lion
    PICTO  about 9 years ago

    I’m not too sure about two teams of men in tight shiny pants bent over a piece of pigskin… but women’s beach volleyball… now there’s a sport I can get behind.

     •  Reply
  13. Airhornmissc
    Liverlips McCracken Premium Member about 9 years ago

    I’m with Rat on this one. Sure it’s easy to be smug about how superior one is because one doesn’t take an interest in something as pedestrian as pro sports. And of course it’s only a game, nothing of lasting import or long-term significance to the human condition. But life should be just plain fun sometimes too. The fact is that these folks have an exceedingly rare ability to do something that is extraordinarily hard, extraordinarily well. It is akin to listening to a first class professional musician play their instrument.

     •  Reply
  14. Thinker
    Sisyphos  about 9 years ago

    Goat should go home and listen to NPR, or whatever it is those “superior” types do to flaunt their distain for popular sports.Sure, it’s all way too commodified, but there is still a game somewhere within all the hype. So, let us the masses have our bread and circuses, or else look forward to your Last Tumbril Ride….

     •  Reply
  15. 1017207 10200214106421862 492754112 n
    Cameron1988 Premium Member about 9 years ago

    thank you, Goat. go Seahawks!

     •  Reply
  16. Burrowing owl attack
    emjaycee  about 9 years ago

    My day today will be babysitting my neighbors’ kids whilst they are at work, so that means the “Kitten Bowl” and the “Puppy Bowl” (their and my favorites), followed by a good book, a cup of tea, and a timer for the halftime show alert.

     •  Reply
  17. 041ce150 741f 443a aa6a 84618520b989 1 201 a
    jessegooddoggy  about 9 years ago

    I love Superbowl Sunday, it’s the least crowded Sunday to be out hiking.

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    cool_alien_empire  about 9 years ago

    Goat said my thoughts exactly. Though I’m not rude enough to spoil superbowl parties, I’ve never understood getting happy/angry/excited for teams. That apathy extends to the Olympics. I’m glad all of these athletes are doing their best…but their winning/losing doesn’t affect me in any way.

     •  Reply
  19. Out little avatar
    dadoctah  about 9 years ago

    “Hooray. The guys wearing shirts the same color as the one I’m wearing just did what they were hired to do!”

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    eddie6192  about 9 years ago

    Rat is a sore winner.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    biglar  about 9 years ago

    Well, my team isn’t in the Big Game this year (thanks to everyone getting stupid in the last 5 minutes of the NFC Championship) but by Goat’s standard I’m O.K.: Many of my friends are partial owners of the team and my 8-year-old goes to school with Jordy Nelson’s cousin.

     •  Reply
  22. Me 2015
    puddlesplatt  about 9 years ago

    I kinda think about sports like I think about sex…nothing!

     •  Reply
  23. Avt jwhouk medium
    Joseph Houk  about 9 years ago

    Stephen would have had to pull this one if the Packers would have made it to the Super Bowl.

     •  Reply
  24. Missing large
    U02NO  about 9 years ago

    The Ssun-Sentinel showed it’s colors by not running Pearls Before Swine after the Mohammed series this past week. Excuse me while I cancel my subscription.

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    Carl Rennhack Premium Member about 9 years ago

    Being a cat lover, I wanted to see either the Bengals, or the Lions, or the Panthers, in Super Bowl XLIX.Tomorrow, since I used to live in Boston, I want to see people in Seattle wearing shirts that say “Wait until LAST year!”.

     •  Reply
  26. Scan0001
    RACerri32  about 9 years ago

    ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ – huh! what? oh, the stupid bowl, yep, there’s no joy in Mudville this year.

     •  Reply
  27. Dsc 0101
    Happy Tinkerbelle Premium Member about 9 years ago

    The exception is the Green Bay Packers that is owned by everyday people.

     •  Reply
  28. Kernel
    Diane Lee Premium Member about 9 years ago

    This isn’t true of one team— The Green Bay Packers. That team is actually owned by 99%ers, you can buy stock in it just like any other company, and owners and season ticket holders pass their ownership in the team down from generation to generation. It is pretty silly to root for your hometown team when your hometown is paying some rich guy to keep the team in your town, and he is blackmailing the city with the threat of moving somewhere that pays better each time the contract comes up.

     •  Reply
  29. Bullwinkle   80x80
    Dacker  Premium Member about 9 years ago

    The only reason I know which teams are playing this year is because I’m originally from New England and now live 150 miles from Seattle.

    I probably will watch a few minutes of the game and later watch all the commercials online.

    Perhaps a few minutes of the half-game show too in hopes there is another “wardrobe malfunction”! ;-)

     •  Reply
  30. 03 head in universe
    Vonne Anton  about 9 years ago

    I just like watching a bunch of millionaires wrestling over a ball. This year, I have to choose which team of millionaires I hate the least, and cheer for them to beat up the team of millionaires I absolutely despise. Not much fun in that. Maybe I’ll read instead.

     •  Reply
  31. Pig
    A_NY_Outlaw  about 9 years ago

    they weren’t my teams either Rat….

     •  Reply
  32. Missing large
    prrdh  about 9 years ago

    What you say is also true of rooting for a political party. I’m not a sports fan myself, but as long as you aren’t acting like a Man United yobbo your behavior is a lot more benign in its effects than being one of the Republicrat faithful.

     •  Reply
  33. Downloadfile
    Guilty Bystander  about 9 years ago

    As a shareholder, I can say with certitude that the Green Bay Packers ARE my team. We don’t need no steenkin’ billionaires like those two teams playing today do.

    We do, however, need to figure out how not to collapse over the final three minutes of a game.

     •  Reply
  34. Aslan avatar
    Aslan Balaur  about 9 years ago

    I’m with goat. Cheering because one group of millionaires beat another playing a kids game to make billionaires richer.

     •  Reply
  35. Eruption   1   rotated
    drdougsteward  about 9 years ago

    While I agree with most of what you say, I do believe that several of the teams DO reflect and represent the community in which they play, e.g., Packers, Bills, Steelers (a not meant to be complete list … merely some examples of teams I believe do reflect their community)

     •  Reply
  36. Missing large
    Scurvey duck  about 9 years ago

    The spectator sports industry is a low quality form of entertainment. They hype the athletes who utter banal platitudes in a pathetic attempt to make the chasing of a toy sound profound and worthy of the public’s attention. The sports industry encourages individuals to part with their money and vicariously experience an activity that any able bodied person can do themselves. They have created a facade of conflict by having each team represent a community although few if any of the athletes have ancestral or even native claim to the community which they represent. Members of the public who desire that their community be lauded on the ephemeral actions of a few will hinge their sense of self worth on a set of numbers and statistics rather than their own accomplishments and the true attributes of their community. Sports casters recite names and numbers in a futile attempt to make the activity seem viable and to the betterment of our world. Ultimately it is all forgotten by many, cherished by few and to no betterment of anybody’s lives but for the two groups of adults who are paid way too much to chase a toy around a field.

     •  Reply
  37. Bucketsidav
    Ripplin Premium Member about 9 years ago

    That’s why, while I enjoy watching sports, I never get too wrapped up in them. I couldn’t care less about some guys being obscenely paid for their own personal glory.

     •  Reply
  38. Penguin hero
    grainpaw  about 9 years ago

    I get my self-esteem from what I do, not from what a pack of ball-chasers does.

     •  Reply
  39. Missing large
    1148559  about 9 years ago

    I have absolutely zero interest in professional sports, but I have to say that goat was just plain rude, and I fully support rat’s reaction to that.

     •  Reply
  40. Missing large
    shelley1doglover  about 9 years ago

    I may be a spoilsport, but I’m also a realist. For those that love sports-and believe me I work with a ton of them and love them all-I’m glad you get enjoyment from this. However, for those of use who see commercial sports as kinda dumb, isn’t another perspective allowed?

     •  Reply
  41. Bobbyavatar
    Saddenedby Premium Member about 9 years ago

    reality is around us and is usually for the most part very serious or even downright depressing. a ‘little’ escapism allows us to hopefully deal a little more sanely with our reality. thus movies, sports, reading of fiction and even some non-fiction, internet, video games etc. etc. allows each to find their own way to cope with the stresses of everyday life. to belittle others way of escapism by saying your escapism is more mature or intelligent than their escapism or to force them to face the reality of their escapism – may be pointing out the problem of human nature – mainly everybody is wrong but me and those who think like me. so goat you are right about the reality that you explained to rat – however taking away rats way of escapism by trying to make him see the ‘reality’ of his escapism, should imho get you tossed out of his house.

     •  Reply
  42. Avatar92
    Charlie Fogwhistle  about 9 years ago

    Basketball and soccer have a similar effect on people. Water polo and synchronized swimming, not so much. Must have something to do with throwing cold water on people’s emotions.

     •  Reply
  43. Dr horrible pinkraygun
    cupertino jay  about 9 years ago

    all time best companion youtubey on this same topic was made by waay too cuties Garfunkel & Oates, titled “GO SPORTS GO” runtime is under 3mins:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fraSdN-PG8

     •  Reply
  44. Monkey
    folklegendredux  about 9 years ago

    Remind me to show Goat my Super Bowl ring sometime

     •  Reply
  45. Dicktracy silhouetteed
    Spade Jr.  about 9 years ago

    Goat is right on! It’s not about sports, it’s about money, and has been for about the last 40 years, perhaps more. If the salaries were lower, and tickets were actually cheap to get into pro sporting events, I’ll bet the crowds and the interest would actually go down. It’s big business entertainment—pro wresting in a different format.

     •  Reply
  46. Missing large
    connie  about 9 years ago

    Superbowl? What’s that?

     •  Reply
  47. Idano
    Ida No  about 9 years ago

    So, which commercial won?

     •  Reply
  48. N1495118875 241922 2408
    Ermine Notyours  about 9 years ago

    Now that “my” team lost (The Ocean Avian Fish Eaters) I say, “All right, but apart from the sanitation, medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?” [/sourgrapes] [/bandwagon]

     •  Reply
  49. N1495118875 241922 2408
    Ermine Notyours  about 9 years ago

    Rat is wearing red, which is one of the colors of the winning team. But where is it still daylight at the end of the Superbowl?

     •  Reply
  50. Bbjcesh
    barister  about 9 years ago

    Now that’s one thing rat has done that I totally agree with. Right on rato.

     •  Reply
  51. Missing large
    docredbird  about 9 years ago

    I think most people have boiled this down to Goat condemning professional football in general. I think Goat’s main contention wasn’t with watching the game, or even having a rooting interest. I think it was the phase “my team”. Calling out people who say “we” when referring to a professional sports team is a time-honored tradition.

     •  Reply
  52. Missing large
    becki3256  about 9 years ago

    I root for the only publicly owned, non-rich-guy’s team. And yes, I “own” a share (meaning I get to vote for the board of directors). So I’d challenge Goat’s premise from the very beginning!!

     •  Reply
  53. Missing large
    Rags2Riches  about 9 years ago

    Nailed it.

     •  Reply
  54. Sad
    claire de la lune.  about 9 years ago

    Pastis has raised his bar by a lot in 2015 compared to last year which had a bit of a slump. What will he think of next?

     •  Reply
  55. Hellcat
    knight1192a  almost 9 years ago

    Gotta go with Rat over Goat on this. It’s called being a fan. I could care less for football, or basketball (especially basketball), but I still get it. Rat probably supports the team by buying their overpriced merchandise.

     •  Reply
  56. Picture
    NeilCopeland  about 5 years ago

    Years ago, a British university banned the use of the phrase “my wife”, because it implied ownership of a human being.

     •  Reply
  57. Aatxajwyqyk2nk17rmugntkjdftf9jthdonfjjyjdgcl=s96 c
    CesarSantos  over 2 years ago

    HAHA, that’s the stupidity of being a sports fan. You are cheering for a bunch of rich morons, under contract of a much richer @$$€0£&, play a children’s ball game against esch other.

     •  Reply
  58. Screenshot  18
    Da Cat Guy  over 1 year ago

    A person could always have their home team win by defining their “home team” as whichever town that is playing they’re closer to. So they could go to a spot halfway between the two towns, and then move to the side of whatever team is winning!

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Pearls Before Swine