Arlo and Janis by Jimmy Johnson for January 26, 2021

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    wjones  about 3 years ago

    Now days you pay for the line, not the number of call’s

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    Tyge Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Be careful in the dark! Don’t trip over the dead squirrel!

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    finkd  about 3 years ago

    Come on now, Arlo, that’s crazy talk !

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    Grumpy Old Guy  about 3 years ago

    You can also charge you phone with your car’s power outlet… Or you could just look out the window to check the power.

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    nosirrom  about 3 years ago

    How close are the houses? If they’re close enough he could just make a window to window call.

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    Rhetorical_Question   about 3 years ago

    Should not be a problem.

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    unfair.de  about 3 years ago

    The neighbors door bell is powerless, too. And so are their automatic window blinds. And their cctv system.

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    admiree2  about 3 years ago

    Hold on a minute there, Arlo. Maybe it’s the long term lockdown but try to keep it together and not go nuts now.

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    flagmichael  about 3 years ago

    I just walk out front and check the street lights if it is dark enough. Nowadays our power company has an app where I can report outages and see what has been reported, and even an ETR if it has been worked for a while.

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    Jhony-Yermo  about 3 years ago

    I love to WALK.

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    Carl Fink Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Hey! Colorist! Read yesterday’s strip, and the dialog!

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    Michael G.  about 3 years ago

    Why not simply while away the weary hours? >:-D

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    outgolfing  about 3 years ago

    Now there’s a radical idea.

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    jarvisloop  about 3 years ago

    I am now officially old. Seeing a plural pronoun with a singular noun bugs the hell out of me.

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    david_42  about 3 years ago

    I was in a RV park once when the power went out. Sure enough, there was a woman going from site to site asking people if their power was also out.

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    Going Nuts  about 3 years ago

    Good for Arlo! Here on the Gulf Coast, it’s amazing how many neighbors you get to know after a hurricane and a prolonged power outage. After Ivan many moons ago and without power and water for two weeks, our next door neighbor got to know us too well because we were getting buckets of water from his pool to flush the toilets.

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    alexius23  about 3 years ago

    If you go next door….socially distance

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    DawnQuinn1  about 3 years ago

    When people text across the dinner table, you KNOW the art of conversation is lost. In my house, no electronics at the dinner table.

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    joefearsnothing  about 3 years ago

    Looks like the power is back on to me! ;o]

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    KEA  about 3 years ago

    This is why I have a backup battery. (for phones, pads, etc)

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    ChessPirate  about 3 years ago

    How very pioneering of you, Arlo! ☺

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    Thinkingblade  about 3 years ago

    It is funny that this exact scenario was part of why the original land lines provided the power to support the call independent of the local power grid.

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    cuzinron47  about 3 years ago

    Considering that was an afterthought, I’m guessing they don’t see the neighbors very often.

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    donwestonmysteries  about 3 years ago

    I would get up and turn the tv on instead of using the remote, but they hid the button.

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    fej  about 3 years ago

    Hey Arlo, Why don’t you have a generator?

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    John M  about 3 years ago

    Last time I was in an area with major power cut – the mobile network died within a couple of hours so not a lot of point worrying about phone battery. But if they hadn’t died then I had a car with plenty of fuel in it that I could have recharged it from.

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    Back to Big Mike  about 3 years ago

    If this isn’t the perfect example of a first world problem, I don’t know what is. <ka-SNICK!>

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    bandidoirlandes  about 3 years ago

    Covid! dont go next door!!!!

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    car2ner  about 3 years ago

    sometimes power outages are the times when neighbors chat the most.

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    Grutzi  about 3 years ago

    5 minute walk down the driveway or call the wife or husband next door on the cell phones but they’re probably at work. He could use his phone to connect with his power company using their app. If he’s really in danger of using up his phone’s power, use it to call his son and have his son check it out on his computer. Yes, I’ve done that.

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    PuppyPapa  about 3 years ago

    WHAT?!? What are you, some kind of Luddite zealot?!?

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    strikklybizness  about 3 years ago

    Walk?!? Mind blown…

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    bevgreyjones  about 3 years ago

    All you have to do is look out a window. If there are no flickering blue lights in the neighbors’ windows, then the TVs are off and the power went out.

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    Laurie Stoker Premium Member about 3 years ago
    What a brilliant idea! Just like we did in the olden days! Okay it was last year but I went next door and hung out there until the power came back on. (It was before the pandemic.)
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    DebUSNRet Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Duh huh!

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    mafastore  about 3 years ago

    When we have a situation – as we have had since yesterday and continues to at least tomorrow due to heavy snow and wind storm – in which we might lose our electricity husband goes crazy. If it is, as now. it is cold weather it is even worse, as he envisions not only losing our electricity, but since our furnace needs same – losing our heat, which will also lead to our water pipes freezing and bursting.

    So to reassure him we keep every laptop computer and every cell phone plugged in continually.

    We now have the added fear that our traditional house phone line had to be converted from the original copper wire lines – which need only their own electricity, not our our electric company’s electricity to work – to fiber optic. We have one day’s worth of battery backup and then we have to have batteries to replace same for another day and so on. The backup takes 12 D batteries – not cheap to buy or compact to store a lot of them in the house. (Also the service with it is terrible, but it was switch or only be able to call/receive calls from the phone co and 911.) When electric lines go out here from a storm it is not uncommon for them to be out for at least 4 days – after Isaias they were out for some areas (luckily not ours) for about two weeks – after Sandy for over a month in some places. I once telephoned the electric company to report an outage (with no storms for weeks before or after) and explained to the employee that this was the second outage in less than a week – I got an “uh huh”. He then entered in the info I gave him and informed me (as if I had not mentioned it) “this is your second outage in a week”.

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