The Cornelius Thought and Decision Minder  09/12/2007 « prev 1st rand curr next »




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kingsleymc » pro 2 years ago
Also, 'Fun-Time Organic Barn Juice' is priceless.
skiddyfisk » pro 2 years ago
What is a cedarn finial?
sstralka » neu 2 years ago
A finial is a type of architectural ornament, and "cedarn" indicates it's made of cedar. What this has to do with high cholesterol is not yet clear to me.
arbys » neu 2 years ago
Curse and drat!
neonfreon » neu 2 years ago
it means he is alive, he is a man, and he eats like a man.
atmus » pro 2 years ago
I believe he is saying that he is not an otherwise useless prettyboy, and that he actually enjoys himself while he lives his life, resulting in high cholesterol.
augeno13 » neu 2 years ago
DRIP
rolotonybrowntown » neu 2 years ago
tomorrow's recipe is cedarn finial, my darlings
ttagxamm » neu 2 years ago
Right, he means to say, "Of course my cholesterol is high, I'm not a block of wood."
soticoto » pro 2 years ago
Your kitty icon fills me with glee.
I am completely ignoring the fact that you are just rehashing previous analysis of the comment in favour of chubbying your post for the paranoid gray cat alone.
tekende » neu 2 years ago
It was pretty amusing until the cat looked right into the camera. Then it was terrifying.
aelindil » pro 10 months ago
When You look into the Cat,
the Cat looks into You.
coldfrog » pro 2 years ago
Unfortunately, the epilogue to the novel has the main beau realizing that he can no longer love a woman who has inferior knowledge of pitons, and abandons her memory for a local chess pro with an amputated leg. The body is never recovered.
straw » neu 2 years ago
But in the sequel we learn that his bittersweet romance with the chess pro is in fact his long-lost love after she lost her leg, regained her hearing, lost her memory and had to have facial reconstructive surgery after the fall! But can she ever love him again?
soticoto » neu 2 years ago
Little is said, but once her dark secret is revealed, the alarmed protagonist attempts to escape. With the help of her athletic brother, the ever more bitter heroine catches her once lover and has him locked in the basement. His next sight of her is a silohuette in the light of the doorway at the top of the stairs, crutch in one hand and whip in the other.
With the relationship having taken a sinister turn, we can only wonder... where will it go from here?
jlynes » neu 2 years ago
This sounds like a job for Dr. Manflesh!
soticoto » neu 2 years ago
TO THE FLESHMOBILE!

*Fap fap fap*
nigelchaos » pro 1 years ago
Which, ironically enough... looks just like a Nintendo.
wae » neu 2 years ago
definitely gonna make room for the double-armed yawn in my morning routine
lolcatdeluxe » neu 2 years ago
Me too! Followed closely by the double-handed scrotum scratch. Finest way to start the day.
soticoto » neu 2 years ago
One hand from the front, one from behind.
Nowhere for the morning itch to escape to.
radishes » pro 2 years ago
Yeah did anybody else stretch their arms ahead of them while reading that?
johnnylandmine » neu 2 years ago
Yes.
sstralka » neu 2 years ago
For what it's worth, a search for the exact phrase "cedarn finial" on Google yields no hits. Take off the quotation marks, and the first result you get is this.
zoom » neu 2 years ago
'the fuck?
straw » neu 2 years ago
It is a word poem as well as a glaring example of why word poems are terrible. (Presumably we're supposed to be delighted by the inclusion of select architectural terms such as "finial" in relation to "groin pain.")
drskradley » neu 2 years ago
First sentence: "Areally bestiary took occur kilns technics noun [url]mesothelioma attorney[url=http://www.rpwb.com/mesothelioma/] yea stipend invent excite frazzle groin pain."

Last sentence: "Shaver square cocoons amigo round manchet hurry outcast product bed younkers mentally exorable gayness when tomtits sodomite."

Wow.
alphagator » neu 2 years ago
That is no word poem, my friend.

Fully 90% of the time you see a link with with the term mesothelioma, it's SEO spam with an advertisement on it.

The random obscure words on there are for when people use bizarre terms like you've used and they're the only hit.

That's because, for quite some time, 'mesothelioma' fetched the highest per-click reward on Adsense.

THE MORE YOU KNOW
straw » pro 2 years ago
See, I'm a graduate of a writing program and I was thinking that that was a fine example of a word poem, based off of what I've seen. ANd by fine example, as I said above, a fine example of how much word poems blow.

Seriously, I've been to readings where people read word poems that resemble those pages, except much longer. I wish I were joking.
invidious » neu 1 years ago
Joyce's "Ulysses"?
sstralka » neu 2 years ago
Interesting. I considered various possibilities for what the fuck this might be (coded message to terrorist cell; avant-garde literature [cf. the word poem hypothesis]; ravings of a madman) but SEO spam was not one of them. I'm glad I didn't buy anything from the bastards.
dejavroom » neu 2 years ago
Pish-posh!
daily » pro 2 years ago
I've had breakfast disappointment before, but never on that level. Cornelius is one resilient old bear. I might have just topped myself.
coolbreeze3 » neu 2 years ago
oh man, I totally screwed that one up. LAME'd
spinynorman » neu 2 years ago
Whenever I hear Cornelius talk in my head, he sounds either like Stephen Fry or Alec Guinness as George Smiley from Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.

Maybe the latter. Short, fat, big, thick glasses, almost entirely unaware that the world has been modernized, and fond of books no one's heard about.
ricnine » neu 2 years ago
Funny you think of Stephen Fry, because my "inner Cornelius voice" is Hugh Laurie.
skiddyfisk » neu 2 years ago
Mine is Helmut Bakaitis.
jackparsons » neu 2 years ago
Woohoo! The Doctor in "Jasper Morello"!
soticoto » neu 2 years ago
Loyd Grossman.

Here are just two of the various reasons why:

#1. Toff American. Super-rare by my rating. Americans just aren't supposed to have that old-fashioned upper class feel to them. There certainly wasn't any suggestion as far as I'm aware that Cornelius was from anywhere else though, and he sure is retroposh.

#2. Pasta. Remember the Badass games? Loyd Grossman claims to have invented at least two types of pasta. For that matter the underlying food theme is present with both of 'em.

Totally logical conclusion, if you ask me.

euphemisms » neu 2 years ago
mine is david attenborough
stuart » neu 2 years ago
Hmm!
radishes » pro 2 years ago
Cornelius is the smart face of Fry with the tongue of Laurie.
mrclarinet » neu 2 years ago
Mine is whichever generic plummy old English guy is being ruthlessly marketed to milk the dollars out of fat Anglophilic secretaries from Ohio who "just love an English accent"
spinynorman » neu 2 years ago
Man, really? Laurie plays way more of a twit, usually... Fry's more like an aristocratic Oxford don. Like, my Hugh Laurie impression is just me sqauwking, "Oh, I say!" and then falling down a flight of stairs.

My House impression is just me with a cane. As you can tell I'm not very good at them.

Laurie needs to gets some role where his character's schtick is that he sits in a very comfortable chair and eats gourmet pudding. Now that would be an act.
aarongstock » pro 2 years ago
I presume you perform your House impression after your Hugh Laurie impression.
spinynorman » neu 2 years ago
I usually need to, I sacrifice the body for my art
stuart » neu 2 years ago
Chubby for conjuring up the very mental image of Hugh Laurie
i_love_kate » neu 1 years ago
Chubby for casting Laurie as L.
sstralka » neu 2 years ago
John Houseman!
lolsworth » neu 1 years ago
Sydney Greenstreet.
jackparsons » neu 2 years ago
John Hodgman. No question.
lateadopter » neu 2 years ago
Uh, "flow chart for Lie Bot."

- awaiting his well-deserved fate, Resident Grammar Dick starts to cry
kledermans » neu 2 years ago
I don't think there is. There's one for Vlad and Lie Bot was in it, but I don't recall one for Lie Bot.
ttagxamm » neu 2 years ago
C'mon, don't lame this guy. If there was a Lie Bot flow chart, why would he tell the truth about it?
paperboy_2000 » pro 2 years ago
Absolutely agree. Chris is a terrific writer and clearly loves the English language, so he'll certainly understand when I say, "IT BURNS! IT BURNS MY EYES!"

Padres pitcher Chris Young was quoted in the paper today, complimenting another pitcher by saying, "His arm was literally electric." I know there's a lot of emphasis being placed on steroids, but I think bionic limbs should also be illegal. Yeah, he's a baseball player but he also went to Princeton, so he should be setting good grammatical examples for all the kids out there.
aarongstock » neu 2 years ago
Well, to be fair, unless you're dead, your arm is electric[al]. It's just a tautology in this case.
locuscosecant » neu 2 years ago
Nothing ungrammatical there, he's just using the term "literally" figuratively.
mattylite » neu 1 years ago
I proscribe all this prescriptive linguistics. Ain't how language works.

Also, what would proscriptive linguistics be, if it were a thing?

Also, I do think it is hilarious that "literally" has developed a usage in which it means the exact opposite of what it usually does. That's a rare honor for a word. Like "bad" or "sick" or stuff like that.

Also, shit, why am I talking to people from 11 months ago like it is the present?
zefiel » pro 2 years ago
Dude that was a Grand Time indeed.
straw » pro 2 years ago
Manflesh delivers the perspective.
atrusrand » neu 2 years ago
No, Cornelius. There are others who also posess the appreciation of the double-armed yawn. I among them. Cheer up, old chap.
afkpuz » neu 2 years ago
I, too, sport the double-armed yawn.

Men ask me if I am doing such an activity for the theatrics, and I respond, "nay sir."
tekende » pro 10 months ago
And they say "Okay but that response right there, that was totally for the theatrics, I don't care what you say."
steerpike66 » pro 2 years ago
AW! Life is hard for the bon viveur widow on a shoe-string harassed by an officious medic! I loved bacon photocopied onto bleached chamois.

And more people should say PSHAW! Also BLACKGUARD!
steerpike66 » neu 2 years ago
And I did mean widower. Really.
zoom » pro 2 years ago
Mr. Bear has long been my favorite character. This insight into his psyche delights me to no end.

The picture of him glaring dissapprovingly at Phillippe gave me giggles.
lolcatdeluxe » neu 2 years ago
The otter is deciding which parts of his body will NOT end up in a dogfood can.
cailetshadow » neu 2 years ago
Cautiously, with careful precision, he decides that he can keep his eyes and the 7 square inches of flesh that surround them.

This is a Bad Decision.
lolcatdeluxe » neu 2 years ago
Once the otter realises this, he will make the call to his Mom. He will admit his failing.

His Mom will feel disappointment.
straw » neu 2 years ago
This totally goes against what he told Beef he usually eats in his interview. Perhaps he was just saying that because, while that's all there is available to eat, that is never what he wants to eat and just made a big show of it to keep up appearances.
biff » neu 2 years ago
Damn those faulty pitons!
paperboy_2000 » pro 2 years ago
I love the "Make Sense of Yesterday" box. Waking up in that house, Cornelius must feel like a forensic scientist trying to figure out who set off the shenanigans bomb the night before.
jlynes » pro 2 years ago
Not hailing from the San Francisco area, I was curious as to the components of the "Hangtown Fry".

Honestly, how could Cornelius NOT have that for breakfast?
rogergs » neu 2 years ago
It is a sad memento of the passage of time that the California State Legislature would today rather volunteer en masse for reverse liposuction than select the worthy Fry as the state dish.
jlynes » pro 2 years ago
While there are a great many things that embarrass me about my home state (the governor, the legislature, the glorification of stupidity), the unofficial state dish is not one of them. Only here in Texas will you find the true expression of the sublime chicken fried steak. There's something about beef that's been battered, fried, and covered in white gravy that brings a tear to my eye.

The official state dish is chili, but everybody knows who the REAL king is.
wae » neu 2 years ago
I didn't know what it was until this strip, and shed a tear of happiness when I read the recipe.
tellumo » pro 2 years ago
It kinda puts me in mind of the Skip's Scramble from Arrested Development.
ravindra108 » neu 1 years ago
I love the fact that his steaks (plural) are smothered in veal. If you're going for it, go for it!
augeno13 » neu 2 years ago
5'd for the look Mr. Bear gives Philipe
overmedicated » pro 2 years ago
I'm not sure why the slightly bigger EARLY in the last box cracks me up, it just does. I think of him talking like Stephen Fry. Maybe I'm just cliched.
daily » neu 2 years ago
I don't think EARLY is any bigger, it's just that each word GO...TO...WORK...EARLY is a little lower than the one before it. Even typing those words is making me feel low, I'll tell you that. Great, and quite subtle, use of graphic design. What did C. Bear do with himself in the (not too distant) past before the D & C opened?
nighttoad » neu 2 years ago
but i thought cornelius liked running the dude and catastrophe. my first thought when i saw the words "go to work early" written all askew was that he was a little tipsy from the bailey's he drank with his breakfast.
thommy_h » neu 2 years ago
FUCKING GLORIOUS
henrythecad » neu 2 years ago
I know we don't post the alt text anymore, but this is too much.

''The tomato is poached very gently, so as not to create Excitement.''
killerlimpet » neu 2 years ago
I miss the alt-text postings.
johnnylandmine » neu 2 years ago
That's a silly thing to do. The alt text is now just as viewable in Assetbar as it is on the front page.
killerlimpet » neu 2 years ago
I am aware of that. I rather enjoyed seeing the race to be first, the titterings about said race, the ritual, etc.
zefiel » neu 2 years ago
You need more excitement in your life.
hollis » neu 2 years ago
At least it's better than the "1st p0st lol butts" nonsense on Red vs. Blue.
killerlimpet » neu 2 years ago
I am a math major.
songbirdspectre » neu 2 years ago
dammit philippe. why would you do that?
justdan » pro 2 years ago
Yeah Philippe why do you gotta do a thing?
shogun » pro 2 years ago
Things like 'hangtown fry' being used to comedic effect is a fair bit of why I love this strip. See also: Kinky Abelour. I mean...Hangtown Fry?? Vintage Cornelius, and he only just established it! THAT is bad-ass.
phy » pro 2 years ago
That IS grand.
zefiel » pro 2 years ago
No, Cornelius. You're not the only one getting some two-fisted yawning action upon waking, Ray does too. And i kinda like his style better.
hollis » neu 2 years ago
His is a fully-articulated, bent-elbow multisyllabic yawn. A true player's yawn. But Cornelius' is the yawn of a gentleman. Naturally.
afkpuz » neu 2 years ago
A gross of oysters?

That is so many oysters.
biff » neu 2 years ago
Of course, tragically, the piton lady waited too long to release herself from her harness, and the piton fails anyway, and Derek falls to his death right beside her, where they lie, broken bodies mingled together, until the spring floods.
tekende » neu 2 years ago
Ha!
ford » neu 1 years ago
For some reason i can only read that as a triumphant exclamation.

Ha! That'll teach you to have a beautiful relationship with a deaf rock climber!
mrclarinet » con 2 years ago
What the hell is Phillipe trying to draw on his face?
astro_zombie » pro 2 years ago
I've now used this to plan out my day and I feel more badass already.
stuartc » pro 2 years ago
As well as 'pshaw', I would like 'tish and fipsy' and 'flimshaw' to be added to the everyday canon...
persnicket » neu 2 years ago
I put it to you that Cornelius says "Oh bother" just like Winnie the Pooh who is also a bear. There is a fun parallel to be drawn.
persnicket » neu 2 years ago
Will you draw it?
budenhagen » neu 2 years ago
I've always thought that Achewood has a parallel to the Hundred Acre Wood. Beef is Eeyore, totally. Ray would probably be Tigger, Philippe would be Piglet, I guess, and Pat would be Rabbit. I actually saw an episode with Rabbit in it not too long ago, and the only thing I could think is "Man, Rabbit is a DICK."
neonfreon » neu 2 years ago
WHO IS POOH

WHAT IS HAND
sstralka » neu 2 years ago
Clearly Pooh would have to be whichever character you could write a book about called "The Tao of XXX." So far "The Tao of Ray" is the one that makes the most sense to me. Although it's admittedly not perfect, I can imagine a sentence along the lines of, "While Roast Beef frets, and Pat chastises, and Lyle pukes, Ray simply is.
astro_zombie » pro 2 years ago
And both the humans are called Christopher!

I can't not think of this now!
stormagnet » pro 2 years ago
Oh, damn. To follow this to its natural conclusion, wouldn't that make Teodor Pooh? Like astro_zombie, I can't unthink this thought.
honesttom » neu 2 years ago
Cornelius should totally replace Winnie the Pooh. Pooh has been going downhill ever since he started turning tricks for Disney. I heard that he's now virtually a shut-in, eating up to forty jars of honey a day, has to be propped up by Piglet when he goes on stage, stands there sweating and swaying for about ten minutes before being booed off. Cornelius can beat that.
estutius » neu 2 years ago
While they both probably say "Oh bother," Cornelius would say it because of a genuine annoyance. Winnie the Pooh says it because he is too simple-minded to comprehend what is going on.
stormagnet » pro 2 years ago
But, Cornelius wouldn't be Pooh; he'd be Owl, right?
johnnylandmine » pro 2 years ago
I like how this is not a "Decision-Making Flowchart," but rather a "Thought and Decision Minder."
stuntman » neu 2 years ago
i feel like cornelieus every time i go to my fridge, trash
professoryes » neu 2 years ago
Cornelius needs to try one of Pat's best-itutes.
honesttom » neu 2 years ago
No he doesn't. Nobody does. Ever.
johnnylandmine » neu 2 years ago
Really. It's entirely possible to be a successful vegetarian without eating anything you need to go to the asshole store to buy. I know people who even manage it as vegans.

Though I guess if you're looking to get in on the "sanctimonious prick" level, then I guess it's pretty much a must.
professoryes » neu 2 years ago
The Asshole Store. Tell me something like that exists, and they have horrendous vegan food to sell.
professoryes » neu 2 years ago
In the interest of love, I will agree.
estutius » neu 2 years ago
Steamed raisins? Wouldn't that just be warm grapes?
kledermans » neu 2 years ago
Kind of like warm reconstituted grapes.
Like grape zombies.
professoryes » neu 2 years ago
And mull the days they didn't become wine.
lolcatdeluxe » neu 2 years ago
Someone wake up Chris! It's almost one!!
zefiel » neu 2 years ago
I NEED MY FIX, MAAAN! MY EFFING FIX!
mnrsiat » pro 2 years ago
Hm, that breakfast is not actually proscribed, it is prescribed; the proscribed one is unfortunately Cornelius's preferred oysters and veal. It's a one-letter difference, but Cornelius really ought to know which is which.
professoryes » neu 2 years ago
The hidden nature of cholesterol.
lauralou » pro 2 years ago
I'm glad that someone else feels the same as me about veggie bacon, it is seriously WRONG!

If ever I feel a craving for (real) bacon, all I have to do is think about that stuff and I'm over it for months!
liquid_banjo » pro 2 years ago
How do you juice a barn?
kleptonis » pro 2 years ago
Everybody has their first Achewood strip. This one is mine, and I couldn't have picked a better one.
hrm » neu 2 years ago
that is not a theme. :(
hrm » neu 2 years ago
(I am referring to "THEME?" near the beginning.)
desert_donkey » neu 1 years ago
hit the nail on the head with the veggie bacon. the stuff appears to be naugahyde. tastes ok tho.
puguglypress » neu 1 years ago
Cornelius has nought but contempt for his audience
bozendoka » pro 1 years ago
Best description of fake. Bacon. Ever.
lolsworth » neu 9 months ago
That's grand.
Displaying all 144 comments