These used to hang from my office corkboard

I used to keep a ton of funny, timely and thoughtful comic strips on a corkboard in whatever I had for an office at any given time in my professional careers. I have kept those clips over the years and they are now in a box.

Click on an image to see what has been pinned.

 

Classic Rock

Classic Rock

Hi & Lois by Mort Walker and Dik Brown Published November 11, 2004 Of course it's only gotten worse since then.

MLB Team Mascots

MLB Team Mascots

Editorial Cartoon by Wiley Miller Published in 1991 ...and they're STILL apologizing.

Baby News

Baby News

Editorial Cartoon by Cameron Cardow Published June 1, 2006 This was near the time I was completely done relying on newspapers and soon TV for my news. Not only had the writing become atrocious, the headlines and story selection soon followed suit.

PhotoShop

PhotoShop

Bizarro by Dan Piraro Published September 18, 2000 Even more people have gotten so good with PhotoShop I always question every photo now. BTW...he doesn't have it in the signature, but 6. (For those that know what that means, please write your answers in the comments...

Two Kinds of Coffee

Two Kinds of Coffee

Dilbert by Scott Adams Published November 13, 2000 If you've known me long enough, you know which pot I drink from.

Record Retention Policy

Record Retention Policy

Dilbert by Scott Adams Published March 22, 2004 I get a long and hearty chuckle every time I look at this strip. I wonder how long that meeting went?

Dawn of the Internet

Dawn of the Internet

Shoe by Jeff MacNelly Published March 16, 1997 It was supposed to replace newspapers they said. But you could still get more from a newspaper than you could on the internet when this was published. Look at the world, newspapers, and what fifty cents will get you...

What are records?

What are records?

Foxtrot by Bill Amend Published April 30, 1998 This was only 1998? CDs had definitely taken over. Bill didn't see vinyl coming back though.

Dagwood on Women

Dagwood on Women

Cartoonists Young & Lebrun Published November 6, 2000 This one speaks for itself...or it doesn't.

Crankshaft on Veterans

Crankshaft on Veterans

Crankshaft by Batiuk & Ayers Published May 29, 2005 I have long said the peace sign is the most supportive symbol for our troops. It means we don't want them fighting any more. Crankshaft came at this same idea from a different perspective in this...