The guy later died from a cardiac arrest after his doctor told him he had a slightly low white blood cell count, but he shouldn’t take it to heart.
Dude takes customer satisfaction seriously.
This comic is a great argument for universal $15 minimum wage.
I like it when you draw your characters a la’ “Looney Tunes”, Chris. Makes it look less like an animation student’s fourth year film.
I can’t tell if this is a compliment or not.
Female Fudd is awesome, it’s a compliment.
Well, at least she knows it’s her own damn fault.
Wow, you put a lot of effort in this one. I love the dual minigun terminators.
Anytime I get to draw killer robots is a success in my book.
Imagine if she had asked for no mustard.
Or no meat.
That one woman witnessing death and destruction, yet still deciding to risk her life for that jar of mayo… True hero.
Well, that escalated quickly…
The only criticism I have is the “NO MAYO” graffiti in panel 8.
I mean, the robots appear to be eradicating the Mayo-loving resistance, but graffiti is typically about sending a message against the authoritarians. So is the graffiti:
a) an old message, aimed at the mayo-loving authorities in the pre-robot era,
b) a new message, and the robots are actually trying to combat the no mayo insurgence,
c) part of a larger anti- no mayo message that has been partially destroyed through conflict?
16 comments on “No Mayo”
The guy later died from a cardiac arrest after his doctor told him he had a slightly low white blood cell count, but he shouldn’t take it to heart.
Dude takes customer satisfaction seriously.
This comic is a great argument for universal $15 minimum wage.
I like it when you draw your characters a la’ “Looney Tunes”, Chris. Makes it look less like an animation student’s fourth year film.
I can’t tell if this is a compliment or not.
Female Fudd is awesome, it’s a compliment.
Well, at least she knows it’s her own damn fault.
Wow, you put a lot of effort in this one. I love the dual minigun terminators.
Anytime I get to draw killer robots is a success in my book.
Imagine if she had asked for no mustard.
Or no meat.
That one woman witnessing death and destruction, yet still deciding to risk her life for that jar of mayo… True hero.
Well, that escalated quickly…
The only criticism I have is the “NO MAYO” graffiti in panel 8.
I mean, the robots appear to be eradicating the Mayo-loving resistance, but graffiti is typically about sending a message against the authoritarians. So is the graffiti:
a) an old message, aimed at the mayo-loving authorities in the pre-robot era,
b) a new message, and the robots are actually trying to combat the no mayo insurgence,
c) part of a larger anti- no mayo message that has been partially destroyed through conflict?
What a solid employee! 10/10 would hire him.
The woman looks like porky pig LOL😂