Fidelity (Side A)
  • David Thomsen
    February 2, 2012

    In the first panel I thought Grrrl was piloting some kind of helicopter.

  • dgc2
    February 2, 2012

    see, in the first panel i though Grrrl was in a listening booth from the 50’s or early 60’s

  • Jyosh
    February 2, 2012

    Being a child of the ninties my conscious years have known mostly the prevailing use of the compact disk. I have little nostalgia for vinyl.
    My band is having to release it’s album on double vinyl because we wrote it as a CD length album. I’m having a hard time not feeling disappointed about it.

  • Bill Freese
    February 2, 2012

    In the first panel I thought Grrrl was locked in a cold glass elevator.

  • idkrash
    February 2, 2012

    And then I said hey!

  • Quizzical
    February 2, 2012

    I’ve seen this one before… in fact, this feels very strongly to be not only the second time, but third time this has been posted. Maybe it’s just recycled dialouge? But I *KNOW* panels 3-5 showd up before with almost identical dialouge, and Prometheus has explained CDs from the mountaintop before…

  • Inky
    February 2, 2012

    I know I’ve seen that comment before, maybe the dialogue was reused from every lame criticism ever.

  • yachris
    February 2, 2012

    Quizzical, we’ve all voted and you’re elected to go through all the back comics and index them by theme, meme, line weight and psychiatric disorder. Oh yeah, you’ll have to write a tagging engine (and then use it, of course!) to tag them all.

    And, yeah, ya know, find those (IIRC mythical) repeated comic panels.

  • athom
    February 2, 2012

    It’s an obvious shop once you know what to look for, good catch. Everybody can go home feeling smart today.

  • Yamara
    February 3, 2012

    In the first panel I thought Grrl was listening to a band trying to retreat into the womb of the 80s. And then the second panel just felt like recap.

    And the comments feel like nostalgia.

  • Esn
    February 3, 2012

    As a composer who immigrated to the West in my childhood from another country, I find that it’s easiest for me to write music that’s reminiscent of what I heard in my youth. It’s the language that comes most naturally.

    But Western pop music is very unimaginative – borrowing from just the span of a few decades rather than from centuries. The trick is to mix so many sources that it’s hard to tell which ones are used.

  • Tom
    February 3, 2012

    Jyosh, try to focus on the joy of a double-vinyl album cover. I believe it was Jefferson Airplane who had an album cover that opened to reveal the insides of a PB&J sandwich. Ahh, I miss those days.

  • Quizzical
    February 6, 2012

    I’ll admit, I was probably wrong. I’m sorry if I called Dorothy’s artistic integrity into question, I must’ve had a bad case of dejá vu I apparently should have kept to myself. Do ignore the comment I posted at 1:18 in the morning, rather than this one from the below time and date.

  • Quizzical
    February 6, 2012

    Ahem, *above* time and date

  • brian
    February 6, 2012

    By convenient result of your correction post, Quizzical, it’s both!

  • Gareth
    March 19, 2012

    Poor Prometheus.
    Im glad Arnold Schwarzenegger saved him eventually.

    http://www.youtube.com/garethernst

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