I gotta say, this is one of the few comics I’ve seen where I didn’t get the joke at all until it was explained
A “sticky wicket”.
Thank you, I honestly wouldn’t have figured it out…Sometimes The Far Side is completely obvious, sometimes it’s completely obtuse.
Did someone just say “weaboo”?
For your cakeday - link w/o Google’s tracker
Well damn. I got so excited about the song I forgot about that. Thanks! And I was not aware of the cake, thanks again.
Thank you for reminding me of AL Jarreau’s music. I’m not a huge fan of his genre, but some of his music is really good.
sticky wicket
noun
A difficult or embarrassing problem or situation.
A pitch that has become wet because of rain and therefore on which the ball bounces unpredictably.
A difficult or unpredictable situation.
sticky wicket
noun
A difficult or embarrassing problem or situation. A pitch that has become wet because of rain and therefore on which the ball bounces unpredictably. A difficult or unpredictable situation.
Is this not commonly known? I used this expression just yesterday.
I had never heard it, couldn’t imagine what the joke was
Well, there are people outside of the US, some of whom don’t even have English as their first language. A quick investigation into this leads me.to believe that there might even be more people outside the US than inside. Most of those people have never heard of a sticky wicket.
Is this a US expression? I never heard it growing up so I just assumed it was from the UK or something
I just looked it up and apparently it comes from cricket, which of course is not an American sport. I just assumed it was American, because Gary Larson is an American.
Ah, well. My original point that most people will never have heard of it still stands. And who doesn’t enjoy making fun of ignorant Americans? 😄
sticky wicket
noun
A difficult or embarrassing problem or situation.
A pitch that has become wet because of rain and therefore on which the ball bounces unpredictably.
A difficult or unpredictable situation.
Those aren’t wickets, at least not cricket wickets. Unless the hoops used in croquet are also called wickets.
Though depicting a factory that produces an otherwise ordinary wooden pole would be a little more challenging to be unambiguous.
… hoops (often called “wickets” in the United States) …
Of course.