Shortpacked! is now available on the Comic Chameleon app! For you younger folks, Shortpacked! is a webcomic I drew once.ALSO debuting in our app today is the ENTIRE 2,000+ strip run - panel-by-panel as always - of Shortpacked by @damnyouwillis! pic.twitter.com/KMghXYAriw
— Comic Chameleon (@comicchameleon) July 21, 2017
257 thoughts on “Deserves”
Ana Chronistic
“How many boxes is it for scoring with Richard?”
“…do that many EXIST???”
Cheesy1
About as many boxes as Richard has scored.
Stephen Bierce
I’ll buy you the whole factory, Sweetheart–no worries!–“Friends of Mister Cairo” by Jon and Vangelis
desolation0
So is Joe in one of those, “I don’t like how my dad acts, partially because I act just like him and see myself when he does.” relationships with his dad?
Jay
Sort of. He seems to be embarrassed by his dad, but can’t seem to see himself acting in a way different from him.
JessWitt
Twenty donut boxes, of course.
Doctor_Who
It just occurred to me that there’s no way Richard’s name is a coincidence.
Pat
Is he that wealthy?
Doctor_Who
A common nickname for Richard is “Dick”.
Bickendan
Again, is he that wealthy?
UniqueSnowflake2
And, of course, he entered Stacy’s rosy valley.
Wack'd
Is he that into Mediterranean cooking?
Historyman68
Richard Rosenthal also has a nice ring to it, Willis tends to go for that kinda thing too.
Hinoron
She DID score with Richard. Joe could tell that from just the hesitation before the word “met”… and massive precedent.
The established price is still 1 box.
Ana Chronistic
Richard to Amber: “I fucked your mom for 1 box of doughnuts (paid by Joe)”
Hinoron
Mike is writing that note in forged handwriting as we speak.
Yumi
Aw, look at Joe, recognizing his dad’s behavior as problematic. Gives me faith for his development.
DailyBrad
Yeah, he shows a few points of maybe having redeeming qualities, such as his friendship with Joyce that I am still not sure if their mutual friends are aware of, or his affection for Danny, even if he’s kind of crummy at that much of the time.
Jay
Joe does seem to try to hide his better qualities as much as he can.
Delavan
Since his dad is toxically-masculine, I think its safe to say that exhibiting “effeminate” traits like, say, emotions would have been frowned on and led to mockery, at the least, in his household. So he’s probably learned to surpress them so far down that he has trouble accessing them. It wouldn’t surprise me if the only acceptable ways of handling frustration, fear, etc. in his household were lust, anger, or pretending the emotions didn’t exist. Given that background, its surprising he’s as redeemable as he is.
Jago
This is not news, though.
Deanatay
Yeah, he’s always viewed his dad’s behavior as… problematic.
NotPiffany
All he has to do is realize he doesn’t have to imitate his dad’s behavior. Come on, Joe. You can do it.
Miguel
YES!!!!!
JetstreamGW
I love Amber’s mom.
Fart Captor
She’s friggin’ adorable
TheAnonymousGuy
I love how she obviously doesn’t care about the do list
Dana
It’s hard to worry too much about the ills of the world with donut in your cake hole.
iforgetwhatiputhere
I think given what we’ve seen of her personality you can interpret her “that’s cute” comment in one of two ways: either “aw look at the widdle kid trying to be a man in all the wrong ways” or “cute isn’t the word you should be hearing but I’m not going to be the one to say it”
Shiro
“Cute ain’t the word I want to use but it’s the one I’m going to use in front of this four-year-old with delusions of grandeur”
Dean
Considering the shit she no doubt experienced when married to Blaine, some teen with a rating system for girls is probably no big deal.
Historyman68
As an Irish friend told me, “cute” in its original meaning isn’t “adorable” as “clever in a sort of negative connotation, maybe ironically.” With her last name, this meaning could be closer to her intention.
Miri
If he gets that his Dad is kinda deplorable, why exactly is he emulating him?!
James
Lack of self-awareness?
Fox
People tend to become what they see as a child at home unless they take steps and have learned the right skills to be different. As the saying goes, “you do what you know.”
PDV
If Joe had stuck to that rule he’d have pissed off fewer women.
Needfuldoer
It’s coming. This is probably the first time where his learned habits have come back to bite him harder than he could shake off.
Jay
Joe seems to see two options 1) act like his dad and at least he gets laid even if he’s not personally happy or 2) act like Danny and he’s still unhappy.
I’m definitely oversimplifying it, but it seems like Joe completely lacks a good role model.
DrWattson
Maybe this is me having too much faith in the character, but I kind of interpret it as this storyline has sort of started to make Joe aware of the… problems with his and his father’s behavior.
DinaWho
His apparent discomfort with his father’s actions when Richard was hitting on Sarah during Parents’ weekend suggest that this may be something he’s had at at least a low level for some time.
ValdVin
Good point, especially as I forgot that bit.
AgentKeen
He sees Richard as someone that is supposed to be a ‘responsible adult with a family’ that shouldn’t act like that versus seeing himself as a young dude that doesn’t yet have the responsibilities of a father. (I think Richard also cheated while married to Joe’s mom, while Joe sleeps around but doesn’t have a committed sigbificant other, which in Joe’s mind may completely change how he sees his dad’s actions compared to his own).
Tori
I’m not sure about whether Joe sees Richard as a ‘responsible adult with a family’, but I absolutely want to second that parenthetical, especially the part about how Joe perceives his actions as being different from his father’s. It’s super common for kids to grow up uncomfortable with a damaging thing that their parent did, decide they’re going to definitely not be like that, and then completely repeat their parent’s dynamic minus that one thing that their child-mind identified as the core of the problem. So you might have a kid who had an alcoholic, abusive parent who completely abstains from alcohol as an adult, but still berates their kids because they’ve absorbed a lot of terrible ideas about what it means to be a parent. Or in this case, you might have a kid who had a dishonest, womanizing father who decides that the core of the problem is his father’s dishonesty because he’s absorbed a lot of terrible ideas about what it means to be a heterosexual man.
Kim
:O
What is that amazing avatar you have?
Socks
I think it might be one of Shoomlah’s historically accurate disney princesses? If you google that, you should find her tumblr or deviantart I forget where she originally posted them, but they’re the best.
Guerisso
Socks has already said how to find this using the normal google search, but you can also copy the link to the gravatar and use it in a google reverse-image search (go to google image search, click on the camera icon and paste the link). Hope it helps with other images or for other people, too. Cheers!
Tori
Socks has it! It’s from an April Fools thing Shoomlah did years ago after people complained nonstop about how all the historically accurate princesses had their eyes closed.
Tori
P.S. I found it again for you! Click here!
AgentKeen
Well, I did say he thought Richard should be that, not that he actually thinks Richard is, and I think that’s the main issue he has with his dad.
Slartibeast Button, BIA
Yeah. Joe doesn’t *pretend* to love anyone, which is more honest. I see Joe as not really thinking love is real, because his parents wasn’t.
Fart Captor
Well, there was that time he pretended to be interested in a relationship to go on a date with Joyce
Ivanka the Terrible
For a certain value of “pretended”. In the end, he kind of gave Joyce exactly what she actually wanted (though not what she thought she wanted, I guess) and just became her friend without any sexual overtones. She’s pretty much the only female “relationship” he’s had, at least on-screen.
That’s actually pretty much what dating is for. Two people get together, share what they want from the potential relationship with each other, and then proceed from the points of commonality. Joe is… actually quite good with relationships, it turns out, he just doesn’t have many because he doesn’t really want one (which… is perfectly fine, it’s not like he’s hiding that from anyone he approaches, or really pursuing anyone who doesn’t want basically the same things he wants).
Honestly I’ve never really gotten the “history’s greatest monster” thing the comments have going on with Joe. This is a comic where one of the main characters is quite literally a violent psychopath struggling against her very real homicidal impulses, and the guy that gets pages of text devoted to how horrible he is is… the one guy who is 100% honest about his lifestyle, basically spends all of his on-screen time looking for people who share his interests, and whose main problem is that he lacks a proper filter between brain and mouth?
I don’t get it.
Fart Captor
No, Joe is quite clearly exclusively interested in casual sex, not any sort of relationship, while Joyce could not have been broadcasting that she was looking for a long-term commitment more obvious if she’d been wearing a sandwich board.
And there was the whole plan “fix her” with his penis, which made it very clear that he was going to attempt to convince Joyce to have sex regardless.
http://www.dumbingofage.com/2010/comic/book-1/03-men-are-from-beck-women-are-from-clark/corrupt/
It also took weeks before Joe even tried to not make lewd sexual comments around Joyce, despite her making it painfully clear that it upset her. Which, even when he (sort-of) got there is not at all what Joyce had been looking for. She had been looking for an actual, romantic, committed relationship.
Joe isn’t history’s greatest monster, but he acts like a creepy douche, and makes women around him feel unsafe. Those who don’t feel unsafe, nevertheless feel disrespected. Because he makes unwelcome advances on almost every woman he meets, with no thought about if the time, place, or situation is AT ALL appropriate for him to do so.
And please stuff the “Amber is homicidal” crap up yourself somewhere uncomfortable. The shit she did to Ryan was self-defense, and he 100% deserved it.
thejeff
“In the end”? Long after the date, during (and before) which he was clear to us (and even to Sarah) that he just wanted sex, not a relationship. He was certainly pretending during the date – until it went all punchy. (Don’t get me wrong, Joyce’s behavior there was much worse, but Joe’s wasn’t good either.)
And it’s not at all clear he’s anything like her friend – they bonded somewhat over text messages during her weekend home, but he pretty much reverted to normal when they’ve interacted in person since.
He’s far from “history’s greatest monster”. In addition to the adult villains, he ranks well below Mary and Mike and certainly far below Ryan. His problems go far beyond “lacking a proper filter”. His “looking for people who share his interests” involves wandering the girl’s floor, propositioning women who have to yell at him to get him to leave them alone – and even then it rarely sticks.
Tom T.
Because he can do things better than his Dad did.
infogulch
Having awareness — even self-awareness — of a bad personality trait doesn’t instantly make the trait vanish. Those traits that we get from our parents are especially difficult to vanquish even with concerted effort. Such traits often don’t manifest until you’re an adult and appear gradually enough that you don’t notice until you take a really hard look at yourself. And even then self-awareness is step 0 in a long road to changing the way you think. Good luck Joe.
Sam
It is complicated.
When your parent does a whole bunch of bad behaviours, it can subconsciously drive them into the depths of your brain and cause you to emulate them with others even if you don’t want to or intend to or it could cause you to accept those behaviours from other people (abuse victims of all kinds tend to be victimized again frequently because of this).
But if you hate their behaviours enough, you may reject the parents ways entirely and end up nothing like them or you may only reject the ones you see as the worst (Joe’s Dad’s cheating) or the core of the problem but still accept their other behaviours.
It also depends on what other influences you have, who you spend time with, what their families are like and I suspect he spent most of his time with Danny’s family which themselves have some toxic ideas about relationships i.e. that Danny is worthless outside of one that may have further played into Joe’s insecurity and led him into emulating his father’s behaviour as he at least seemed confident.
It basically isn’t very simple and even if emulating his dad a lot, he may give himself excuses to do so and declare himself different from his father because his intentions and reasons and circumstances are different even if they are similar.
Jay
I think you’re spot on. I’m pretty sure Joe spent most of his time with either his father or with Danny (and his family), and so his view of relationships and his own development have been stunted.
Jago
I’m guessing his father is not the most responsible adult (he hit on Sarah, for one) and parent, and possibly wasn’t a too faithful husband, but I’m going out on a limb here.
Delavan
The short version is that low-level emotional abuse because his dad is the embodiment of toxic masculinity leads to suppressing his emotions and emulating the person he lives with out of emotional self-defense and/or a desire to have any connection with his family.
Tori
I’ve been wondering more and more whether this is a way that Richard has attempted to connect with Joe, too. Like, my mom is by all accounts not a creep, but even she attempted to bond with me over our (assumed) shared attraction to men and would try to engage me in checking out guys with her. (Thankfully, she gave that up pretty fast.)
I often get the sense that as gross as Richard’s behavior is (and as gross as Joe recognizes that it is), being heterosexual men and checking out/rating/hitting on women is something they probably used to do together — something they bonded over in the past. That would explain a lot of the emotional dissonance and conflicting views Joe seems to hold about both his dad’s behavior and his own behavior (and also why in the comic I just linked Joe does a complete 180 between panel 2 and panel 4).
Historyman68
Also appropriate for the next day’s strip
DinaWho
Something tells me Joe is really uncomfortable with the way his father acts, despite having picked up parts of that persona. I’d gotten a bit of this sense earlier on in the comic as well.
Ivanka the Terrible
He’s explicitly said as much in the parent weekend arc a while back. Something to the tune of it being one thing to be all sexually liberated when you’re a kid but his dad was supposed to be a responsible adult.
Danni
hopefully theres maple glazed in there
Shiro
Fuckin’ love maple glazed
Danni
maple glazed is the end all be all of donuts!
Slartibeast Button, BIA
Glazing is messy and an abomination unto Nugan.
A Scientist
In a minor league baseball clubhouse, three glazed donuts were exchanged for one maple frosted, which I think affirms this perspective.
Needfuldoer
I’d take that deal in a heartbeat.
Friggin’ love plain glazed!
Shiro