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What’s Funny on the Internet? David Rees Knows

     David Rees’s public career began as just the opposite of trying to be funny.  It was a late-at-night flight from his idle amateur cartooning.  “I kinda made a decision: well, I’ll try to make a comic about how I actually feel for once.”  The ruins of the World Trade Center were barely cool.  The war on Afghanistan had been announced.  David Rees was struck by the want of public skepticism about a war on terror, the lack of curiosity about the cost on the ground.  And so a new comic strip “Get Your War On” was born, with an office jock speaking into a phone: “O Y

{ 6 } Comments

  1. leke kremi | March 31, 2010 at 8:08 am | Permalink

    Nice design, good work

  2. April Tourneau | July 2, 2010 at 9:54 am | Permalink

    If you surf the Internet at all these days, you are guaranteed to run across a web site that has a gallery of funny videos. They are everywhere now. The day after the State of the Union address, I found about forty web sites that had spoofs of President Bush’s speech on them. They were hilarious. My friends and I rolled for days about some of the things on these videos. Numerous of the funny videos that appear on the web are spoofs on someone, or something famous, but some of these videos are just everyday situations with a funny twist.

  3. Anonymous | August 20, 2010 at 10:47 am | Permalink

    lol… very funny..

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    mobilier cuisine

  5. Mercado de Divisas | April 7, 2011 at 9:33 am | Permalink

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  6. dizi | May 15, 2011 at 11:12 am | Permalink

    David Rees’s public career began as just the opposite of trying to be funny. It was a late-at-night flight from his idle amateur cartooning. “I kinda made a decision: well, I’ll try to make a comic about how I actually feel for once.” The ruins of the World Trade Center were barely cool. The war on Afghanistan had been announced. David Rees was struck by the want of public skepticism about a war on terror, the lack of curiosity about the cost on the ground. And so a new comic strip “Get Your War On” was born, with an office jock speaking into a phone: “O Y