There's a strong flavor of Papa Bear from the Berenstains to these comics, an explicit This Guy Is a Doofus that's incredibly unflattering. I mean, in a lot of these instances...she's not wrong. I have however found after 17 years of marriage that public denigration of the partner will only lead to one artistic outcome: the divorce memoir. (I am still happily married because I only denigrate my partner privately, in my Lisa Frank locked diary.)
Chris Rock, in an interview some years ago, was asked about the way he unflatteringly portrayed his wife in his act and how his wife felt about it. He explained that he has a "comedy wife" and a real wife. His real wife understands that the "comedy wife" is an exaggerated caricature and has very little relationship her.
Rock and his wife got divorced several years later, so maybe that didn't work out quite as well as he might have thought.
Bill Burr talks about his wife a lot in his act, but in those bits he's almost always in the wrong. The comedy comes at his expense, not hers.
I didn't view the comic as a window into the author's life (though it would seem the archive indicates that it might be). But I did find it kind of annoying in the same way a comic from the husband's perspective would be if it was: "Panel 1: (man contemplating buying a new shirt) No, I'll save the money and keep wearing the ones I have. Panel 2: (his wife) Look! A new shirt! I'll buy it!"
Okay, I'm deleting this. I need to follow my own advice and not comment on other people's lives, marriages or situations — especially if I do not know them. Sorry for the negativity.
There's a strong flavor of Papa Bear from the Berenstains to these comics, an explicit This Guy Is a Doofus that's incredibly unflattering. I mean, in a lot of these instances...she's not wrong. I have however found after 17 years of marriage that public denigration of the partner will only lead to one artistic outcome: the divorce memoir. (I am still happily married because I only denigrate my partner privately, in my Lisa Frank locked diary.)
Wow he is literally Papa Bear, I am ashamed not to have flagged this given how frequently I read about said gentleman.
You're too close to the situation, probably.
Chris Rock, in an interview some years ago, was asked about the way he unflatteringly portrayed his wife in his act and how his wife felt about it. He explained that he has a "comedy wife" and a real wife. His real wife understands that the "comedy wife" is an exaggerated caricature and has very little relationship her.
Rock and his wife got divorced several years later, so maybe that didn't work out quite as well as he might have thought.
Bill Burr talks about his wife a lot in his act, but in those bits he's almost always in the wrong. The comedy comes at his expense, not hers.
I didn't view the comic as a window into the author's life (though it would seem the archive indicates that it might be). But I did find it kind of annoying in the same way a comic from the husband's perspective would be if it was: "Panel 1: (man contemplating buying a new shirt) No, I'll save the money and keep wearing the ones I have. Panel 2: (his wife) Look! A new shirt! I'll buy it!"
Okay, I'm deleting this. I need to follow my own advice and not comment on other people's lives, marriages or situations — especially if I do not know them. Sorry for the negativity.