Okay – how do you bend a fork onto a Klingon Bird of Prey?
The spoon I get as a constitution class ship sans nacelles if you apply lots of imagination.
I never liked the bird – the D7 sans photon torpedo from the rewrite due to that first movie [shakes fist]
It takes three forks. One provides the body (tine end for the bridge). Two more for the wings (bend two tines up and two tines down to stick them in place).
Is it me or was there a funnier version of the comic (panel #1) here before? 😀
It was certainly an interesting version. I had to read it a few times. The text didn’t quite match the graphic.
I appreciate your dorky humor.
Original version, Freudian slip? 🙂
What I don’t understand is how a goof like that could go undetected through the entire process of creating the comic. I can see making a risqué “Freudian slip” in the text — I see typos occasionally in other comics. But in this case the first panel had a text and graphic that were each inconsistent not only with the other but also with the rest of the comic, so both needed to be altered. How does that happen? It was, in it’s own small way, kind of epic.
Sadly, this is me. 100%. My wife howled with laughter when she read this one.
Next up, a mound of mashed potatoes in the shape of a well-known rock formation.
Okay – how do you bend a fork onto a Klingon Bird of Prey?
The spoon I get as a constitution class ship sans nacelles if you apply lots of imagination.
I never liked the bird – the D7 sans photon torpedo from the rewrite due to that first movie [shakes fist]
It takes three forks. One provides the body (tine end for the bridge). Two more for the wings (bend two tines up and two tines down to stick them in place).