Pounds Are Animal Prisons: Difference between revisions
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== [[Newspaper Comics]] == |
== [[Newspaper Comics]] == |
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* Averted in a ''[[Scamp]]'' comic where after spending an entire day trying to find a place to cool off on a hot summer day, Scamp gets sent to the pound, where the dogs there have built an escape tunnel ([[Continuity Nod|which appears to be the same one they were working on in the movie]]), but stay anyways because it is nice and cool inside. |
* Averted in a ''[[Scamp]]'' comic where after spending an entire day trying to find a place to cool off on a hot summer day, Scamp gets sent to the pound, where the dogs there have built an escape tunnel ([[Continuity Nod|which appears to be the same one they were working on in the movie]]), but stay anyways because it is nice and cool inside. |
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* In |
* In ''[[Dilbert]]'', Dogbert was once [http://dilbert.com/strip/1990-06-18 sent to the pound] and used his [[One Phone Call]] to call a wrecking company to destroy it. |
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* ''The Dogs of C Kennel'' by Mick and and Mason Mastroianni is pretty much this. |
* ''The Dogs of C Kennel'' by Mick and and Mason Mastroianni is pretty much this. |
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* The title character of ''[[Opus]]'' was imprisoned in the local dog pound at one point. It was [[Played for Laughs]], with the storyline spoofing various [[Prison Tropes]] (and the inmates' reaction to a ''penguin'' in their midst). He was released after a short time, once his owner paid his fine. See ''[[Bloom County]]''. |
* The title character of ''[[Opus]]'' was imprisoned in the local dog pound at one point. It was [[Played for Laughs]], with the storyline spoofing various [[Prison Tropes]] (and the inmates' reaction to a ''penguin'' in their midst). He was released after a short time, once his owner paid his fine. See ''[[Bloom County]]''. |