Anyway:
Tonight at 8:
Andy - utterly naive doofus or manipulative super genius???
I'm starting to think the latter.
![Hmm... :-?](./images/smilies/39.gif)
Not really. Ruby keeps talking herself into things; his only trick is saying "Yes I'd love to!" quickly before she realises what she's just said.Elasticpete wrote:This guy is good
It's not the smoothest line in the book, but it's not too bad really. It's saying "look, I know I'm not a great kisser, but I want to be a good kisser for you, so please let me practice with you". It comes out a bit clumsy, but there's a touch of sincere liking for the other person involved. Well, on a charitable reading, anyway.Bambikles wrote:Am I the only one to feel appalled by Andy's line in the second panel ? Somehow it makes it look like he sees Ruby only as a practice dummy.
I asked, and the writers said "early 20s". But as both he and Ruby behave and talk exactly like clumsy, naive teenagers, you can mentally knock four years off everyone's ages and you'll probably find that the comic works better. The only snag is that some of the comedy depends on this being twenty-somethings behaving like teenagers.DrAngryEd wrote:...OK, how old is this guy, again? This eagerness to learn and practice makes me think he's like ninteen or something...
I think you can only feel appealed if you're a legal case making your way through the court system.Don Alexander wrote:Nice typo, Bambikles. ;) I think you mean "appalled", which is pretty much the opposite of "appealing" ("to feel appealed" doesn't really exist, afaik).
Anyway:
Tonight at 8:
Andy - utterly naive doofus or manipulative super genius???
I'm starting to think the latter.
Spidrift wrote:But his really dodgy fashion decision was the bow tie. At least the accident with the drinks has saved him from that.