Friday, August 23, 2019

Ed Ranks Pixar Films Without Context or Explanation


21. The Good Dinosaur


20. Cars 2


19. Cars 3


18. Brave


17. Cars


16. Monsters University


15. A Bug's Life


14. Coco


13. Ratatouille


12. Inside Out


11. Monsters, Inc.


10. The Incredibles


9. WALL-E


8. Up


7. Finding Dory


6. Toy Story 2


5. Toy Story


4. Incredibles 2


3. Toy Story 4


2. Finding Nemo


1. Toy Story 3

Monday, August 19, 2019

Ed Re-Ranks #1 Rankings That He Absolutely Fucked Up

Sometimes I'm in some weird or inexplicable mood in life, which causes my mind to break down and therefore I absolutely fail at my own rankings.  These are 10 rankings which I did, in which I absolutely failed to pick the correct #1 Ranking.

10. Ed Ranks Who Negan Will Kill Sunday, From Least to Most Likely
    This was very wrong.
  • What I Picked:  Maggie Greene
  • What I Should Have Picked: Glenn Rhee
  • Analysis: Eh, I don't feel bad about this one. It's more of a "hindsight is 20/20" kind of thing. I though the show would change things up because killing Glenn was too obvious. There was also "leaked" footage of Maggie dying, which the AMC people obviously leaked on purpose (as they filmed scenes of Rick "imagining" all of the various characters dying).

9. Ed Ranks the Vocalizations of Turkeys
  • What I Picked: Gobble
  • What I Should Have Picked: Kee-Kee
  • Analysis:This one doesn't matter that much either, but I did get it wrong. "Kee-Kee" is much  more interesting than "Gobble."

8.  Ed Ranks Things Associated with the FIFA World Cup

  • What I Picked: Money Laundering
  • What I Should Have Picked: Unequal Gender Pay (something that wasn't even listed in my rankings)
  • Analysis: Guess I didn't know about that additional reason why FIFA sucks. I do now. 

7. Ed Ranks Titles of Nobility (By How Cool they Sound)
  • What I Picked:Viceroy/Vicereine
  • What I Should Have Picked: Archduke/Archduchess
  • Analysis: I'm not sure why I thought "Viceroy" was so cool. Sure, it still sounds cool to me. But does it sound cooler than "Archduke?" Nope. For some reason I had Archduke/Archduchess ranked all the way down at #6. Vicereine sounds like a knockoff brand of Listerine.

It seems so obvious in hindsight.
6. Ed Ranks the Characters of Westworld
  • What I Picked: Bernard
  • What I Should Have Picked: Maeve
  • Analysis: In the grand scheme of things, this ranking still holds up as solid. I previously had Maeve at #2 and Bernard at #1. Maeve is better though. That's my mistake and I admit it.

5.  Ed Ranks the Events of August 25
  • What I Picked: Alexander SkarsgÃ¥rd is born.
  • What I Should Have Picked: Paris is liberated by the Allies.
  • Analysis: I am 95% sure I was just being facetious and smarmy on purpose when I said Alexander SkarsgÃ¥rd being born is a more important historic event than the Allies liberating Paris in World War II. The problem is that 5% of unsure, which makes me question if that was the joke? Even if it was the joke, it's not a particularly funny joke, and I should have just gone with the Paris thing. 

4. Ed Ranks the Supposed Multiple Causes of Rasputin's Death
  • What I Picked: Beating him with a Rubber Truncheon
  • What I Should Have Picked: Basically anything else on the ranking, especially Cyanide-laced Tea and Cakes, or Being Thrown in the River.
  • Analysis: At the time I thought that it was exceedingly funny that despite Rasputin's ability to survive being poisoned and shot, someone also thought hitting him with a rubber stick would be effective. I guess because of how futile and dumb it was, I ranked it as #1 because that silliness. But I wasn't ranking his causes of death by how silly they were. I was ranking them by other, general factors of interesting-ness and effectiveness.

3. Ed Ranks Possible Things that Happened to Mira Sorvino
  • What I Picked: Eaten by a Shark
  • What I Should Have Picked: Nothing. I absolutely should not have done this ranking at all, in hindsight.
  • Analysis: In April of 2017, I decided to make a joke ranking that made fun of the fact that actress Miro Sorvino just vanished from the face of the Earth. I picked a bunch of ludicrous possible things that happened to her, and ultimately claimed that she was most likely eaten by a shark. Three months later, I ranked my first 100 rankings and I stood by this ranking, saying that I still thought it was hilarious. Three months after that, Mira Sorvino came forward and basically explained that she wouldn't sleep with skeezy producer Harvey Weinstein and he sabotaged and destroyed her career after that, as he did to many other actresses who said no to his sexual assaults. So yeah, I sort of feel like a huge dick about this in retrospect.

2. Ed Ranks the Top 10 2018 Winter Olympic Moments

  • What I Picked: Norwegian Curling Pants
  • What I Should Have Picked: Korean Curler Filled with Hate (probably), or maybe and Ready Canada Beer Husband or Finnish Knitting Coach
  • Analysis: For some reason during the last Winter Olympics, I really thought those Norwegian Curling Team's crazy pants were hilarious and worth talking about. In hindsight, they were barely memorable. Meanwhile, the Korean Curler with the resting bitch face who looked like she wanted to kill everyone still is hilarious, as is the husband of the Canadian curler who stood inches away while holding a beer, and is the Finnish snowboarding coach who stood inches away while knitting like she was bored by the whole "Olympics" thing. All three of those should be bumped up in the ranking, and those Norwegian pants should be knocked down to #4.

1. Ed Ranks Countries by Food
Actual winner. Sorry, Mexico.
  • What I Picked: Mexico
  • What I Should Have Picked: Japan
  • Analysis: I had previously ranked countries by beer (a ranking which is controversial for sure, but which I still 100% stand by), and so I figured I'd give this a try too. I said Mexican was the best food (it is pretty good) and for some unbelievable, stupid reason I put Japan waaaaaaaaaay down at #5. All I did when mention Japan was make some fleeting comment about sushi or some bullshit. I should have known better. In fact, I did know better. I had already been to Japan multiple times before I wrote this ranking, and yet I scored a huge brain fart here. Sushi is great and super delicious, but Japan has so much more to offer. Yakiniku (grilled meats) and various Kushi (skewered meats, including Yakitori), Tempura, Ramen (obviously!), Udon, Tonkatsu (deep fried pork cutlets), Soufflé Pancakes, Okonomiyaki (savory pancakes), Sakana (a wide variety of side dishes, usually served just as bar snacks to have with alcohol), Takoyaki (fried balls of octopus and magic), Soba, Shabu-Shabu, Wagyu beef, etc.  That's just a start on the big, famous things you can get anywhere. Once you add in various cities and regions with their own specialties (Okonomiyaki is basically different in every city) - the list is almost endless. I fucked this ranking up... BIG TIME.

Thursday, August 15, 2019

Ed Ranks Circulating Coins of the United States Dollar

U.S. COINS! Fun! There are six presently in active circulation, although two of those six are no longer having new coins minted for mass release (only for collectors). Here they are, ranked:

6. Half Dollar (50¢)

Too big + nobody uses it. Boo.
Very impractical. This is the largest circulating coin in both size and weight, being 1.2 inches in diameter. It's twice the weight of the quarter. You never see anyone use these. If you tried to, a cashier would probably look at you funny. They might evens say the coin is fake or not legal currency. Just like with a $2 bill. While technically the U.S. Mint ceased production of the coin for general circulation in 2002, it is still legally in circulation and the Mint still produces them every year for collectors. I also don't agree with the concept that the largest coin shouldn't have the most value. It just makes no sense to me.
  • What is it made of?  91.67% copper, 8.33% nickel (exactly the same as a Dime and Quarter below)
  • Who is on the front? JFK
  • Who should be on the front? Eh, JFK is fine. Nobody uses this coin though so who cares?
  • What is on the back? The Presidential Seal, which is absolutely be the laziest of all reverses
  • What should be on the back?  JFK and RFK high-five'ing as they double team Marilyn Monroe. 
 5. Penny (1¢)

Look, pennies!
Can the United States just give up on the penny and get rid of it like other countries have? It has practically no value and for quite a number of years it has cost more to make the penny than it is worth (the last stat I was able to find was from 2014, when it cost the U.S. Mint 1.67¢ to produce a penny). Canada got rid of these things and just rounds all the prices to the nearest nickel. Is the fact that the color is different than all the other coins cool? Yeah, it sure is. Is Abe Lincoln cool? Yeah, he sure is. But Honest Abe deserves to be bumped up to a coin with more value. You can't buy anything for a penny anymore.
  • What is it made of?  97.5% zinc, 2.5% copper
  • Who is on the front? Abraham Lincoln
  • Who should be on the front? Nobody, because this coin should be taken out of circulation.
  • What is on the back? Since 2010, it has been the "Union Shield," which is just boring and awful. In 2009 there were a few different backs for one year only, but they were also dumb.
  • What should be on the back? Bringing back the Lincoln Memorial or even the old "Wheat Cent" would be better than the shield. But I say neither because, as above, let's just get rid of this coin.

4. Nickel (5¢)

CREEPER.
Nickels annoy the hell out of me for the EXACT same reason they annoy the hell out of you and everyone else - they are at an initial glance ALMOST IDENTICAL TO THE QUARTER. The Nickel is 0.835 inches in diameter, while the Quarter is 0.955 inches -- a mere 0.12 inches difference. A TENTH OF AN INCH! The Quarter is worth five times as much as the Nickel, so it's obviously superior. Chances are you, like me, thought you were going to a vending machine or paying a cashier with the right amount, only to foolishly realize that one of the things you thought was a Quarter was actually just a Nickel and now you're twenty cents short. Also aggravating about the nickel is that it is smaller than the Dime. Can the Nickel and Dime swap sizes, please?  Regardless of if the two flip sizes or not, whichever one is closer in size to the Quarter should have is color changed so that no longer looks nearly the same as a quarter. Since I have proposed getting rid of the Penny, now one of these other coins can get the copper-plating. A Nickel is really already %75 copper anyway, just with Nickel on top. Would it be weird if the Nickel wasn't the color of nickel? Sure, I guess.  Which is why if we size swapped it with the Dime, the Nickel could stay small and nickel-colored, while the Dime gets larger and gets the copper look. This all makes perfect sense to me.
  • What is it made of? 75% copper, 25% nickel
  • Who is on the front? Thomas Jefferson, eerily staring at you since 2006 like you're Sally Hemings and he's planning to rape you.
  • Who should be on the front?  HOLY CRAP! Why did they redesign this coin from a profile face to him looking directly at you?! Anything is better than this. Just bring him back to his old profile face with his fucking pony tail. Or better yet, replace him with literally any other President of the United States who didn't rape slaves. Maybe move Lincoln here if we've gotten rid of the Penny. Or let's just go back to the old Buffalo Nickel with the American Indian on the front.
  • What is on the back? Monticello, AKA the Slave Rape Bunker.
  • What should be on the back? Okay, now I'm all in on the Buffalo Nickel idea. Let's throw a bison on the back and call it a day.

3. Dime (10¢)

Generic old white man.
My frustrations with the Dime were already articulated when discussing the Nickel above, but just to further complain about this coin - why the hell was it ever so teeny, tiny in the first place?!  It's almost the exact same size in diameter as the Penny, but it's even thinner (it's the thinnest coin in U.S. currency), weighing in at a minuscule 2.268 grams. Historically, the Dime used to actually contain silver, hence it was still more valuable despite the less weight. But that silver has been gone since the Lyndon Johnson administration, so it's time we rethink this bad boy. As stated above - eliminate the Penny, swap the size of the Nickel and Dime so that the Dime is now Nickel-sized, and then change the color of the Dime so that it is now copper on the outside and does not easily get confused with the Quarter.
  • What is it made of?  91.67% copper, 8.33% nickel.
  • Who is on the front? FDR
  • Who should be on the front? Look, FDR was pretty memorable for his time with WWII and being President for an unprecedented (and never repeated) four terms. But is face is pretty boring and un-memorable on this coin. If there is a U.S. coin that most people can't tell you who the President on it is, it's gotta be this one. So maybe badass Teddy Roosevelt instead. That mustache is top notch!
  • What is on the back? An olive branch, a torch, and an oak branch. All of which are LAME.
  • What should be on the back?  If Teddy goes on the front, then maybe the back should be the Devil's Tower in Wyoming, as it was the first National Park ever established (by TR).

2. Dollar Coin ($1)

Hey look, a baby!
I suppose I should dislike the Dollar Coin for the same reason that I rank the Half Dollar in last place - nobody uses it. Damnit though, that's not right! We should totally be using these things. Nearly every other country uses a coin for their dollar or equivalent currency. What we need to do is get rid of the stupid paper dollar and start forcing people to use these coins. How much is wasted on printing out those dollar bills which will only remain in circulation for a few years before getting ripped and worn down... versus a coin that can last for decades and decades. I love the idea of using Dollar Coins, and love the idea that I can pay for significant things like a meal with "change." But I think the last time I ever saw one was as change from a toll booth (which makes sense). Basically as long as the government is still printing paper dollars, these are never going to be a thing. Alas, as with the Half Dollar, the U.S. Mint doesn't really produce dollar coins for general circulation any more, and the ones circulating out there are all from 2011 or before. My only major problem with Dollar Coins in recent history has just been the Mint's totally insane inability to pick a thing which goes on it and stick with it.
  • What is it made of?  88.5% copper, 6% zinc, 3.5% manganese, 2% nickel.
  • Who is on the front? Since 2000, Susan B. Anthony has mostly been replaced with Sacagawea. However, from 2007 to 2016 there was a "Presidential Dollar Coin" series, where various U.S. Presidents were placed on the Dollar Coin, including Presidents who were already on different coins. For the first several years, these coins appeared in general circulation. But by the time they got to the 20th President, James Garfield, they abandoned the whole thing and only made collector coins for the remaining dead Presidents. They also had a First Ladies Dollar Coin set as well. In 2018, they also announced a new and stupid "American Innovation Dollar Coins" collection, which will again be limited to collectors-only and not put in general circulation.
  • Who should be on the front?  Sacagawea and ONLY Sacagawea. Stop having the same coin with different people on the front. That's annoying. What is this... the Eurozone or something? Changing what's on the back is fine. But keep the front the same.
  • What is on the back? Mostly, it's a flying bald eagle. The overwhelming majority of Sacagawea coins were produced in the first four years, which featured that on it. Chances are, if you've ever had a Sacagawea Dollar, you figured the eagle was the only thing on the back. Nope. Beginning in 2009, they started to change the design on the back every year to a different scene representing Native American culture or history. But as I said, in 2011 the U.S. basically gave up on the whole Dollar Coin thing, so only three years of circulated coins, produced in much smaller quantities, had other backs.  They've continued to produce additional collector's only coins with the different backs since 2012. 
  • What should be on the back? I'm okay with the concept of the back of the coin changing to a different thing every year, although since no new circulating coins are even being made it's a bit of a moot point. 

1. Quarter (25¢)


Pick one concept and stick with it, Florida. Jesus!
The Quarter is the best. It's a nice size - not too small, not too big, a perfectly fine weight, and its value is decent. 25¢ isn't a ton of money, but if you have a big bag full of these at a coinstar machine, you're going to have a mad amount of bills come out in return. As opposed to going to the machine with a big bag of pennies and winding up saying, "Oh, is that all?" Anyway, the Quarter is the American coin. That's why we put the first President on it and why we've dedicated so much time over the last twenty years to putting an endless cycle of stupid different things on the back. 
  • What is it made of? 91.67% copper, 8.33% nickel
  • Who is on the front? George Washington.
  • Who should be on the front?  I suppose there is an argument to removing all the slave-owning Presidents from coins, but at least Washington didn't rape his slaves like Jefferson did (that we know of or can prove). Still though, he's the first President. Are we going to rename the city? The state? None of that is ever going to happen. Let's just keep this as-is unless the removal of the Penny (as I proposed) means that Lincoln needs somewhere to go (if we go with a Buffalo Nickel instead of putting Lincoln on that).
  • What is on the back? Ugh. What a shit show. Initially it was an Eagle. Then in 1999 they started doing the "50 States Quarters" thing. At first I thought it was cool - for 10 straight years five "new" Quarters would be released every year with different backs, representing each state. I collected them. You collected them. Everyone collected them because it was nifty. Or at least you and I and everyone collected them for a few years before we all said, "fuck it," and then broke our collections open to go get a Dr. Pepper.  By the time we got through the 50 states, the U.S. Mint decided to add on DC and U.S. territories. Fair enough, makes sense. Then after that they added on the "America the Beautiful" coins featuring parks. Okaaaaay. Sure. That will end in 2021 and I'm sure they'll pick some new silly rotation to go with.
  • What should be on the back?  After 20 years of rotating different things on the back... can we just have the eagle back for a few years with nothing else? The "oh look, a new thing on the back!" isn't that interesting or special if it happens all the time. Let the damn eagle get five years or something. 

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Ed Ranks Wile E. Coyote's ACME Products (Part 2)

HELLS TO THE YEAH! We're still talking about insanely dangerous ACME products that should not be allowed on the shelves of stores and yet somehow were. Or mail order catalogs. I'm not particularly sure how Wile E. Coyote acquired all these things. It wasn't the internet, that's for sure. How do I know? Duh. Coyotes don't know how to use the internet, moron. Everybody knows that.

17. ACME Jet-Propelled Pogo-Stick
Yaaas coyote!!! Bounce!

  • Featured in Episode: Hot-Rod and Reel! (1959)
  • Intended Use: Try to catch the road runner with a fast pogo stick.
  • Description: A pogo stick, but with jets on it.
  • Did it Work? No. Adding jets to various things (pogo sticks, roller skates, unicycles, etc.) is NEVER going to work and will only lead to Wile E. Coyote falling off a cliff, as he absolutely did in this cartoon.
  • Analysis: Honestly, I think I learned what a Pogo Stick is from this cartoon. I'm not kidding. I don't think I had ever actually seen one, and the concept of their bouncy existence was introduced to me by this 1959 cartoon which I saw as a small child in the 1980s. This ranks higher because the fact that it's a rocket on a pogo stick is just so dumb that I sort of like it.
16. ACME Instant Icicle Maker
  • Featured in Episode: Zoom at the Top (1962)
  • Intended Use: Try to freeze the Road Runner.
  • Description: The box this product came in literally says, "Freeze Your Friend-Loads of Laughs." What? THIS IS DANGEROUS! Don't freeze your friends! Don't freeze anyone!
  • Did it Work? No. If you've ever seen one of these cartoons, surely you'll know he fucks up and feezes himself.
  • Analysis: Even Mikkos Cassadine had a more logical freezing plan than Wile E. Coyote.
15. ACME Roller Skis
  • Featured in Episode: Lickety-Splat (1961)
  • Intended Use: Go fast, catch bird!
  • Description: A set of skis with wheels on them, which seems pretty silly.
  • Did it Work? No. He fell off a cliff, embedded himself into the cliff on the other side, but still fell to his doom anyway.
  • Analysis: This is barely a remix on all of his other previous "device to go fast" mishaps. At the very least he didn't attach rockets/jets this time, which shows at least he's leaning a little bit. Although... seriously... skis don't need wheels. You're supposed to use them on snow. These are just impractical rollerskates.
14. ACME Boomerang
  • Featured in Episode: Zoom at the Top (1962)
  • Intended Use: Stick glue to boomerang, throw it at bird, have it come back with bird, eat bird.
  • Description: A boomerang, like Aussies use, mate.
  • Did it Work? Remember how I mentioned ACME glue previously? In this episode, the glue on the boomerang got stuck to the hims and thus Wile E. threw himself.
  • Analysis: This plan would have worked without the glue. Just throw the boomerang at Road Runner without the glue and knock him out. Glue ruined the whole thing!
13. ACME Earthquake Pills
If only the small text was legible.

  • Featured in Episode: Hopalong Casualty (1960)
  • Intended Use: Have the stupid bird eat them, and give the bird violent, uncontrollable seizures.
  • Description: Pills, with very small text on it that can't be read.
  • Did it Work? Nope. Road Runner eats the pills and nothing happens. Then Wile E. Coyote, who is a fucking moron, downs the entire bottle himself in anger. Before noticing that the small text on the bottle of Earthquake Pills says "Not Effective on Road Runners." Wile E. then starts shaking uncontrollably himself.
  • Analysis: The warning on the bottle should have obviously been bigger. What does this product exist for? Why doesn't it work on Road Runners? I think ACME is just fucking with poor Mr. Coyote by this point.
12. ACME Tornado Kit
  • Featured in Episode: Whoa, Be-Gone! (1958)
  • Intended Use: Create a tornado that catches the Road Runner.
  • Description: A box which says "Seed Your Own Tornado," and which includes tornado seeds and a water pistol. Because apparently tornado can be grown from seeds which you water.
  • Did it Work? Nope. The water pistol was shit quality and spilled water on the bottle of seeds, so Wile E. sucked himself up in a tornado rather than catching his nemesis.
  • Analysis: I had always been under the impression that tornadoes were formed in two ways: #1: a rotating air of an updraft meets the rotating air of a downdraft; and #2: you are white trash that lives near a trailer park in the deep south and God hates you. But apparently there was a third way the whole time: #3: seeds.
11. ACME Glue
Minimally effective.

  • Featured in Episodes: Ready.. Set.. Zoom! (1955), Zoom at the Top (1962), and [sort of] Hare-Breadth Hurry (1963)
  • Intended Use: A really sticky substance, intended to catch/trap the Road Runner. In the case of Hare-Breadth Hurry, Bugs Bunny actually uses it to catch Wile E. 
  • Description: Glue. Although technically in the episode Zoom at the Top it was referred to as "Iron Glue" for some reason.
  • Did it Work? No. Obviously this dipshit coyote would always end up getting himself stuck in a various number of ways. A
  • Analysis: I'm just confused by why the name of the episode Ready.. Set.. Zoom! uses two dots to form an ellipsis rather than three dots.
10. ACME Air Balloon
  • Featured in Episodes: Going! Going! Gosh! (1952), Fastest with the Mostest (1960)
  • Intended Use: Throwing a bunch of (ACME?) products together to make an Air Balloon to pursue that damn bird with, and then throw an anvil (or a bomb) at it.
  • Description: In Going! Going! Gosh!, technically only a Street Cleaner's Wagon had the word "ACME" written on it. But Mr. Coyote assembled it with a balloon, an electric fan, and an anvil to make it into an air balloon that he could fly around. In the later Fastest with the Mostest, both the basket and balloon were labelled with "ACME."
  • Did it Work? No, neither time. For GGG, the anvil also served as the ballast of the balloon, so after he released it he kept going higher and higher. Then he fell down and the anvil wound up hitting him instead. With the case of the bomb in the later episode, Wile E. actually inflates himself instead of the balloon and goes floating in the air by himself with the bomb (he eventually falls to the ground and the bomb explodes on him, per usual).
  • Analysis: WTF happened to the laws of physics with the anvil thing? There is no way that Wile E. could have wound up falling faster than the anvil, so that he would eventually speed past it and be hit by it himself. Does terminal velocity not matter in Merrie Melodies? Did nobody over at Merrie Melodies research Galileo? Newton's Second Law? Shiiiiiiiiit.
9. ACME Giant Rubber Band
  • Featured in Episodes: Gee Whiz-z-z-z-z-z-z (1956), Whoa, Be-Gone! (1958), and Wild About Hurry (1959).
  • Intended Use: In the three shorts, Wile E. tried to use the rubber bands in two different ways. Two times it was to sling/launch himself after the Road Runner, but once it was designed as trap that the Road Runner would run into.
  • Description: A rubber band. But giant. Like, super big and impractical for any use I can think of.
  • Did it Work? Nah. He obviously only ever really face planted and/or otherwise destroyed himself using these things.
  • Analysis: I'm going to repeat my comments from "Description" above - why does this product exist? Who on earth would use a giant rubber band and what for?  Wile E. Coyote should just buy a trebuchet.
8. ACME Nitroglycerine and Detonators
This should wind up well for Wile E.

  • Featured in Episode: Zipping Along (1953)
  • Intended Use: Blow up the Road Runner.
  • Description: A pile of nitroglycerine and other explosives, placed next to a door that--if opened--would hit the detonator and blow up. The other side of the door claimed that there was bird seed inside, supposedly to entice the Road Runner.
  • Did it Work? No. Instead of the Road Runner showing up, a truck did. Wile E. stupidly opened the door himself and blew himself up. Then afterwards got run over by the truck.
  • Analysis: This is horrifically destructive and I'm surprised they sell these products at all. How did he even get these? By mail order. This seems like the types of products you should need to buy in person and get intensive background checks before you can buy.
7. ACME Invisible Paint
  • Featured in Episode: War and Pieces (1964)
  • Intended Use: Wile E. Coyote makes himself invisible, so that he can sneak up on the Road Runner undetected.
  • Description: A bucket of paint that makes the person who applies it to himself invisible.
  • Did it Work? No. Wile E. Coyote did the usual thing, instead getting hit by a bus and falling off a cliff when invisible.
  • Analysis: This seems like a pretty good and effective product. Getting hit by a bus was an unfortunate coincidence, and the falling off a cliff thing was Wile E.'s own fault, not the fault of the invisibility paint itself. As an un-fun fact, this is also arguably Chuck Jones' last Warner Brothers cartoon before being fired (until he came back in the late 70's) - although some sources say that the Bugs & Daffy "The Iceman Ducketh" cartoon was the last. That one came out in May of 1964 though, while this came out in June.
6. ACME Bombs
  • Featured in Episode: Fastest with the Mostest (1960)
  • Intended Use: Blow up the bird
  • Description: Wile E. Coyote tried to use bombs all the time, but this appear to be the only episodes where the bomb explicitly said "ACME" on it.
  • Did it Work? I'm not sure why I'm even asking this. NO. IT NEVER WORKS. Of course he blew himself up.
  • Analysis: Pretty straight forward and not incredibly creative. But you know what it is? ICONIC. Dumb crap like bombs are what I think of when I think of ACME products. While Wile E. Coyote used bombs on many occasions, I believe that technically this was the only episode which specifically had "ACME" written on the bomb, which means even though I think it's iconic I'm probably just Mandela Effect-ing ACME onto the side of other cartoon bombs in my head when it was never really there.
5. ACME Female Road Runner Costume
Hot.

  • Featured in Episode: Ready.. Set.. Zoom! (1955)
  • Intended Use: Dress up and sexually entice the Road Runner into hot, sticky copulation. Only to suddenly reveal himself as a dangerous, predatory coyote that tears the Road Runner apart and eats his flesh, raw.
  • Description: A costume to look exactly like a (presumably) sexy female Road Runner with big ol' eyelashes.
  • Did it Work? No. Instead of attracting the Road Runner while dressed up as a female Road Runner, he attracted other coyotes who tried to kill and eat him.
  • Analysis: This could have gone wrong in so many ways. Why does ACME sell this? Who the hell is buying sexy, fuckable lady Road Runner costumes? I mean you KNOW the costume had to have been fuckable.
4. ACME Bird Seed
  • Featured in Episodes: Zipping Along (1953), Stop! Look! And Hasten! (1954), Hook, Line and Stinker (1958), Wild About Hurry (1959), and Zoom at the Top (1962)
  • Intended Use: Attract Road Runners.
  • Description: This is another one that's pretty self-explanatory. Bird seed is going to attract the Road Runner to fall into Wile E. Coyote's traps. Hypothetically. What's strange is how many varieties of bird seed that ACME sold. In every episode the box for the bird seed looked totally different. ACME must have really, really, really been into feeding birds and/or knew that Wile E. Coyote accounted for about 99% of all of their business.
  • Did it Work? No obviously, it never worked. The reasons why varied by episode. One common example: mixing the seed with metal and then trying to use a magnet. There were some other ways this worked, but that was the one they'd turn to again and again.
  • Analysis: One of the quintessential and most commonly repeated ACME products featured. In principle this is a good idea, but bird seed by itself won't do anything. You need to pair it up with another product. Or just fucking poison it, Coyote. You should have poisoned it. Although I guess if you poisoned it then you couldn't eat the Road Runner. So never mind. As you were, coyote.
3. One Fifth of ACME Bumble Bees
Seems like an unnecessary product.

  • Featured in Episode: Zoomed and Bored (1957)
  • Intended Use: Sting the hell out of Road Runner, presumably because bees have something to do with birds (the "birds and the bees", I dunno).
  • Description: A jar of angry bees who want to sting people.
  • Did it Work? No. They stung the coyote instead. Oh well. A for effort.
  • Analysis: Haha, I fucking love that this is an alcohol reference embedded within something that kids won't understand and adults will appreciate. Did I get the joke when I was a kid? No. Do I get it now that I'm a barely functioning alcoholic? YES I DO! Also... WHY WOULD PEOPLE STORE BEES IN A BOTTLE CLEARLY DESIGNED FOR LIQUOR?! THIS MAKES NO SENSE BUT I LOVE IT! SO IRRATIONAL!
2. ACME Triple-Strength Fortified Leg Muscle Vitamins
Performance enhancing drugs!

  • Featured in Episode: Stop! Look! And Hasten! (1954)
  • Intended Use: Make Wile E. Coyote run really, really fast.
  • Description: Self-explanatory. Pills that make the coyote fast like the Road Runner.
  • Did it Work? Yes, in that he ran really fast. No, in that he's an idiot and kept running and smashes himself into something while the Road Runner stopped to escape. 
  • Analysis: Seems like the type of product that would be banned in Olympic competition. Still though, the fault was in Mr. Coyote's own behavior and not the product itself. Anyway, this one ranks high because it was the ORIGINAL time that Wile E. popped some pills or medicine that made him run super fast. As you'd see from the first part of this ranking, once they ran out of new ideas they just copied this idea over and over again. First time is best time.
 1. ACME Rocket-Powered Roller Skates
Such a good bad idea he did it 40 different times.
  • Featured in Episode: Beep, Beep (1952)
  • Intended Use: To go really fast in order to catch the Road Runner, who is also very fast.
  • Description: A set of roller skates, with rockets on them. Again, self-explanatory.
  • Did it Work? For a while, because he caught up to the Road Runner. Alas, the Rocket-Powered skates don't have a very good ability to turn fast. So when the Road Runner turned, Wile E. continued to rocket forward, hitting into old west dessert buttes before being rocketed off into the air before the skates ran out of gas and he fell back to earth.
  • Analysis: This is way too dangerous to sell and should be taken off of the market immediately. You basically have no directional control.You might be surprised to see this one ranking this high at #1, based on how low I ranked all the other "Wile E. Coyote puts a rocket on something" products. However, as with the leg muscle vitamins immediately above, this gets the bonus points for being the first time they used this idea, which would be repeated countless times afterwards and be a staple of the cartoons for the next decade and a half.

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Ed Ranks Wile E. Coyote's ACME Products (Part 1)

Get used to reading about bird seeds plots a lot.
Wile E. Coyote really wanted to kill and eat the Road Runner.

Fortunately for Mr. Coyote, there was a company called "ACME" that sold a lot of weirdly specific products that could potentially be used for killing said Road Runner.

Unfortunately for Mr. Coyote, ACME is sort of a shit company with faulty products. Or at the very least ACME didn't really include proper instructions. Basically, ACME = IKEA.

Five quick notes before we begin:
  • I'm going to call these things "Episodes" below. I know that they are technically "shorts" that aired in movie theaters. I think the term "episode" is fine though. dealwithit.gif
  • I'm not including "Ralf Wolf" cartoons here. Yes, I am aware that Ralf Wolf is EXACTLY THE SAME as Wile E. Coyote, but with a red nose instead of black nose.
  • Occasionally Wile E. Coyote also tried to murder Bugs Bunny. These episodes are included.
  • Warner Brothers Animation Studios shut down 1963/4-ish, around the time Chuck Jones was fired. In the late 1970's, Chuck Jones came back and WB started making new cartoons, but those cartoons aren't from the "golden age" of WB animation that I'm thinking of. So I'm not including those and therefore won't talk about anything that happened after 1964. Which makes me sort of like my dad, who is an old man who also won't recognize anything related to pop culture which happened after 1964. So if you remember him using some product that's not listed here (e.g. explosive tennis balls, etc) - it probably came from a post '64 episode.
  • I'm cutting this ranking in to two parts because that buys me another four days to stretch things out. So this part will include #33 to #18.
Dishonorable Mention: ACME Super Speed Vitamins
  • Featured in Episode: Hare-Breadth Hurry (1963)
  • Intended Use: Make Bugs Bunny really, really fast.
  • Description: A bunch of pills that can increase speed.
  • Did it Work? Yes.
  • Analysis: This is one of those rare "Wile E. Coyote vs. Bugs Bunny" cartoons. By the time this came out in 1963, the "pills/tonic that make you fast" plot device had already been used a half dozen times in these cartoons. This time it was Bugs using them though, in an attempt to explain why he could zip along like the Road Runner. Sort of lame, but at least they tried to explain it. The point of this ranking though is to rank ACME products that Wile E. Coyote used. This is a Wile E. Coyote episode and this is an ACME product in it... but it's Bugs using it, not Wile E. Therefore, it only gets a dishonorable mention status, as it doesn't quite make the cut.
33. ACME Iron Bird Seed
  • Featured in Episode: Beep Prepared (1961)
  • Intended Use: Seed. Metal. Magnet. See below.
  • Description: Honestly, what the fuck?
  • Did it Work? No.
  • Analysis: As you'll see later down this list, there were already multiple occasions in Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner cartoons where the coyote mixed in bird seed with metal, in an attempt to use a magnet to attract the bird to him. On all the previous occasions, Wile E. Coyote at least went to the effort to mix ACME Bird Seed up with ACME metal. This time though, approximately the 700th time the coyote did the EXACT SAME STUPID TRICK, the writers just got SUPER FUCKING LAZY and decided, "eh, let's just make the bird seed metal so we can skip the part where he mixes the bird seed with metal." This begs the question, WHAT THE HELL WOULD ANYONE USE IRON BIRD SEED FOR?! Why is this even a product?
32. ACME Indestructo Steel Ball
Blue Pac-Man?

  • Featured in Episode: Wild About Hurry (1959)
  • Intended Use: A protective ball that will prevent Wile E. Coyote from being hurt.
  • Description: A big ol' metal ball.
  • Did it Work? No. Surprisingly enough, it wasn't that indestructible.
  • Analysis: Eh. This one never made sense. How does he even plan to get the bird if he's stuck in a ball?
31. ACME Iron Carrot
  • Featured in Episode: Compressed Hare (1961)
  • Intended Use: Carrot. Metal. Magnet. See below and above.
  • Description: Once more, Wile E. Coyote tried to get his opponent to eat metal food and attract said opponent via a magnet. This time is another one of the rare episodes where he's trying to eat rabbit rather than bird...thus it's a carrot rather than seeds.
  • Did it Work? Obviously not. The magnet attracts a mailbox, which slams Wile E. in the face.
  • Analysis: This same metal/magnet food joke is used over and over again, but at the very least this time they've changed "seed" to "carrot" to mix things up and pretend like they're trying to do something different.
30. ACME Iron Pellets
Mix with the above seed.

  • Featured in Episodes: Wild About Hurry (1959), Zip N' Snort (1961).
  • Intended Use: Mix it in with bird seed. Use magnet. Make Road Runner come to him. Rinse and repeat in 100 different episodes.
  • Description: These are pellets made of iron.
  • Did it Work? No. The magnet attracted a bomb and/or an electric power line instead. Which Wile E. Coyote really should have seen coming.
  • Analysis: Another repeat joke both times, as Wile E. had previously tried to mix in metal with bird seed and a magnet back in 1953 for the Zipping Along episode. Lay-Zeeee! Wild About Hurry would be the first time this scheme would repeated though, so it at least gets some credit for barely being a repeat at first. But AFTER this though, almost every single story would just reuse this same trick over and over again like it was a legal requirement for every single cartoon.
 29. ACME Dehydrated Boulders
  • Featured in Episode: Scrambled Aches (1957)
  • Intended Use: A small, "dehydrated" boulder to which water can be added, expanding it into a full-size boulder that he can throw on the Road Runner.
  • Description: Well, honestly this is just fucking odd.
  • Did it Work? No. He crushes himself with the boulder, per the usual.
  • Analysis: I just want to point out that boulders aren't made out of a bunch of water. They very much lack water, in fact. You probably knew this already, so I'm not sure why I'm explaining it.
28. ACME Matches
  • Featured in Episode: Beep, Beep (1952)
  • Intended Use: To light a fire and be able to see better.
  • Description: This one is pretty straight forward. Matches that you use to light a small fire. Nothing to crazy here.
  • Did it Work? Yes, the match did light. Unfortunately, Wile E. Coyote lit the match in a dark tunnel full of dynamite.
  • Analysis: The product worked as intended, but Wile E. really should have ordered an ACME flashlight.In the end, this one gets ranked fairly low because it's simply not that impressive or interesting. A pretty normal, mundane product.
27. ACME Triple-Strength Battleship Steel Armor Plate
  • Featured in Episode: Gee Whiz-z-z-z-z-z-z (1956)
  • Intended Use: A steel plate that could stop the Road Runner.
  • Description: A steel plate, presumable of the type used on Battleships.
  • Did it Work? No, the Road Runner went right through it.
  • Analysis: This bird should die impacting thick steel like that. But he didn't. This is probably poorly constructed or a Chinese counterfeit. ACME is shit. I hope the U.S. armed forced didn't use this shit armor for their battleships.
26. ACME Hi-Speed Tonic
  • Featured in Episode: Hip Hip-Hurry! (1958)
  • Intended Use: A magical elixer that will make Wile E. Coyote go super fast.
  • Description: A tonic made up of "Vitamins R, P, & M" that will make Wile E. go super fast. He tests it on a mouse first before downing an entire bottle for himself.
  • Did it Work? No. He goes to fast and crashes into a bunch of fireworks, blowing himself up and ending the whole episode/short.
  • Analysis: Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. By 1958, these Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner cartoons had been going on for 9 years and the writers were clearly running out of ideas. By the time this short aired, the coyote had already taken numerous potions to make himself run faster, and every time he stupidly outran the Road Runner and crashed into something else. This is a rehash of previous plot devices, barely mixed up to be original.
25. ACME Jet-Propelled Unicycle
This should work out well.

  • Featured in Episode: Hot-Rod and Reel! (1959)
  • Intended Use: Become fast. Catch Road Runner. Look like an idiot (as everyone on a unicycle does).
  • Description: A unicycle with dangerous fucking rockets on it.
  • Did it Work? Fuck no. It launched him off a cliff, which was the second time in the episode that an ACME jet-propelled product launched him off of a cliff. SAD!
  • Analysis: Literally EARLIER IN THIS VERY EPISODE/SHORT, Wile E. Coyote used ANOTHER JET-PROPELLED ACME PRODUCT (the Jet-Propelled Pogo-Stick) and EPICLY FAILED AND FELL OFF A CLIFF. How did he expect things to wind up any different just a few minutes later? Okay, maybe it wasn't just a few minutes later in the passage of time between the two events. But then again, these cartoons were never that great at explaining just how much time occurs between these ludicrous attempts at bird murder.
24. ACME Rocket Sled/Ship
  • Featured in Episodes: Wild About Hurry (1959), Beep Prepared (1961)
  • Intended Use: Bird fast. Rocket fast. Use rocket to catch bird. Durrrrrr!
  • Description: Two forms of sleds/carts that Wile E. Coyote used in attempts to quickly launch himself at Road Runner.
  • Did it Work? No. One time he launched himself into space and the other time he crashed straight into the ground.
  • Analysis: More repeats, as the writers simply said "let's do that joke again where the coyote attaches a malfunctioning rocket to something."
23. ACME Jet Bike Kit
What could possibly go wrong?

  • Featured in Episode: Gee Whiz-z-z-z-z-z-z (1956)
  • Intended Use: Various parts to assemble a very fast jet bike, which could be used to catch the Road Runner because the Road Runner is also very fast.
  • Description: ACME products making up this kit included ACME Handle Bars, an ACME Jet Motor, etc.
  • Did it Work? I know you probably won't believe this, but instead of successfully working, the end result of Wile E. Coyote's "Jet Bike Kit" adventure was him FALLING OFF OF A CLIFF. I know, right? Hard to believe! Who would have though that Wile E. Coyote would have--instead of catching the Road Runner--fallen off of a fucking cliff?! CRAZY!
  • Analysis: Why bother writing an analysis for this one.It's just a little bit better than the last several jet rockets on X devices.
22.  ACME Grease
  • Featured in Episodes: Guided Muscle (1955), Zip N' Snort (1961)
  • Intended Use: Make the ground super slippery so that the Road Runner couldn't pass, and/or make the ground slick so that Wile E. can go faster.
  • Description: Grease.
  • Did it Work? No. The first time, Road Runner ran right over it while a conveniently timed truck showed up to run over Wile E. (which he couldn't avoid because he himself got stuck slipping on the grease). The second time the grease makes him slide off a cliff.
  • Analysis: This dipshit coyote is always falling victim to the trap he himself planted. I'm starting to think this is more his fault and less ACME's fault. Also he should move to a place with less cliffs.
21. ACME Super Outfit
Well this looks... dumb,

  • Featured in Episode: Fast and Furry-ous (1949)
  • Intended Use: To get the magical power to fly off the side of a cliff.
  • Description: A blue cap/helmet, shirt and pants with a red cape.
  • Did it Work?  No, it did not provide him with the ability to fly. He just fell off a cliff.
  • Analysis: Dressing up as Superman does not give you Superman's powers. ACME maybe could have been clearer with the instructions. In fairness, this was the FIRST EVER Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner Cartoon, so at least this gets points for being the first time the coyote uses ACME products to try to kill the Road Runner. Nice.
20. ACME Bat-Man's Outfit
  • Featured in Episode: Gee Whiz-z-z-z-z-z-z (1956)
  • Intended Use: To dress up like "Bat-Man" (although it looks nothing like Batman) and fly.
  • Description: An odd, green costume that ACTUALLY GIVES WILE E. COYOTE the ability to fly.
  • Did it Work? HOLY SHIT, SORT OF! It actually ALLOWED HIM TO FLY!!! WHAT THE HELL?! IS THIS SORCERY?! Of course, he stopped paying attention to where he was going and crashed into a cliff.
  • Analysis: I'm torn on this one. To a degree, it's a repeat of the previous "Super Outfit" featured way back in 1949, so it's a bit lazy. On the other hand, the joke with the Super Outfit was it didn't work - and yet this "Bat-Man" costume did work, and did allow him to fly. For a bit. The costume was also green and weird, I'm sure to avoid being sued by DC Comics.
19. ACME Giant Kite Kit
  • Featured in Episode: Zipping Along (1953)
  • Intended Use: As a kite to sort of fly with, in order to throw a bomb/missile at the Road Runner.
  • Description: A kite. But giant. The bomb might have been an ACME product too, but it didn't specifically say it was. 
  • Did it Work? No, he fell of a cliff while trying to fly with the kite (obviously) and then the bomb exploded on him (obviously).
  • Analysis: This was overall a terrible, terrible idea. You should not try to attach yourself to a kite. You fly kites. Kites do not fly you, no matter how giant they are. Even if he was successful, this would have been stupid because blowing up a bird with a bomb defeats the point of your goal - eating it. Do you want to eat tiny, charred pieces scattered across the mesa? No, of course you don't. 
18. ACME Christmas Package Machine
Seems safe. Go for it!

  • Featured in Episode: Hopalong Casualty (1960)
  • Intended Use: Trick the Road Runner into going inside by claiming that it is a "Detour," and forcibly package up the Road Runner so he can easily become an easy Peapod order for Wile E. Coyote.
  • Description: A machine that, no matter what goes into it, is packaged up with Christmas wrappings.
  • Did it Work? No. Wile E. Coyote obviously fucks up and packages himself up. Even a child can see this plot development coming.
  • Analysis: Eh, I guess it's at least a new idea! By the time this cartoon aired, they were basically re-doing things from previous cartoons over and over again.

Okay everyone, that's the bottom half of the rankings. Next time... the top ACME products.

Saturday, August 3, 2019

Ed Ranks Memes (Part II)

Hi. I'm still ranking memes. These are the best. #25 through #1!

25. Arthur Fist - Ah yes, Arthur the aardvark. He sees something he doesn't like and his fist balls up in rage. This is good times.

24. Leeroy Jenkins! - I have never played World of Warcraft, and the famous video is apparently fake anyway. Whatever. It's still sort of funny.

23. Sad Keanu - Poor Keanu Reeves. Sitting on the bench. Eating his sandwich. Someone should just tell him he's breathtaking to cheer him up. Whoa.

22. Hitler Downfall Subtitles - Oh yeah, this had it's run a while back. Clips from the film Downfall, but with Hitler losing his shit about different, mundane internet/pop culture things. Is it still funny a decade later? The answer is yes... yes it is.



21. I Have No Idea What I'm Doing - This is just a dog scientist who has no idea what he is doing. It's not the most popular or famous meme in the world, but as I said these rankings are going to be overly-hyped up with animal-based memes. So you're welcome.

20. Yes, This is Dog - Hahaha, the dog is on a phone. What is the dog doing? I don't even know! It's crazy! Dogs can't talk on phones!


19. Keyboard Cat - Is this the oldest meme on the entire list? It could be, but I'd have to do some research to figure that out. Which seems like a lot of work.

18. Ceiling Cat - A cat in a ceiling. What is it doing? Probably watching you masturbate. You are on the internet, after all.

17. Mocking SpongeBob - tHiS iS a GrEaT mEmE.

16. Rule 34 - If you need this one explained to you... uh... once again, google image search is your friend. Or perhaps your enemy. Prepare to have your childhood ruined though.

15. He Protec but He Also Attac - There are a lot of good ones of these, although they do tend to drift into modified LOLCat Territory. Oh and hey, speaking of that...

14. LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezeburger - I'm using this as a generic default for a ton of different cat-based memes, just featuring cats being stupid with captions which prove that cats are poor spellers. Good shit.

13. I'm the Juggernaut, Bitch - This was a great video redub, in the spirit of the earlier GI Joe PSA redubs. But it got big enough to even be included in X-Men: The Last Stand, which officially made it not funny anymore. But time has passed and we've all healed from that terrible movie. So as long as we remember the original context of the dubbed animation and forget about Vinnie Jones, all is well. Oh. This reminds me that I forgot to actually include the GI Joe PSI redubs on this ranking. Let's just say that they also are here, tied at #13. It would be too much work to renumber this whole thing.

12. Mr. T Ate My Balls - As with "Bert is Evil," you really got to dig bag to the beginning of the Internet when you were dialing in and hearing those terrible screeching sounds (and losing your ability to use the phone) when you were looking at Mr. T Ate My Balls memes, and other inspired "Ate My Balls" pages. I think I might have even made an "Ate My Balls" page on Geocities myself. Yeah, that's right. Geocities. MmmMmmm! Them some good balls!

11. One Does Not Simply - This one is simple and stupid enough. Everyone saw Lord of the Rings, and so everyone knows what this references. So you simply remix it up with other things that Boromir things one should not simply do, and you have Internet Gold!

10. McKayla is Not Impressed - Some of you think #10 might be pretty high for a fleeting picture of Olympic Gymnast McKayla Maroney looking unimpressed at the 2012 Olympics after winning Silver in vault when she thought she deserved Gold. You are wrong. This is great and deserves to be here. I mean look. She got the freaking President to do it. And I mean the good president, not the one which always makes me think of #8 below.

9. Honey Badger Don't Give a Fuck - I don't need to explain this any further. You either know what it is or you don't. If you don't, why are you even reading this?

8. This is Fine Dog - This was moderately funny the first time I saw this, but as life and the world in general continues to spiral into the fucking dumpster fire it is today, I appreciate this meme more and more all the time.

7. Joseph Ducreux - Take a modern phrase or rap lyric. Reverse translate it into a fictional 18th-Century style language. Example: "Fuck Bitches, Get Money" turns into "Disregard Females, Acquire Currency." This is exactly why liberal arts majors exist.

6. It's Over 9000! - Yes Vegita, that does seem pretty high. Nothing worth breaking your scouter over. That thing probably costs some money.

5. All Your Base Are Belong to Us - This is the meme to start all memes. I can't say anything is outright hilarious in this video, but I also can't lie and say I didn't watch it 6000 damn times back in college. Ah, Macromedia Flash Videos. What ever happened to you?

4. Deal With It - Once these magical shades fall down from the sky and land effortlessly on your face, you know that you've won.

3. Doge - Wow. Very fascinate. Such meme. How pronounce? I say it's prounounced like "dohj" (or I could alternatively spell that out as "dough-juh" but with one syllable, not two). If you think it's pronounced "doggie" of "dog-eh" or anything else then you're wrong.

2. Advice Animals - This is a big one, and included probably 100 different sub-memes. Advice Animals are those animals (almost always in front of a color wheel with various hues) providing you with life advice via contrasting top and bottom text in white IMPACT font. The Advice Dog might be the original, but it also includes Business Cat, Socially Awkward Penguin, Philosoraptor, Courage Wolf, Anti-Joke Chicken, and so on. Confusingly, advice animals aren't only animals. Advice Animals also include advice humans. I guess humans are a type of animal though, right? Once you add in the Advice Humans to the Advice Animals, you also add in classics like Hipster Ariel, Ermahgerd, Scumbag Steve, Success Kid, Bad Luck Brian, Ridiculously Photogenic Guy, and Unhelpful Teacher).  They're like Rage Comics, except actually funny. Technically the Pun Dog isn't an Advice Animal (because rather than being a single image, it's a three panel quasi-comic strip), but he's close enough and I'll just say Pun Dog is included as part of this, because Pun Dog is great. PUN DOG! 

1 Distracted Boyfriend - This will never stop being funny.