• OtterOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      201 year ago

      This one got an audible laugh, it’s so simple but so good

        • @Phoenix3875
          link
          281 year ago

          Opening a purse but only getting flies flying out usually means that the purse is empty in cartoons. Here the conversation suggested that frogs uses flies as currencies and thus subverts the convention.

          Another layer on top is that two flies are required, but the customer only got one, so they’re still broke, just like the conventional representation of being broke.

          • palordrolap
            link
            fedilink
            91 year ago

            Technically the insect in the original gag was a moth, not a fly.

            Certain kinds of moth caterpillars eat cloth. Banknotes at the time and location of the original gag were made of cotton fibre paper, (and indeed some places still do this, or did so very recently) so were theoretically as delicious to those caterpillars as cotton clothes would be.

            For clothing, mothballs can be used to deter them from laying eggs wherever the clothes are, but it’s kind of hard to cram a mothball into a wallet. Also, the money probably already had the eggs on it, which is too late for a mothball anyway.

            Thus, if a moth flies out of your wallet, it means that the paper money is long gone because that moth had time to get all the way from egg, through note-munching caterpillar to moth before you opened your wallet.

            • OtterOP
              link
              fedilink
              English
              31 year ago

              Oh a moth makes sense! I hadn’t thought of that