
Same rules as always! Find a difference and post it in the comments. Best comment (as determined by my own subjective, arbitrary and autocratic tastes) earns a prize!
Cartoonist Bob Weber, Jr., the artist of Slylock Fox and Comics for Kids, is probably best known for the comic strips that star the titular character, famed vulpine detective Slylock Fox, who solves mysteries involving sexy cats, mad scientists, and apes that dress like pimps. But Weber regularly presents his readers with his own mysteries in the "Find the Six Differences" feature. Trouble is, the differences aren't always evident. I've dedicated this blog to finding all six.
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Usually the Six Differences witness the carnage of the revolt of the animals against their human masters, with all kinds of food-snatchings and dive-bombings and shenanigans; they even war upon each other for various morsels or even for fun, lamentably imitating the very oppressors they rise against. But in panel 1, lo! ’tis a scene of attempted reconciliation today, as a lone denizen tries to stem the tide of violence, to the shock of all. Will this singular gesture be accepted in the spirit of truce it is intended, or will it lead to naught but a few tufts of fur in a red pool?
In panel 2, the proposition is that of one leading to _unspeakable filth_.
The cat in the second drawing is an earthly incarnation of Zeus and the dog is an eartly incarnation of Zeus' annoying cousin Gary. They are not aware of each others' actual identities, so this mythological zoomorphological mix-up is going to be told and retold at cocktail parties through the ages. (Hint: the squirrel's the one that tipped everyone off.)
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