It's funny because the first panel has no hand drawn (I figured the right hand was in a coat pocket), then there's some stuff about a guitar that magically appears in his hand for 4 panels, and then the final panel has no guitar in anyone's possession.
I think it's a Mudede-metaphor for how we become trapped and burdened by what we occasionally considered fun.
Not bad. Not funny, but at least not poorly drawn and poorly written with an insipid message to convey, like many previous entries to be found here.
@3: The hand would have to be holding the guitar case in a pretty uncomfortable position for it to not be poking into the first frame, but the fifth frame is probably supposed to be suggesting that Raggedy Anne/Andy is setting it down.
@8 this highlights a lack of context-specific action and timing in the comic, which is not a good thing. I'm guessing we're supposed to be too distracted by the pointlessly, haphazardly frilly lettering and 'Every Day is Halloween' costumes to notice that there is little craft deployed in this comic, and even less thought. I guess that worked on @7.
I think it's a Mudede-metaphor for how we become trapped and burdened by what we occasionally considered fun.
@3: The hand would have to be holding the guitar case in a pretty uncomfortable position for it to not be poking into the first frame, but the fifth frame is probably supposed to be suggesting that Raggedy Anne/Andy is setting it down.