Jump to content

Talk:J. Wellington Wimpy

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 66.129.135.114 (talk) at 15:30, 29 January 2008 (→‎Cleaned up trivia section: new section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WikiProject iconComics Start‑class Mid‑importance
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Comics, a collaborative effort to build an encyclopedic guide to comics on Wikipedia. Get involved! If you would like to participate, you can help with the current tasks, visit the notice board, edit the attached article or discuss it at the project's talk page.
StartThis article has been rated as Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
MidThis article has been rated as Mid-importance on the project's importance scale.

Fictional character

I don't think it's accurate to say that Wimpy the cartoon character in Popeye owns a hamburger chain. He is just a cartoon character, right? The chain was named after him.

Completely correct. -- Infrogmation 15:44, 25 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Image

Couldn't we find a better uncopyvio picture than a Tijuana bible? 惑乱 分からん 00:36, 4 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Good Eats

Wimpy was also referenced on Good Eats. SargeAbernathy 07:15, 5 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Implausible material

In one strip, Wimpy conned Popeye and Olive Oyl into agreeing to an "indecent proposal", which he then reneged on. In a notoriously shocking Sunday strip, Wimpy tries to sell a cow to Popeye to raise money for hamburgers, but Popeye angrily refuses. Wimpy then asks if he can borrow some kitchen implements. The final, wide panel shows Popeye coming across Wimpy sitting beside a meat grinder, hundreds of burgers and a barbecue grill.

The first sentence makes it sound like Wimpy offered Popeye $1 million if he could sleep with Olive Oyl (à la the movie Indecent Proposal), and if that's not what the strip was about then the sentence is too vague to be meaningful. I doubt this happened in the Popeye comic strip since Bobby London was fired as the cartoonist for doing a sequence with references to abortion the year before the movie Indecent Proposal was released. The latter two sentences are described as "notoriously shocking" ... to whom? People who don't know what animal hamburgers come from? I'm removing these sentences until they are verified and properly cited. --Metropolitan90 04:30, 15 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Cleaned up trivia section

Lord, nobody cares if somebody mentioned Wimpy's name once on some episode of Family Guy or in a hamburger commercial.