40 Humorous One-Panel Dog Comics By The New Yorker Magazine Cartoonist Harry Bliss

Harry Bliss has spent decades proving that asingle panelcan say more than pages ever could. Best known for his work in The New Yorker, Bliss has a way of distilling life down to its most revealing moments, often with a dog sitting right at the center of it all. In his world, dogs aren’t background characters or comic relief. They’re observers, confidants, and, more often than not, the emotional core of the story.

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That emotional core becomes even more visible in his book "You Can Never Die," which began not as a creative ambition but as a personal necessity. “My book is a memoir, and I began writing it as a way to cope,” Bliss shared in an interview withBored Panda. “My book is a memoir, and I began writing it as a way to cope with the loss of our beloved dog, Penny, after 17 years,” he said. What started as journaling slowly unfolded into something much more layered, “some autobiographical essays,” as he describes it, until a clearer intention emerged. “I wanted to connect to a reader, have a shared intimacy.”

The process wasn’t easy. “Curating the book was very difficult. I had to weave humor, art, cartoons, raw biographical essays and visceral grief into something that is essentially me.” It took three years to complete, and what came out of it feels less like a project and more like a self-portrait. “If anyone out there wants to get to know who I am, just read the book—it’s all there, the good, the bad, and the hilarious.”

© Photo:blisscartoons

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That same emotional honesty runs through his relationship with dogs, both in life and in art. When asked where that sensitivity comes from, Bliss doesn’t over-explain it. “I’m not entirely sure… I can only guess that it comes from a deep observation and a curiosity about all things.” But he also pointed to something more personal: “The sensitivity has a direct correlation to the loneliness I had as a child.”

His bond with Penny, in particular, reshaped the way he sees the world. “She was instrumental in teaching me how to slow down. I never pulled on her leash, I always let her take her time.” As she grew older, that connection deepened. “When she aged and became more dependent on us, there was a newfound empathy I began to experience… It’s remarkable that these things can lie dormant in us and a pet can activate them.” That shift naturally found its way into his work: “My work these days is less sardonic, more driven by a mirthful kindness.”

© Photo:blisscartoons

© Photo:blisscartoons

When it comes to creating his dog cartoons, Bliss doesn’t separate imagination from reality; it’s both. “I’ll give you a real-life example,” he said. “I was out walking in the woods with my new dog, Junior. He had grabbed a very large stick. I was talking to my wife, and he ran up behind us and clipped her leg.” Her reaction made the moment unforgettable: “She yelled, ‘Oww! Junior just Tonya Hardinged me!’” Bliss laughed. “That made me laugh—real life!”

In the end, what he hopes people take away isn’t complicated. “I want them to laugh or smile,” he said, “but embedded in this I want them to feel a kindness.” It’s a simple idea, but one that is truly important: “There isn’t enough of this in the world these days. Slow down and be kind.”

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40 Humorous One-Panel Dog Comics By The New Yorker Magazine Cartoonist Harry Bliss

Harry Bliss has spent decades proving that asingle panelcan say more than pages ever could. Best known for his work in The New Yorker, ...
What is the Met Gala Dress Code This Year?

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Town & Country The 2025 Met Gala Celebrating "Superfine: Tailoring Black Style" - Arrivals

Awards season may have wrapped up in March with the Oscars, but for red carpet fashion fans, the year’s biggest moment has only just arrived.The 2026 Met Galais upon us, and with it, a slew of A-list celebrity sightings and, of course, the sartorial statements that come with them.

As ever, the annual gala, which serves as a benefit for The Costume Institute, is centered around the institute’s yearly exhibition, and this year is a particularly special one, as it will mark the very first exhibition to be housed in the Costume Institute’s new 12,000-square-foot permanent galleries at The Met. Titled “Costume Art,” the exhibit will “focus on the centrality of the dressed body within the Museum, connecting artistic representations of the body with fashion as an embodied art form,” Andrew Bolton, Curator in Charge of The Costume Institute explained when the concept was announced. He added that he wanted the exhibit to emphasize, “the indivisible connection between our bodies and the clothes we wear.”

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So what does that mean for this year’s Met Gala dress code? The exhibition theme traditionally dictates the concept around which the star-studded guest list crafts their ensembles, and while “Costume Art,” will focus heavily on the physical form (the exhibit will reportedly be organized around concepts like the “Naked Body,” the “Classical Body,” and the “Pregnant Body”) the dress code itself offers a broader thesis: “Fashion is Art.”

PerThe Met, the dress code will invite guests to “express their own relationship to fashion as an embodied art form.” How exactly that will be interpreted by the evening’s stars, including co-chairsBeyoncé, Nicole Kidman, andVenus Williamsis anyone’s guess, but we could expect to see anything from a return to last year’s form-focused “naked dress” trend to gowns that take a direct cue from art history. For now, we’ll just have to wait and see.

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What is the Met Gala Dress Code This Year?

"Hearst Magazines and AOL may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Awards season may have wra...
“Watson” ending explained: How the CBS series says farewell to John Watson

Watson wrapped its two-season run on May 3 after being canceled in early 2026.

Entertainment Weekly Morris Chestnut as John Watson in the 'Watson' series finaleCredit: Colin Bentley/CBS

Key Points

  • The final episode finds Watson reuniting with Holmes amid his struggles with a brain tumor.

  • Eddie Izzard guests as Sebastian Moran, an infamous villain from the Sherlock Holmes canon.

Watsonis one of the stranger procedurals to emerge over the past several years, reimagining the canon of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes books and stories inside an investigative medical drama. But, as its title implies, the focus isn't on Holmes, but Dr. John Watson (Morris Chestnut), the detective's loyal confidant. Along with his fellow doctors at the Holmes Clinic in Pittsburgh, Watson treats patients with baffling, often misleading symptoms.

Watson's first season began withHolmes' death, but the detective resurfaced in season 2 (played by Robert Carlyle). As the season unfolded, however, we came to learn that this version of Holmes was a hallucination brought on by the tumor in Watson's brain.

But season 2's penultimate episode threw us quite a twist when the real, non-imaginary Holmes turned up in the clinic with what appears to be a case of amnesia. Our heads are spinning, too.

The final episode of season 2, "Cobalt Fissure," will be the last episode ofWatson, as the series was canceled by CBS earlier this year. Below, we break down how the series says farewell to Chestnut's Watson while folding in another character from Doyle'sSherlock Holmesstories.

What's wrong with Holmes?

Robert Carlyle as Sherlock Holmes on 'Watson'Credit: Colin Bentley/CBS

The episode begins with Watson being prepped for surgery at a clinic in Baltimore to deal with the glioblastoma in his brain. But he flees upon hearing that Holmes, who he's been hallucinating all season, has appeared back in Pittsburgh.

Holmes' symptoms — memory loss, dehydration, hypotension, elevated liver enzymes — confound Watson and the rest of the doctors, who spend much of the episode debating various treatments and potential diagnoses.

The secret to Holmes' condition, however, lies in an old case he and Watson investigated years prior. They reminisce about it as Holmes' memory returns — a three-day pursuit of an adversary led them to a weapons testing site populated by soldiers clad in biohazard gear. It was radioactive, and both Holmes and Watson's proximity to it contributed to their individual ailments.

Watson confirms this by testing a sweat-soaked towel carried by Holmes. The results point to what Holmes describes as a genetic alteration — "I'm a mutant," he declares — and the treatments appear to be working by episode's end.

Tragically, as Holmes gets better, Watson gets worse. His tumor is giving him seizures that grow in severity throughout the episode.

Who is Sebastian Moran?

Morris Chestnut as John Watson and Eddie Izzard as Sebastian Moran in the 'Watson' series finaleCredit: Colin Bentley/CBS

There have been whispers of Sebastian Moran, an acolyte of Holmes and Watson's nemesis Moriarty (Randall Park), throughoutWatson, but it's only in the series finale that the killer actually surfaces. Fans of the Sherlock Holmes canon will be familiar with the character, as he plays a similar role for Moriarty to the one Watson plays for Holmes.

Eddie Izzardplays the loquacious Moran with a slimy charm, and it's a shame we won't get to see more of the character. In this episode, he shoots and kills an oncology nurse in a random attack that's meant to get Watson's attention. Why? Honestly, it's all a bit confusing — and we wouldn't be surprised if this storyline was reworked upon news of the show's cancellation.

Basically, Moran says that he's the one who dropped Holmes off at the clinic. See, he's been holding Holmes hostage and using the detective to help carry out his own nefarious schemes. There's been a "power vacuum" since Moriarty's death, he says, and he's trying to fill it. But Holmes' sickness has made him "not quite so useful," so he needs him patched up and delivered back to him.

His murder of the nurse is followed by threats against Dr. Mary Morstan (Rochelle Aytes), Watson's ex-wife. If Watson's team involves the police, he says, he'll have his cronies kill her.

How is Moran foiled?

Robert Carlyle as Sherlock Holmes and Ritchie Coster as Shinwell Johnson on 'Watson'Credit: Colin Bentley/CBS

Holmes doesn't seem to remember his work for Moran, but he remains familiar with the villain and helps Watson and Shinwell Johnson (Ritchie Coster) in their efforts to find his hideout.

Moran is dyslexic, Holmes explains, and uses the letter "x" as a means of simplifying confusing letter patterns. X being a "safe" letter for Moran, Holmes suggests that he could be hiding out under a fake name that includes multiple x's.

Shinwell finds Moran in a nearby hotel, where he's checked in with the name Alexander Cox. Shinwell, as fans of the series may recall, has a personal vendetta, as he believes Moran murdered William and Nancy Evans, a couple that cared for him like a son. But Moran claims he never killed the Evanses, though he will if Shinwell rats him out.

This puts Shinwell in a tough spot. A former debt collector with a violent past, he's reformed himself in recent years. He even promised his new fiancée, Carlin (Margot Bingham), that he was leaving that part of his life behind. Does he preserve his innocence — or make Moran pay for his sins?

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When next we see Shinwell, he's approaching Carlin at the clinic with a sack of Moran's teeth. Yes, he flexed some of his old muscles to force Moran to give up the men monitoring Morstan — and the location of the Evanses. He confesses this to Carlin, but reveals that instead of finishing the job himself, he gave up Moran to the authorities.

"Yeah, I wanted to carry on. Good god, I wanted to carry on. But I didn't," he says. "No one is damaged beyond repair. It's just, I can't lose this..."

She forgives him.

What else happens in theWatsonseries finale?

Eve Harlow as Dr. Ingrid Derian, Peter Mark Kendall as Dr. Stephens Croft, and Inga Schlingmann as Dr. Sasha Lubbock on 'Watson'Credit: Colin Bentley/CBS

Dr. Sasha Lubbock (Inga Schlingmann) has spent much of the season being deceived about the identity of her birth mother, sending her into something of a tailspin. While Dr. Ingrid Derian (Eve Harlow) is able to point her in the direction of her real mother, Sasha is still nursing some deep wounds.

It makes sense, then, that she'd choose to be alone in the finale. After Dr. Stephens Croft (Peter Mark Kendall), with whom she's had a tumultuous relationship, tells Sasha he wants to commit and give her the wedding and family of her dreams, she rebuffs him.

"I've been a bit of a fool for a good while now," she says. "I need to change some things. I don't know how I'm supposed to be in the world. I don't know who I am, and if I don't know who I am, how am I supposed to know who to be with? Stephens, I'm happy you know what you want right now, it just shouldn't be with me."

Ingrid, meanwhile, appears to have gotten away with her murder of Beck Wythe (Noah Mills), the man responsible for Sasha's deception. While Det. Lestrade (Rachel Hayward) has doubts that the slaying was in self-defense, as Ingrid claims, she has no hard evidence. The last we see of Ingrid, she's back in group therapy for antisocial personality disorder.

Does Watson die?

Morris Chestnut as Dr. John Watson in the 'Watson' series finaleCredit: Colin Bentley/CBS

Watson is able to save the life of his old mentor, but not before severely endangering his own. After suffering multiple seizures, he's prepped for surgery to address his brain tumor. Before he goes into surgery, his colleagues shed tears as they thank him. There's a good chance he won't survive the operation.

Morstan, his ex-wife, tells him how her "entire world changed" the day she met him. "I am in that operating room with you, John. Every room you walk into ever, I'm there."

Stirred by her words, he wakes and recalls the moment earlier in season 2 when he walked in on her kissing her new boyfriend, Josh (C.J. Lindsey).

"I was there to say I love you," he croaks. "I have this picture of you and me and we're living on Baker Street in London and we're having breakfast but we're not talking because we don't need to talk. We have everything we need."

"You're going to be okay, John," she says. "You have to be because I can't imagine a world without you."

So, does Watson survive the operation? Well, that depends on how you interpret the ending. The title card rises just as the surgery begins, and in a brief epilogue, we're transported to 221B Baker Street in London — the address of Holmes and Watson's residence in Doyle's series.

As rain falls, Watson arrives and checks the mail. Morstan opens the front door to greet him. "You're home early!" she says with a smile. He joins her inside, his "picture" of their lives having come true.

Butdidit come true? Or is it just a nice thought? His idea of heaven? That remains ambiguous.

Where can I watchWatson?

Watsonis available to stream on Paramount+.

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Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Watson” ending explained: How the CBS series says farewell to John Watson

Watson wrapped its two-season run on May 3 after being canceled in early 2026. Key Points The final episode finds...

 

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