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This topic contains 8 replies, has 7 voices, and was last updated by IRuleMe 2 years, 6 months ago.
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Was Popeye the Sailorman considered MGTOW even though he keeps trying to win Olive Oyl over and fight Bluto/Brutis? I mean Popeye was considered a man’s man.
By the way, Popeye cartoons are the oldest cartoon series I ever seen, because it came out in 1928, I believe. I don’t care if it was in B/W. It was a very good cartoon.
As a treat, I give you one of the Popeye cartoons, which is my favorite one and in its original quality:
I like old cartoons, especially when they’re in their original condition, because it makes it feel more classical. Remastered stuff is good for modern stuff, but I like old shows and cartoons to remain looking old.
https://themanszone.webs.com/
He was a white knight and if it wasn’t for his spinach brutis would of punched f~~~ out of him .
Olive oyl was banging chad / brutis and Popeye was getting f~~~ all . Olive oyl was also a town hooker banging all the sailors on shore leave .
48 seconds of proof
THE PLANTATION HAS NOW TURNED INTO THE KILLING FIELDS . WOMAN ARE NOW ROLLING CAMBODIAN STYLE .
F~~~ i just found this 6 minute beauty.
Popeye and olive have babies
I bet ya there not his kids
THE PLANTATION HAS NOW TURNED INTO THE KILLING FIELDS . WOMAN ARE NOW ROLLING CAMBODIAN STYLE .
Was Popeye the Sailorman considered MGTOW…
The Popeye in the cartoons you’re familiar with is a very different character than the Popeye of E.C. Segar’s classic daily comic strips.
In the strip, Olive is merely one of Popeye’s many friends and only occasionally a girlfriend if the plot or gag demands it. In the strip, Swee’pea is Popeye’s adopted son or ward and doesn’t somehow belong to Olive Oyl as portrayed in the cartoons.
The Popeye of the cartoons is a pale and faulty imitation of the Popeye for the comics as the cartoons definitely “dumbed down” both Popeye’s character and characterization. In the strip, for example, Popeye rarely resorted to eating spinach at every obstacle.
Popeye wasn’t even a character in Segar’s original strip. That strip, Thimble Theater featured Olive, her brother Castor, and Ham Gravy who was Olive’s boyfriend and Castor’s friend. When the trio wanted to visit an island casino and “break the bank” thanks to a good luck charm they found, they hired Popeye and his ship to take them there. Popeye and his role in the casino story was so popular with readers that Segar quickly brought him back and Popeye just as quickly “took over” the strip.
I was lucky as a kid that our local paper “re-ran” the classic Popeye strips from the late 20s and 30s up to Segar’s death. I got to read the “real” Popeye and couldn’t wait for the evening paper every day.
So, no Popeye the cartoon character is definitely not a MGHOW and, yes, Popeye the comic strip character most definitely is a MGHOW.
Confused yet?
Do not date. Do not impregnate. Do not co-habitate. Above all, do not marry. Reclaim and never again surrender your personal sovereignty.
That was an intresting read about the old popeye in the early days .
THE PLANTATION HAS NOW TURNED INTO THE KILLING FIELDS . WOMAN ARE NOW ROLLING CAMBODIAN STYLE .
Was Popeye the Sailorman considered MGTOW…
The Popeye in the cartoons you’re familiar with is a very different character than the Popeye of E.C. Segar’s classic daily comic strips.
In the strip, Olive is merely one of Popeye’s many friends and only occasionally a girlfriend if the plot or gag demands it. In the strip, Swee’pea is Popeye’s adopted son or ward and doesn’t somehow belong to Olive Oyl as portrayed in the cartoons.
The Popeye of the cartoons is a pale and faulty imitation of the Popeye for the comics as the cartoons definitely “dumbed down” both Popeye’s character and characterization. In the strip, for example, Popeye rarely resorted to eating spinach at every obstacle.
Popeye wasn’t even a character in Segar’s original strip. That strip, Thimble Theater featured Olive, her brother Castor, and Ham Gravy who was Olive’s boyfriend and Castor’s friend. When the trio wanted to visit an island casino and “break the bank” thanks to a good luck charm they found, they hired Popeye and his ship to take them there. Popeye and his role in the casino story was so popular with readers that Segar quickly brought him back and Popeye just as quickly “took over” the strip.
I was lucky as a kid that our local paper “re-ran” the classic Popeye strips from the late 20s and 30s up to Segar’s death. I got to read the “real” Popeye and couldn’t wait for the evening paper every day.
So, no Popeye the cartoon character is definitely not a MGHOW and, yes, Popeye the comic strip character most definitely is a MGHOW.
Confused yet?
Wow, never knew the history of Popeye. Thanks for that Bill.
How does Popeye lubricate his dick?
He sticks it in Olive Oyl.
I think I heard that joke over 50 years ago. Thanks for the memories.
Thanks OldBill for you insight and I will see if I can track the old series down. Had no clue that they existed
"My father didn't tell me how to live; he lived, and let me watch him do it." - Clarence Buddinton Kelland
MGTOW? Popeye from the cartoons was a cuck. Not even close to MGTOW.
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