Archive for June, 2010


Top 10 Rejects of the Month: June

I promised I’d be on time this month.

10.
senator ben nelson environmental protection agency EPA carbon

9.
dream act illegal immigrants
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Witnessed at McDonald’s!

I’m glad that I can start filing these in my new FAST FOOD category. I only had my tiny pocket notebook with me tonight, and I think the guy on the right was wise to me sneaking peeks in order to doodle him and his dining room neighbors.

witnessed 40th dodge mcdonald's omaha
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Bearded Odyssey: Road trip in life tells stories of interesting people, places

In celebration of the 7th anniversary of the Bearded Odyssey, I am re-running the series throughout the summer. This chapter was originally published in The Daily Nebraskan on July 6, 2003.

A wise man named Aaron Shigley once told me, “The monuments and lakes and rivers — and everything else you think would be the focus of your learning — end up taking a backseat to the people you meet and the stories they have to tell.”

There’s a woman, sort of, named Rachel who works at a gas station in Pacific Beach. With all due respect, Rachel is a man doing a bad job at being a woman. He has long, stringy blonde hair and very bad makeup, consisting of a thick layer of pinkish foundation.

Every time I see him/her, he is wearing a similar, if not identical, long-sleeved button-up shirt with a knee-length skirt. To make it all the more awkward, he still has the body and the voice of a man.

Some people can pull off the transvestite thing quite convincingly; Rachel is the polar opposite.
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So principled - June 27, 2010

from the Lincoln Journal Star

fremont illegal immigration ban law

And check out the nealo.com facebook page for two rejects on this topic.

Fan art

A reader writes:

Mr. Obermyer -

I’m always happy to see your zany perspective in the Journal Star. Your willing to confront the people in power in Nebraska in ways others are not. But we don’t always line up on the issues, but I’m still so inspired to see a young man with such imagination. As I know you like to post your rejected cartoons,, here’s one I recently submitted to a newsletter I subscribe to, which was unfortunately also rejected. Hope you enjoy it, and maybe it adds a little balance for us right wingers! :)

- David M. Flanagan III

nobama barack obama fetus american values crying eagle

Thanks, David! If you have a drawing you’d like to share, send it to nealo@nealo.com.

Another shamefully late Top 10 Rejects: May

I promise next month’s will be (closer to being) on time. As a bonus, don’t forget I already revealed two rejects from May. So you really get twelve.

10. Man, arena jokes sure seem old by now.
arena potholes

9. So do jokes about the Treasurer’s race.
state treasurer tom nesbitt don stenberg tony fulton
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Bearded Odyssey: A friendly chat with a self-proclaimed archangel

In celebration of the 7th anniversary of the Bearded Odyssey, I am re-running the series throughout the summer. This chapter was originally published in The Daily Nebraskan on June 22, 2003.

beard2

I’d been walking along the coast of Pacific Beach in San Diego when it was time to go meet my friends at The Tavern. I started up the hill to head down Garnet Avenue when a fluffy-bearded man in a leather jacket muttered something to me from the shadows.

He started on an intimidating combination of scripture and marijuana-induced rambling, burning his fingers trying to light his quarter-inch joint, before formally introducing himself: “Behold, the hand of God! I am Gonzo Yhvh, ben Olam Haba Ebets Yhvh, the archangel of God.”

This was Gonzo — a balding, red-bearded man of probably about 50, although the elements undoubtedly added a few unfair lines to his face. He gave me a brief history of his previous lives on Earth, and how he was reborn into this life in Phoenix, Ariz., (”Get it?” he asked. “I was reborn in Phoenix!” He told me God has a sense of humor that way.) and had just moved to San Diego.

I politely listened to what he had to say, but I explained people were waiting for me at the bar, so I needed to get going. I told him that I’d come find him later.

Now, when I said later, I meant when I someday returned to San Diego, but he called out that when I saw him later, he would come sliding across the floor. “I have my own special door in the back — you’ll see it,” he said. At this point, I figured he was just speaking nonsense about having some door at the bar. But he continued:

“At the bottom of the door is a self-illuminated crystal. Above that is dark red garnet. You walk in the door and everything lights up. You’ll know it’s my door because there’s an eight-sided fountain outside with nothing in it. I asked God if I could put a statue of me in it. You know what he said to me?”

I didn’t, so Gonzo got right in my face for his God impersonation: “Don’t even think about it!” He laughed and took a seat back on the bench.

“Maybe I could put some fish in it. You know…I don’t know if we even have fish in Heaven.” Then he remembered he was talking to me. “So yeah, when you get to Heaven, look me up.”

This was a little too cool to walk away from, so I asked him if he’s always been called Gonzo. My guess was that he had a “normal” name, like Brian or Tom or Chester. Sure enough, he used to have a different name: Onzo.

After explaining the alphanumeric significance of the name Onzo and its relation to Jesus, he told me that the change to Gonzo had less to do with the numerology than it did with his new arch-angelic role: “I was just Onzo,” he said, “but then everything changed. They changed the job description on me.”
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Happy Father’s Day! - June 20, 2010

from the Lincoln Journal Star

This cartoon has nothing to do with Father’s Day.

children deficits debt medicaid education welfare food stamps

Saturday bonus - June 19, 2010

From the Lincoln Journal Star
(I hope this works — posting from my phone. If it’s messed up I’ll fix it later.)

Pick up this week’s Reader for reading and looking

I made a brief return to The Reader this week, providing the illustration for the cover story about Fremont’s immigration proposal. It was great on two fronts — it’s nice to do something for The Reader again, and I love that I was able to contribute something on this topic. It’s clearly easy for people to get swept up in anti-immigrant fever, but it’s easy to overlook the costs associated with legislating your phobias. Pick up a copy or visit TheReader.com to read the story.

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