2014-05-22
Explanation
The Joke
A long-form comic featuring what appears to be characters resembling Dr. Seuss-style creatures debating whether one of them would eat green eggs and ham in increasingly elaborate scenarios. The comic parodies the structure of Dr. Seuss"s "Green Eggs and Ham" but reframes the persistent character"s refusal in progressively more aggressive and absurd terms, culminating in a confrontation with large bold text: "WOULD YOU STOP? EAT TO MAKE IT." The final panel breaks the fourth wall, with characters commenting on the situation.
The Humor
The comedy comes from taking the beloved, innocent children"s book "Green Eggs and Ham" -- in which Sam-I-Am cheerfully pesters someone to try green eggs and ham -- and reimagining it as a genuinely hostile confrontation. In the original book, the persistent offers are charming and the refusals are playful. Here, the refusal escalates to genuine frustration and anger, reflecting how an adult might actually react to someone relentlessly badgering them to eat something. The parody highlights how Sam-I-Am"s behavior, when stripped of its children"s-book charm, is essentially aggressive harassment about food choices.
References
- Green Eggs and Ham: A 1960 children"s book by Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel), in which a character named Sam-I-Am persistently tries to convince another character to try green eggs and ham in various locations and situations. It is one of the best-selling English-language children"s books of all time.