daisy
Explanation
This comic depicts two duck characters -- drawn in a style reminiscent of Disney's Donald Duck and Daisy Duck -- having an emotional conversation. One says "It doesn't matter any more. I can tell you now that you're the one -- that you never loved him -- and it's all made up. All I ever --"
The other responds emotionally: "I love you! Wouldn't that be enough? I love you... I just want this for love, any more -- but I loved you too."
They continue with increasing melodrama: "Right, the real lie was that we'd always know. You were alive. Wait -- there's things that better come back and say that you would never know! Things that neither of us could --"
The final panel pulls back to reveal a caption: "In 2030, Donald Duck and The Great Gatsby will both be public domain."
The joke is about copyright expiration and public domain law. Characters like Donald Duck (owned by Disney) and literary works like F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" are set to enter the public domain as their copyrights expire. The comic imagines the absurd creative mashups that will inevitably result when these properties become freely usable by anyone -- in this case, Disney duck characters acting out melodramatic scenes reminiscent of Gatsby's tortured love affairs.
The humor lies in the collision of two wildly different cultural properties: the cartoonish, family-friendly world of Donald Duck and the tragic, literary sophistication of The Great Gatsby. The overwrought dialogue given to the duck characters parodies the kind of fan-created content that floods the internet whenever beloved properties become public domain, combining things that were never meant to go together in ways that are both terrible and wonderful.