Immortality
Explanation
The Joke
In the first panel, a scientist joyfully announces: "We've done it! Humans are now immortal!" while celebrating with colleagues, with a small Earth visible in the background. In the second panel, the perspective shifts to a cosmic scale: a doctor-like alien figure examines Earth (depicted as a small body) near a large star and solemnly says, "Sorry, Earth. I'm afraid it has metastasized."
The Humor
The comic delivers a gut-punch perspective shift. From humanity's point of view, achieving immortality is the ultimate triumph -- conquering death itself. But from the perspective of the planet (or the cosmos), humans achieving immortality is terrible news: humanity is reframed as a cancer on Earth, and immortality means the cancer has "metastasized" -- it can no longer be stopped by natural death. The joke works through the radical shift in scale and perspective. What looks like a cure from the inside looks like a disease from the outside. The medical metaphor is particularly sharp: a doctor delivering a grim cancer diagnosis, except the patient is Earth and the cancer is us. It's a darkly misanthropic gag that touches on environmentalism, overpopulation concerns, and the idea that humanity's relationship with the planet might be more parasitic than we'd like to admit.