the-library-of-heaven
Explanation
The Joke
A person arrives in heaven and is told "Welcome to heaven! Here, we have literally everything!" The newcomer asks if they can watch a movie, and the angel confirms they have infinite movies -- literally every possible combination of images and sounds. Excitedly, the person asks for the Star Wars sequel that would make "the saga infinite." The angel hesitates and explains that in heaven's infinite library, they would "probably get something like liquid garbage." The person protests, "Can I get a manager?" and the angel replies, "I can only get you a movie that has somebody who looks like a manager."
The Humor
The comic is a riff on the concept of the Library of Babel by Jorge Luis Borges -- a library containing every possible book. The problem with such a library is that while it technically contains every masterpiece, it also contains every possible piece of nonsense, and finding anything meaningful in the infinite noise is essentially impossible. Applied to movies, this means that while the perfect Star Wars sequel technically exists somewhere in heaven's infinite collection, the overwhelming majority of the infinite films are random visual and auditory noise -- "liquid garbage." The angel cannot help because even the concept of a "manager" just maps to another random movie that happens to contain something resembling a manager. It is a joke about how infinity, far from being wonderful, makes finding anything specific statistically impossible.
References
The concept directly parallels Jorge Luis Borges' 1941 short story "The Library of Babel," which describes a universe-sized library containing every possible 410-page book. While the library contains all truth, it is practically useless because meaningful content is drowned in an ocean of random character combinations. The comic applies this same paradox to an afterlife scenario.