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> Honestly, it's no secret that both of these strips are simply their creators sexual fantasies and "turn on's"

*grin* I'd love to see what Mike & Carol Curtis think about that, or Eric Schwartz, for that matter. Good call on responding anonymously...

> commited to digital "print."

Shanda the Panda is a pulp medium comic only, Sabrina Online is not.

> This is sort of like seeing people french kissing in the lobby at a convention. I'm not interested in seeing or hearing about it, they really need to keep it in the bedroom.

Just because you have a problem with other people kissing doesn't mean you should take it out on the comics, kiddo. :)

I don't see where you are coming from, honestly.

I've been a collector of Shanda the Panda for a while, and an avid follower of the story. The focus has never been sexual, it has been emotional; an exploration of the ties of the heart, and how they bend and fray under the stress of the tumult of everyday life. The lifestyles portrayed are unusual; but their methods of coping are ones that many readers can relate to.

Sabrina Online takes a more lighthearted approach in my view, staying away from most of the naughtier elements, and focusing instead on the absurd situations and compromises a person has to make in their life.

Frankly, in any story, I believe the reader makes of it what they want. If all you see is a focus on sex...

Bahumat,

doing the things a particle can

"Virtuous and vicious, every man must be.
Few in the extreme, but all in the degree."

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