The Far Sideis synonymous with certain recurring characters, locations, and punchlines – yet one potent example,Gary Larson’s penchant for uproarious courtroom scenes, often goes underappreciated, even by the most hardcore fans of the artist’s work. Larson frequently made jokes in which unexpected characters found themselves on trial, and the results included some of the bestFar Sidecartoons ever produced.

From pop culture icons like Popeye and Mr. Ed taking the stand, to cows and insects testifying before the court,The Far Side’strial-based punchlines rank among Gary Larson’s zaniest flights of fancy, as the premise of these jokes helped the artist achieve some especially memorable punchlines.

Far Side, April 9, 1987, Mr. Ed on the witness stand reveals incriminating evidence

Whether the end result was obvious, or totally unexpected, Larson’sFar Sidecourtroom scenes captured the tension and the excitement of criminal trials, while pushing this trope to its most absurd comedic limits.

10Television’s Iconic Talking Horse Takes The Stand – And Refuses To Hold His Tongue Any Longer

First Published: June 17, 2025

ThisFar Sidejoke uses Mr. Ed– the beloved “talking” horse from the eponymous sitcom, which ran on American television 1961 to 1966 – to establish a baseline familiarity for the reader, a foundation upon which Gary Larson then builds a laugh-out-loud scene, in which the equine witness unburdens itself in a long stream-of-consciousness ramble, which reads:

…and then I see Wilbur go around to the back of the barn carrying this shovel and he’s got this wild look in his eyes and he’s like real nervous and then I notice he’s trying to bury this big plastic bag which at first I figure is just full of manure but then I start to wonder what the hey is going on and then…

Far Side, June 10, 1987, depicting a prehistoric court room scene

Wilbur, of course, was the name of Mr. Ed’s human owner on the show, and sofor readers with nostalgic attachment to the TV series, which aired decades before this comic was published, thisFar Sidecomic would certainly have been a hilariously dark twist on the show’s recognizable elements. As funny as the joke is, its success is also in part a result of its ability to surprise the reader with this unexpected subversion of its otherwise lighthearted pop culture source material.

9This Far Side Comic Shows That Sometimes The Best Punchline Is Playing It Straight

First Published: June 20, 2025

ThisFar Sidecomic, set in a prehistoric courtroom, is an example ofGary Larson’s fascination with humanity’s cave-dwelling ancestors, but more critically, it also highlights a particular strain of the cartoon’s humor. There areFar Sidejokes in which the punchline evolved out of the premise, but this is a case where the premise and the punchline are one and the same.

That is, the “joke” here is that the caveperson courtroom drama is playing out exactly as a contemporary murder trial would; there is no absurd twist in the dialogue,as the cave-prosecutor confronts the defendant, “Mr. Grok,” with the murder weapon.Rather, the sheer absurdity of the characters' anachronistic behavior – playing out a legal drama tens of thousands of years ahead of their time – that is intended to get a laugh here.

Far Side, August 18, 1987, a dog on the stand in a court room explains his quid pro quo with the defendant

8The Far Side’s Depiction Of Canine Court Is Criminally Underrated

First Published:​​​​​​​ July 23, 2025​​​​​​​

“Well, the defendant and I had made this deal in which we both prospered,“a mangy-looking mutt says from the witness stand, explaining further that it was, “one of those ‘you-scratch-me-behind-my-ears-I’ll-scratch-you-behind-yours’ arrangements.“While Gary Larson doesn’t divulge the greater context of the crime in question here, it is clear that this quid-pro-quo arrangement is an important piece of information for the dogs on the jury.

Love It or Hate It, This Is What a Perfect Far Side Comic Looks Like

Many Far Side comics have a claim to being “the best,” but I’m more interested in defining what makes a great, or even perfect, Gary Larson joke.

Again, the joke here is the matter-of-fact tone of the proceedings, in contrast with the animal nature of the characters in court, yet the overall humor of the panel relies onthe details Gary Larson includes, such as the judge’s gavel being a bone, and the framing of the image from the jury box, with the jurors all having their noses pointed in the air like bloodhounds, waiting for the truth to come out.

Characters from The Far Side drawing and waving.

7Legendary Pop Culture Strong Man Popeye Reveals His True Nature At A Pivotal Moment

​​​​​​​First Published: June 02, 2025

In this unforgettableFar Sidecourtroom moment, Popeye the Sailor Man is on the stand, but rather than a witness, it is clear he is the defendant in this case – and in a moment worthy ofA Few Good Men, he isgoaded into a startling admission by the prosecutor, snapping his famous line, “I yam what I yam,” after the prosecutor asks the leading, semi-rhetorical question of, “what kind of a monster are you?”

It is a funny, satisfying pop culture reference, one in which the pay-off centers around taking something familiar and situating it in a totally new context. Here, Gary Larson recontextualizes Popeye’s iconic saying, turning it from a triumphant declaration of self-confidence into a sinister revelation of the darkness lurking within, and the result is a hilariousFar Sidepanel.

Far Side, November 10, 1987, Popeye on trial for murder says ‘I yam what I yam’

6This Far Side Witness Waited Their Entire Life For This Moment

First Published: August 06, 2025

“So, once they started talking, I just remained motionless, taking in every word,” an informant explains to a crowded courtroom, from the witness stand,adding “of course, it was pure luck I just happened to be a fly on the wall”– and indeed, the witness, as well as the lawyer, the judge, and every other inhabitant of the court, are all flies.

This is the kind ofFar Sidejokethat is elevated by the way it straddles the line between the novel and the obvious; a court scene where the characters are flies is a strange concept for a joke, but then Gary Larson uses that to deliver a deliberately recognizable pay-off. On a compositional note, it is worth noting that Larson almost certainly worked backward here, deriving the premise from the punchline, rather than the other way around.

Far Side, May 8, 1990, a fly on the witness stand explains how it overheard information

5This Deep Cut Far Side Reference Deserves More Credit Than It Gets

First Published: June 14, 2025

Rather than a trial setting, thisFar Sidecartoon instead takes place ina “Senate subcommittee” hearing, in which famous teen detectives the Hardy Boys explain how they “crack[ed] the Iran-Contra scandal.“It is the kind of layered reference that will go unappreciated by contemporary readers, who might not be familiar either way the novel series, or the political scandal that plagued the Reagan administration in the 1980s – yet, at least on a purely technical level, it stands asone of Gary Larson’s best.

The Far Side Complete Collection

That is, the joke here effortlessly mashes together a pop culture reference and a piece of social commentary, hewing between satire and parody in a way that gives the cartoon a broad appeal. At the time of its publication, it would have been immediately relatable to a much wider section ofThe Far Side’saudience, and as such, even in retrospect, it is worth giving its dues to.

4This Far Side Panel Blends Classic American Folklore & Contemporary Courtroom TV

​​​​​​​First Published: August 08, 2025

Captioned “Ichabod Crane v. the Headless Horseman in The People’s Court,” thisFar Sidepanel – which depicts exactly that, a legal showdown between the human protagonist and spectral antagonist of Washington Irving’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”– evokes a familiar American myth at the same time that it references a pioneering modern TV series, making this anotherclassic blend of elements by Gary Larson.

The first incarnation ofThe People’s Courtran from 1981 to 1993, and was at the forefront of the evolution of reality television. That reference would have been immediately impactful for readers at the time, while pitting Ichabod Crane and the Horseman in a television, small-claims legal dispute is a very amusing use of thePeople’s Courtpremise.

The Far Side: “The Hardy Boys crack the Iran contra scandal”

3The Far Side Depicts The Consequences Of Discrimination Against Two-Dimensional Characters

First Published: August 02, 2025

Despite what he might have thought about his own work,Gary Larson was a very talented illustrator, one who clearly became more comfortable pushing the limits of what he could do in a single panel as his career progressed. Often, Larson directly incorporated different levels of artistic quality intoFar Sidepanels on purpose, as is the case here,in which a stick figure takes the stand to call out the defendant who callously sicced their dog on him.

The joke is straightforward enough, and it is the disparity between the fully-embodied representations of most of panel’s characters, and the setting itself, in contrast with the bare bones, two-dimensional drawing of the victim, which is what makes this a chuckle-worthyFar Sidecartoon, at the very least.

The Far Side Complete Collection Book Set

2Gary Larson Revels In Twisting Language With This Far Side Interrogation

First Published: June 12, 2025

ThisFar Sidecartoon is a linguistic delight, asGary Larson riffs on the recognizable “how now brown cow” tongue twister, using the courtroom setting to enable a scenario in which a prosecutor confronts a bovine defendant, stating:

We know how you did it–how is no longer the question. What we now want to know is why…why now, brown cow?

Far Side, December 31, 1992, depicting ‘Ichabod Crane vs. the Headless Horseman in the People’s Court’

DespiteThe Far Side’sreputation for obscurity, it just as often featured deliberately obvious jokes like this one, in which the fun – for both Larson and the reader – comes from reveling in this quirky reorientation of language.

Why The Far Side’s “Dog With Gun” Comic (And Its “Sequel”) Illustrate Gary Larson’s Favorite “Animals Turning the Tables On Humans” Trope Better Than Any Other

“Dog With Gun” is one of the most recognizable Far Side cartoons, and in a way, it represents the pinnacle of a classic Gary Larson recurring joke.

In other words, Larson plays on readers' familiarity with “how now brown cow,” and the familiar patterns of legal dramas, by skipping over the details of method and getting right to the essential question of motive, asking why the bovine suspect committed their presumably-violent crime at the moment they did.

Far Side, April 9, 1993, a stick figure testifies against the man accused of siccing a pet dog on him

1This Far Side Courtroom Comic Blends The Horrifying & The Hilarious Like Only Gary Larson Could

First Published:​​​​​​​ July 03, 2025

In thisFar Sidecartoon,a man with one eye, and scars all over his face, and his arm in a sling, sits in the witness booth as a prosecutor holds a safari hat with two large googly eyes on the front of it up for him to look at– while asking him to confirm that the defendant knowingly gave it to him to wear in order to provoke a baboon attack. Remarkably, there is something equally ridiculous and nightmarish about this premise.

That is to say, with this panel, Gary Larson impressively walks a tightrope between the gruesome nature of the joke’s premise, and the cartoonish illustration, artfully blending horror and humor in the way thatFar Sideexcelled at. It isa surprisingly detailed, ambitious scenario, compared on some of Larson’s more famous punchlines, and that is precisely what makes it an undervalued, unforgettableFar Sidecomic.