
🏛️ Gorgocutie Explains
Artist: Piccolo & Hilary B. Price — Rhymes With Orange
What’s happening here?
Two-panel comic titled “SIBLINGS.” The first panel shows a timeless sibling argument — “It wasn’t me. It was YOU!” — with two tiny ghosts peeking into frame. Classic siblings bickering, nothing special.
The second panel reveals the punchline: the ghosts are ancient Egyptians. They’re floating in a museum exhibit full of pharaonic artifacts. The grumpy ghost has clearly been stewing for millennia, and the cheerful one is still throwing shade: “People are STILL talking about that vase you broke. I told you you’ll never live it down.”
The wordplay: “You’ll never live it down” is a figure of speech — but these two literally did not live it down. They’re already dead! And the broken vase? It’s sitting right there in a glass display case as a museum centerpiece. Three thousand years later, and the evidence is still on display.
Why it works as a history meme:
- The Egyptian museum setting is rendered with identifiable detail (hieroglyphic tablets, golden death mask, the broken vase as the artifact)
- It plays on the immortality of embarrassment — even death can’t erase a screw-up that ends up in a museum
- Smart comic strips that use historical context for their punchlines are rare and underappreciated
Classic Rhymes With Orange — taking everyday idioms and stretching them across millennia.
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