The Empty Bowl Crisis
The newsroom gathers around the bowl. A few kibble pieces remain, but emotionally, the market has crashed.
Episode Board Active · Bowl Crisis Filed · Couch Command Taking Calls
Dog Daily
All the news fit to sniff.
Manga Episodes
The DogDaily manga desk turns ordinary dog life into front-page drama: empty bowls, squirrel scandals, mailman testimony, vacuum terror, leash negotiations, and the couch command center.
Breaking bark: episode desk confirms every small incident is now a saga.
Read in order, or jump directly to the crisis closest to your dog’s current mood.
The newsroom gathers around the bowl. A few kibble pieces remain, but emotionally, the market has crashed.
A squirrel appears on the fence and behaves with criminal confidence. The Squirrel Desk opens a case.
The mailman takes the stand. Dogs demand answers about daily visits, envelopes, and suspiciously fast exits.
The closet opens. The hose appears. The newsroom abandons objectivity and relocates behind furniture.
Walk-time diplomacy begins at the door. Talks collapse over the phrase “after this call.”
The couch becomes strategic headquarters with pillows, snacks, remotes, reporters, and no plans to move.
Series Notes
DogDaily manga treats daily dog life the way dogs experience it: as enormous, urgent, emotional, and clearly worthy of a newsroom.
Humans may describe these events as “normal.” DogDaily disagrees. An empty bowl is economics. A squirrel is foreign policy. A vacuum is national security. A leash is constitutional law. A couch is executive authority.
The episode style should be funny, polished, fast, and visual. Each page should work like a newspaper feature, but the emotional scale belongs to manga: dramatic reactions, big stakes, ridiculous dignity, and punchlines that wag.
The main DogDaily editor is the black-and-tan newsroom dog: part reporter, part lawyer, part detective, part household manager. The supporting staff includes food analysts, squirrel investigators, mailman correspondents, health reporters, cartoonists, and couch strategists.
Every episode should stay readable, high-contrast, warm, and funny. No white-on-white panels, no tiny unreadable jokes, and no muddy layouts.
The joke should be simple enough to understand in one glance and funny enough that the caption feels like a bonus biscuit.
Featured Story
The DogDaily episodes are comedy, but the Miranda feature gives the site its warm center: dogs are funny because they are family, and sometimes they choose us before we understand what is happening.