“The Fine Print” Comic by Reed Leviti – Episode 12

Share

Below is this week’s edition of The Fine Print comic by Reed Leviti:

 

 

The Fine Print Comic Strip by Reed Leviti. Episode 12. May 14, 2026

 

 

See last week’s episode here

Banner Image: The Fine Print. Image Credit – Reed Leviti


Share

15 Comments

  • Clam Soup Escapee Clam Soup Escapee says:

    hahaha I love it. The ones that think they can take the heat. hahaha

    Wow..how did they get my avatar into that captcha thingy? That feels so 1984. Spooky A*!

  • Avatar Minimum Angle Entertainment Co says:

    Well this is not realistic I mean mild salsa is not 0% Chilies it is some chilies but not a whole lot now you also have medium which is more chilies and leaves a lingering heat in your mouth but the hot it is true is for the real deal folks who don’t just say they can take the heat they live it

  • Avatar Kyle says:

    Essentially, Reed is just poking fun at people who think they can eat hot foods but can’t.

    I’m not sure it aligns with “People of Color” but the ethnic part 100% right on. I just don’t really have any black friends. TBH so I don’t know. Someone else chime in. But i do have many ethnic friends either way.

    The ethnic people..part…and yes..of every shade…they all eat hot foods like they have some inner need for heat. I refrain.

    I tried. I almost died. But they are immune so it they feel no pain.

    Hot hot HOT foods? nah, I’ll pass now every time.

    I don’t need to prove I’m a hero. being brave and standing up to peer pressure is e better example anyway.

  • Avatar Jeffrey Simms says:

    “hot sauce in my bag, swag,”

    say it allllllllllllll

  • Avatar Westin Allie says:

    I admit this is true. I learned my less and don’t mess with the hot sauce anymore.

  • Avatar RONNIE LION 66 says:

    THIS IS INACCURATE

    MILD SALSA IS NOT ZERO PERCENT HOT

    AND MEDIUM IS NOT .00000000000000000000000000% OR WHATEVER

    THIS IS UNTRUE AND NOT FACT

  • Avatar Janet says:

    Black Americans absolutely identify with hot sauce, and it is a proud, essential pillar of African American culinary history.

    I am kindly and don’t try stressing others. White coworkers I always warn about my hot sauce at our potluck. Not trying to do anyone harm. I think white families eat more spicy than in the past. Social media helped blow up exotic ethnic tastes.

  • Avatar Spicy Serina says:

    Yooooooooooooooooooooo

    Not for nothing, but that Hot Salsa looks ****ing GROSS fam

    I mean W T ****!!

    GROSS… I feel like puking just looking at all those freaking CHUNKS. *GAG*

    Is this comic right on? I for one know that this is true fact. My life shows me. I go to public school. WHite kisd definitely do not eat spicy.

  • Avatar Raj says:

    These are lazy old memes. There is some truth but this is dated. Hot peppers have blown up.

    Bhut jolokia (ghost pepper) are typically the spiciest.

    And now people visit shops suited specifically to this very hot taste.

    The Staten island mall even had a Hot Sauce shop but I think it has since closed?

  • Avatar Staten Islander Since....Too Long... says:

    HAHAHA We make jokes about this very thing. Being partially of South Asian ancestry I can definitely take the heat. The Hot salsa is mild to me. The hot is good with corn chips. But for a real hot sensation you have to eat Indian food. Totally different scale of hotness.

    In the YouTube videos I’ve seen they do not serve the non-Indian individuals the same as the white or black customers. Even if they ask for hot they don’t make it that hot.

  • Avatar Lewis56 says:

    I am a Person of Color of African American ancestry. I can attest to the fact that hot sauce is a big part of Black culture here in the states.

    But you want the facts on this? People of color and ethnic background always make their own salsa. 😉

    Fresh is best.

    As for heat level, well, it’s probably not suitable for someone who didn’t grow up encountering that hot sensation.

    I keep a bottle of Hot Sauce in my dashboard glove-box. You never know.

  • Avatar Rickrolling Jedi says:

    Nowadays they have Hot Pepper sauce made from Ghost peppers which make the standard Chip dip Hot Salsa seem like ultra-mild.

  • Avatar Todd "Jag" P. says:

    White guy here. 40 something.

    I usually go with the Medium.

    Just enough kick to feel nice.

    The Hot variety is unpleasant.

    Not so sure of the correlation with black people, though.

    Ethnic? Mostly true.

    But I get it. This is not meant to be conveying fact, just a gag.

    HA HA

    Actually had me LOL for first time in a while.

    I think my wife is going to think I’m finally losing it.

  • Avatar Jeanette says:

    I noticed this growing up in intermediate and high school as well as in college. Now I am older and it is not so easy making friends.

    But I do remember how it was. Meeting new girls and hanging out and meeting their sisters and families. Eating dinner with them. Sometimes breakfast if we were younger and I had slept over.

    I learned very quickly to ask HOW HOT something is before diving right in. My Chinese friend took myself and another girl out with their entire family for a birthday party. This was in a restaurant in the back room portion. One long table. And I didn’t ask.

    There were these black little shriveled up peppers on one chicken dish. I ate one bigger one! They were there just for flavoring. I guess some guests ate them? But after I ate one I was told by the relative sitting near me whom i did not even know to only eat them if I enjoy the really hot taste. I had never had anything so hot! I kept putting ice cubes in my mouth. They were very sympathetic. But they said just wait. It will get better. It did. But I did not enjoy the experience at all.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

code