When DST ends you set your clock back 1 hour (or it does it automatically nowadays) in the middle of the night, gaining 1 hour of extra sleep
The joke here is that the guy did the same for Leap Day, setting his clock back 24 hours and gaining 24 hours of sleep, so when his boss called at 2pm he was in the middle of his ~32h night
It didn’t become 2 AM. It was still 2 PM, but on a day that Jenkins already worked.
Jenkins was planning to go to bed on Wednesday the 28th at 10 PM and had his next alarm set for 6 AM on Thursday the 1st. He then adjusted his clock back to Tuesday the 27th at 10 PM.
But that’s not a good joke, IMHO. It strains credulity even in the context of a comic strip and is so counterintuitive and unrelatable that no one here was in the cartoonist’s head space.
Love how nobody got the joke
When DST ends you set your clock back 1 hour (or it does it automatically nowadays) in the middle of the night, gaining 1 hour of extra sleep
The joke here is that the guy did the same for Leap Day, setting his clock back 24 hours and gaining 24 hours of sleep, so when his boss called at 2pm he was in the middle of his ~32h night
But how does setting his clock back 24 hours mean that 2pm becomes 2am? 12 hours, yes. 24 hours, no?
It didn’t become 2 AM. It was still 2 PM, but on a day that Jenkins already worked.
Jenkins was planning to go to bed on Wednesday the 28th at 10 PM and had his next alarm set for 6 AM on Thursday the 1st. He then adjusted his clock back to Tuesday the 27th at 10 PM.
It seems like a better joke for a child going to school, then. An adult would have already experienced many leap years.
It’s also just not a connection most people would make. How do leap years and daylight savings relate at all?
I didn’t get the joke until it was explained, but I can explain this much.
In the fall, for daylight savings, you set the clock one hour back. Basically, you get an extra hour that is inserted into the night.
In leap years, you get an extra day, so the joke is that this extra day is inserted into the night.
The analogy doesn’t account for the spring part of daylight savings.
But that’s not a good joke, IMHO. It strains credulity even in the context of a comic strip and is so counterintuitive and unrelatable that no one here was in the cartoonist’s head space.