I might have picked up this book to have an excuse to do a little goggling and figure out that story, as my fingers type here.
WuMo: Something Is Wrong is a 2015 collection of the strip - I say "strip," but it's always a single panel, laid out in the wide horizontal format of an American daily, with one joke and no continuing characters - with a big note on the cover to say that it collects the best strips. Even assuming that the strip has gotten better in the past decade, since we always hope things get better over time, that looked like a good place to start.
OK, let me start with my assumption: I think "Wulff" and "Morgenthaler" are real people, probably both men, and that they're not American. My guess is that they're European, something vaguely Germanic. I have no idea how a panel by a couple of Europeans would have gotten into American syndication a decade or two ago, but let's see if I can find out.
According to Wikipedia, which I always believe when it says I'm correct, I am basically correct. Mikael Wulff, a comedian, writes the strip, and Anders Morgenthaler, a cartoonist and animator, draws it. [1] They're Danish, and it started in Denmark in 2001, getting syndicated in the US in 2013. It was originally titled Wulfmorgenthaler (apparently without the internal capital, a good idea to keep them from looking like a law firm), but switched to the shorter version about a year before the American syndication deal (i.e.: mid-2012, a long time ago).
It's a gag-a-day strip, in that vague post-Far Side territory where a strip has a sensibility and a style and a tone without having continuing characters or a sitcom-style set-up. WuMo panels take place just about anywhere, featuring animals and people and fantasy creatures, all drawn a bit lumpy and rumpled. The tone is more goofy than iconoclastic - perhaps why it has found a home in American newspapers - and often drops into "the secrets of modern life" mode. It reads smoothly, but I've always thought the phrasing is subtly off: I've always thought it was translated from some other language, so I was happy to find out that was Danish.
(I also see that the panel might be somewhat different in Europe: there's a major, very popular character - also appearing on related TV shows! - called Dolph the Fascist Hippo who I don't think has ever showed up on my shores. And that's a shame: if there had been a big, brightly-colored idiot on newspaper pages every day starting in 2012, saying self-evidently stupid fascist things that people actually laughed at, it might have stolen a market niche from a different brightly-colored fascist idiot who rose to his current prominence slightly later.)
It's funny, and it's off-kilter, and its sensibility is subtly different from anything else on American comics pages today - my working assumption is that's because Wulf and Morgenthaler are not American. The drawing is funny, too: that's nice to see.
I don't think there are a lot of WuMo books in English. (On Amazon right now, I'm finding a handful of what look like pre-name-change Danish collections, and some calendars from the late Teens, and only this book.) So, if you want to try the strip, this is your best package when reading in English.
Or, as always with an ongoing strip, you can just go to the page where the strip lives - it's on GoComics; I linked it up top - and read today's strip. Then come back tomorrow, rinse and repeat.
I probably don't need to explain that to you people, do I? I hope not.
[1] Wikipedia does not actually say this explicitly. It credits the strip to both of them, and says what else they do: Wulf makes jokes, Morgenthaler draws and animates. It's possible they both write gags for the strip, or write gags together. It's also just barely possible that Wulf is involved in the art in some way. But I'm sticking to the most boring possible explanation.
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