Old Nobody is the character of another comic from the same time period, by Clifton Meek. Meek apparently ghost-wrote a few Everett True comics as well. It seems like Nobody's gimmick started off with more or less the exact same first panel as Everett comics, but Nobody's thing would be that he would never actually challenge the problem because he's "nobody"
why does E.T. call Ol Nobody a "loafer", after he went through the trouble of bringing his umbrella?
why can't I find any info about "Old Nobody" on the web? Is this a figment of my imagination? It seems like he should have some Powers, like Punch Dodge or something like that.
That's a really nice Oi-Zuki Jodan, btw, though True-san's leaning a bit too far forward. Or maybe Everett "The Outburst" True was originally a boxer?
Does anybody have more info about "Old Nobody", btw?
A "loafer" is an old timey word for tramp, from German/Dutch "landlaufer" meaning "land walker".
The rest is speculation, but I think this is a sort of anger at nobody returning his umbrella. Nobody does this, which is why this "person" is just a stick. Someone stole Ev's umbrella and didn't return it. But you can beat up nobody, so, here's a literal strawman to beat up.
Looks like someone had basically the same idea at the same time with another character, only the punchline was that "nobody" challenged the thing instead of Everett (forcefully) doing it
Old Nobody looks like the start of a creepypasta. Like in all aspects of their being. Weirdly shaped, no information, people hostile to it (although this is True, he's hostile to almost everyone). Just weird!
In the source comic that Skua pointed to, the second panel is basically that character saying "you know who returns umbrellas? NOBODY!" But E.T. cut him off by bonking him.
The character also put me in mind of those old Family Circus cartoons, when the kids did something evil, the parents would say "who did that?" and the kids would say "Not me!" and "Nobody!" And there'd be invisible ghost-kids with labels like Not Me and Nobody on them running around.
My guess is that True is objecting to someone using the passive voice: having borrowed his umbrella without asking and then returning it without taking responsibility, insinuating that persons unknown are to blame for the inconvenience that he is now taking the credit for remedying.