Dean Scott, DVM, started drawing cartoons to stay awake during veterinary school. He sketched his way through what he refers
to as a four-year sentence at University of California-Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and says he was released on his
own recognizance in 1993. After serving (lunches and dinner, mainly) in the U.S. Army Veterinary Corps and becoming co-owner
of Animal Clinic of Brandon in Brandon, Fla., Scott realized he had dozens of veterinary-related cartoons lying around collecting
dust. "As a veterinarian all I could think was, 'How else can I not make money?'" Scott says.
 LOLdogs: Each cartoon goes through a rigorous approval process with the FunnyVet staff. Scott also has three cats—they don’t
find him funny.
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And then he created
http://funnyvet.com/. The site has evolved during the past six years and is bursting with song parodies about the profession, ridiculous client
comments, veterinary truisms and a humorous blog, in addition to cartoons. The content on Scott's site may be lighthearted,
but his main motivation for the site is actually quite serious.
"I hear about the high suicide rate of veterinarians and how much pressure we're under all the time," Scott says. "My goal
is to provide some humor in my own small way. I really think there's a need for it."
 Did you recently have a ridiculous exchange with a client or a hilarious experience with a patient? Send your cartoon ideas
to Dean Scott, DVM, using the contact form at funnyvet.com—he’s always looking for inspiration.
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More than 3,000 veterinarians and veterinary team members from across the map visit
http://funnyvet.com/ every month—no joke. Thanks to Google analytics, he knows doctors from Korea, India and Japan frequently log on and the site
has recently gone viral in Brazil.
"I have received more thanks and praise in six years for
http://funnyvet.com/ than I have in 19 years as a veterinarian," Scott says. "I don't know if that says more about my medical expertise or the
cartoons."
Scott says updating the site has become therapy for him as well as his audience. He posts 10 to 25 new cartoons every month
and will upload cartoon number 1,000 in October. "This site has grown beyond anything I dreamed it would be," he says.
He's created YouTube (funnyvetdotcom) and Facebook (
http://FunnyVet.com/) pages complete with satirical videos and updates on the latest funny business on his website. Scott also manages a CafePress
store with T-shirts, bags, wall decals and more with catchphrases like, "My patients walk all over me" and "It's all fun and
games until the anal glands explode."
Scott was first inspired to deal with stress through humor in veterinary school. He noticed the classes and exams weren't
difficult just for him—everyone was having a tough time. He went on to write From the Back Row: A List of Veterinary School Stresses as Viewed by a Study on Prozac (CattleDog Pub, 1999) and the sequel, Vet Med Spread (BookMasters Publishing, 2010). "It started out as a top 10 list of school stresses," Scott says. "Ten wasn't enough, so I
made it a top 1,000 list."
Now, it's client questions and interactions that get his wheels turning. Scott never identifies the pet owners in his cartoons
and so far only one new client has discovered funnyvet .com—and she still made an appointment, he says. Scott's currently
finishing an ebook called The Incomplete Dog Book: Nothing You Ever Wanted to Know About Dogs. He says the profession is sometimes much too serious and veterinarians can lighten up a bit.
Scott says he admires well-known funny veterinarians such as Michael Obenski (Where did I go wrong? Full moon follies), Bo
Brock (Stampede: What would the horse say?) and Robert Miller (a featured columnist in DVM's sister publication Veterinary Medicine), but as far as he's concerned, there can never be too much humor. Scott says stress is lessened when veterinarians band
together and poke fun at daily challenges. "There's nothing better than getting people to laugh and appreciate the absurdity
that happens our profession," Scott says.