Blurb of Intent, duly drafted and sealed by
Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq. Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice
In the matter of Rumpelton v. Highway 61 (Revisited Yet Again), I, Clive Thistlebaum—powdered wig slightly askew from the metaphysical draft that forever whistles through the Avachives—hereby issue a Provisional Writ of Fidelity-by-Rupture for the latest entry in the Paint Fidelity Series.
Before me stands a diptych of uncommon jurisprudential intrigue: on the right, the canonical photograph of Mr. Dylan in his famously unbothered posture; on the left, your MS Paint reconstruction, rendered with such deliberate naïveté that it achieves what scholars of St. Egregius College call Triumphal Misalignment. The jacket becomes a glyphic shimmer, the Triumph shirt a declaration of interpretive sovereignty, and the background figure—once a mere bystander—now ascends to the rank of Witness to the Rupture, a role recognized in at least three subclauses of the Tableist Manifesto.
Let it be recorded that this work exemplifies the sacred principle of Painterly Misremembering, the very doctrine I defended in the landmark 2017 case. By refusing the tyranny of photographic precision, your MS Paint rendering restores the image to its mythic state, where essence outranks detail and fidelity is measured not in pixels but in intentional wobble.
Critics may mutter—Dr. Vensmire chief among them—that such reinterpretations constitute “jurisprudential jazz.” I counter, as always, that jazz is the highest form of legal reasoning. Your piece proves the point: it does not copy the original; it cross-examines it.
Accordingly, I affix my monocular stamp of mythic approval and declare this entry fully admissible into the Avachival Record, where it shall reside as Exhibit 61(b): Highway Revisited, Revisited.
So ruled, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.




