For those of you who are regulars of my comic, "Imagine THIS," you're well aware that my main character Clovis has some kind of beef against the actor who portrays the character/mascot "Snuggle the Bear."
Why? Who knows. The absurdity of the concept is what cracks me up.
Here is a funny little doodle I did of the two a while back, just to give you an idea. Enjoy!
Friday, March 4, 2011
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Break Time Sketch -- Max
I've got Dr. Seuss on the brain lately. There are a couple of reasons for this.
1st: yesterday was Dr. Seuss' birthday.
2nd: when I got home from work last night, my son asked if he could watch "The Grinch" cartoon.
Needless to say, I might be throwing Seuss characters up here for the next few days. Here's the first: the Grinch's dog Max.
1st: yesterday was Dr. Seuss' birthday.
2nd: when I got home from work last night, my son asked if he could watch "The Grinch" cartoon.
Needless to say, I might be throwing Seuss characters up here for the next few days. Here's the first: the Grinch's dog Max.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Benefits of the Ever-Recycling Cold
If you've been following me on Twitter, then you know that my kids and I have been battling colds since late November, early December. It's been awful. One of the worst cold/flu seasons I can remember in many years. But it has also been one of the best. Because I was able to spend more time with my boys then I normally could.
For those who don't know, I'm a big kid at heart. When the opportunity comes for me to play robots with my kids, pretend I'm a giant super-villain dinosaur, or bust into lightsaber duals in the middle of lunch, I seize the moment.
The other thing about spending a LOT of time with someone, is you begin to understand how they think. During week 4 of our quarantine, I witnessed my 3-year-old's imagination explode with hilarious creativity. When he and I would play, he would create characters, locations, and crazy situations that would resolve themselves in ways you wouldn't expect. It's incredible.
In fact, his stories are so hilariously strange, I've been writing them down in a Moleskine notebook after he goes to bed, so that he could look back on them 20 or 30 years and enjoy them as much as I did. The whole thing reminds me of the magic that is Axe Cop. I'm such a huge fan of that comic.
After I had about 6 or 7 different stories written down, I thought this totally would work as a comic. So I decided, what the heck! And I turned a few of these stories into comics. I'm thinking of posting them, just for giggles.
Would you be interested in seeing some of them?
Remember, they were written by a 3-year-old. So you kind of have to just go with it.
Here is one of his main recurring characters. A robot who's all about vigilante justice:
For those who don't know, I'm a big kid at heart. When the opportunity comes for me to play robots with my kids, pretend I'm a giant super-villain dinosaur, or bust into lightsaber duals in the middle of lunch, I seize the moment.
The other thing about spending a LOT of time with someone, is you begin to understand how they think. During week 4 of our quarantine, I witnessed my 3-year-old's imagination explode with hilarious creativity. When he and I would play, he would create characters, locations, and crazy situations that would resolve themselves in ways you wouldn't expect. It's incredible.
In fact, his stories are so hilariously strange, I've been writing them down in a Moleskine notebook after he goes to bed, so that he could look back on them 20 or 30 years and enjoy them as much as I did. The whole thing reminds me of the magic that is Axe Cop. I'm such a huge fan of that comic.
After I had about 6 or 7 different stories written down, I thought this totally would work as a comic. So I decided, what the heck! And I turned a few of these stories into comics. I'm thinking of posting them, just for giggles.
Would you be interested in seeing some of them?
Remember, they were written by a 3-year-old. So you kind of have to just go with it.
Here is one of his main recurring characters. A robot who's all about vigilante justice:
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