Artist, writer, comic, hacker, loud voice, and nerd of all trades from New York City.
He/him. 💙💜🩷
All original content I post here is licensed Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 Int’l.
Fuck censorship.
This was from a webcomic from around ten(?) years ago called “Pictures In Boxes.” It was at PicturesInBoxes.com but the site is gone, the Web Archive coverage is spotty, and I haven’t been able to track down the specific URL for this one.
The artist’s shop has prints of this comic but not stickers, but he has other stickers of his work. Maybe he’d entertain a request to do some stickers of these.
deleted by creator
If you watch Titanic in reverse it’s about a sad lady floating on a door who idly fishes a cute boy out of the ocean and brings him onto a big fancy steamship that has conveniently sprouted up over by an iceberg, where they have steamy no-strings vacation sex until they split up because they each find new boyfriends on the ship they’d rather go to Europe with.
It feels intangibly relevant somehow that Alec Guinness was wearing a toupee when he played original Obi-Wan.
And that’s how the Kong Banana Hoard got started.
They did both misspell their band names.
Shannon Wheeler’s work has been criminally underrated for decades.
Diced onions are for amateurs. Pyramided onions are where it’s at.
I’m a New Yorker and used to date a person from Chicago. We saw eye-to-eye on many things, but we had to be okay with the fact that this debate was not among them.
…Shaking more red pepper flakes onto your dollar slice?
We’d all still be drinking baby bottles.
Link to the original post (on Fesshole’s official Mastodon because fuck Twitter) - https://mastodon.social/@fesshole/113069359291052427
An assistive listening device, a road interchange, a series of satellites, a news magazine, an ice cream cone, and some other stuff.
And when blue LEDs just started being available prop designers for scifi loved them because LEDs work much better on screen than incandescent bulbs, and as blue lights were something people didn’t have yet in their household objects they looked new and interesting. Look at the Doctor Who and Torchwood props from the mid 2000s, everything from the iconic Sonic Screwdriver to alien zappers and bleepers and greebles of all kinds were full of tiny blue lights because it screamed “scifi” to the viewer.
Very quickly, though, blue LEDs got cheap enough for everyday junk and manufacturers immediately shoved them into every consumer product because they were new and interesting and, thanks in part to the scifi trend, made stuff look like scifi future tech you could have in real life.
Now, a couple decades on, we’re still kind of stuck there.
You just can’t get a good woodland-critter-saliva sauce in the big city.
Christiann MacAuley, the artist who made this, is on the Fediverse if anyone’s interested: https://mas.to/@xiann