Credits and Contact Information
Possibly you are a wealthy publisher type person and are so astounded by the work you have seen on these sites that you want to find out who we are and get in touch with us so you can lavish us with the praise, money and power we so obviously deserve. More likely, you are so horribly offended by the material here that you feel an urgent need to find out who the hell created this repugnant crap in an effort to avoid them at all costs. Whatever your needs, this is the page where all is revealed. ...Well, where some is revealed.

The Page of Links
You didn't think we're just out here on our own, did you? The Internet is a dangerous place and a lone person could get snapped up in a minute by all the hungry beasts that lurk in its various scary depths. This page will give you quick access to pages run by the other denizens of this little fetid pool in which we live.

A Few Additional Random Things
If you've gotten this far and like what you've seen, then you'll probably dig this Other Stuff.

Sucking
This is a really, really old episode of The Pinkey Suthers Show.

To Mars And Back
The Pinkey Suthers Show originally appeared in The Daily Cardinal, a daily student newspaper at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. (Well, actually the show originally appeared in a newsletter for the computer labs run by the university housing people, but we won't go into that here). In the Cardinal, Pinkey appeared in a variety of formats. This is a sort of experimental serialized story, and not a very successful one at that. A note to any aspiring cartoonist: you have to avoid creating vertical columns in your strip when you are writing in horizontal rows, otherwise the readers won't know which panel comes next. This story originally ran in four sections on four different days, which is why there are four sets of panels numbered 1 through 6.
I realize that this is hard to read. If you have a lot of trouble making out the words, don't worry: you're probably not missing anything. I'm only putting this thing up here for people who remember the strips from the Cardinal. Ah, nostalgia.

Monkey Love In Space
This is a comic strip starring characters from Dylan Graham's irregularly reoccurring series called The Small Ship. Santiago, a monkey boy hated by the crew of the small ship, appear here in completely the wrong garb. He has a kind of TMNT mask instead of his usual Lone Ranger kind of thing and seems to have left his hat off entirely. I don't know what happened to him on his way to the drawing board that he got his outfit so completely wrong, but at least he made it to the strip.

87k
David Heagle is not just a great cartoonist, he has other talents. Here we get a chance to listen to Mr. Heagle wax robotic via the vocoderizations of Operation Reinformation's MacinTalk controlling software Talk Back To Basics. This is a super wonderful pop song, the likes of which you have probably never heard but, since this is pop music, you are probably going to feel very comfortable listening to.

Otaku
Exciting! A whole book made available online for your enjoyment. Well, for your something, anyway. This is a collaborative project between David Heagle and Dylan Graham. In the physical world, this story appears in and accordion fold book with hard covers. The panels run not only across the gutter but over the fore edge as well, fully utilizing the opportunities provided by the book's structure and keeping us from ever being able to submit it for publication.


         

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