Feed aggregator
Dragon Boi
Extra 005 - Bait and Switch Novel Excerpts - novel excerpts by Music cues by In Fenton's world, some kids are toons. Some think the change is biological. Others think the change is social. But some kids turn into toons, and Fenton's father just wants i
Bait and Switch novel excerpts by Austen Crowder
Music cues by Infinity Squared
In Fenton's world, some kids are toons. Some think the change is biological. Others think the change is social. But some kids turn into toons, and Fenton's father just wants it to stop. He's even built a Realist movement to ban toons from the real world, hoping that it will keep his own children from following in their estranged mother's cartoon footsteps.
Tensions rise as the Realists lobby to get their ban set into law, and toons fight for their right to be themselves. Fenton's father knows he can count on his two boys to stand behind him and his dream of building a safe, a toon-free reality. It's just too bad that Fenton's becoming a toon....
Bait and Switch is a coming-out story which uses the metaphor of Toon Town encroaching on the Real World. As Austen describes it, it’s Boys Don’t Cry meets Who Framed Roger Rabbit. It’s a moving story, with powerful drama. While the situation revolves around issues both personal and political, the story is never a manifesto. Instead characters on both sides of the fence come off as human and nuanced, as they try to do what they think is right.
Extra 005 - Bait and Switch Novel Excerpts - novel excerpts by Music cues by In Fenton's world, some kids are toons. Some think the change is biological. Others think the change is social. But some kids turn into toons, and Fenton's father just wants it to stop. He's even built a Realist...I've seen better
<lj-embed id="363" /><br /><br /
Georges St-Pierre continues to be sexy. And hang out with fursuiters!
CGI Easter Bunny + Live Action movie =?
Starman and Congorilla
Okay, try to keep up here: Mikaal Thomas — known as the superhero Starman — and Congorilla — a talking ape from Gorilla City, made famous in the pages of The Flash — team up to “unlock the secrets behind the toxic Omega Man’s dark energy, which has encased Washington, D.C.”. All righty then. In this full-color one-shot from DC Comics, our heroes — one blue, one furry — encounter several friends and foes from the DC universe, including Animal Man, Sirocco, and “a certain wonder-dog named Rex”. You can thank writer James Robinson, illustrator Brett Booth, and cover-artist Gene Ha when Starman/Congorilla hits the shelves in early January.
Furries: a documentry
WRC in Edmonton
No write-up, just a cute photo ^_^
<lj-embed id="361" /
SoFurry music contest: Make the most of 16 samples
7 Vote(s)
Furries - An Inside Look
DAE get annoyed when newcomer furries spell Furry as 'Furrie'?
Season 5 - Show 31
Orangina, Furry Juice Ads Montage
Tales (Tails?) of the Trickster Spirit
Many cultures in our world have a long tradition of folklore relating to the trickster spirit — a being of great power who mostly uses that power to steal food or precious possessions, cheat at games, fool the opposite sex (or sometimes the same one!), and so forth. Often enough the trickster spirit is embodied as an animal — Reynard the fox from Europe and The Monkey King from Asia are great examples. Native American cultures also have rich traditions of trickster story, whether he (or she, or both) takes the form of a raven, a rabbit, a coyote, or whatever. Now Fulcrum Publishing have brought together many of these stories in a new full-color comic trade paperback: Trickster — Native American Tales — A Graphic Anthology, edited by Matt Dembicki. More than twenty Native American story-tellers worked together with a select group of artists to bring to life stories like “Coyote and the Pebbles”, “How Wildcat Caught a Turkey” , “Rabbit’s Choctaw Tail Tale”, and many more. Take a look at Fulcrum’s web site for the book.
Fur Affinity Temporarily Offline
9 Vote(s)
Business Deer is a Valuable Asset to add to Your Professional Lineup
Return of the Rescue Rangers
Once again BOOM! Studios have stepped up to the task of bringing the Disney Afternoon back to life. Following on the webbed heels of their successful Darkwing Duck comic book series, now comes the full-color return of Chip ‘n’ Dale’s Rescue Rangers, written by Ian Brill and illustrated by Leonel Castellani. You can see a preview of this new series, as well as the various alternate covers for the first issue, at BOOM! Studio’s web site.
Flash 016 - Both Sides Now - Renee Carter Hall gives us two dramatic shorts showing two views of the darker end of the spectrum of human/anthro interactions. "Sideshow" and "Cover of Darkness" by Read by Music cues by
Renee Carter Hall gives us two dramatic shorts showing two views of the darker end of the spectrum of human/anthro interactions.
"Sideshow" and "Cover of Darkness" by Renee Carter Hall
Read by Peter Katt
Music cues by Infinity Squared
Flash 016 - Both Sides Now - Renee Carter Hall gives us two dramatic shorts showing two views of the darker end of the spectrum of human/anthro interactions. "Sideshow" and "Cover of Darkness" by Read by Music cues by