All Posts tagged gay

posted by jeremy
April 28, 2010

Lieutenant Snazzy Saved My Life

no-strings-attached

Sometimes life operates at such a level of astounding stupidity, you can only bang your head against a brick wall or laugh. I chose the latter. Comedy duo Holt & Steele tackles the issue of gays in the military using puppets for Funny or Die. My favorite quotes: “How am I supposed to kill those ragheads when some feltface is singing songs about butterfly kisses and caring behind me?” and “What’s wrong with the alphabet, lady?” I wonder what Felt Mistress has to say about puppets serving in the military???

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filed under: Igloo | | | |
posted by jeremy
April 20, 2010

We Are Brothers with Le Merde, Johnny Ryan and Matt Furie

We Are Brothers with Le Merde, Johnny Ryan and Matt Furie at Giant Robot

Take three male designers who grew up amidst a landscape of comics and counterculture, transport them to San Francisco and band them together for a brotherly love fest of art. Result? The art scene equivalent of what Joel McHale would feature on his Talk Soup segment, “GAY SHOWS!” Giant Robot hosted Le Merde (Mike Kelly), Johnny Ryan and Matt Furie for an epic assembly of affordable art. Almost everything is priced under $50, and well, a lot of it is really gay. With titles like Buttmasters of the Universe, Fancy a Poke, Pickle Eater, Pecker Eggs, Taste the Rainblow and the poignant pictorial, Balls Copter, the only thing that would make this show gayer would be if there were glory holes beneath the drawings.

Johnny Ryan's Planet of The Alfs

Johnny Ryan has never shied away from tackling sexual subject matter in his Angry Youth Comix. I’m guessing this is the kind of show where art buyers definitely care about the provenance of a piece, so please be advised that Balls Copter initially appeared in early 2010 in this comic. Hot button issues like interspecies dating (as seen in Planet of the Alfs) were also explored.

Johnny Ryan for We Are Brothers

The designers all dipped their quills into a gaping cavern of pop culture. It all seemed very tongue-in-cheek. Or possibly something else in cheek. See Van Halen and God above.

Le Merde for We Are Brothers

Le Merde opened up his arsenal of characters, seeding the walls of the gallery with Hollis, Van Far and the gang. Mike was there for the show and remarked how awesome it is to be able to pick up a Johnny Ryan at a $50 price point. True! Read the rest of this entry »