Comix System

For all things comics and for all things.


www.reynoldbot.com


This may be an oldie, but it’s definitely a goodie.

Here’s a collection of scary-ass tv logos from our childhood.  The harsh, ominous synth tunes accompanying these logos are scary enough by themselves.

This is an amazing real-time look at the plane crash in Lost done in 24 styling.  Awesome!

juliavickerman:

danforth:

leitepreto:

steveagee:a12thway2reachme:(via gconnect)


Yay! I made this and it looks like it’s getting around!

Danforth, you made this?? I’ve been telling people about how clever it is for days.

Go Team Coco!

juliavickerman:

danforth:

leitepreto:

steveagee:a12thway2reachme:(via gconnect)

Yay! I made this and it looks like it’s getting around!

Danforth, you made this?? I’ve been telling people about how clever it is for days.

Go Team Coco!

Good god Kimmel just eviscerates Leno on his own show.  It’s good to see someone really stick it to him right to his face.

YEAH GET IM!  KILL THOSE DINOSAURS!  He may be cute now, but in ten years these things will have killed every living thing on earth.

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

An enigmatic title for a truly strange song, it’s Firemen In The Flood by The Great Scotts. This is a brand new recording by me featuring 40% new rich buttery musical goodness.

This tune no doubt came to us during one of our usual aimless jam sessions (or several, judging by how it sounds).  It was ultimately one of our more complex tracks and was a blast to play live (especially since I usually needed an audience member to stand next to me and hand me the slide during the freakout sections).  The only problem is that the original song is mind-numbingly repetitive, so I added the extended bridge both to spice things up a bit and to showcase the guitar for once.

Tropical Disease by Air. Their most recent album Love 2 is freaking phenomenal.

Reblogged from pixarmovies
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Ah the life of a snail….that’s the life for me.  Snail Song by the Great Scotts ponders the great mysteries of the gastropod mind.

This song came into fruition almost exactly as you hear it now during a routine band practice when consistent tagalong/roadie/fangirl Jenna asked us to write a song from the perspective of a snail.  Like most of our songs, this one was lots of fun to play live and always got a laugh out of our audience.