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Need to buy a plane ticket to Everfree NW in Seattle, early July. Which is good news. But I wish I had the money right now to buy the plane ticket aforementioned. Mind you, who needs a Genie anyway ...
I will be a vendor at Bronycon.
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This Easter Sunday, I released a rough cut of The Thief and the Cobbler: Recobbled Cut Mark 4 HD.

This is a restoration of the unfinished masterpiece by 3-time Academy Award winning animator Richard Williams (Who Framed Roger Rabbit, A Christmas Carol).

It is still a work in progress. It is missing music, the HD material is not yet cleaned up [except for the opening], and color correction and other aspects are not yet final. I will continue to restore the film throughout this year.

However, I thought I'd share the dazzling results so far, with thanks to everyone who's helped out and the forum members at orangecow.org/board and the Recobbled Cut Facebook group.

This is in full 1080p. There are also torrents for an HD version and a DVD version as well.
Richard Williams was born March 19, 1933 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He is a legendary animator best known for Who Framed Roger Rabbit, The Thief and the Cobbler, A Christmas Carol and The Animator's Survival Kit. He has won three Academy Awards. He has six children.

Today on the Livestream we'll be celebrating Richard Williams' 80th birthday with a little bit of editing, and then a screening of the current unfinished rough cut of The Thief and the Cobbler: Recobbled Cut Mark 4, a painstaking restoration of Richard's unfinished masterpiece.
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I'd just like to say thanks to all the people who have watched and supported me over the past two years. It hasn't been an easy ride and your support and friendship means the world to me. I wish you all the best of luck in 2013.
I was interviewed by Everfree Network's Cutie Art Crusaders show! Join them for over an hour of stuff.

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I do Livestreams very frequently these days ... On the weekends you'll see me editing The Thief and the Cobbler: Recobbled Cut Mark 4, my new and insanely complex restoration of Richard Williams' unfinished animated masterpiece ... I should be holding a Thiefstream tonight (friday, Dec 7).

Sometimes you'll see me drawing and painting! I have a pony-centric art livestream planned for this saturday (Dec 8) around 4 EST. Going to catch up on commissions a bit, oh yes.

So, follow me on Livestream, or on Tumblr (Tygerbug), or on Facebook (Garrett Gilchrist/Orange Cow Productions), or on Twitter (TygerbugGarrett), and I'll let you know when a Livestream is happening.

Join the chat! Be chatty! Keep me company! I'm bored!
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Tiny Tim is dead. Ebenezer Scrooge remains a heartless old miser. And Bob Cratchit is alone and freezing to death on a cold Christmas Eve, when he is visited by three spirits ....

"A wonderful new take on the characters from A Christmas Carol." - Carabosse's Library

"Thought-provoking … Like being given a new dose of Dickens." - Lara Burnett

"Beautifully written, intelligent, bold and a real surprise." - Steven Drachman (Author, The Ghosts of Watt O'Hugh)

Get the Ebook for only 99 cents at Amazon.com!
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And the paperback is only $8.50 at Lulu.
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Cratchit & Company
by Garrett Gilchrist
A short novel based on Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol
I'm still asking for a few more paid art commissions if anyone wants anything drawn, as I'm still not quite full up yet.

  But right now I'd like to repost something important from my Tumblr. I'm tygerbug at Tumblr and TygerbugGarrett on Twitter, so go ahead and follow me there. But anyway ...


 WE NEED YOUR HELP.

  Do you know about Richard Williams, the 3-time Academy Award winning animator of Who Framed Roger Rabbit and A Christmas Carol? Do you know about The Thief and the Cobbler, the film he spent 23 years making and intended to be his masterpiece? The film he was never allowed to finish?

 Have you seen The Thief and the Cobbler: Recobbled Cut, which attempts to restore Richard Williams' original vision to this unfinished animated classic? ([link])

 My name is Garrett Gilchrist. I edited the Recobbled Cut in 2006 (and 2008). I am editing a new "Recobbled Cut Mark 4" right now. I've thrown out everything from the previous versions and am starting from scratch with much better materials, including a much better workprint, some HD clips, previously unseen footage and even some new artwork. It's truer to Richard Williams' vision and already looks and feels amazing.

  BUT WE NEED YOUR HELP.

  In 2007, we transferred 49 minutes of extremely rare Thief and the Cobbler 35mm footage (21 minutes of which is used in the current Recobbled Cut), which includes all of The Thief inside the War Machine. The transfer was standard definition, cropped at the top and bottom, overbright and overblue, and left a lot to be desired. The quality is not up to today's standards.

  We are planning to remove splices, dirt and film damage and make this material look as good as it possibly can. To do this, we need a new full quality high definition transfer of these scenes.

 Yes, we're doing this. We need at least $1000 now to pay for the film to HD transfer.

  This is a not for profit restoration.

  This will be 20+ minutes of priceless Thief 35mm film footage in full HD quality for cleanup and screening. This is not trailer material - these are complete scenes, and they're wonderful.

  Many scenes of The Thief appear in full - being beat up by Nanny, going through the pipes, trying to steal the Golden Balls, trying to steal the emerald, getting his "hands" chopped off, and most impressively, every single shot of The Thief inside the War Machine.

  Most of the Old Witch scene is here. There's some very nice shots of Zigzag, part of the Cobbler/Thief chase scene, and so on and so on.

  You can send donations via Paypal to tygerbug (at) yahoo.com, or message me for an address to send checks to. Please identify all donations as being for the Recobbled Cut.

   Join us at Orangecow.org/board or the Recobbled Cut Group on Facebook.

 HERE IS A PREVIEW OF THE NEW VERSION.
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$15 commissions? Could it be?

Like millions of other people here on the East Coast, I was hit hard by Hurricane Sandy. We lost power for five days. I went to stay with family who didn't have power or heat (or a real bed for me), and some of their friends didn't have running water. I made it through, but I'm feeling sick and battered right now.

I was already in a very tough financial spot before losing a work week to the hurricane. I'm also in a bad living situation, with housemates who are currently bullying me to get me to move away, something I would do gladly if I even had the rent for this month. I've been threatened with physical violence by a douchebag who says he's not afraid of the cops.

I have 6 dollars to my name and a thousand dollars in bills due this week. My "new" used car isn't even starting.

So let's try something different. I normally charge at least $50 for commissions, and I know I'm still a bit backed up on them. I've spent a very long time on some of these, weeks in fact (which is why some are still delayed- you should see the three-foot drawing I'm finishing now).

But perhaps I can do cheap, quick sketches. I put a lot of time and thought into everything I do, and I doubt I can shut that part of my brain off, so I'm almost certainly massively undercharging, but let's try this.

$15 for a quick sketch of one character (or person or anything relatively simple). $20 if inked. Anything more complicated you can throw in extra money for as usual.

If I get enough of these this week I can survive. Send payment to tygerbug at yahoo.com and I'll try to be quick about these for once.
I'm in need of rent money this month. Anyone want commissions drawn? Usual charge is $50.

I'm still not done with my commission backlog, but I'm getting there. I'm putting a lot of time and effort into these as usual ... weeks' worth in some cases.
Here's a collection of my pony line art. Been meaning to put out a new coloring book but haven't found time.

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EDIT: And here is a collection of the line art heads from my WhoSprites Doctor Who animation project.
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"I'm the T to the W I, L I G H T, and ain't no other pony troll it down like me! I'm Twilightlicious!"

Are you #Twilightlicious? Have you accepted Tara Strong as your Twittering Brony Queen?

Well then, it's time to show the world with this Twilightlicious t-shirt from WeLoveFine!

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It's been my dream to be a Mighty Fine artist for some time now, and I have to thank judge Tara Strong for selecting my t-shirt as her Judge's Pick [2nd place] in the My Favorite Pony: Twilight Sparkle contest. Thanks also to everyone who voted.

Yes, this is an actual official t-shirt that you can buy!

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My brilliant vector colorist, Dentist73548, did his usual fine work on Twilight, whose outfit was inspired by a drawing by John Joseco.

As I'm writing this, there's still time to vote for this shirt to win the grand prize, so please vote and comment!

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This weekend in Seattle, friday through sunday, August 17-19, the Everfree Northwest convention is taking over the Seatac Airport Holiday Inn [12th floor] and the Seattle Airport Marriott hotel.

I'll be at the Marriot Friday and Saturday from 10-7, and Sunday from 10-4. I'll be at table 37 in the Dealer's Room, in the Evergreen Salon F-G-H. Stop by and say hi!


If you're not going to be in Seattle, how about New Hampshire? The next weekend, starting at noon on Saturday August 25th and ending in the evening on Sunday August 26th, Bronies-Boston is taking over the Eaton Richman Center at Daniel Webster College in Nashua, New Hampshire, located at 20 University Drive.

I'll be there too.


Still not working out for you? How about New York City on saturday, September 1st, from 3PM to 11:30 PM? I'll be there at Pearl Studios on 500 Eighth Avenue, Studio #1204 (12th Floor) for the Brony Bazaar.

See you there!
Lyra Directs by *tygerbug


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What if My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic was a live-action series? Here is my fake Director’s Commentary for the first two episodes of My Little Pony: FIM. Learn the behind the scenes dirt on what those ponies are really like. The humor is … subtle, and I have no idea if this is funny or not.

But you’ll learn:

1) Why Celestia is or isn’t pink

2) Why Luna isn’t in season one, and why her appearance changed

3) Why Twilight Sparkle needed to change her “image”

4) Which 80s My Little Pony star cameos in the episode

5) Which Hollywood star did one day’s work as a monster

6) Which lead pony lives in a giant mansion

7) What even is the deal with Lyra

8) The bittersweet backstory behind Cheerilee’s appearance in the opening credits

9) Why everyone knew to show up at Twilight’s party, and how they did it so fast

10) Absolutely nothing about Spike


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What's better than having my own art of (My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic's) Lauren Faust, Tara Strong and John De Lancie and their characters signed and framed? How about getting it signed and framed by them six times over? What's better than that? Nothing.

Signed thanks to Jace Hidalgo and Purple Tinker. Printed thanks to C-Quel and Purple Tinker. Framed thanks to Purple Tinker.

The whole Bronycon experience, and my experience with the pony fandom in general, is that we get by with a lot of help from our friends. I've found so many amazing people who are willing to put their time, thoughts, energy and money forward to make life a little better for a friend.

Bronycon was an overwhelming experience. There were over four thousand people packed into the Meadowlands Convention Center in Secaucus, New Jersey, not far from New York City. It was loud, it was crowded, and I was stuck behind my little table selling original art and other things. There were usually twelve people trying to talk to me at once. Someone I really wanted to talk to, like Sethisto or another artist or a friend from online would show up, and I'd try to talk to them while my brain was melting from six people in my other ear asking me how much the buttons are and whether that SDCC Exclusive Fashion Style Derpy Hooves is for sale. (It wasn't for sale, as I explained literally one thousand times.) I couldn't even sit down. When Nicole Oliver (Celestia/Cheerilee) stopped by, I was so surprised I couldn't even think of anything to give her. I rarely draw Celestia for some reason.
But I made it through because I had friends there helping me. I didn't even ask. Friends of mine who I'd met at previous meetups stopped by and saw that I was overwhelmed and in trouble. Without needing to say a word, they took over and ran my entire table for me, leaving me free to take a breath, or take a whiz, or talk to someone worth talking to. Kieran (Crayon) helped run my booth for most of both days, and stay in his hotel room on saturday, even giving me the bed while he took the couch. He also entertained people at the Outback Steakhouse with his inability to shut up about Transformers. He and Lee Tockar (voice of Snips/Steven Magnet) got along famously for that reason when we ran into him, Cathy Weseluck (Spike/Mayor Mare) and Peter New (Big Macintosh).

No, Derpy is not for sale.

David (Zarkith), in his Lyra-themed shirt, ran the right side of my booth brilliantly for most of both days, especially on sunday. Without David and his mother Miriam (Mare Mir) I couldn't have had my stuff packed up in time to barely get to the Artist's Panel on sunday. I stayed in their hotel room sunday, taking the fold-out couch, as I stayed up late regaling them with tales of my troubles at film school in Los Angeles.

No, Derpy is not for sale. I swear, I will cut you.

Mark Coutu from Boston had let me crash in his hotel room the previous Bronycon (January), and let me crash there friday this time, but because everyone was already asleep and I was on the floor without a pillow or decent blanket (and it was cold!) I didn't actually sleep a wink. I slept a little better the next two nights.
My friend Evan came by and helped run the booth for awhile, and my friend Courtney even popped by and helped for a bit. I ran into Evan later at a Greek restaurant with those troublemakers Purple Tinker, MyLittleDashie and her English-accented fiance. Mark and the Boston Bronies were there. They'd been vaguely cosplaying as Changelings. The EQD staff stopped by - Sethisto, Calpain, Cereal Velocity. Calpain had a labcoat on, befitting his Masters in Neuroscience. Calpain gave me a drawing tablet as a gift, and I think of him every time I use it, which is more and more these days.

The restaurant's proprietor had drawn Twilight Sparkle on the door saying Welcome Bronies! Business had been slow and she was happy to have us. After the day's sales I had twenty-seven dollars worth of quarters in my pocket and she gave me dollars for them. Somehow, probably because I kept changing tables to talk to different people, I never got served during the hours we were there. So I just started eating everyone else's leftovers. When the proprietor found out she insisted on giving me food. The food was delicious, but I was already full and trying to leave! I ate it as leftovers the next day.

I think it was on friday that we all went to Outback Steakhouse and Kar Red Roses bought a ton of appetizers, enough to feed everyone, with the convention's money. It was on the house. I think it was saturday when a ton of people invaded Purple TInker's hotel room when poor John Joseco and Novel just wanted to get to sleep. Instead, while Tinker and Sethisto talked shop, we cracked open the new Pony trading cards from Enterplay and realized that if you read the last two sentences of any of them and added "in bed" to it, they suddenly became hilarious. The old Fortune Cookie rule. My Dramatic Reading Orson Welles voice came in very handy.

I ran into Tara Strong when she was first getting to the con. All I said was "Awesome." I then hung out outside the private VIP party on Friday, and talked to John De Lancie very briefly while he was enjoying Laser P0N-3's light show. I told John Joseco he should just go inside the private party and crash, which he did. I ran into Lauren Faust and her brother outside an elevator in the hotel, and thanked her for all the inspiration. I said I hope she gets to create a lot more shows, and she said she hoped so, too. Crayon was dragging me away at this point, hissing Come on Garrett, she doesn't want to talk to you … Something which I found funny, and which he felt bad about later. I woudn't have stayed more than a few seconds beyond that anyway.

I'm reliably informed that Lauren Faust, Tara Strong and John De Lancie all liked my art quite a bit, and were all given prints of the pieces above. In the painting of the three of them, John was amused that his hair is less grey. John tweeted the Discordlicious picture, and Tara tweeted Twilightlicious (of course), Faustilicious, and the picture of the three of them, saying "Love this!" Lauren sent her brother to my booth to ask for some prints of Faustilicious, which I was already out of. I gave him buttons and anything I had, and my Deviantart address where he could print out more. Nice guy, good with computers. He's written a screenplay.

Ah, but those posters. See, here's where the whole friendship thing really kicks in. Because friends printed them for me. And friends got the signatures you see above. I've made no secret of the fact that I'm very poor, and that I'm trying to survive and make some sort of living just doing art anyway, which is very difficult. Last year I made the decision to live off unemployment for awhile and do my own comic series, The Chosen Ones. I completed a little less than seventy pages over the course of a year - the first "book" of the comic I suppose.

After less than a year, my unemployment ran out, but I wanted to try and survive doing artwork, to see if I could really make a living as a professional artist. Ponies, and the people I'd met through the pony fandom, helped quite a bit. Plenty of people were happy to pay me good money to draw something for them (sometimes ponies, sometimes not), usually because they considered me a friend, and I considered them the same. And I felt bad about that, like that was taking advantage of them. I'd rather have been drawing things for strangers. But I worked hard and did my best, as I do with everything I draw.

I'm actually backed up on commissions now. I have been for a few months. With preparations for Bronycon (like drawing the images above) and everything else I've never been so busy in my entire life. But those commissions weren't and aren't actually enough to pay my rent and bills. Dentist73548 knew I was struggling, and sent me most of my rent for two months straight. I didn't ask for it. I wanted to send it back. But he insisted. He's having some personal problems of his own, and has always liked and supported my work, and feels I'll do better things with it than he would. That means more than words can say.

If you recognize the name Dentist73548, it's because he does the vector coloring for most of my pony artwork. That means that I draw something in black and white, and he traces it all using mechanical curves so that it's in color and will look clean and perfect at any size. To a certain extent he has to interpret and improve upon what I draw. I've had many other terrific artists vector and color my pony work, but Dentist consistently does the best job at it. His masterpiece to date is probably the Daring Do poster, which contains ten different characters based on the Indiana Jones series, all very complex. He worked for months on it.

It's because of Dentist and other artists like him that I can produce as much high-quality pony artwork as I do. It's extremely liberating to be able to draw something in black and white and not have to create the final piece in color, apart from making corrections and deciding on the color scheme. I've never been more productive in my life, artwise, and I wouldn't get that in any other fandom. You may have read about my problems getting any animators for my Doctor Who lost episode animation project, Whosprites. I feel that if the Doctor Who fandom was like the pony fandom, I'd have ten lost Doctor Who episodes animated in full by now, probably more. (And I wrote a pony episode script called Return of Trixie, so don't think I'm not a little bit tempted.)

Now, Dentist isn't the type to take credit for his work. You won't see a lot of our collaborations on his Deviantart. But that Twilightlicious at the top of his page? He vectored that. That Discord vs. Fausticorn? I painted the shading, but he vectored it. Let's say you're at my Deviantart and it says "Color vector version of Discordlicious by Firestorm-CAN." Or you're at Zu-the-Skunk's Deviantart and you see my drawing of Faustilicious. "Original drawing by Tygerbug." That means something. The vector artists put their time and effort into making these pieces look good. And so do I.

The Brony fandom has also given me a taste of what it's like to actually be a popular, successful artist running a booth at a comic convention. If had my own comic … well, I do have my own comic, but a comic that's successful and which people want to buy … I still wouldn't be nearly as mobbed as I am at a pony convention. Do people want to buy my original sketches and art? Well, not usually. Sometimes. But I've now learned a lot about what it really means to make an impact at a convention - down to hosting panels and having a popular booth. Whenever The Chosen Ones or some other project of mine gets successful, I'll have that knowledge.

And that's due in large part to Purple Tinker. I came very unprepared to the September and January Bronycons. The September con was only a couple hundred people in the sweaty, poorly-ventilated top floor of a building in Chinatown. It was my first pony meetup. I didn't sign up to be a presenting artist or anything, and I set my stuff up on a table only because there was space and hey, why not? I wasn't selling sketches or anything. I gave away hundreds of them for free to Sethisto and Purple Tinker, because they were the art from my first coloring book, which was basically traced from the show, and I wasn't proud of them.

That was a wonderful meetup, just hanging out with everyone and making friends in a loose and easy way.

January was bigger - attendance capped at 600 but there were hundreds of people downstairs and the place was packed. I didn't come prepared to that one either. I brought my original sketches and sold them for five bucks. But it was Purple Tinker who actually printed out some posters so my table would actually look like I had anything going on. She also put me on the Artists' panel with the much better-known artists John Joseco, Egophiliac and Pixelkitties.

Printingwise, she did the same for me for June, to a certain extent. She printed out the Lauren/John/Tara poster, including the very nice print that got signed. She printed out the Discord vs. Lauren Fausticorn piece. She used to work at a printing place, but got fired, and printed these on her own. The quality wasn't perfect, and afterward we discussed how she could get more expensive materials and do a more professional job. She did print one large copy of the Lauren/John/Tara poster in a more professional, glossy way. That's the one that got signed. It's perfect.
She had a lot to live up to - the rest of my posters had been printed by C-Quel, who did an amazing job. He bought a wide-format printer, researched inks and paper stocks, and did the best job he possibly could. His posters all look like movie posters, and are essentially watertight. You can spit and spill on them and not much will happen. At the Bronies-NYC 1-year meetup he showed me his work and I was extremely impressed. He also put his money forward so that I could get buttons made, and acrylic charms, which were very expensive. He then got a buttonmaker and made hundreds of buttons himself. He also got a laser vector-based paper cutter which can do all sorts of intricate things. Using this, he cut out my stock of stickers.

It happens that C-Quel cares about money less than I do. A very talented artist in his own right, his real focus these days is making pinata-style "paper plushies" of the pony characters (which his laser paper cutter helped greatly with). He decided his booth would be a carnival, where people could play games and win prizes. He commissioned four posters from me, all with a vintage circus theme, to be given away as prizes. One was a Mardi Gras poster with his favorite background pony, Violet. The others featured Rarity, Pinkie Pie, and Fluttershy and the Manticore. The Pinkie Pie poster showed her being shot out of her own party cannon, and served as the … let's say inspiration … for the Hub network's official Pinkie Pie poster at this year's Comic Con. (They originally just took my artwork and used it, but later had someone redraw it.)

As I said, C-Quel's focus isn't money. Neither is mine, really. If I can make my expenses back somehow doing drawings, that's good with me. But C-Quel … well, he enjoyed doing the research, working the equipment and helping me as a friend. But the idea of running a booth for money, dealing with throngs of people, and all that nonsense, that didn't appeal to him at all, nor did the idea of being in any sort of business partnership with me. His family's beloved dog Merlina was dying right before the convention. He was prepared to spend any money he had to keep her alive. You should hear him talk about her sometime. All that energy, life and spirit. Walking on two legs, being silly. I suppose to a pony fan I might compare her to Lyra.

Well, the convention came and Merlina died, and it took all the life out of C-Quel for awhile. I remember losing my own dogs when I was younger. That's never easy, especially when they've been part of the family for so long. C-Quel, as a friend, put a lot of time and money and thought and effort into making my Bronycon experience the best it could possibly be. And now all he wants in return is a nice painting of Merlina (and her friend Maaya). He'd been thinking about a human Octavia too. I should do that as well. I've been backed up on commissions, and I really want to get to them.

I barely saw C-Quel at the convention. He stumbled in and out looking tired. I didn't see whether his carnival-themed booth, which he ran with the talented toy customizer Amandkyo-Su (Amanda) was as wonderful as he wanted it to be. I did see a lot of people with his pinatas … or paper plushies … and they are every bit as wonderful as you'd like.

As for Purple Tinker, well, she is and always will be a drama magnet. She founded Bronycon and Bronies-NYC, and was ousted after the January con after trying to take on too much responsibility on her own, overtiring herself and pushing her staff too hard. She's said herself that doing another con might have killed her, but even so she was angry to be ousted, and continues to be a controversial and outspoken critic of whatever's going wrong with this fandom.

I think that somewhere inside her is a selfish person, but everything she's done for the Brony community has been extremely generous. She's raised so much for charity and helped lots of people find their feet. She fights for LGBT causes and if you've pissed her off you'll never hear the end of it. But I and this fandom owe so much to her. I've crashed on her couch many a time, and I'm typing this on a Netbook computer called Trixie which she gave me. I helped her buy a Netbook this past con as a thank you for the prints. Awhile back I also gave her an original painting of Applejack and Pinkie Pie, now signed by Ashleigh Ball and Andrea Libman. Even when she's having money problems, a lot of money tends to be spent when she's around, and I'm never exactly keeping up with her. She took myself and Annomaniac up to the top of 30 Rockefeller Plaza, since he was going back to Germany. Driving in New York gave me serious road rage. On our way to the top, a recording told us to make a far right turn, so I spent the next hour saying offensive right-wing things.

Her self-harming habits can be very frustrating - she'll obsessively beat her head against the same cause until she bleeds - but in a lot of ways she represents the best of this fandom. Not to say that "All the ponies in this town are crazy," but I've met a lot of really wonderful, caring, giving people in this fandom, a lot of who wear their psychoses and broken hearts and broken minds on their sleeves.  Sometimes I feel a little too normal to be part of this fandom, something I've never felt elsewhere, since I'm far from normal. But I am endlessly inspired by the genuinely kind and caring and optimistic nature of the true Brony. They are like flawed diamonds. They don't hide their cracks. They show them to you. You know exactly what you're getting. And the rest is dazzling.

This is a roundabout way of saying, thanks, everyone. Thanks for everything. You're amazing and I couldn't have done a thing without you.

And to you, too, the ones reading this, or reading my stuff in general. The people who follow me on Facebook and care about what I'm up to. The people who've supported my art and just been there fore me. Thanks. I'd name names but after such a long pony-related post that'd be cruelty to force you to read this much. You know who you are, the ones who've been there all this time.

Sunday ended with the Artists' Panel, which I was hosting this year. Yes, they asked me to. There had been a fire earlier, which had put everything off schedule. Apparently John De Lancie had stood onstage as the Meadowlands burned, grinning like a true lord of chaos. Everything was happening an hour later. The staff weren't nearby (or were too exhausted) and it was hard to get a straight answer on what was happening. Fair play to them - they ran a convention of four thousand people. That's one hell of an achievement. They had already gone to war and won.
So eventually we had the vague idea that the Artist's Alley would be open for another hour, and that the Artists' Panel would be an hour later too. No one came to get us - I was sort of expecting that there would be people there pushing us around, making sure we were on time. That was a big mistake on my part to expect that. I'd have to pack up my table and then get immediately to the panel. That was difficult. I couldn't exactly get my stuff to the hotel inbetween. Thankfully I had Zarkith and Mayor Mir, and Crayon was still around kinda. We packed up, late, and they took most of the stuff between them and left. We had to leave a big 32-pack case of water behind. Someone might have put it onstage later. I don't know. I wasn't going to pick it up and walk around with it all night. I took some stuff onstage with me.

It was all pretty confusing. Eventually we started wandering toward the stage, and that included most of the artists for the panel - John Joseco, Pixelkitties, WillDrawForFood, Tsitra360, Speccysy, Chibi-Jen-Hen. Everyone was looking very confused, expecting someone to tell us what to do. Other artists and friends were there too. People had been asking me all day if they could be on the artist's panel. I said they only allowed seven people and I'd already made my decisions long before. It was a difficult decision, and etc. That didn't stop people from asking all day. Kar actually promised Tim Kangaroo he could be on the panel, I think, and I had to say no to him, even though he's done a lot of art for Bronycon. I also had to say no to the guy who does Dr. Adorable, which is a pretty great blog. And ToxicMario. There was no sign of Celebi-Yoshi, who was supposed to be on the panel. We had Mario but no Yoshi.

Celebi is 19, and travelled with other people who wanted to leave the minute the con ended. So she had to leave, and told the staff to let me know about it. That didn't happen.

I was just wandering around confused like an idiot. I'm kicking myself in retrospect, but still I was kinda leading the group. "Well, if I don't pack up my booth now, this panel won't happen." And still, as I was packing up, people were trying to buy 50 cent stuff and haggling over the price! "Oh, now that I've seen it, 5 bucks is too much." No, Derpy's not for sale.

"Well, if we don't walk toward the stage now, this panel won't happen." Waiting for Yoshi. Waiting for Yoshi.  "Well, if we don't get onstage now, this panel won't happen."

So I walked onstage. We all did. Sergeant Sprinkles, author of Cupcakes, was there too. Didn't say a word the entire time. We went onstage, and sat there, confused, staring at the audience. Waiting for … Yoshi? Eventually someone walked up to us and asked why we weren't saying anything yet.

"We're … waiting for Yoshi?"

Oh, right. If I don't start talking now, this panel won't happen. I should have realized that a long time ago.

So the panel was a lot shorter than it was supposed to be. I had time to ask questions to everyone on the panel two and a half times. There were some very good answers. Chibi-Jen-Hen was nervous but turned in better answers than just about anyone. WillDrawForFood did a perfect impression of Billy West's Futurama voices - Fry, Farnsworth, Zoidberg. Another artist (not on the panel) does a perfect Lewis Black.

And Pixelkitties was particularly good. We had spoken via email about how this really is a fandom about friendship, and the minute that a convention and the fandom in general becomes about power and money (ticket sales) and who's more "famous," we've lost. I started to talk about that and she understood, so we ended on that, not getting to talk to John and WillDraw and Tsitra for a third time.
Having decided that Twist was worst pony, I'd asked people to draw pictures of Twist, and someone actually did. I heard later that most of the audience couldn't hear anything. In general people weren't laughing at the jokes or understanding my calls for applause. There was an embarrassing moment where I asked people to clap for Chibi-Jen-Hen and no one did until I yelled for it. People did clap for Egophiliac, who had decided not to appear, but who I made sure to mention (along with Tim Kangaroo, ToxicMario and Dr. Adorable).

I asked the audience if they could hear, and they said they could hear me, since I was talking straight into the mike and holding it. I had the whole panel do the same. Apparently Chibi-Jen-Hen, for her relative shyness, was the only one who could be heard clearly from some seats. Tsitra360 was quite quiet and I look forward to hearing the panel posted online at Everfree Radio so that people can finally hear us! 21 days later it still hasn't been posted. The livestream had gone down that day, possibly due to the fire, and because of that Sunday's panels didn't get posted, I guess?

The cosplay contest was going on in the other panel area. The Meadowlands is just one big room, and they were loud as hell. There was very loud thumping music, and tons of cheering. Apparently Spider-man had jumped up onstage. Tsitra was speaking and I could barely hear him, and I was just a few feet away!

I joked about it. I treated the next room as being another panelist with something to say, and asked it questions. Eventually I just screamed, DAMN YOU COSPLAY HALL! FROM HELL'S HEART I STAB AT THEE! YOU CAN COSPLAY IN HELL!

A minute or two later, hundreds of people walked from the cosplay hall to our panel en masse and sat down. I guess I'd piqued their curiosity.

I was being funny, I hope. Talking too much, for sure. Taking advantage of the situation to say a few things that were on my mind. It was hard to escape the feeling that we were trespassing. That we weren't supposed to be here. I swore, at one point, then asked if I was allowed to swear. "Can I swear? Should I just never stop swearing?"

No one laughed, at any point. I think they'll laugh when it's online. I used to do standup in Los Angeles, and the trouble with Los Angeles is everyone's pretending to be someone they're not, so if you do standup and play an idiot character, they take you as face value, like that's who you are. There's no irony, no layers allowed. It makes what Andy Kaufman did seem more and more impressive in retrospect. I've been thrown off enough comedy stages to have the feeling, deep down, when I host something, that, well, they won't get my humor and I'll never be allowed to do that again.

At that point in the day though, I'm not sure anyone was even paying attention. Even if they could hear.

It was a pretty fun panel with talented people on it. It's the most I got to talk to Pixel (and Jen) the entire convention! It still hasn't been posted online so I never really heard any reaction to it either way.

It was probably 36 minutes into it when a very tired Punchline ran up to the stage and hissed, "You need to wrap this up. NOW."

So I did.

I'm not sure why it was so urgent, as closing ceremonies didn't start for another half hour or so. The Bronycon staff all took a whole lot of bows - too many but still greatly deserved, all things considered - as the remaining voice actors and guests stood around awkwardly. This was loud. You could hear it. Rocket bellowed. There were laughs and cheers of the sort our panel hadn't had. John De Lancie came out with a calculated look on his face. It seemed he'd seen a lot from this fandom now, good and bad. He'd borrowed a Brony shirt to wear, at his panel and here. He said simply: "I am with you." Huge cheers. "You will change the world." Huger cheers. Then he left. Laurent from the documentary (I think that's her name) was walking around with an arrow sign taped to her butt. He handed her back the shirt, I think. Through the curtains. There were mute goodbyes and hugs from some of the cast and crew, stolen moments.

Purple Tinker had a surprise for me. I had to catch up to her somehow. I did, eventually, leaving others behind. I didn't eat all day. That happened a lot. Bronycon just took over. If I ate, it was because Evan ran up to me with a burger.
Her surprise was a 13x19 print of my painting of Lauren, John and Tara, signed by all of them. It was and is glossy and large and looks a lot better than the other prints she did for the con.

She got it framed. We went to Walmart and bought frames for five different posters. She paid, as far as I can tell. She paid for the trip to the top of 30 Rock too.

A friend of mine, Jace Hidalgo, had braved the lines and spent the time and money to have all the rest of my art signed. He got the one of Lauren, John and Tara signed too. I have two of those now. Signed by all three.

So.

Lauren/Tara/John. Signed by Lauren/Tara/John, thanks to Purple Tinker. Printed and framed by Tinker. Other copy signed thanks to Jace.

Discord/Fausticorn. Signed by Lauren/John, thanks to Jace. Printed and framed by Tinker.

Three 'Licious posters, signed by Tara, John and Lauren, thanks to Jace. Printed by C-Quel. Framed by Tinker.

Other gifts of Bronycon? Mug and Gummy toy from Pixelkitties … well, I talk about that in another post.

Yeah, so Bronycon was pretty neat. Exhausting, but fun. Secret, but fun. I owe a lot to a lot of people. Thanks to every single one of you. Let's do it again sometime.
[link]

Here's an extremely rare Japanese laserdisc of Jim Henson's Dog City. Both the American and UK DVDs of Dog City cut out over 10 minutes of material with Kermit and the MuppetTelevision crew, and the US DVD has very bad audio. The Japanese laserdisc contains the entire uncut Jim Henson Hour episode, although it's dubbed into Japanese! The same company issued Monster Maker (now on Netflix!) and was planning to issue Secrets of The Muppets and Living With Dinosaurs among others, but never got round to it. Monster Maker is not on DVD, and Secrets of the Muppets and Living With Dinosaurs, like most Jim Henson Hour material, have never been released anywhere.

Dog City is just as wonderful as I remember it - a very silly Muppet romp through a 40s film noir world populated entirely by Muppet dogs and a constant stream of puns and dumb jokes. The special doesn't entirely shy away from the adult humor that the film noir genre necessitates, and handles references to murder, prostitution and the word "bitch" in a funny and kid-friendly way. If you like the humor of The Muppet Show you'll like this. On a technical level, it's shot on video but done single-camera with every trick Jim Henson had up his sleeve, including animatronic characters for some shots. Jim Henson won an Emmy for directing this, and rightly so. The special inspired an animated series, which reused the same puppets in framing segments about a cartoonist.

This special originally aired on my favorite Jim Henson production as a kid - the short-lived Jim Henson Hour, which usually gave you a half hour of MuppetTelevision (an updated, high-tech Muppet Show), and another half hour that was a journey into Henson's amazing fantasy world, with productions like The Storyteller, Monster Maker, Song of the Cloud Forest and (the almost Twin Peaks-lite) Lighthouse Island. There was also a then-unaired episode in which Jim showed you the Secrets of the Muppets.

It was Henson at his very peak, showing all the amazing things his studio was capable of. There were great songs like "Sweet Vacation" and "The Music Keeps Rollin' Along," celebrity guests like KD Lang and Ted Danson, some vaguely adult humor, appearances by former Muppet Show writer and legendary British comedian Chris Langham (whose career is now dead on pornography charges), and Frank Oz popping in to play Miss Piggy and Fozzie Bear. Saving the environment was a subtext of several episodes, and in general, like Fraggle Rock (which was designed to promote world peace among different cultures), the series seemed designed to open up a child's imagination and make the next generation better people.

NBC cancelled it very quickly due to low ratings. Henson died not long after and none of the work the Henson Company has done since has really shown the same ambition that Jim had. In particular, the more complex, high-tech Muppets of The Jim Henson Hour have been abandoned in favor of a more Sesame Street-like approach with the newer characters from, say, Muppets Tonight!

The recent "The Muppets" movie treated the characters as a hopeless anachronism of the 70s and 80s, failing to make their way into modern times, and acted as if the last thing they ever did was The Muppet Show. Now, to the general public, perhaps that's true. But Jim was always an innovator first and foremost, with films like the Dark Crystal and Labyrinth. Both were box office disappointments, which crushed Jim - his best work, on a technical level, often went unappreciated. It was that technical knowledge that allowed Frank Oz to bring Yoda and Audrey II to life, and it's worth remembering that the Henson Company was at the forefront of special effects all through the 80s.

None of the Jim Henson Hour episodes were ever released on video, laserdisc or DVD, although this Dog City laserdisc and the releases of Monster Maker are technically an exception. Some productions which aired on The Jim Henson Hour have been released on DVD - all nine episodes of The Storyteller, which might be the best thing Jim ever did, are on DVD, along with the slightly less wonderful spinoff Greek Myths. The Song of the Cloud Forest (a colorful story about saving the rainforests) is also on DVD and Miss Piggy's Hollywood was released in PAL (along with The Fabulous Miss Piggy Show, guest-starring Andy Kaufman as Tony Clifton!). Dog City is available on DVD in the US and UK, but all Jim Henson Hour framing material has been removed (including quite a lot of Kermit and Jim and Digit and Bean Bunny and etc.), and the audio on the US version is strangely terrible.
Artwise, I've never been so busy in my life. I've been backed up on commissions for two or three months now. I've got about six pretty ambitious pieces I should be doing. And which I'll get to the minute I finish the other deadlines crashing down on me. (Two magazine articles due friday which I haven't even started. One of which the interviewees mostly haven't even returned my emails yet.)

That busyness isn't going away anytime soon. I'm happy to announce I've just gotten a paid job drawing a full 24-page comic for publication.

I haven't drawn much superhero stuff and I'm up for the challenge. The writer's a nice guy and I put everything aside to do a two-page test. Worked hard on it, and it was interesting to do. I'm definitely going to push my skills to the limit on this one.

Things are so crazy here that I never even wrote about Bronycon. Bronycon was a great time. There's a lot to say.

But hey, what about Everfree Northwest?

I wanted to go to Everfree Northwest. I really did. That's the Con in Seattle on August 17-19.

Registration was closed ages ago, but as an artist, I could still get a Dealer's Membership. And I had a little money left over after Bronycon, which is supposed to go to a new computer which I desperately need.

I had barely thought of Everfree as a possibility. A plane ticket to Seattle and back? Food and hotels and everything else …

Well, I looked it up on Kayak and the flights would cost $500. That means the trip as a whole would cost about $1000.

Everfree NW has a terrific lineup of guests, but it's still a smaller convention. Bronycon had 4000 attendees, and I was able to sell a decent amount of art. That's not nearly as possible when there are 1100 people attending.

I did the math over and over in my head, trying to figure out how this could possibly work.

Then I said, screw it, and bought the plane ticket anyway. Yep, I'm going to Everfree Northwest!

I've lived in poverty for many years and never had a grand to spend on anything, but you only pony once.
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The Thief and the Cobbler: The Game

This should be a thing that exists. Think Sega 16-bit, action platformer. Some levels have a "tag-along" character (think Sonic/Tails).

1. You are The Thief in the streets of The Golden City. Collect all the golden treasures. Avoid angry townspeople, Royal Guards, and Zig-zag's men. And watch out for Princess Yum-Yum's Nanny! (Boss Fight) Enter the Cobbler's shop. Collect items and don't fall down!

2. You are Tack the Cobbler. Dodge the whips and attacks of Zig-Zag's men, and take on Zig-Zag The Grand Vizier in a Boss Fight!

3. You are The Thief. Ride in a garbage cart down precarious hills. Watch out for townspeople and the Royal Polo Ponies! Try to get inside the castle gates, with a Boss Fight against the Gate Guards! Swim through the moat outside the palace and enter the palace pipes. Watch the movement of the pipes to know when water is flowing through. Watch out - a fast current will throw you right back into the moat below! Some pipes lead to rooms inside the castle! Collect treasure and watch out for King Nod and his consort. Finally, when you've reached Princess Yum Yum's bathing room, hop on top of bubbles before they disappear, collect treasure and Yum Yum's backscratchers!

3. You are Tack the Cobbler. Chase The Thief through the halls of the palace! Don't be confused by all the optical illusions you see, and watch out for traps, as well as the palace guards, palace eunuchs, palace servants and dignitaries, King Nod himself, and Zig-Zag's men! When you've caught up to The Thief, it's time for another boss fight against Zig-Zag himself!

4. You are The Thief. Follow the white polo ball, collect treasures and watch out for the Royal Polo Ponies as they thunder toward you! Climb trees, watch out for birds and other small animals and don't get trampled! When you reach the spectators in the stand, collect all the treasures and watch out for Zig-Zag!

5. You are Princess Yum-Yum. Tack the Cobbler has been imprisoned by Zig-Zag! Run through the halls of the palace! Be careful- there are traps and pitfalls everywhere! Don't be confused by optical illusions and always keep ahead of Zig-Zag's pet bird Phido. Watch out, he's hungry! Knock down Zig-Zag's men and be careful you don't lose your head!

6. You are The Thief. Pole-vault, jump and bounce off awnings to get to the top of the tallest buildings in the city! Collect treasures, avoid townspeople and guards, and watch out that you don't fall! Use awnings as trampolines to get higher and higher, and be careful on high-wire clotheslines as birds and small animals get in your way! When you've reached the tallest minaret, it's time to climb and collect your greatest treasure - the Three Golden Balls!

6. You are Tack the Cobbler, inside the palace. Watch out for Zig-Zag and his men, and Phido! Be fast and be sneaky, and stay one step ahead of them. Be careful of traps, pitfalls and optical illusions, and be smart - the palace's traps can be your best friend in this level! You'll have to be crafty to catch up with The Thief. Collect hearts and Yum-Yum's broken shoes on your quest to find The Princess.

7. You are Princess Yum-Yum. The desert can be a dangerous place! Watch out for snakes, vultures, and those dangerous brigands. Look out for pitfalls, spikey rocks and cacti, and collect water bottles to keep your health levels up! You won't be alone - Tack will be one step behind you the whole way.

8. You are Tack the Cobbler. Chief Roofless and his band of brigands have come charging in to raid your caravan. Fight them off and tie them up, and protect the Princess Yum-Yum! You won't be alone - Yum-Yum's Nanny will help you in your fight!

9. You are The Thief, in the desert. Collect rare gems and treasures, bounce off signs, and watch out for guards and brigands as you traverse miles of rocks and climb the mountains to reach the priceless Buddha Ruby! Jump with springs on your feet and learn to fly with palm leaves on your arms! Be careful - the ruby is very well guarded (Boss Fight). When you've reached the witch's cave, watch out for toxic fumes, vampire bats and pitfalls, and use trampolines and white clouds to get higher and higher and collect some of the most impressive treasure yet! Then it's time for a boss fight with the Old Witch herself. She's much more dangerous than she looks and can take on many forms, including the spirit of a hurricane! As wind and lightning strikes and the mountain crumbles to the ground, can you escape in time? Watch out for falling fist-shaped rocks! Be fast and be smart! Strap on your springs and your wings and get out of there!

10. You are Chief Roofless, and there's no time to waste! Run through the desert as fast as you can, followed by your brigands. Dodge all the traps and pitfalls and collect water to keep your health up. The army of the Mighty One-Eye has come to destroy the Golden City, with its massive war machine. It's time for you and your brigands to fight the One Eye Soldiers! There may be thousands of them, but you need to slow this army down and buy some time until Tack and the Princess arrive.

11. You are Tack the Cobbler. The Army of the Mighty One-Eye, and its massive war machine, stands outside the Golden City, ready to attack. And Zig-Zag the Grand Vizier is riding at the front. In fact, he's riding right at you! Dodge his horse and his lance. Jump! He's fast and you'll have to be faster! Throw tacks to try to trip him up. Eventually, all you'll need is one well-timed shot!

12. You are The Thief. Run through the desert and enter the mind-bogglingly enormous and complex war machine of The Mighty One-Eye, even as it self-destructs around you. Collect treasures, but be careful! This is your most dangerous stage. There are thousands of One-Eye soldiers, and huge traps and pitfalls unlike anything you've ever seen. Dodge armored elephants and ride on their backs! Watch out for fire and falling machinery! Jump and bounce and climb to the highest level to collect the Three Golden Balls. Then just try to get out alive! Ride the rollercoaster of death, and learn how to fly it like an airplane! Avoid a pair of scissors twenty times your size, and a steaming iron, and a flyswatter, and a hundred other traps! Be shot out of a cannon through rings of fire! Watch out for falling elephants, flying soldiers, cannonballs, arrows and flaming debris! Did I mention everything is on fire and falling apart?

13. You are Tack the Cobbler. Zig-Zag has been thrown off his horse, and it's time for your final battle. Protect the Princess Yum-Yum! Watch out for flying arrows and One-Eye Soldiers! Defeat Zig-Zag!

14. You are The Thief. You're stuck in an assembly line of infernal machinery as the One Eye War Machine falls to pieces around you. There's fire and spikes and arrows and cannonballs and traps and pitfalls everywhere. It's a spiralling pinball machine, and you're the pinball! Speed is everything! Shoot yourself out of cannons and through rings of fire to get over every obstacle! Timing is vital, and practice makes perfect. Collect your final treasures, and get the hell out of there!

15. You are Tack the Cobbler. The One Eye War Machine is crumbling to the ground! There's fire everywhere! Protect the Princess Yum-Yum. Dodge traps and pitfalls, spikes, falling debris and fire. Watch out for huge, falling pieces of the War Machine, and its falling "feet!" Run through the wreckage, bounce, climb and jump to get to the very top of the One Eye War machine! Knock down the Mighty One-Eye, and watch out for his wily Women! Protect the Princess and start climbing down to get back to The Golden City in one piece!
(This is my third Journal tonight. Read the previous two entries as well!)

Lot to cover here so this is gonna be a long one.

Manic A. writes:
I'm disgusted that there are people out there on the net who target Bronies and subject them to the kind of bullying and humiliation you've very eloquently reported on in recent blogs. I don't understand the My Little Pony thing myself, but there is unequivocally no justification for that kind of behaviour, period.

That being said, I must say I think you are wasting your considerable talents on this subject, Tygerbug. I remember opening a national newspaper here a few years ago and seeing your work in an article on fan animations of missing Doctor Who episodes. It's your life, and you must of course spend your time as you see fit, but I kind of wish you were still into doing that because it really had legs. Not to mention your excellent She-Hulk fan film too! Not just that either-- some of your portraits of people you've posted here are top notch.

I don't want to start a flame war and I'm absolutely not trolling or judging any Bronies here. You have a passion for something and I don't understand it, but that's life, and just because I can't quite get my head round it in no way means it's not a good thing. But, y'know, ...I'm just saying.

You are a tremendously talented man. Your Doctor Who animations are superb, and I feel your focus is misdirected. There has already been an animator who has been hired by Big Finish to recreate a partially missing tale for DVD-- I see no reason why something similar couldnt happen to you. You've got a wider audience than Bronies, and we haven't lost interest. I stress again: there's nothing wrong with MLP, and I'm not saying you should abandon it entirely. It's not even the case that I think your current work sucks-- it's clearly very good. I just think your other work is better.

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Thank you. I appreciate the compliments about my Doctor Who animated work, and about the Shamelessly She-Hulk feature. I am immensely proud of both projects, and spent about three years on both of them. I wish I'd left both projects in a more completed and impressive state. I've even returned to them and done some work this past year, and might return again. I still get letters about them from time to time.

I'm also very aware that my My Little Pony work is not for everyone. In fact, I'm quite certain it's made me a laughing-stock in some circles. I've lost some dear old friends on Facebook because of it, although I've gained many more.

I am an artist, filmmaker, writer and performer, and I'm very ambitious, creatively. I don't pick small projects. I try to create projects that are worth creating, and will make a big impact on people. Projects that need to be done. Projects "somebody ought to do," "and that somebody might as well be me."

You might even say that drawing characters from a cartoon show about adorable talking ponies is the least ambitious thing I've done in years.

When I restored The Thief and the Cobbler, I didn't know anyone but me who had heard of the film. I did it for myself, because I loved the film and knew somebody needed to restore it. It was worth doing. It was a lot of work and continues to be a lot of work, since I now run an entire archive (Youtube: TheThiefArchive) dedicated to the work of Richard Williams, one of the greatest animators who ever lived.

When I reread my old Sensational She-Hulk comics (by John Byrne), I saw a smart, funny, attractive character who I'd loved as a kid and still loved now. I thought, this would make a great movie. So I made one. It was extremely ambitious for the tiny budget I shot it on. I didn't want to waste the producer's money. I kept the budget small and made every penny of it count. We had some cast problems which resulted in a couple of key scenes not being shot as intended. But in general the cast was amazingly talented and all put in terrific performances, of which they should be very proud. There was a huge, huge amount of effects work to be done in post production, and I wound up being crushed a bit by my own ambition. I was still using the same Mac from 2003, and didn't have money for a new one. Eventually, it was clear that my old Mac just wasn't up to the tasks I was asking it to do, and that I was wasting my time. I released half the film on Youtube and put the rest aside for the time being.

As for the lost episodes of Doctor Who, I'm obviously a huge fan of the show and the black and white era is probably my favorite. Those 106 lost episodes include, in my opinion, some of the best work the show ever did. It's a tragedy that they don't exist anymore, and fans were crying out for them to be animated. Begging. Pleading. I decided to spend three years of my life creating a huge library of thousands of animated drawings and digital paintings, so that anyone with a little bit of editing skill could bring any lost episode to life. I finished versions of all the major characters and a bunch of guest stars as well.

I had huge ambitions. I imagined that dozens of Doctor Who fans with a little bit of film knowledge would dip into my library and that we'd bring sections of all the missing episodes to life. I made all the files available, but that never happened.

Yes, my project was covered by The Guardian newspaper, SFX Magazine, The WIRED Magazine Blog and other major and minor media outlets. There was a lot of interest from the press, which was flattering. There were public screenings in the UK and US of the 30 minutes of footage I created, which only scratched the surface of the incredible amount of artwork I'd actually completed.

I had already reached the limit of what I could achieve myself, without help. I never wanted to do all the lip-sync and movement for entire episodes. I wanted to create the art and leave the movement to others, particularly since my computer wasn't really up to the task.

I needed either a few talented Doctor Who fans to help get the ball rolling, or better yet to be hired by the official Doctor Who DVD team. I talked to as many members of what used to be the Doctor Who Restoration Team as I could. One of them was very interested, but was fired shortly after. The others weren't interested. They watched some very early tests of mine, or downloaded them and said it wouldn't play on their computer, and ignored my further letters. One of them felt that my style was too complex for animation (even though I'd already done huge amounts of finished animation with it), and that based on how much work I'd done there was something wrong with me and I should seek professional help. I was enduring a lot of negativity and trolling from various Doctor Who forums at this point, although there were a fair amount of compliments as well. I don't think anyone ever realized how much work I'd really put into the project; by the end the fandom was just ignoring me.

I knew other people then who were also animating Doctor Who material. At this point nearly all of them have been hired for something or other. For whatever reason, I'm the one who did the most work animating Doctor Who lost episode material who never got hired for anything. It looks to my eyes that many of them are now copying my style, which is ... fine? My girlfriend of the time eventually said, quite rightly, that I needed to stop just for my own sanity. I was dealing with apathy and attacks from crazy people, some of whom had their own animation projects and wanted mine gone. I was often treated like my art wasn't even art, that somehow Photoshop could automatically create what I did. The fact that I spent a week on every character didn't click with people.

(I was also trying to get hired as a writer for the Big Finish Doctor Who audio plays and couldn't get anyone to read my work there either. I wrote a piece called War of the Words which I'm rather proud of.)

Now, that art still exists, just waiting for an ambitious Doctor Who fan to take it and do the lip-sync and body movement. I will always be open to that. In fact, someone did complete an entire episode using my artwork (Evil of the Daleks Part 7!), and I did some additional art (and walk cycles!) recently to help him and improve on what he's done. But for some reason he hasn't really responded to my letters and the episode hasn't been released. That's my main perception of the Doctor Who fandom. They write me wanting to be part of the project, I write them back, and I never hear back from them again. It's happened hundreds of times now. (Also, that animator is apparently working for a crazy person now. The craziest!)

I'm tempted to write certain people again and see if they're more open to my work now, but that might just mean opening an old wound for no reason. If you love my Doctor Who work, and see the same potential in it that I do, why not write the Doctor Who restoration team about it yourself?

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I learned a lot doing the Doctor Who art. In fact, it was a major learning experience and turning point for me as an artist. I'd always considered myself more of a writer and filmmaker, and that art was just this trick I could do. Those two or three years creating thousands of drawings and paintings of Doctor Who actors really sharpened up my skills at drawing people realistically. I had to animate their mouths and faces moving, which was great fun and a real challenge, coming up with believable facial expressions off the top of my head. I developed a very clear style of drawing people, to the point where I now find drawing a likeness of anyone very easy. None of the Doctor Who art was traced, either. If I drew a facial feature in the wrong place, I'd put it in the right place in Photoshop later.

I came out of it a much better artist, surprisingly so, and I decided to turn my attentions to an animated series I'd written in 2005, The Chosen Ones. I'd written two and a half screenplays about this group of twentysomethings who battle alien invasion and other threats. I had had some interest from Hollywood, but only a tiny bit. Getting anyone to read the many screenplays I've written has been nearly impossible. The few people who read it pumped me full of compliments, although I could tell they only understood it on a superficial level.

I decided to adapt The Chosen Ones as a comic series, and spent 2011 creating nearly seventy pages of the thing. By that time I was only twenty pages into my first screenplay! Once again, my huge ambition was getting ahead of me, and I was struggling with the slowness of my computer. It felt like I'd wasted the whole year just waiting for the computer to work and do anything.

And then the pony thing happened, and I had to put that aside for awhile.

Also I was writing a novel called Ragland.

I'm thirty-one now and the years pass like months. I put a project aside for  a little while and a year passes. It's fair to say that my larger projects have gotten the better of me. I need a helping hand, usually. I need a full studio of people. Instead I have myself. I haven't directed a feature since She-Hulk, since I have no cast or crew to help me here. Art is easier. I can do art on my own. The amount of creative material I'm putting out is still huge. I wake up every day and create something which I'm proud of. I essentially have no love life, and almost no social life outside the internet and conventions.

Is drawing ponies a waste of my time? Perhaps, but then so was drawing Doctor Who. I'm still a writer more than I am an artist, and unless I'm putting out my own creative work, like The Chosen Ones and Ragland, and creating franchises of my own, I am not living up to my potential. I do feel torn between projects.

The goal with The Chosen Ones was to stop doing fan work and put out at least the beginning of a big, ambitious masterpiece of my own. No one noticed until I threw in some pony and Homestuck cameos. But rest assured I'll return to that one.

The story was still progressing at a snail's pace, requiring a huge amount of work for very little story progression. I want people to know me as a writer, so I also published a novel I'd previously written, Cratchit & Company, and wrote half of a novel, Ragland, which I need to finish.

Meanwhile I need to survive and make money. And for the first time in my life, I'm making money as an artist. I've been getting commissions from friends which have taken up a lot of my time (and I'm quite a bit backed up right now!) Thanks to the pony fandom I've had my first taste of attending conventions as an artist, hosting panels and being treated as someone important and worth knowing. Compared to the negative attitude of fandoms I've known in the past, the pony fandom is extremely positive. I've met literally hundreds of people I would consider friends. It's been a wild ride that has, for the time being, enriched my life enormously. It's gotten me out of the house and out of this daily grind and given me enough joy and inspiration to keep me going.

I've joked about how I'm a little bit famous for a bunch of different things, which doesn't ever combine into fame that means anything. (Hey! It's The Thief and the Cobbler guy! Hey, Star Wars: Deleted Magic! Hey, Orson Welles impersonation! Hey, when will She-Hulk be finished?) These days, a little bit of fame on the internet can go a long way. It can get you funded on Kickstarter. It can get you help. It can pay your bills. I feel like I'm always putting out lots of interesting things, but everyone knows me for something different, and is wondering why I don't do just that one thing. I often feel that if people appreciated me for the full range of what I do as an artist, I'd have a much more successful life.

This isn't the life I would have chosen. In fact, from some angles it looks like a constant downhill slope of absolute failure, where no one important has noticed a single thing I've done. I can't seem to get hired or even considered for paid work anywhere, and almost no one has read anything I've written. Hey, I thought I'd be a cult filmmaker by now. When I was in high school, I once finished shooting four features in a single year! But my standards get higher. The screenplays I write get more and more ambitious. I don't want to put out crap. I write huge epics, and fill them with whatever meaning I can. As a writer I'm more a philosopher than a storyteller. I want to inspire people.

The positive spirit of My Little Pony happens to have inspired me, and if people want me to draw a pony for them, that's fine by me. These have been the busiest few months of my life, and I've met a lot of great people and had a lot of interesting experiences.

Better still, I've found people who will help me. For once, I have people willing to help vector and color my art and make it look nice. To help print out my work and help me succeed as a convention artist. I have all the help here which I couldn't find in the Doctor Who fandom, and my output has increased because of it. People like C-Quel, Purple Tinker, Calpain and Dentist have donated equipment, time, energy and money to keeping me afloat. I have a lot of friends here all of a sudden. I'm not used to that.

I get that you're not interested in cute girly ponies. A lot of people don't like cartoons, kid's stuff. A lot of people can't see beneath the surface. A lot of people think I'm completely insane to be doing what I'm doing right now.

But even now, ponies aren't all I'm doing. Work has begun on The Thief and the Cobbler Recobbled Cut Mark 4, and I just drew a test for a paid comic job with characters modelled after Noel Clarke (Mickey Smith of Doctor Who). I've got a bunch of art I need to finish which isn't ponies, and I'm waiting for a free moment to get back to Ragland and The Chosen Ones and everything else … probably even She-Hulk.

The problem with fanart is, people don't like it because I drew it. They like it because it's ponies. Because it's Doctor Who. Because it's Homestuck. And that's okay. That's why I like it too.

So you're grumbling about, urrgh, why does this Gilchrist guy keep drawing characters from a show I don't like? He's so much better than that. He should draw characters from a show I DO like instead! Do you see the problem with that?

And yeah, my style is more suited to humans. Then again, I've recently drawn Benedict Cumberbatch, Angelina Jolie, Noel Clarke, John De Lancie, Lauren Faust, Tara Strong, Alan Moore, etc. Not just ponies.

I suppose, when I stop drawing ponies so often, or stop entirely, a lot of the people who follow me for ponies will be long gone. And some of them will stay. And that's fine. I've enjoyed being in their company and have had a lot of good times in a very creative and positive fandom.

But let's say you really do like my work, and want to support me. Check out 30 Days 30 Screenplays. Check out The Chosen Ones. Check out my Tumblr [Tygerbug].

How about you trust me as an artist enough not to say, you should be doing this one project, and nothing else? Trust me that whatever I'm creating will be interesting. And that if some of it doesn't interest you (like ponies), there will be more stuff coming along that you will like?

I do feel torn between projects, and there are usually a lot of good reasons why I'm doing something right now when you might think I should be doing something else.

But regardless, I'm going to be doing my best work and growing and learning as an artist. I'm not in competition with anyone other than myself, and I'm not here to serve any one fandom.

I'm here to do the best and most interesting work I can, under the realistic financial and time constraints under which I find myself. To a certain extent I'll follow what people are most interested in (and don't fool yourself - people are a hundred times more interested in my ponies than they were in my Doctor Who work). And I'll follow the money, and the deadlines. But at the end of the day, the choice is my own.

I hope that one day, the stuff people love about my work will be my own as well. That people will come to love my original work like The Chosen Ones and Ragland as much as they like my fanart now.

I can't promise that all my of huge, ambitious dreams will come to fruition. Though some of them will.

What I can promise is that I will always be creating something new and interesting, that I will always put 100% effort into everything I do, that I will always be learning and growing and changing, and that my work will always be worth paying attention to.

I hope that's enough for you.

Journal History