Frequently Asked Questions
If you'd like to ask a question, contact me and I'll answer right away. No hateful questions, please.
Q: Where were you born?
A: I was born in Seattle, Washington.
Q: Are you single?
A: Oh yeah.
Q: What pets do you have?
A: I own a snowshoe cat named Zinnia.
Q: What comics do you like?
A: Calvin and Hobbes, Peanuts, Pogo (even though I haven't read it), Buckles (now it's an okay comic strip), Get Fuzzy, Pearls Before Swine, Mutts, and Bloom County.
Q: What are you favorite books?
A: Diary of a Wimpy Kid.
Q: Where do you learn to animate?
A: Well, Disney and other animation studios do inspire me to become an animator.
Q: Where do you learn to draw?
A: Currently, I draw just like David Gilbert of Buckles fame.
Q: Were your moments good?
A: Well, on my first days on YouTube, I had so many haters. Back then, I tried to be a comedian, but no one ever laughed. Instead, they bully me about my early videos and my "webcomics," because they didn't like my bad moments like Calvin from "Calvin and Hobbes" getting shot by Susie, and Thomas crashing into a tree and getting blown up after he ran over Winnie the Pooh. Now I have very good moments.
Q: Which of the characters you've created is your favorite?
A: Arry, the humanoid armadillo from "Tara and John," because he's sexy and cute.
Q: Which of your videos is your favorite?
A: Broom Wars, the best cartoon I've ever done. Even though the animation was dull.
Q: Why is your work infamous?
A: Because my YouTube channel is viewed by just Toon Boom animators and 13 to 14-year-olds, especially my school friends. What a damn shame. Some teenagers and animators watch my original videos, but others don't. Using the Toon Boom animation program wasn't the reason I have to go back to animating, but I used the program for some of my subsequent animations. My cartoons, especially Broom Wars, were successful, mainly because of how I animated them. They're all not supposed to be just a discussion for how I used Toon Boom to animate them.
Q: Are you making video games?
A: I'm working on one based on "Derek the Rock Star" about a teenager named Derek Finn who has a job as a rock star.
Q: How did you ever come up with "Derek the Rock Star?"
A: One day, when I go to sleep, I had a dream of a teenage rock star performing on a concert, but when he finishes his song, a guy disguised as a baby ruined his performance. Sooner or later, the rock star must battle his enemies to save his performance, but that baby-disguised guy is at it again, so my dream was over. A few days later, I did an illustration of the characters that were from my dream, but I haven't given them names yet. But with a help from my friend Tommy Greene, I named the characters. Derek the Rock Star is originally going to be just a movie, but I decided to make it a game, and then a movie.
Q: How did you ever come up with Tara and John?
A: Tara and John is based on "Scribbles & Secrets," a journal I bought at a book fair when I was in third grade. It was initially created as my attempt at getting syndicated to newspapers. I even created a slideshow of the old comics and posted it on YouTube, but the slideshow became the least favorite of many people because of the fact that the comics appear to be badly drawn. Later in February, when my dad banned me from my computer for six days because I refuse to go to bed on school night, the dreadful bug in my old YouTube account has gotten worse, so my account fails by having people (especially the ones who did YouTube Poop, which had nothing to do with my work) come enter my channel and bully me about my comics and spam me. And that's why my old account doesn't survive anymore. A few months later, I have to redo the comic, and make it my first true webcomic.
Q: What do you think of your alternative account on YouTube?
A: Well, I made that account at the time the YouTube Poopers are still bullying and mocking me. The reason I decided to do it is because I wanted to upload an intro to a kids' show online. And it's becoming EVEN MORE popular than my original material. Pity. I need to stop uploading copyrighted videos and other stuff that were unrelated to my work. It's just generic stuff. I prefer my main account.
Q: What do you think of your anthropomorphic animal characters?
A: Many of them were hot, especially Arry.
A: I was born in Seattle, Washington.
Q: Are you single?
A: Oh yeah.
Q: What pets do you have?
A: I own a snowshoe cat named Zinnia.
Q: What comics do you like?
A: Calvin and Hobbes, Peanuts, Pogo (even though I haven't read it), Buckles (now it's an okay comic strip), Get Fuzzy, Pearls Before Swine, Mutts, and Bloom County.
Q: What are you favorite books?
A: Diary of a Wimpy Kid.
Q: Where do you learn to animate?
A: Well, Disney and other animation studios do inspire me to become an animator.
Q: Where do you learn to draw?
A: Currently, I draw just like David Gilbert of Buckles fame.
Q: Were your moments good?
A: Well, on my first days on YouTube, I had so many haters. Back then, I tried to be a comedian, but no one ever laughed. Instead, they bully me about my early videos and my "webcomics," because they didn't like my bad moments like Calvin from "Calvin and Hobbes" getting shot by Susie, and Thomas crashing into a tree and getting blown up after he ran over Winnie the Pooh. Now I have very good moments.
Q: Which of the characters you've created is your favorite?
A: Arry, the humanoid armadillo from "Tara and John," because he's sexy and cute.
Q: Which of your videos is your favorite?
A: Broom Wars, the best cartoon I've ever done. Even though the animation was dull.
Q: Why is your work infamous?
A: Because my YouTube channel is viewed by just Toon Boom animators and 13 to 14-year-olds, especially my school friends. What a damn shame. Some teenagers and animators watch my original videos, but others don't. Using the Toon Boom animation program wasn't the reason I have to go back to animating, but I used the program for some of my subsequent animations. My cartoons, especially Broom Wars, were successful, mainly because of how I animated them. They're all not supposed to be just a discussion for how I used Toon Boom to animate them.
Q: Are you making video games?
A: I'm working on one based on "Derek the Rock Star" about a teenager named Derek Finn who has a job as a rock star.
Q: How did you ever come up with "Derek the Rock Star?"
A: One day, when I go to sleep, I had a dream of a teenage rock star performing on a concert, but when he finishes his song, a guy disguised as a baby ruined his performance. Sooner or later, the rock star must battle his enemies to save his performance, but that baby-disguised guy is at it again, so my dream was over. A few days later, I did an illustration of the characters that were from my dream, but I haven't given them names yet. But with a help from my friend Tommy Greene, I named the characters. Derek the Rock Star is originally going to be just a movie, but I decided to make it a game, and then a movie.
Q: How did you ever come up with Tara and John?
A: Tara and John is based on "Scribbles & Secrets," a journal I bought at a book fair when I was in third grade. It was initially created as my attempt at getting syndicated to newspapers. I even created a slideshow of the old comics and posted it on YouTube, but the slideshow became the least favorite of many people because of the fact that the comics appear to be badly drawn. Later in February, when my dad banned me from my computer for six days because I refuse to go to bed on school night, the dreadful bug in my old YouTube account has gotten worse, so my account fails by having people (especially the ones who did YouTube Poop, which had nothing to do with my work) come enter my channel and bully me about my comics and spam me. And that's why my old account doesn't survive anymore. A few months later, I have to redo the comic, and make it my first true webcomic.
Q: What do you think of your alternative account on YouTube?
A: Well, I made that account at the time the YouTube Poopers are still bullying and mocking me. The reason I decided to do it is because I wanted to upload an intro to a kids' show online. And it's becoming EVEN MORE popular than my original material. Pity. I need to stop uploading copyrighted videos and other stuff that were unrelated to my work. It's just generic stuff. I prefer my main account.
Q: What do you think of your anthropomorphic animal characters?
A: Many of them were hot, especially Arry.