THE SIMPSONS NEWS
What a surprise, it looks like we are behind on the show as always. *being sarcastic here, obviously* It’s getting closer to the deadline and we have a long way to go. It’s hard to know what to do when this happens. On the one had I can speed up, but when I do that, I make bigger mistakes and my work isn’t as good. On the other hand, I want to do a good job and make as few mistakes as I can and that usually means working a little slower. I guess the trick is, to find the right balance.
I managed to finish the train scenes from last week and as a reward, I got much more complicated versions of similar scenes. More trains, more cars, more technical camera movement. It’s fine though. I don’t mind. It’s a nice brake from always drawing characters and I’m looking forward to them.
I’m very inspired by Japanese cartoons (anime) that have giant robots or other complicated cool looking machines which are drawn by hand. They, almost always, look amazing and I’m in awe of the artists that draw them. Drawing cars and trains is the closest I get to doing that. When I see the complicated machines in anime I think to myself, if they can draw those complicated machines as good as that, surely I can attempt to draw the machines I have, just as good. So I sit at my desk and pretend I’m a Japanese animator working on anime and suddenly, drawing machines is fun.
PHILOSOPHY
At work, the topic of Evolution came up. By Evolution I mean, a process whereby life arose from nonliving matter and subsequently developed entirely by natural means. We also talked about Creationism, by which I mean, a religious belief that humanity, life, the Earth, and the universe were created in their original form by God literally as it happened in the book of Genesis, without need for Evolution. These topics came up in reference to an upcoming documentary called Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed. Here’s the trailer for it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGCxbhGaVfE
I find it odd, as a Catholic, that Creationists don’t do what many Catholics do and allow for the possibility of evolution being part of the intelligent design processes. By Intelligent Design I mean, the assertion that certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as natural selection. As Catholics we must believe in Intelligent Design but not necessarily in Creationism (although if we wish to, that’s allowed as well, though I’ve never seen it encouraged). For more info on this topic see The Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraphs 279-324. On the other hand, I find it annoying that everyone tends to get all up in arms if someone questions the Evolutionary theory. After all, it’s still a theory. In fact, there is a very controversial book written by a Catholic Biochemistry Professor, Michael J. Behe by the name of Darwin’s Black Box that does exactly that. It questions Evolution. On the one hand, scientists have noted that the contents of the book is not science (with good reason. I think they are right, it’s not science. I explain myself more below). On the other hand it does bring up good arguments that blatantly show how far the Evolutionary theory has to go before it could be proven factual. Understandably, since the book claims to be scientific, it has outraged the scientific community.
Creationists want Creationism and/or Intelligent Design to be taught in science classes (to a Creationist, Intelligent Design and Creationism are often synonymous, even though they are not). I don’t think that’s a good idea. Not because they are not valid systems of thought but because they go beyond the limitations of science. They are Cosmology. By Cosmology I mean, “the branch of philosophy and metaphysics that deals with the world as the totality of all phenomena in space and time. It addresses questions about the Universe which are beyond the scope of science.” The Creationists and the proponents of Intelligent Design have their definitions mixed up. Personally I think that Intelligent Design (and even Creationism) should be taught in school, but in Philosophy classes not in a science classes. This, of course, requires that Philosophy be taught in school in the first place and it’s NOT. Cosmology, ontology, metaphysics, logic, rhetoric, ethics, should all be taught, why aren’t they? They used to be.
By definition Science mean, The investigation of natural phenomena through observation, theoretical explanation, and experimentation, or the knowledge produced by such investigation. Science makes use of the scientific method, which includes the careful observation of natural phenomena, the formulation of a hypothesis, the conducting of one or more experiments to test the hypothesis, and the drawing of a conclusion that confirms or modifies the hypothesis.. This means that science is limited to the material world and will only produce knowledge of the material because it only studies natural phenomena (as opposed to supernatural phenomena). It is utterly useless for proving immaterial things like: truth, beauty, wisdom, God…etc. because none of these things have any material form that a scientist can experiment on and test. So unless a proponent of, say, Intelligent Design, can physically produce the actual designer of the universe to be examined, he’s out of luck.

This begs the question: If Creationism and Intelligent Design are Cosmological arguments, why are people trying to shove them into scientific debate? Because philosophy isn’t taught in school so people are trying somewhere to teach Cosmology. The solution, therefore would be to teach philosophy in schools.
I propose this answer to the question, because there is an erroneous idea, in just about all people’s minds, that scientific knowledge is the only kind of knowledge that counts. The moment you bring up philosophy, most people roll their eyes and don’t want anything to do with it. Either because they think it’s too complicated to understand, or because they think that it brings forth no true certainty and therefore has no practical use, or because they believe that philosophy holds no true knowledge, only mere opinion. Ironically, these points of view are philosophical in nature, showing how easy and practical it is to adhere to a philosophical view point.
Where did these points of view come from? Philosophers of course. Which ones? Well according to Dr. Mortimer J. Adler, they came from Hume and Kant. The following is a long excerpt from Dr. Adler‘s book, Ten Philosophical Mistakes. I copied down a large chunk of his argument because I think it’s a really important, critical topic to discuss. I wanted to really hit home the problem we modern people have when thinking about knowledge when it comes to philosophy and science, as well as show how the problem can be solved. Dr. Adler here, will first site a quote from Hume and then he will proceed to analyze it:
This brings [Hume] to his thundering conclusion in the last paragraph of the Enquiry:
“When we run over our libraries, persuaded of these principles, what havoc must we make? If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matters of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.”
Before we continue, I can’t help but interrupt. After reading Hume‘s statement, I’ve noticed that it doesn’t contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number nor does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence, therefore by Hume‘s own criteria, we must commit his statement to the flames: for it is nothing but sophistry and illusion. Way to contradict yourself Hume (Sorry, I kept reading the statement over and over and I had to point that out because it was bugging me). Okay, now back to Dr. Adler‘s analysis of Hume’s statement:
The line that divides what deserves to be honored and respected as genuine knowledge from what should be dismissed as mere opinion (or worse, as sophistry and illusion) is determined by two criteria. (1) It is knowledge and can be called science if it deals solely with abstractions and involves no judgments about matters of fact or real existence. Here we have mathematics and , together with it, the science of logic. (2) It is knowledge, if it deals with particular facts, as history and geography do, or with general facts as physics and chemistry do.
In both cases, it is knowledge only to the extent that it is based upon experimental reasoning, involving empirical investigations of the kind that occur in laboratories and observatories, or methodical investigations of the kind conducted by historians and geographers.
What did Hume exclude from the realm of Knowledge? Even though he refers to what he calls “natural Philosophy,” which in his century was identical with what we have come to call physical science, his intention was to reject as sophistry and illusion, or at least as mere opinion, what in antiquity and in the Middle Ages was traditional philosophy, including here a philosophy of nature, or physics that is not experimental and does not rely on empirical investigations, as well as metaphysics and philosophical theology.
This view of knowledge and opinion comes down to us in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the form of a doctrine that has been variously called positivism or scientism. The word positivism derives its meaning from the fact that the experimental or investigative sciences, and other bodies of knowledge, such as history, that rely upon investigation and research, came to be called positive sciences.
Positivism, then, is the view that the only genuine knowledge of reality or of the world of observable phenomena (i.e., matters of fact and existence) is to be found in the positive sciences. Mathematics and logic are also genuine knowledge, but they are not knowledge of the world of observable phenomena, or of matters of fact and real existence. The twentieth-century form of scientism or positivism thus came to be called “ logical positivism.”
Here we have one facet of the mistake about knowledge and opinion, the other facet of which is to be found in Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason. The latter is by far the more serious and the more far-reaching in its consequences.
He then goes on to explain the three errors Kant made in trying to fix some of Hume‘s ideas. The worst of which being, the substitution of idealism for realism. In other words since what we observe and take into our minds is not reality but a picture of reality, and since we “idealize” it once it’s in our mind, what we know is an ideal not the real.
Dr. Adler then goes on to solve the problem:
Let us return to the focal point for the this discussion—the distinction between knowledge and mere opinion. On the one hand, we have self-evident truths that have certitude and incorrigibility; and we also have truths that are still subject to doubt but that are supported by evidence and reasons to a degree that puts them beyond reasonable doubt or at the least gives them predominance over contrary views. All else is mere opinion—with no claim to being knowledge or having any hold on truth.
There is no question that the finding and conclusions of historical research are knowledge in this sense; no question that the findings and conclusion of the experimental or empirical sciences, both natural and social, are knowledge in this sense.
As contrasted with such knowledge, which is knowledge of reality or, as Hume would say, knowledge of matter of fact and real existence, mathematics and logic are also knowledge, but not of reality. They do not depend upon investigative research for their finds and conclusions.
The question that remains to be answered is the one that, in my judgment, Hume and Kant answered erroneously, an answer that has persisted in various forms down to our own day. Where does speculative or theoretical philosophy (by which I mean philosophical physics, metaphysics, and philosophical theology) stand in this picture? Is it mere opinion or is it genuine knowledge, knowledge that, like the empirical sciences, is knowledge of reality?—-
—-In the first place, what has been overlooked is the distinction between common and special experience.
Dr. Adler then goes to define common experience as, that which all people experience everyday without really looking to experience it. While special experience is the kind of experience that a scientist might get in a lab through experimentation. He then continues:
With this distinction in mind, between special and common experience, between experience resulting from investigation efforts and experience enjoyed without such efforts, we can distinguish between modes of knowledge that, while depending on experience as well as upon reflective thought, rely on different types of experience.
Mathematics is a case in point. Mathematical research is carried on mainly by reflective and analytical thought, but it also relies on some experience—the common experience that all human being have. Mathematicians do not engage in empirical investigation. They need no special data of observation. Mathematics can be called an armchair science, and yet some experience—the common experience of mankind—lies behind the reflective and analytical thought in which the mathematician engages.
Speculative or theoretical philosophy, like mathematics, is a body of knowledge that can be produced in an armchair or at a desk. The only experience that the philosopher needs for the development of his theories or the support of his conclusions is the common experience of mankind. Reflecting on such experience and proceeding by means of rational analysis and argument, the philosopher reaches conclusions in a manner that resembles the procedure of the mathematician, not that of the empirical scientist.
However, we must not fail to note one important difference, a difference that aligns the theoretical philosopher with the empirical scientist rather than with the mathematician. Unlike mathematics, but like empirical science, theoretical philosophy claims to be knowledge of reality.
In the light of what has just been said, we can divide the sphere of knowledge into (1) bodies of knowledge that are methodically investigative and (2) bodies of knowledge that are noninvestigative and that employ only common, not special, experience. To the first group belong history, geography, and all the empirical sciences, both natural and social. To the second group belong mathematics, logic, and theoretical philosophy.
If the division is made in terms of whether the body of knowledge claims to have a hold on truth about reality, then theoretical philosophy, even though it is noninvestigative in method, belongs with history, geography, and the empirical sciences.
Each of these disciplines, according to its distinctive character, has a method peculiarly its own and , according to limitations of that method, can answer only certain questions, not others. The kind of questions that philosopher or the mathematician can answer without any empirical investigation whatsoever cannot be answered by the empirical scientist, and, conversely, the kind of questions that the scientist can answer by his methods of investigation cannot be answered by the philosopher or the mathematician.
Dr. Adler wrote, that a man by the name of Sir Karl Popper said there was only one line of demarcation between knowledge and mere opinion which was: falsifiability by empirical evidence, by observed phenomena. An opinion, a view, a theory, that cannot be thus falsified is not knowledge, but mere opinion, neither true nor false in any objective sense of those terms. But Dr. Adler believes there are more lines of demarcation:
Another is refutability by rational argument. The only irrefutable truths we possess are the very few self-evident propositions that have certitude, finality, incorrigibility. Since our knowledge of reality, whether scientific or philosophical, does not consist exclusively of self-evident truths nor does it consist of conclusions demonstrated to be true, scientific and philosophical theories or conclusions must be refutable in three ways.
One way is falsification by experience which produces evidence contrary to the evidence that has been employed to support the opinion that claims to be true and to have the status of knowledge. A second way is by rational argument, which advances reasons that correct and replace the reasons advanced to support the opinion that claims to be true and have the status of knowledge. The third way is a combination of the first and the second—new and better evidence, together with new and better reasons for holding a view contrary to the one that has been refuted.
Opinion that cannot be refuted in one or another of theses three ways are not knowledge, but mere opinion.
Were this not so, this book would be fraudulent in its claim to point out philosophical mistakes and to correct them by offering evidence and reasons to expose their errors. Nor could we replace them with views that are true or more nearly true.
If philosophy were mere opinion there would be no philosophical mistakes, erroneous views, false doctrines. There would be no way of substituting views or doctrines more nearly true because they employed insights and appealed to distinctions that for one reason or another were not in the possession of those who made the mistakes.
All this just to say that a good philosophical argument can put forth as true a knowledge as Science. Which leads me to say something to the small group of Creationist and the Intelligent Design proponent that are really loud and are making all the other Creationist and Intelligent Design proponents look bad; stop forcing the enormity of Metaphysical Cosmology into the tiny hole of science. Science can only show proofs of the material, not the immaterial. Use Philosophy instead. That’s what it’s good at, that’s what it’s for. It’s okay to use science as your data base, just don’t call your conclusions scientific. They may be true, they just aren’t scientific.
To the small group of scientists who by being loud about their mocking of advocates of Intelligent Design, make the entirety of the scientific community look bad, I would like to say, stop assuming that you hold a monopoly on the only means of gathering truth. That truth exists, that truth is rational, that it’s understandable and that it can be taught, are the foundations of science itself and yet these are philosophical propositions that can’t be proven scientifically, but must be proven by good rational argument. Which is what the proponents of Intelligent Design are trying to do, only sometimes in a misguided way.
*EDIT: And by the way, until there is empirical scientific proof that Evolution is true, rather than just the inferring that its true based on scientific data, the Evolutionary theory is also a Cosmological, philosophical conclusion, not a scientific one.*
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Luise,
That is a great illustration of the Podcast Expo. Sorry you did not make it to the Mass.
God bless,
Fr. Jay
Just found your page about Italy! Loved it! Lived in Italy a couple of years; just doing a YouTube video about how to get to the Sistine Chapel. Your sketches brought back so many memories (especially the “Metro at Rush Hour” type).
Dear Luis,
Very interesting and thoughtful blog. If you are interested in Catholicism and boardgames you might appreciate “Vatican” the boardgame I designed. It has been selling worldwide and we have gotten very favorable comments
Sincerely,
Stephen Haliczer Ph.D.
Distinguished Research Professor
Product Designer
The College of DuPage Press
Hey! I’ve been trying to call you for a couple weeks! I should have checked your blog sooner. I thought you might have had the baby by now! Congrats! Call me ya bum. My number…unlike yours… is the same xxx-xxx-xxxx.
im doing a piece of it coursework and wondered if i could put your
“computer stoopid” picture on it.
I would acknowledge where it came from beneath it and in the bibliography.
If the answer is yes then could you tell me the artists name too?
thanks. keith.
Sure, absolutely, go right ahead. Thanks for asking.
Hi Luise,
I just came upon your Nephilim skeleton debunking image….very interesting.
I wish we could have met at Comic Con to discuss certain issues. Nothing that
I would want to discuss openly here.
Hope to hear from you,
Den
If you want to discuss something privately, you could always e-mail me. The address is up there under the “Hi, Welcome!” about the top commentators. It’s luis(at)luisescobarblog(dot)com.
Can you give me permission to use one of your illustrations for a tee shirt. I really want to wear “there must be some way to plug this keyboard into this game” – It’s how I see the world.. and you explained everything I want to tell the world in that one illustrzt8ion.
Gina
Yes, Gina. You can make it into a shirt for yourself off of that cartoon. I’m flattered.
I’ve been thinking about making shirts off of my little cartoons but I’m not sure which ones to do. Outside of an occasional cartoon that really hits home for someone, I’m not sure if they would sell.
So go right ahead Gina. Have fun.
Hi Luis,
My name is Phil and I came across your site while looking up information about animation and voice-over work. I’m a huge fan of the Simpsons & Futurama and a big Billy West fan (Ren&Stimpy, Futurama, Ect.). It is truly amazing to me how so many individuals come together to create these animated cartoons and the quality of the end product. I’m curious from your perspective how much work you have to re-do sometimes because of the networks and the way they censor some of the work that is being done. Best of luck to you in your projects. – Phil
You’d be surprised Phil. The biggest censors of the show are the writers themselves. They often pull back a joke they think is going too far. Sometimes, some of the jokes are funny too. It’s the artists that end up complaining about it. For example, there was a joke in one of the Halloween shows that all the artists thought was really funny. It was the show where Homer goes back in time on his toaster. In one of the futures he comes back too, he finds himself married to Patty and Selma. He discovers this when they show up waring lingerie. They looked really nasty, with their flab and hairy legs. When we saw it, everyone roared with horrified laughter. It was crazy. For some reason, during the re-write, they cut the gag because they thought it was too much. It was very disappointing. They didn’t even put the scene as an extra on the DVD.
Hope that answers your question.
It does. Thanks for the reply Luis. That gag actually would have been hilarious! Too bad it didn’t make it. I wonder if some unnecessary second guessing happens though because the writers feel they may be going over the top? (If that’s possible.) I know there is that fine line that writers and creators have to walk probably not only with the content of the show that’s created but with the networks as well. At least from what I understand in reading interviews and seeing convention interviews. Storyboards I think really help to set the tone of an episode and I bet it probably helps to justify many of the ideas that get spun out during the writing sessions of the writers. You all do great work on the show and I’m going to continue reading through your website. Thanks! – Phil
Hello there. I was researching nephilim for a report and I foung your blog. Its too bad those pics were all frauds. If they had been real, it would have been amazing.
After I read your stuff on the pictures I hung around a little, and read your “about me section”.
I am merely curious, so if I overstep a boundary, please feel free to tell me so.
I was wondering, sir, since you state that you are in fact a roman catholic, weather or not you believed in the deity of Jesus Christ?
I myself am a Christian, but I research other religions and alternate sects of my own. You could say its a hobby. In any case, if you find my inquiry impolite, I am sorry. I mean no offense.
Heh, no Christine, your question isn’t impolite. It’s good of you to ask. Too often people just assume things about Catholicism without asking.
The simple answer to your question is, “Yes”. Catholicism, teaches that Jesus Christ is God, the second person of the Holy Trinity.
The slightly more involved answer is as follows: The Catechism of the Catholic Church (the official book that explains all that the Catholic Church teaches) in paragraphs 446-451 ( http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P1H.HTM ) states the following:
Arianism was a Heresy that the Catholic Church fought against that deputed this belief around the years AD 250-336 which concluded in the Council of Nicea. For more info go to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arianism or http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01707c.htm .
Hope that answers your question.
thank you. most people would out-right refuse to answer that question nowadays.
May the Lord bless you, Luis!
Luis – my name is Luis Escobar – every now and then I Google my name just to see what pops up. Well – I often come across you. No doubt – you have discovered me too. Anyway – sure there a ton of our Luis Escobar’s out there but I thought that I would just say hello and let you know that you have a cool name. BTW – I am the third Luis in four! Grandpa, Father, me and my son. Louie’s all around!
HA ha! Yeah, you have a great name too.
Wow! That’s a lot of Luisesesss in your family. Pretty cool. Love your site dude. I’ll link to you.
wow – that was fast – I am a photographer, distance runner and high school cross country coach. I live in Santa Maria California. Married with three kids. Your work is great. You are very skilled. I will take some time and learn a little more about you and your work. Very cool. Well – I am off to a work with one of my running students. I will look forward to talking with you a little more in the future. Luis
Cool. Anytime.
i like simpsons, starting watch becouse my doughter like it
I write comment but strange dropdown
Howdee Luis, if you are a real Christian then i would suggest you to do some research on your big boss (Matt Groening being a 33rd degree mason).
Loads of subliminal messages in the Simpsons, and occult symbolism.
(Even 9-11 was announced).
Greetings…. (Peace be upon you)
I would like to present to you all the sciences related to cosmogony together with its rules as per its identity which is something not similar to any of the other things and is out of any and assimilation according to the following point of view:
1. The theories of on cosmogony lack the fundamentals of the origin of things as they are mainly based on incidence and on the unseen.
2. The cosmic extension that has been taking place is the result of the range of vision through using the telescope and any other instruments because the thing being seen is determined by vision and this is one of the universe laws.
3. Knowing the within secrets of man will uncover secrets of the universe as the apparent entities of existence are of six kinds: the perspective (what is being seen), the tangible world (what can be touched and felt), what can be weighed, what can be heard, things that have flavor and things that have smell. These, in most cases, are overlapping and are counted six in number.
The origin of all entities are bare pictures of materials, void of force and readiness; it shines in debate and is complete when read. The investigation of scientists is restricted to this reading (capability and liability) where the material is with all its atoms, energy and speed and this alone is useless compared with its radiance.
The first cosmic law is that nothing can be determined unless established with what is contrary to it. And things are sometimes concrete and sometimes abstract and both are the same according to law.
The origin of radiance is the brain and by saying this I do not mean perception but the simple core of it. By formulating this equation the truth becomes uncovered.
The subject is highly complicated and can only be clarified by word of mouth or by arguments.
So, what do you have to present. (show)
بعد التحية :-
أود أن أعرض عليكم جميع علوم نشأة مفردات الكون وقوانينه وفق ذاتيته التي هي شئ ليس كباقي الأشياء خارجه عن حد التعطيل والتشبيه حسب النظرة التالية :-
1/ أن نظريات نشأة الكون تفتقد لأصول نشأة الأشياء وتحيل على ألصدفه أو الغيب .وكذلك استغراق البحث في الأفاق لم يأتي بغايته إلا بقدر ربطه بالوعي الإنساني.
2/ التوسع الكوني الحاصل هو نتيجة المد البصري من خلال التلسكوب وغيره لأن المنظور أليه يثبت بالبصر وهذا أحد قوانين الكون
3/ معرفة أسرار بطون الإنسان تكشف أسرار الكون حيث أن مفردات الوجود الظاهر على ستة أنواع (المنظور أليها ). (الملموسة). (الموزونة). (المسموعة). (ذات طعم). (ذات رائحة). وتكون في أغلب الأحيان متداخلة .وأصل الأشياء كلها صور عارية عن المواد . خاليه من القوه والاستعداد . بمناظرتها تشرق وبمطالعتها تتم . وبحث العلماء ينحصر في هذه المطالعة (القوه والاستعداد) حيث المادة ودقائقها وطاقتها وسرعتها وهذا وحده لا جدوى منه بقدر إشراقها . . وأصل الإشراق هو العقل ولا أقصد به الإدراك أنما هو )جوهر بسيط درأك محيط) وبتكوين هذه المعادلة تنكشف الحقيقة .
الموضوع غاية بالتعقيد يوضح بالمشافهة والجدل فما هو عرضكم ؟
توضيح:-
* أود أن أبين بأن وسائط الإدراك هي الحواس ألخمسه + تحسس الوزن.
* إما أحوال الإدراك ( تصوراته أي المعاني التي يلبسها ) فهي ستة أيضا ثلاثة وخلافها :-
1/ الحياة والموجود ولها صور فمثلا صورة الحياة هي الماء.
2/ الحركة والسكون ولها صور فمثلا صورة الحركة هي الهواء.
3/ الانفعال والسكينة ولها صور فمثلا صورة الانفعال هي النار.
* إما مراتب نفس الإدراك إي نفس ألصوره فهي خمسه:-
1)الجماد 2) النبات 3) الحيوان 4) الملكوت 5) الإنسان وصور ذلك كثيرة.
*** وكل هذه الصور تندرج ضمن تصورات الإدراك .منها ظاهره ومنها كامنة إي لم تظهر لحد الآن . والتوسع الكوني الحاصل هو ظهور لبعض هذه الصور الكامنة.
*وأروع إبداعات الإدراك هو العقل (جوهر بسيط درأك محيط ) ولكل واحده تفصيلاتها الوظيفية.
ووظيفة العقل هي ربط كل الصور المذكورة أعلاه بعوالمها الحسيه ألسبعه. وعالمنا هو العالم السابع وفق نمطيته الحسيه. وتجري آثار العقل على كل الصور الكونية فتصبح محسوسة وفق قوتها واستعدادها التصوري.
قد لا يفهم الموضوع بشكل جيد كونه لم يطرق بتاتا
Lol been stalking you. You’re pretty good. Not bad for a dad of many. Very talented. Don’t know how you keep up. Chat soon on twitter
An overwhelming desire to keep sane helps.
I’m doing some onsite interviews at Mystic Dragon’s Festival of Books. Would you have time to talk with me about your work and “The Art of Draw Fu”? at 4 pm on August 15th? Please let me know (and your “Black Terror Kid” comics, along with your comic about your trip to Rome, are really fun!).
Yes, absolutely. I’d be happy to.
Great, thank you! Could you email me a contact for you, at the above email link, and I’ll send you more information (and I’m ordering your book now!).