@deaddays
John Rios

Dead Days 7/2/03
Dead Days 7/2/03 by @deaddays (John Rios)

Ok, you're probably wondering why I'm doing a Thanksgiving strip in July. Well, you see, Dead Days runs weekly during the school year, but unfortunately, I have no time to do Dead Days during the school year due to homework, projects and political and editorial cartoons. Thus, I have to plan ahead and do them all during the summer. This'll run sometime during the Thanksgiving week later this year.

BUT JUST COZ IT'S NOT NOVEMBER DOESN'T MEAN IT CAN'T BE FUNNY! Right? Right??

This is an important strip, because it answers the question, "How far will John go to make a stupid joke?" The answer is THIS far. This is probably one of the most elaborate Dead Days I've done. Usually not much "action" in Dead Days (Last action scene was... the fight between Math Major Man and the Human Pi. What a great battle!), but I felt this was warrented. So, um, enjoy some early holiday fun! My motto is that there's never a bad time to enjoy turkey karate. BYE!

P.S. Depending on how this new SIDE 7 version turns out, This might be my final post on Side 7 (I'm a broke college student, so if posting means paying, it's gonna be a tough decision). At any rate, You can always catch my work at deaddays.deviantart.com where I update just as regularly as I do here. Thanks for viewing! Later! -John Artwork © Copyright 2003 John Rios

Category:
Rating:
Teen (LV)
Class:
Finished Work
Submitted:
21y150d ago
Tags:
None
Other Work By @deaddays

Comments & Critiques (0)

Preferred comment/critique type for this content: Any Kind

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in and have an Active account to leave a comment.
Please, login or sign up for an account.

What kind of comments is deaddays seeking for this piece?

  • Any Kind - Self-explanatory.
  • Casual Comments - Comments of a more social nature.
  • Light Critique - Comments containing constructive suggestions about this work.
  • Heavy Critique - A serious analysis of this work, with emphasis on identifying potential problem areas, good use of technique and skill, and suggestions for potentially improving the work.
Please keep in mind, critiques may highlight both positive and negative aspects of this work, but the main goal is to constructively help the artist to improve in their skills and execution. Be kind, considerate, and polite.