
I think I talked about my newfound love of Rick and Morty a few weeks ago. I also know I talked about a jam piece I worked on with Jason Young. Well this combines both! I drew Rick and Morty, Jason drew the alien/monster thing, and, if I say so myself, we did okay.
280. Rick and Morty
279

I was wiping excess ink off of my brush pen. This happened. This may be the best accidental thing I’ve ever drawn.
278. The Young Ones

Other than the fact that I love this show, I drew The Young Ones for a reason. It’s an awesome reason that I can’t tell you about yet. I can tell you, however, that Mike was a pain in the ass to draw and ruined three tries at this piece.
277. X-Factor

A while ago, my pal Jason Young and I were hanging out and for some reason the discussion turned to comics. We wound up talking about Marvel Comics’ Hip-Hop Variant Covers that were just being previewed. We browsed through all the ones that were revealed at the time. Some were great and clever, some obscure, some were just kind of eh. Some were done by Bill Seinkewicz, who had actually done some Hip-Hop album covers.
I know there’s controversy surrounding these variants, with Marvel’s stance on diversity, race, and their hiring policies, but Marvel is a massive part of a gargantuan corporation. It’s an unthinking, unfeeling grinder, and I doubt much will change.
Also Marvel’s variant practices are kinda gross and awful, so good luck finding these covers, anyway.
That said, back in the Fun Zone, Jason and I were inspired. At first we were gonna do our own version. Fake Metal variant covers, ’cause Metal is our god, and so many albums could be repurposed as comic covers. But, we dig a lot of Hip-Hop too, and started reminiscing about some of our favorite rekkids (sorry, Ed Piskor).
Ultimately, we decided to do our own fake Hip-Hop variants, because it just seemed like a thing to do. We had lofty goals, we were gonna do two each and release ’em on our blogs throughout November. We were dumb.
So here’s mine, Digital Underground’s SEX PACKETS repurposed as a 90s X-Factor cover. I loved this album as a kid, even when I went full-blown metal & punk. It absolutely blew my tiny rock brain when I learned Shock G and Humpty Hump were the same dude. Ton of great songs on this album and it has a lot of humor, too.
Which is why I always loved Peter David and Larry Stroman’s X-FACTOR book. It was smart, character-driven and funny. When the whole X-craze hit in ’91, people went nuts for Jim Lee’s X-Men and Rob Liefeld’s X-Force. I loved X-Factor so much more. Still do.
So yeah. Check out Jason’s awesome Hip-Hop variant over on his blog!
Below is the original album art for reference.

274. Alan Moore

This one was “Alan Moore as a Werewolf”.
Is there a difference?
273. Bat Vampire

Hey, here’s a character I rarely draw!
I was asked for “Batman/Dracula”, and I may be disappointing them with this, because when I read that, the first, last and only thought I had was of the epic Doug Moench/Kelley Jones trilogy of Batman vampire comics. It started with Batman/Dracula: Red Rain, continued in Batman: Bloodstorm and wrapped up in Batman: Crimson Mist. All three are available in one fine package called Batman: Vampire. I can’t recommend ’em enough if you like the unlikely combo of Batman and horror. Seriously, though, Kelley Jones is kinda the greatest. So, I wanted to draw his vampired up Batman here.
272. Super Zombie

No need for me to blather on here. Pretty self-explanatory. I did spend last Sunday in a sort of Superman haze. I don’t know why, but I decided to watch Superman The Movie, which, I dunno if you know this, is pretty good. The first 45 minutes of that movie are fucking great. Punches me right in the feelings balls.
I followed that up with Superman vs. The Mole People, the first George Reeves Superman film, pre-television show. After that I watched about half of the Fleischer Superman cartoons from the 40s, and then wrapped it up with the entire first season of Superman: The Animated Series. Up, up, and away, ’til 3am, apparently.
I should mention that I was working on stuff while doing all this. I didn’t just veg out with Clark Kent all day. I was busy as shit.
271. Hulkenstein

I have iffy feelings about the Hulk, but I do kinda love drawing him sometimes. For Hulkenstein, I just thought about Hulk with stitches and electrodes, but whenever I’ve drawn The Frankenstein Monster, I usually like to make him a lot more patchwork quiltified than he’s usually shown. So, multi-colored Hulks get Frankensteined together.

