“Rainy Day Daydream’s” background designers were Ghostshrimp and Santino Lascano. The painters were Martin Ansolabehere and Sandra Calleros. Nick Jennings is the show’s art director, Pat McHale is the creative director.
You know how a few weeks ago fans posted all those Adventure Time album covers on the show’s Tumblr page? Well, here are 100 of them strung together in a new video. Thanks, donk6000.
– Eric
PS How old am I that I recognize maybe 10% of these? How many do you know?
“Rainy Day Daydream’s” character designers were Phil Rynda, Natasha Allegri, and Tom Herpich. Character clean-up artists were Mike Collins and Alex Campos. Ron Russell and Simon Simmonds were the colorists. Nick Jennings is the show’s art director, and Pat McHale is the creative director.
“Rainy Day Daydream’s” background designers were Ghostshrimp and Santino Lascano. The painters were Martin Ansolabehere and Sandra Calleros. Nick Jennings is the show’s art director, Pat McHale is the creative director.
Okay, I really thought yesterday’s Dimple Plant post was the end of the “Henchman”-related stuff, but it turns out we never posted the original story outline. As you can see, the writing team - who, I think, then consisted of Pen Ward, Pat McHale, Merriwether Williams, Tim McKeon, and Steve Little - churned out “Marceline’s Slave Story” last May, pre-Lady Gaga. Now that the episode has aired, you can compare and contrast the two for your weekend pleasure.
The last of the last of “Henchman.” Cut & Paste credits here: Phil Rynda is the show’s lead character designer. Nick Jennings is the art director, and Pat McHale is the creative director. On “Henchman,” Tom Herpich and Natasha Allegri were the character designers, and Mike Collins and Alex Campos handled clean-up. Ron Russell and Simon Simmonds were the color stylists.
From “Henchman.” Phil Rynda is the show’s lead character designer. Nick Jennings is the art director, and Pat McHale is the creative director. On “Henchman,” Tom Herpich and Natasha Allegri were the character designers, and Mike Collins and Alex Campos handled clean-up. Ron Russell and Simon Simmonds were the color stylists.
Seth Green and Matthew Senreich’sRobot Chicken beat out Adventure Time this afternoon to win the Creative Arts Primetime Emmy for the Best Short-Form Animated Program. Adventure Time is in good company, though, with Flapjack, Chowder, “Uncle Grandpa,” and Kick Buttowski also coming up empty. (Actually, now that I think about it, Seth is the one who opened the category’s winners’ envelope and announced his own award. I call shenanigans.)
Congratulations to the Robot Chicken team (including the folks at ShadowMachine) along with all the nominees. I guess this just means Pen and his crew will have to win two Emmys next year.