Your search for watermelon returned 23 result(s).

December 14 2008 permalink | 30 notes
Subway FruitClick here for a closer look on Flickr.What would the L train be? What fruit is grey?Oh, and because they feel left out : here’s something for the watermelons.©Dan Meth

Subway Fruit
Click here for a closer look on Flickr.
What would the L train be? What fruit is grey?
Oh, and because they feel left out : here’s something for the watermelons.
©Dan Meth

November 14 2008 permalink | 6 notes
Steven Seagal took on an entire gang of watermelon gangsters in the 1991 thriller “Seeds of Vengeance”

Steven Seagal took on an entire gang of watermelon gangsters in the 1991 thriller “Seeds of Vengeance”

February 27 2008 permalink

logo8210.jpg

Josh Cohen of media site Tilzy.TV dropped by the studio to grill me on “The Meth Minute” and below is the result. They also wrote a very astute article to go along with it.

For the bizzare animated sketches of The Meth Minute 39, New York-based artist Dan Meth combines flash-based graphics with a style drawn from the past three decades of adult and children’s cartoons. After his viral advertising campaigns with catchy, kitschy tunes caught the eye of animation heavyweight Fred Seibert (especially Shofar Idol), Dan soon joinedChannel Federator, the world’s first cartoon network podcast, as a hired pen.  In September 2007, he introduced his Meth Minutes.

Not surprisingly, the series’ first episodeInternet People, a song about those touched by internet fame (and infamy), became a viral hit spoofing everything from Numa Numa to Dick In A Box. Since then, The Meth Minute has found mention in the New York Post, Time Out, andNew York Magazineamong others.  Each episode is a completely unique universe in itself, twisting pop culture into unseemly shapes and stone-cold weirdness. Populated by parodied pop stars, both titanic and obscure (or even fictional) and human Pez dispensers.

Even when he’s not drinking and drawing, navigating the mind of Dan Meth, soaked with Ren & Stimpy reruns and classic rock radio, is no light-hearted task, but Josh recently gave it a shot when he met up with the artist at the Frederator Studios in NYC

As he mentioned above, Dan records improvised dialogue, creating a hilarious overlap rarely found in mainstream and more orderly animation.  If you’re unfamiliar with the series, here’s a primer on the content:

### In Syd Barret Visits his Accountant, a typical day of soul-numbing tax preparation turns into a psychadelic rock-out within the LSD-damaged mind of the former Pink Floyd leader. Mike Tyson’s Brunch Outis a meeting of the Heavyweight Champ, (the eight-bit Nintendo version) and the hipster brunch crowd. Hilarity ensues. Nite Fite is a parody of Hardball-style news shows where two hosts, Penalty and Lloyd, debate whether the band Rush can indeed be classified as “heavy metal.” Similarly, The Music Nerds animates an argument between two friends both claiming title as the world’s largest Led Zeppelin fan (NSFW - language).

Despite the ingenuity, some sketches feel more like warm-ups for viral adverts. Dog Video Dating is a montage of dogs looking for love. While the idea of video dating might not be all that topical, the production is still top-notch and veers towards an darkly comic sensibility.

But those that don’t strike entertainment gold are few and far between.  Conceived by Meth after spending too much time watching children’s programming, For Kids! is a personal favorite, while Watermelon Nightsis a happy-go-lucky, leave-your-worries-on-the-doorstep, walk-on-the-sunny-side-of-the-street fav of the series’ creator.

We’re 22/39 of the way through, but the series is far from over.  Before all’s said and done, Meth told us that we can expect to see some reappearances of old friends and definitely more strange animated goodness.  Catch episodes new and old at MethMinute39.com.

July 1 2008 permalink
ASIFA “Meth Minute” Screening
Last Thursday, Dave Levy of ASIFA East arranged for us to show a selection of Meth Minute cartoons on the big screen at NYU front of an audience. It was great to see the cartoons projected huge (how many pixels wide? MILLIONS) in front of a large group of people. It’s sort of like seeing these films for the first time, and also the way cartoon were originally meant to be viewed.
Afterwards, Dave moderated a Q & A session. It was nice to answer some burning questions about The Meth Minute that people had. (13 Watermelons. That’s how many it took!) Fred and Carrie joined me on the panel. We’ll most likely do this again in some form or another, so don’t be sad if you missed it.

ASIFA “Meth Minute” Screening

Last Thursday, Dave Levy of ASIFA East arranged for us to show a selection of Meth Minute cartoons on the big screen at NYU front of an audience. It was great to see the cartoons projected huge (how many pixels wide? MILLIONS) in front of a large group of people. It’s sort of like seeing these films for the first time, and also the way cartoon were originally meant to be viewed.

Afterwards, Dave moderated a Q & A session. It was nice to answer some burning questions about The Meth Minute that people had. (13 Watermelons. That’s how many it took!) Fred and Carrie joined me on the panel. We’ll most likely do this again in some form or another, so don’t be sad if you missed it.

August 5 2008 permalink
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Watermelon Nights… The Song

May 1 2008 permalink

32. Emomelon Days

The watermelons return in episode 32 of The Meth Minute… only this time they’re not so happy. In fact they’re Emo. Or maybe Goth. It’s hard to tell. Not even the other fruits and vegetables can figure it out.

December 6 2007 permalink

11. Watermelon Nights

Dan Meth takes the animation out into the real world with a full-length stop motion music video for this summer anthem by underground musician John Crave. It’s one of the “sweetest” short films ever made.