Adam West is the Real Batman and I refuse to argue the point any longer. Actually, Christian Bale was pretty good in his own right. If you know me at all, you know that I harbor a certain fondness for the 1966-'68 Adam West/Burt Ward series, despite or perhaps due to its excesses.
Art in Haste is the illustration blog thingie that I devote most of my time to in 2006 (and it's the place I'd refer you to first). It has this place beat because you can leave comments and mash notes, if you choose.
The Astounding B Monster is an old favorite. I'm never going to get tired of budget-basement horror and monster movies...won't I?
Crime were, are, and will remain San Francisco's First and Only Rock 'n' Roll Band. They'll always get props as long as I'm around to offer 'em.
DeviantART is where most of my newer stuff gets posted these days, and while it's a little bit on the juvenile side, it's still a lot of fun. Its feedback system is useful, anyway.
Etsy is an interesting concept in hand-made retail: I don't have anything of my own for sale there yet, but may one day.
Flickr might not be all it's cracked up to be, but it fulfills a need. I've got some recent photos, some drawings, some pulp paperback scans, and some very aged ephemera from the Modesto days posted 'ere.
Fortean Times will twist your melon right 'round. Reading the website is certainly cheaper than buying it at the newstand.
FlipSide Fanzine are long gone, but this page serves as a neat memorial to LA's premier punk mag of the 70s and 80s (the 90s not so much).
Friendster leaves me cold in comparison to the competition, but if you use it still, then here you go.
Garage Punk.com is probably my favorite musical destination these days: check out the forums during your visit.
Gimme Action is Janelle Hessig's site, she of Tales of Blarg fame.
Grass Hut Corp. is the home of artist (and one-time Real Foods employee) Bwana Spoons. I knew him under a different name and at a far different time, but he's as interesting as ever.
Huge Magazine dates a bit with its Church of the Subgenius-inspired art and collages, but I dig it all the same.
Illustration Friday is a fun project with a noble goal.
Jeff Heermann is the site that I actually pay to have up. My name is its own domain: proceed with caution (and why were you here in the first place?).
Jeff Heermann's Inconvenience Store is open 24 hours to serve you better. Any cheaply-produced merchandise you'd like to see emblazoned with my artwork? Drop me a line and lemme know.
Jess Hutch is the site owned and maintained by my lovely wife, an artist of many talents.
Maximum Rock 'n' Roll will always rate a mention. My stake in the mag is minimal now, but what the hell.
MySpace is a necessary evil these days. I've bowed to that evil.
Mister SF isn't a great name for what this site does, but what the hell. An exhaustive resource for real locals-only kinda San Francisco history and trivia.
Monster Kid magazine is a fun read. You could even call it Monsteriffic.
Musty TV is Rain Jokinen's regularly-updated blog on all things televisionistic.
Real Losers are one of the hippinest and hoppinest Brit bands of the modern world, sez I.
Spectre Collie will get you if you're not careful: it's Chuck Jordan's clearing house of commentary, wit and wisdom.
Static Party is Ryan and Scott Soriano's audio blog showcasing the best (or wurst?) of 90s garage-noise singles. Teengenerate here we come.
Swipple is the online home of Jim Damron's art...and what art it is. He doesn't get the kind of attention that he richly deserves, but then, he might not really be looking for attenion.
Trouser Press ceased to be relevant in about 1987, but it's still a good reference for mainstream "new music" acts and artists before that time.
Tweedlesketch is another fun-time illustration blog, which deserves notice here. Talk about your compositional integrity!
Wazo Café Gallery deserves a look, so look once and look twice.