Who doesn't have a store these days?


A collection of various Cafe-Press stores that have come up over the years. Some are in a state of chaos, others collecting dustbunnies, but, well, here they are...

tRick Salsman's first store where all manner of needless stuff is for sale. This is more or less an experimental (in terms of imagery) site.

R&R Wireless Cable Believe it or not, this was a business run by me and Ron Youngquist. Later, Ron would have something of an affair with my once-wife who would tell me she wanted to leave me for him, though he wasn't interested. It gets complicated, but ends even weirder when, while I was in jail on 80 counts of grand theft, he was beaten to death on a beach. He was a good friend, a bad enemy, and isn't there anymore. I'm not sure how I feel about that.

The Slow Poisoners Store The band has merchandise (better than this), but I put up some designs otherwise not available. Gotta love the infant creeper!

Ogner Stump and his sorrows The comic by Andrew Goldfarb lives in paperback and on into the future. Here you can get some stuff that would go nicely with a copy of the first Sorrows. Get THAT at Wonderells Printed.

vFinyl My production department was given an insane goal to produce one year. In a company that sputtered and flailed and failed to hit the rest of its goals, my department kicked some ass (kudos to those who did the work, you know who you are). As sure as we hit our goal, the other management decided that business meetings were too boring and wanted to make them entertaining. We set up vFinyl as a performance piece. In the end, we printed our target numbers on money (so people would read them and give a rip about them), threw 52 cards (51 actually) into the air, and spilled 500,000 beans onto a snare drum in a wash tub. The point? There wasn't much of a point except that I used to work in a company that would try to make business meetings "more fun" while the company spiraled into a shit-heap. Numbers and accuracy were always "too hard" or "uninteresting" and performance was what was demanded, though not rewarded. It was pathetic, really. vFinyl was a hoot, though. Video available upon request. Oh, yeah, F-you to those who deserve it (and you know who YOU are).

Set Studios Store They are not just a production company! These kids have their own merchandise sure as they have opinions about who gets to yell "cut" at the end of a scene. It is pretty Set-specific, but who needs a vanity-free Cafe Press store?




Posted: Mon - January 3, 2005 at 09:11 PM          


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