SuperF*ckers

Created by James Kochalka.
Follow James' tumblr here.
See the original comic here.

Here’s my fan art. James suggested I submit, I felt honour bound! Meatballs! Submit your fan art to us! Thank you manfromspaceahoy for the Jack Krak fan art

May 7, 2013


Here’s my fan art. James suggested I submit, I felt honour bound! Meatballs!

Submit your fan art to us!
Thank you manfromspaceahoy for the Jack Krak fan art

Here’s my fan art. James suggested I submit, I felt honour bound! Meatballs!

Submit your fan art to us!

Thank you manfromspaceahoy for the Jack Krak fan art

Jack Krack is the Mutha’ Funker! More odd drawings at lil-doodles.tumblr.com Watch SuperF***ers every Friday Great work lil-doodles on the fan art!

May 2, 2013


Jack Krack is the Mutha’ Funker! More odd drawings at lil-doodles.tumblr.com

Watch SuperF***ers every Friday
Great work lil-doodles on the fan art!

Jack Krack is the Mutha’ Funker! More odd drawings at lil-doodles.tumblr.com

Watch SuperF***ers every Friday

Great work lil-doodles on the fan art!

archiemcphee: One of our favorite comedians, Maria Bamford, is selling a couple of t-shirts with quotes from her standup special, The Special Special Special. She recorded her special (special special) in her living room with just her parents and pug as the audience. This particular quote about the power of celebrity, paired with an illustration from Priscilla Wilson, is especially awesomely weird.  Get your own shirt here Maria Bamford = comedy gold. But we here at Cartoon Hangover already knew that. Go buy some t-shirts and prepare for a Maria Bamford marathon: watch her Special Special Special, and then listen to her radiant voice in SuperF*ckers and Bravest Warriors.

January 4, 2013

archiemcphee:

One of our favorite comedians, Maria Bamford, is selling a couple of t-shirts with quotes from her standup special, The Special Special Special. She recorded her special (special special) in her living room with just her parents and pug as the audience. This particular quote about the power of celebrity, paired with an illustration from Priscilla Wilson, is especially awesomely weird. 
Get your own shirt here

Maria Bamford = comedy gold. But we here at Cartoon Hangover already knew that.
Go buy some t-shirts and prepare for a Maria Bamford marathon: watch her Special Special Special, and then listen to her radiant voice in SuperF*ckers and Bravest Warriors.

archiemcphee:

One of our favorite comedians, Maria Bamford, is selling a couple of t-shirts with quotes from her standup special, The Special Special Special. She recorded her special (special special) in her living room with just her parents and pug as the audience. This particular quote about the power of celebrity, paired with an illustration from Priscilla Wilson, is especially awesomely weird. 

Get your own shirt here

Maria Bamford = comedy gold. But we here at Cartoon Hangover already knew that.

Go buy some t-shirts and prepare for a Maria Bamford marathon: watch her Special Special Special, and then listen to her radiant voice in SuperF*ckers and Bravest Warriors.

Just a simple little hug, is enough to set him off! Thanks  destasablog for submitting your fan art!

December 27, 2012

Just a simple little hug, is enough to set him off!
Thanks  destasablog for submitting your fan art!

Just a simple little hug, is enough to set him off!

Thanks  destasablog for submitting your fan art!

kochalka: This is the first interview I’ve done about quitting American Elf… in my hometown paper, Seven Days.  Oh, and they mentioned SuperF*ckers!  You know the world is coming to an end when they mention SuperF*ckers in the newspaper. There are so many ways to get your Kochalka fix: in print, ebook, web, and Internet cartoons!

December 19, 2012

kochalka:

This is the first interview I’ve done about quitting American Elf… in my hometown paper, Seven Days.  Oh, and they mentioned SuperF*ckers!  You know the world is coming to an end when they mention SuperF*ckers in the newspaper.

There are so many ways to get your Kochalka fix: in print, ebook, web, and Internet cartoons!

kochalka:

This is the first interview I’ve done about quitting American Elf… in my hometown paper, Seven Days.  Oh, and they mentioned SuperF*ckers!  You know the world is coming to an end when they mention SuperF*ckers in the newspaper.

There are so many ways to get your Kochalka fix: in print, ebook, web, and Internet cartoons!

hey, Jack Krak, what are u doing… oh god… I drew Jack cause he’s awesome. That’s it. He’s freakin’ out cause he can’t find a clean toilet and he has to PEE! Watch the all new episode of SuperF*ckers and you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about. You TOO can submit your SuperF*ckers fan art by clicking here Thank you Cath for the hilarious fan art!

December 15, 2012


hey, Jack Krak, what are u doing… oh god…
I drew Jack cause he’s awesome. That’s it.

He’s freakin’ out cause he can’t find a clean toilet and he has to PEE!
Watch the all new episode of SuperF*ckers and you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about.
You TOO can submit your SuperF*ckers fan art by clicking here
Thank you Cath for the hilarious fan art!

hey, Jack Krak, what are u doing… oh god…

I drew Jack cause he’s awesome. That’s it.

He’s freakin’ out cause he can’t find a clean toilet and he has to PEE!

Watch the all new episode of SuperF*ckers and you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about.

You TOO can submit your SuperF*ckers fan art by clicking here

Thank you Cath for the hilarious fan art!

Shitstorm GIF & Animatic stills from the second episode of SuperF*ckers.  Jack Krak feigns making sweet blob-love to Grotus’s new costume. This offers a glimpse into how we transform an animatic into animation! Isn’t it Jack Krak-tastic? Subscribe to SuperF*ckers for all the necrovomitous slime action, coming at you on Fridays exclusively on YouTube.

December 13, 2012

Shitstorm GIF & Animatic stills from the second episode of SuperF*ckers

Jack Krak feigns making sweet blob-love to Grotus’s new costume. This offers a glimpse into how we transform an animatic into animation! Isn’t it Jack Krak-tastic?

Subscribe to SuperF*ckers for all the necrovomitous slime action, coming at you on Fridays exclusively on YouTube.

Ready to sing about the Sweet Mystery? Download this instrumental from SoundCloud and submit your own version here! We want to broadcast your voice on the internet, so send your covers our way!

December 10, 2012

image

Ready to sing about the Sweet MysteryDownload this instrumental from SoundCloud and submit your own version here!

We want to broadcast your voice on the internet, so send your covers our way!

I love this series so far! So funny XD Thanks April for the awesome fan art! Submit your fan art now!

December 3, 2012


I love this series so far! So funny XD

Thanks April for the awesome fan art!
Submit your fan art now!

I love this series so far! So funny XD

Thanks April for the awesome fan art!

Submit your fan art now!

“Superf*ckers is a work of art.”  SF creator James Kochalka received this fan letter over the weekend, and got the writer’s kind permission for us to reprint it on the tumblr. “Warmth and sincerity” and “heart and soul and character” are the phrases that jumped out at me, the ones that captured exactly why the Cartoon Hangover and Frederator teams wanted to make the show in the first place (if in a slightly different form). I hope you all feel exactly the same way. -Fred ….. Hey James, I was going to write this on the americanelf (sic) forum but I couldn’t figure out my login info. (Hope this is an account that you actually use..) Anyway, I wanted to share my thoughts on the premiere of Superf*ckers. I think the show has something very special and rare that is hard to find in modern day animation. I can’t exactly put it into a single word, but there is a certain warmth and sincerity to it. The movement looks smooth, like it is alive. It all seems alive. A lot of stuff today feels very cold and dead and detached, even the really well written shows. They look shallow and empty. It is as if there are moving images, and sound, but the two do not connect. I don’t see any of that in Superf*ckers. Superf*ckers is a work of art.  I think a lot of good animation that feels warm and alive and real relies a lot on dimension and severe exaggeration. So getting a subtle minimal style to look and feel warm and alive is almost unheard of. The animators did an amazing job on bringing the comic book to life in a way that does not water it down, or over do it, it doesn’t feel bogged down with details. Clearly a lot of people put a lot of work into it, but it doesn’t feel like it was arduously constructed by some unwilling committee or something. It’s rich and full, but the animation feels hand drawn and custom made like your original artwork, almost like you drew it all yourself. Your work sort of has a delicate balance, and I think you guys did a great job of staying true to that. The voice acting is really great. And the animation fits with the voice work, it looks like they animated specifically to the recordings and added little extra quirks from the audio. Your simplistic and minimal expressions are executed just right. Characters feel like they are really saying what they are saying, feeling and thinking. I was surprised when I first saw the first few clips how great that turned out! Your original color work looks great, and has been handled very well by the crew. The show feels inspiring and inspired. I’m a longtime fan, so I may be completely biased. But I am also a harsh critic.. I think Superf*ckers is out of the ordinary in the way that it is genuine and authentic. Maybe those types of qualities are harder for people to notice at first, I don’t know. I think the negative knee-jerk reaction a lot of people are having has more to do with the state of current pop culture trends and less to do with the quality of your show. It’s harder for people to detect heart and soul and character, it seems that we are more used to cheap obvious jokes recited by empty lifeless drawings. And it’s hard to trust an artist’s voice nowadays, if people see the surface as being just swearing and simplistic looking drawing style or whatever, without noticing what is unique and specific or subtle about it, and what is beneath it all, based on the crap they are used to seeing they are not sure what to expect. It may be something that people don’t “get” right away, until they get a feel for it. Who knows? Probably better that the masses don’t immediately love it anyway, that makes it more of a cult status, it belongs more to the fans. Anyway, sorry for rambling on. The show is great. The quality of the show is undeniable. Congratulations to you, the cast and the crew. Can’t wait for the next one. I hope you guys have the opportunity to produce many more episodes! Keep up the awesome work. -Adam Lore

December 3, 2012

“Superf*ckers is a work of art.” 
SF creator James Kochalka received this fan letter over the weekend, and got the writer’s kind permission for us to reprint it on the tumblr. “Warmth and sincerity” and “heart and soul and character” are the phrases that jumped out at me, the ones that captured exactly why the Cartoon Hangover and Frederator teams wanted to make the show in the first place (if in a slightly different form). I hope you all feel exactly the same way. -Fred
…..
Hey James,
I was going to write this on the americanelf (sic) forum but I couldn’t figure out my login info. (Hope this is an account that you actually use..)
Anyway, I wanted to share my thoughts on the premiere of Superf*ckers. I think the show has something very special and rare that is hard to find in modern day animation. I can’t exactly put it into a single word, but there is a certain warmth and sincerity to it. The movement looks smooth, like it is alive. It all seems alive. A lot of stuff today feels very cold and dead and detached, even the really well written shows. They look shallow and empty. It is as if there are moving images, and sound, but the two do not connect. I don’t see any of that in Superf*ckers.
Superf*ckers is a work of art. 
I think a lot of good animation that feels warm and alive and real relies a lot on dimension and severe exaggeration. So getting a subtle minimal style to look and feel warm and alive is almost unheard of.
The animators did an amazing job on bringing the comic book to life in a way that does not water it down, or over do it, it doesn’t feel bogged down with details. Clearly a lot of people put a lot of work into it, but it doesn’t feel like it was arduously constructed by some unwilling committee or something. It’s rich and full, but the animation feels hand drawn and custom made like your original artwork, almost like you drew it all yourself. Your work sort of has a delicate balance, and I think you guys did a great job of staying true to that.
The voice acting is really great. And the animation fits with the voice work, it looks like they animated specifically to the recordings and added little extra quirks from the audio. Your simplistic and minimal expressions are executed just right. Characters feel like they are really saying what they are saying, feeling and thinking. I was surprised when I first saw the first few clips how great that turned out!
Your original color work looks great, and has been handled very well by the crew. The show feels inspiring and inspired.
I’m a longtime fan, so I may be completely biased. But I am also a harsh critic.. I think Superf*ckers is out of the ordinary in the way that it is genuine and authentic. Maybe those types of qualities are harder for people to notice at first, I don’t know.
I think the negative knee-jerk reaction a lot of people are having has more to do with the state of current pop culture trends and less to do with the quality of your show. It’s harder for people to detect heart and soul and character, it seems that we are more used to cheap obvious jokes recited by empty lifeless drawings. And it’s hard to trust an artist’s voice nowadays, if people see the surface as being just swearing and simplistic looking drawing style or whatever, without noticing what is unique and specific or subtle about it, and what is beneath it all, based on the crap they are used to seeing they are not sure what to expect. It may be something that people don’t “get” right away, until they get a feel for it. Who knows? Probably better that the masses don’t immediately love it anyway, that makes it more of a cult status, it belongs more to the fans.
Anyway, sorry for rambling on. The show is great. The quality of the show is undeniable. Congratulations to you, the cast and the crew. Can’t wait for the next one. I hope you guys have the opportunity to produce many more episodes!
Keep up the awesome work.
-Adam Lore

Superf*ckers is a work of art.” 

SF creator James Kochalka received this fan letter over the weekend, and got the writer’s kind permission for us to reprint it on the tumblr. “Warmth and sincerity” and “heart and soul and character” are the phrases that jumped out at me, the ones that captured exactly why the Cartoon Hangover and Frederator teams wanted to make the show in the first place (if in a slightly different form). I hope you all feel exactly the same way. -Fred

…..

Hey James,

I was going to write this on the americanelf (sic) forum but I couldn’t figure out my login info. (Hope this is an account that you actually use..)

Anyway, I wanted to share my thoughts on the premiere of Superf*ckers. I think the show has something very special and rare that is hard to find in modern day animation. I can’t exactly put it into a single word, but there is a certain warmth and sincerity to it. The movement looks smooth, like it is alive. It all seems alive. A lot of stuff today feels very cold and dead and detached, even the really well written shows. They look shallow and empty. It is as if there are moving images, and sound, but the two do not connect. I don’t see any of that in Superf*ckers.

Superf*ckers is a work of art. 

I think a lot of good animation that feels warm and alive and real relies a lot on dimension and severe exaggeration. So getting a subtle minimal style to look and feel warm and alive is almost unheard of.

The animators did an amazing job on bringing the comic book to life in a way that does not water it down, or over do it, it doesn’t feel bogged down with details. Clearly a lot of people put a lot of work into it, but it doesn’t feel like it was arduously constructed by some unwilling committee or something. It’s rich and full, but the animation feels hand drawn and custom made like your original artwork, almost like you drew it all yourself. Your work sort of has a delicate balance, and I think you guys did a great job of staying true to that.

The voice acting is really great. And the animation fits with the voice work, it looks like they animated specifically to the recordings and added little extra quirks from the audio. Your simplistic and minimal expressions are executed just right. Characters feel like they are really saying what they are saying, feeling and thinking. I was surprised when I first saw the first few clips how great that turned out!

Your original color work looks great, and has been handled very well by the crew. The show feels inspiring and inspired.

I’m a longtime fan, so I may be completely biased. But I am also a harsh critic.. I think Superf*ckers is out of the ordinary in the way that it is genuine and authentic. Maybe those types of qualities are harder for people to notice at first, I don’t know.

I think the negative knee-jerk reaction a lot of people are having has more to do with the state of current pop culture trends and less to do with the quality of your show. It’s harder for people to detect heart and soul and character, it seems that we are more used to cheap obvious jokes recited by empty lifeless drawings. And it’s hard to trust an artist’s voice nowadays, if people see the surface as being just swearing and simplistic looking drawing style or whatever, without noticing what is unique and specific or subtle about it, and what is beneath it all, based on the crap they are used to seeing they are not sure what to expect. It may be something that people don’t “get” right away, until they get a feel for it. Who knows? Probably better that the masses don’t immediately love it anyway, that makes it more of a cult status, it belongs more to the fans.

Anyway, sorry for rambling on. The show is great. The quality of the show is undeniable. Congratulations to you, the cast and the crew. Can’t wait for the next one. I hope you guys have the opportunity to produce many more episodes!

Keep up the awesome work.

-Adam Lore