I came across Dan Meth’s work while on a forum. There was a thread about old youtube vids that are funny and I saw an illustration of “Eli Porter” (for those who don’t know check the link). And of course the pic was watermarked with his website danmeth.com. I checked out his site and was entertained by the quality of his artwork as well as the humor his work portrays. He’s done work for collegehumor, playboy, gizmodo as well as his own personal projects.
-In my circle we call people who spend a lot of time on the web “web junkies”. I can’t make any assumptions about how much time you spend on the web but after checking your website I can definitely assume you get a lot of inspiration from the web. So I have to ask where/when did this “web-inspired” work start?
I cannot pretend it’s not true. I am definitely a web junkie. For the last decade I’ve spent my days on the web, made a living off knowing how it works and making things for people to watch on it. And it’s increasingly how I (and everyone else) gets entertainment, knowledge, communication, and certainly inspiration. I’m not sure exactly when my work became knowingly inspired BY the web, but I guess my first cartoon about the internet was 2007′s http://collegehumor.com“Internet People” which kicked off my Meth Minute series in a big way (it had about a million views in a matter of weeks)Nite Fite”. But mostly it’s just me. I consider my voice actors to be collaborators in a way because I encourage them to improvise and often there’s no script.watermelons.

-What else do you draw inspiration from?
-I was also able to spend some time viewing your film work. Your videos are very interesting. Do you create the films solo or do you collaborate with a team?
-What equipment did you use for film/animation?

-Where can more of your work be found?
-You update your website quite often, especially considering its all original content. How do you stay inspired and have you always been this way creatively?
-Anything else you would like to add?












