So that is the deal with your guests, right?
Then why always you gotta play saint 'I gave up so much of my time for these people'?
Nah, bro. That's the deal. Content for you, promotion for them.
Stop playing martyr.
Because it shouldn't be my job to make Mike S. Miller palatable to my audience in order for him to get out of debt.
It's clear by Mike's absence on my show, and our relative success levels apart from one another, that one of us was helping the other big time.
In other words, I can do this just fine without them, not so the other way around.
They give me something to bounce ideas and jokes off of, but they aren't at all necessary. And by promoting them, I've made them tens, even hundreds of thousands of dollars
that they wouldn't have seen otherwise. What do I get? Some superchat money I would have gotten anyhow.
So yes, I'm definitely a martyr. A Christ figure.
In unrelated news, Mike S. Miller celebrated Father's Day today by posting statistics of children born to unmarried women sorted by race.
Based.
View attachment 1396571
Holy shit.
@FROG "Alan Moore didn't tell stories because he did draw. pleb, I drew forty or fifty comic books for DC over thirty years!"
There's no reason to be an assmad retard just because you don't understand comics lingo.
"Storytelling" in comics doesn't mean scripting or plotting. The same script by Donny Cates could be given to a hundred different artists, and each artist is going to interpret it in their own way.
"Storytelling" is about angles, character acting, basically turning the written page into pictures.
In movies, for example. Ed McBain, a pseudonym for Evan Hunter, adapted the Daphne Du Maurier novella THE BIRDS to a screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock.
Hitchcock turned that into a film. We would refer to Alfred Hitchcock here as the storyteller, not the screenwriter or novelist. EVEN THOUGH HE DIDN'T WRITE THE STORY.