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Bar Fight
State of the Comic #14
I did my test to see if A.I. could ink pencil sketches. The answer is, “Depends on the model.” Flux Kontact failed, so I tried Google Nano Banana, and that worked brilliantly. I moved on to coloring, and found out it helps to generate flats and take the flats and line art into GIMP for correction. Then the finished result can be fed back into the A.I. and it will have a much easier time producing the final colored image. Although A.I. companies push the idea of doing everything by prompting with text, it really isn’t the best way to work with A.I. Text has its place, and so do other things. A.I. only shifts the amount each tool gets used. 3D is much less important, 2D shifts to the forefront as the most important skill. The great thing is that I’ve now got a workflow where pencil drawings are my star player, which gives me original art to sell again. This is one of the better developments in my career as an artist, since computerization eliminated most of the originals I might have made throughout my career. There’s almost nothing for either Way of the Waifu or XTIN, or anything else. Just very loose sketches few could even decipher.
I get to retain the status of being a “real artist,” while offloading the parts I never liked, but had to do, to A.I. I never wanted to be an inker, either traditionally or digitally. And the idea of my original pencil drawing being destroyed by a traditional inker, which nearly every professional comic book page ever drawn was, is apalling. Good riddance to inking, in all its forms. Except A.I. inking, which is the best thing ever. Except for possibly A.I. coloring.
A double pox on coloring and painting. I did so much less of what I wanted to do because of it. For those who can spend endless hours making paintings of fruits because the colors are interesting, may that always be there for you. I could never.
I made a few short video clips, those didn’t turn out as well. But the attempts burned up nearly half of the credits I had saved up.
So here’s the art I made tonight (except for the pencil sketch, from 2005). Videos were made with Grok Imagine, Happy Horse, and Seedance. I tried a bunch of other models, the results aren’t worth showing.





State of the Comic #13
Bandwidth usage has quadrupled since posting the music tracks. That’s not saying a lot, and it may not be saying anything if it is bots scraping content. No one’s signed up to comment yet, but even that could be bots, couldn’t it? It’s a shame thinking positively and thinking realistically are so often enemies.
I’ve been meaning to test whether I could use AI to ink my pencil drawings and color them. I’m sure it can. I need to go ahead and get that test done. That could be a decent compromise. I never liked digital drawing. It would be nice if I could go back to doing real pencil drawings again. I don’t want to give up comic making (although I have for years now), but I’ve got to bring the work load down, since its not likely to ever be more than a hobby.
With that in mind, here’s a non-AI generated graphic that represents my musical act –

Hopefully that image won’t overlap my text like the thumbnail for “R Kelly in P Major” did. That was working fine, and then I come back the next day and it’s not working fine. I’ve got no idea why.
Well anyway, “OM-MINUS” is the male energy that balances “Way of the Waifu,” because “Way of the Waifu” is a bit suspect and weird on its own. I’m having second thoughts about using the comic name as a band name, but then there’s no shortage of real bands with stupid names and stupid acts that made it big. If you haven’t seen Angine de Poitrine yet, there’s the current example. Some say they are technically excellent, but I can’t say I enjoy their music. They obviously gained attention for the uniquely weird visual.
Fixing the lawnmower.
It’s not exciting, but it’s how I spent my morning. This old Craftsman was given to me, probably over a decade ago, when it was already well worn out. But it’s still going –

The steering drag link has been popping off, leaving me without the ability to steer. The problem is on the other side of this wheel-

It’s this part here –

The problem area is under the short silver tube. There’s a metal ball which that black arm (the one that goes horizontally across the middle of the picture, and angles up at the right edge of the picture) snaps onto. The hole in the arm has enlarged, so the arm doesn’t stay fastened to the ball anymore.
I found a YouTuber who fixed his with a split bushing, which is what the silver cylinder is. There’s a gap along one side of the bushing that lets it slip over ball (around the peg the ball is on). I couldn’t crimp the bushing down well enough to keep it from sliding off the end of the drag link, but the steering works until the bushing slips off. So I’m going to try putting a worm drive clamp on the end of the bushing.

That might be enough to hold the bushing in place. It doesn’t immediately slide off, so maybe there’s not much force trying to push the bushing forward.
I replaced the air filter, and changed the spark plug –

That red filter is rather doubtful looking. I stuck it on, but it leaked gas, so I put the old one back on. The old one looks dirty, but it still flows, so I’ll use it until I can find a better one.
I believe the coil is dying, since the motor runs for a while, starts missing after about half an hour, and dies. Eventually it will start up and run well again. I found a comment that says a dying coil acts like that when it gets hot. The coil will work again when it cools back down. Sounds like my problem. So now I’ve got to find a coil that isn’t Chinese junk.
I was planning to do a music review show before life interrupted . . .

I’ve been building this car with the idea that the show would be filmed inside the car – and it still could be, since the interior is mostly done – but perhaps this would be a better arrangement?
Pete Steele disliked bands that disregarded the visual side of their act, playing in their street clothes. I’m of the same mind. I see artists and writers making videos in a normal room in their house, not appearing special in any way. We’re supposed to be selling the fantastic, giving people something they don’t normally see. I put some thought into how I could pull that off with the stuff I have, and came up with this.
I’ve had this car for a third of a century now. It’s not the most desirable Charger (some people hate this body style), but it’s the one Richard Petty drove, the car he won the most with, and his favorite race car of the bunch. This one is a 72, which I believe is the first year Petty drove the Charger. 71 was the first year for this body style, but I don’t believe Petty drove that year. One of the drivers he employed drove the Charger in 71, while Petty continued to drive the Road Runner. I remember seeing footage of Petty getting passed by his junior driver in the Charger, and I believe the other driver went on to either win, or at least place higher than Petty. So in 72 Petty alternated between the Charger and the Road Runner, and I think he eventually switched to the Charger altogether.
I’ve read that racing provenance is what makes a car valuable, but these Chargers are largely forgotten despite being very successful in their time, and a little after. And they were driven by, arguably, the most famous race car driver of them all. Certainly the one with the best hat. They make good drag racing cars, and the front of the car is the same as the 71 Challenger, which Chrysler put a big effort into for Trans Am racing. So they handle well too.
Here’s a super cool road test from back in the day –
1971 Charger SE 440 – vintage road test
I’ve been building this one as a tribute to the King. It’s got his signature on it (I took the glove box door off and mailed it to the Petty Museum, where Richard signed it). The suspension is done, the brakes are mostly done, the interior is mostly done, and a lot of other stuff. I’m borrowing the color palette from Richard’s famous hat. Many have built Petty tribute cars, using the racing livery, but IMO Petty Blue and STP red clash rather badly. It’s not so bad on a race track, but it looks terrible on a street car. I’m planning to keep the car black, with the 71 stripes in gold, and gold rims.
I wasn’t planning to do anything with the comic, or the car, until next year. I was planning to spend the time between now and fall classes working, and replacing a couple of very bad floors in my house. But, there’s nothing to stop me from switching things up, if it’s justified. I could start making cellphone videos tomorrow. I don’t know how good that would be, but waiting for the best often means just waiting, with no best. Ever. Maybe there is a happy middle ground, or no one would want videos, so don’t worry about it? Maybe I should only draw the comic. If having my own website was the answer all along, I might not have to do anything else.
Well, it’s a mystery for now. Perhaps the answer will soon appear?
More site traffic thoughts

Almost all of my traffic is coming from the U.S., Japan and Brazil. That actually makes a lot of sense, since Brazil has the largest Japanese population outside of Japan. I believe what I’m seeing here is a strong indicator that the site traffic for Way of the Waifu is real after all, since these are the places where I would expect to find the largest audiences for English-language manga. The bandwidth usage makes sense as well, since most of it comes from the music and videos; which don’t have a typical anime look or sound. I wouldn’t expect them to be as interesting to a Japanese audience as the comic pages.
That’s the SSL traffic. Japan is nearly half of the non-SSL traffic, generating nearly as much traffic as the United States.
Logically, since there is no advertising for this site, and hasn’t been for over a year, all of the traffic is likely to be coming from “word of mouth” advertising. Which is the best kind, because it reflects real interest. But, I can’t find any mention of my webcomic anywhere. That could be partially explained if it’s being talked about on the Japanese speaking portion of the internet. It wouldn’t be easy for me to find. But, what about English speakers? Shouldn’t I see something, somewhere?
Well, you can see that I’ve tried to make my decisions based on evidence and logic – not wishful thinking. I haven’t been able to explain the explosion in site traffic, but I can’t disprove the realness of it, and I’ve tried.
We’re not talking huge numbers, but here’s the SSL for this year-

It will go over 2,500 for June, for sure, so June’s SSL will easily be six times bigger than March’s. AWstats is only showing 23 robots. Bots are supposed to shoot up page counts, but not unique visitors. Page counts appear to be scaling in proportion to uniques though. I’m no expert, but that doesn’t seem to indicate bot activity.
This looks more like someone made a social media post somewhere. If that happened, I’d sure like to see it.
Let’s see where this goes.
Yep, let’s find out.





