Boing Boing editor/partner and tech culture journalist Xeni Jardin hosts and produces Boing Boing's in-flight TV channel on Virgin America airlines (#10 on the dial), and writes about living with breast cancer. Diagnosed in 2011. @xeni on Twitter. email: xeni@boingboing.net.

  • http://twitter.com/squiggystardust MaryAnn Hogan

    love

  • http://daruiburns.tumblr.com/ Dlo Burns

    Wait, you’re saying there was a reason to watch the parade and I missed it?

  • http://avarana.blogspot.com MarlboroTestMonkey7

    Now that it’s gone mainstream it’s kinda of meh…;)

  • http://thisisonlya.blogspot.com robcat2075

    Now that he has the attention he was seeking I presume he will go back and remove those “faded tags” that “can still be seen on the sides of buildings,” which i suspect no one actually asked to have placed on their building.

    • EH

      Oh you.

  • DisGuest

    I like the character created for the parade as well as the associated drawing. I find it relate-able on a popular culture level ( as an art cartoon and almost a nostalgia piece; it seems old). As an introvert, I get the face covering. I’m not “feeling” the rest of his work featured, or his persona, on the Sunday morning show. But I also realize that it means nothing since he is selling work, has fans, and perhaps the show didn’t really represent him accurately. I suppose I should reserve judgement, overall, until I see more.

  • David_in_Houston

    The character is a “little too shy”? I thought it represented death (which I thought was kinda funny for a Macy’s Parade). Generally speaking, when a cartoon character has X’s for eyes that means they died. — Just sayin’ ;-)

  • nanner

    i don’t know the artist but i interpreted it as a protest piece. Wearing Mickey Mouse gloves and shorts but the character lacks the bright colors of the other characters and has X’d out eyes, the death of the season as Black Friday hysteria takes over… and covering it’s eyes to block out all the commercial nonsense of the parade. i thought it was funny the way the commentators obliviously described the “shy” character. I don’t know the other work of this artist and will not look into it since I like my interpretation of the balloon. I was like “you go mystery protest balloon artist!”