Was that for the last Ween show at the Orpheum?
SJ: Yeah. I think they were both at the Orpheum. I did one for the last show, and for the time they played a year or two before that at the Orpheum. The one I did last year had the little three-eyed kid walking the dog, and the one I did the year before that had a strange, ’60s, smiling cartoon-dog face that said “keep smiling.” D: It seems a lot of creative ventures in Madison are pretty ephemeral. Are you surprised that Firecracker’s gone on this long? SJ: Hmmm… I’m not surprised. After I started doing it, I just couldn’t stop. There wasn’t anything else I really wanted to do. I think there’s a lot of potential there, but I’m just burnt-out and cash flow is—I just don’t want to throw any more money into it. I’ve been throwing everything I’ve had for the past four or five years into that, and it hasn’t paid off in the way that would make me want to continue doing it right now, I guess. I still want to do something basically on the same level, probably someday, but not right now. I nee