Arthur Bradford

[4] After the publication of his first book, Dogwalker, in 2001, Bradford lived briefly in a remote cabin in The Northeast Kingdom where he wrote and published several short stories about the experience.

Bradford's short stories have won an O. Henry Award[8] and have been published in Esquire, McSweeneys, Zoetrope, Dazed & Confused, Tin House, and Vice.

His second book, Benny's Brigade (2012) recounts the adventures of two girls who discover a small talking walrus inside a walnut.

[2] In 2014, Planthouse, Inc. published the limited edition artist book Forty-Three Monsters by Bradford and Chuck Webster.

Bradford contributed a comic narrative to accompany Chuck Webster's childhood monster drawings from the 1970s.

Early video tapes were seen by South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker who became executive producers on the project.

feature film, a documentary wherein disabled and handicapped adults interview unsuspecting passersby in a cross-country road trip, in 2001.

[14] Bradford directed 6 Days to Air, a documentary that depicts the making of an episode of South Park, which premiered on Comedy Central on October 9, 2011.