Walter Pater writes:

Uncle Jimmy. Demented clown? Psychedelic leprechaun? Boo Radley's exhibitionistic cousin? Whatever he "is", Uncle Jimmy's Dirty Basement is a genre-bending subterranean spectacle where puppets-with-attitude and fringe characters answer the question: "What kind of show would Ed Sullivan have presented had he been an agoraphobic, somewhat delusional 35-year-old confined to his parent's basement in Indiana?"

In the course of a single visit to Uncle Jimmy's Dirty Basement  the repressed desires of robots are revealed through song and dance, Chuck Bob finds a devoted sidekick in Pirhannaman, and the consciousness-altering properties of Bun-Bun become visually and aurally apparent. 

In "The Basement" you will be dazzled by Billy Paul Timeshaft's guitar antics and choice of reading material, Spivey Jack David Yearwood's stone bass groove, Roy 'Get Outta Town's wizardry on drums, T-Bird "Turbo" Burnett's lush keyboards, and the silky sax of The Wee Scotsman. Only " Uncle Jimmy's Dirty Basement" can answer the deeper questions that still linger: what is the Bunkbed Commando's real mission? Does grandpa really like it in the furnace room? Are all cats attracted to hats? And what does Jimmy's mom really think of all of this?