Bitcoin Magazine
Building FUN! on Bitcoin: Parker Day and Casey Rodarmor Talk Collaboration and the Future of On-Chain Art and Auctions
Parker Day and Casey Rodarmorâs FUN! Collection is an unprecedented synthesis of photographic maximalism and protocol-level innovationâa work that stands alone within the landscape of Bitcoin-native art. Saturated with Dayâs bold color palette, surreal personas, and layered identity play, the collection is anchored by Rodarmorâs foundational role as the creator of the Ordinals protocol. Most notably, the series is inscribed directly under Inscription 0âthe first inscription ever made using the Ordinals Protocolâmarking it as an ontological outlier in the digital art canon. No other collection occupies this same foundational location on-chain, making FUN! a conceptual and technical landmark in Ordinals history.
Now expanded with new reflections from both collaborators, this interview explores the projectâs deeper ideological dimensionsâfrom the mechanics of trustless auctions to the ethics of artistic compensation, from pro wrestling and portraiture to capitalist generosity and the social roots of value. Together, Day and Rodarmor form a rare creative pairing: artist and dev, photographer and protocol architect, equal parts absurdity and rigor.
One of the collectionâs most iconic worksâfeaturing Rodarmor himselfâis set to headline the Megalith.art auction, a Bitcoin-native sale structure that concludes on June 3rd and will be showcased at both Bitcoin 2025 in Las Vegas and its satellite event, Inscribing Vegas. The piece anchors a broader lineup that includes standout contributions from leading digital artists such as Post Wook, Coldie, Ryan Koopmans, FAR, Rupture, and Harto.
Itâs less an interview than a glimpse into a high-voltage collaboration:
Parker, your photography is known for its bold color, eccentric characters, and fearless exploration of identity and persona. How did this collaboration with Casey come about, and what visual or cultural influences helped shape The FUN! Collection?
PARKER: Casey and I have known each other since high school. You could even say he was one of my first modelsâI shot his portrait for my sophomore year darkroom photography class. We kept in touch over the years, and in 2017 he encouraged me to turn my ICONS series into crypto art. I passed on that at the time, but in 2021 I did release an Ethereum NFT collection of ICONS. Right after that, Casey called me and said, âYo! You need to go even bigger! Do 10k!â And Iâm like, âYou know these are all unretouched and shot on film, right?â But with his encouragement and funding, we figured out how to produce 1,000 unique portraits.
The visual and cultural influences behind FUN! are too numerous to nameâjust a mishmash of pop culture thatâs been stewing in my brain since childhood.
The FUN! collection was released under a CC0 license, meaning anyone can reuse, remix, or recontextualize the work without restriction. In a project so rooted in persona, authorship, and performance, what led you to make that decisionâand how do you think about authorship or artistic control in the context of open licensing on Bitcoin? What would you find interesting to see done with the collection beyond your original photography methodology? What kinds of reinterpretations or mutations of the collection would genuinely intrigue you?
PARKER: I love it. As an artist, once you create something and it leaves the studio, itâs out of your hands. The audience shapes the work in their own interpretations. You have no control over it. It seems silly to say âthis is my IP, you canât do anything with it.â We live in a world of memes, of reproduction ad infinitum. It seems anachronistic in todayâs world to clutch copyright with an iron fist. And itâs perfectly in keeping with the ethos of Bitcoin to make the work CC0. In terms of value, the inscriptions are the scarce collectibles. Even more so than any editioned prints will ever be. Their inscriptionsâ provenance is on chain, directly descended from inscription 0.
Thereâs nothing in particular that Iâd like to see or not like to see done with FUN! I just hope people find meaning in it, and make meaning from it.
You two have an unusual creative relationship: artist and protocol dev, patron and co-conspirator. Casey, you basically invented a new medium to support Parkerâs work. What does it mean to build something enduring together in a space that often prizes individualism?
CASEY: I love it. I meanâI really love it. Parker and I are super complementary. We each have our own strong wheelhouses, and weâre always engaging with each otherâs work, but in this very chill, supportive way.
Like, when weâre shooting, Iâll tell her what I think looks cool or what might work well in the collectionâbut itâs never directive. Itâs more like, âHey, hereâs some data. Do with it what you will.â And same goes for the technical stuff. Weâll talk about metadata, domains, the website layoutâshe gives me her thoughts, and itâs just⊠input. Take it or leave it.
Weâre both so solid in our own lanes that it makes collaboration easy. Thereâs no weird insecurity. Sheâs the creative force behind the collectionâI know that. Iâm the technical backboneâand she knows that. That kind of clarity makes it fun.
And honestly, Iâm just really proud of this partnership. Weâve been in each otherâs lives in a positive way for so longâsince high school. Parkerâs given me Bitcoin haircuts. I was bugging her to do NFTs in 2017. Even when weâd go long stretches without talking, we always checked back in.
âHey, howâs it going?â
âSaw you on Twitter.â
âSaw you on Instagram.â
Itâs just one of those great, long-running collaborations thatâs rooted in mutual respectâand a shared willingness to go weird.
Casey, did you draw on any past modeling experienceâor take notes from Raph? And what was it like working under Parkerâs direction: more Kubrick or camp counselor?
CASEY: I think I was pretty self-directed for the shoot. I wasnât drawing on past modeling experience exactlyâmore like theater kid energy. Iâve always loved professional wrestling. Itâs incredibly cool⊠and also incredibly formulaic, so I get bored if I watch too much. But every couple of years, I check back in, see what the storylines are.
For this shoot, I knew exactly how I wanted to ham it upâlike a professional wrestler. That wild, sweaty, insane energy. The spiked ball pressed against my face. All the weird faces. American pro wrestling is super operatic, honestly.
The character I was channeling? Mostly Ultimate Warrior. Parker really nailed the eyesâthose classic, intense Ultimate Warrior eyes. He wore wild makeup and had that jacked-up look. Ric Flair was another influenceâmainly for the hair. He had this long blond hair, and when it got bloody in the ring, it looked insane.
As for Parkerâdefinitely more camp counselor than Kubrick. She sets the scene: everything ready, hair and makeup dialed, wardrobe laid out. We talked through the costumes a bit. Sheâll give direction, a few hints here and thereâbut itâs really up to the model to bring it.
You can include that (Casey snaps his fingers.)
Yeah. You know? You know.
The FUN! collection features an interactive website where visitors can filter portraits by mood, prop, background colorâeven astrological sign. What inspired that kind of functionality?
PARKER: Before FUN!, I had been thinking about an exhibition that grouped photos based on emotional expression. Even though the personas may appear wildly different, the core humanity is the same. Iâve always tried to equate disparate identities by shooting people in the same wayâwith simple fabric backdrops that strip away time and place.
The FUN! website (fun.film), reflects this idea: difference in sameness, or sameness in difference. Itâs a tool for playâbut also a way to reflect on identity in a fragmented age.
Casey, youâve described yourself as a capitalistâbut youâve also given away tools for free and pursued an almost obsessive elegance in your work. How do you reconcile market belief with this ethic of generosity? And what does that tension mean for the future of Ordinals?
CASEY: Thereâs absolutely no tensionâand thatâs because most people just donât understand what capitalism is. Like, I canât even begin to unpack what people think capitalism means.
Capitalism simply means the means of production are privately controlled. Thatâs it. Thatâs the whole definition. The alternatives? Youâve got two: either (1) violent chaos, or (2) the government owns and allocates all capital. Thatâs it. Those are your three options.
So when people say theyâre âanti-capitalist,â what they usually mean is: âI want the government to control who gets what.â Iâm not about that. Iâm a staunch capitalist. I allocate my own means of productionâmy computers, my resources, my energyâhow I see fit, not how the state tells me to.
And sometimes? That allocation includes giving things away. Thatâs not anti-capitalist. If the government confiscated my stuff and handed it out? Sure, thatâs anti-capitalist. But me choosing to make somethingâsometimes selling it, sometimes notâis 100% aligned with the spirit of capitalism.
People need to get with the program.
You asked about the tension between generosity and profit in Ordinals? There isnât one. Weâre social creatures. Itâs great to make moneyâmoneyâs fun. But the real magic is the people you meet along the way. Youâre not gonna be on your deathbed wishing you made more money. Youâll wish you spent more time with people who matter.
The beauty of capitalism is that it gives us so much productivity that we can afford to be generous. You build so much surplus, you can finally do things that arenât transactionalâmentorship, gift-giving, weird creative stuff just because it feels good. Thatâs the bounty of capitalism. It enables non-market joy.
Honestly? The best moments in this space havenât been about money. Yeah, the rare times Iâve made some have been fun. But the truly great stuff? The fun projects, the weird experiments, the friends. Thatâs the soul of it.
Like, if I had to live in some crummy little placeâbut had healthcare, enough to get by, and this incredible network of people and ideasâIâd take that any day over ten times the money and no friends.
So I hope the degens are listening.
Megalith.artâs auction model introduces a novel approach by leveraging atomic swaps for settlement. Could you elaborate on how this mechanism ensures trustless, on-chain finality for high-value digital art transactions, and how it contrasts with the delayed, custodial settlements typical of traditional auction houses like Sothebyâs or Christieâs?
CASEY: So, normally, when you swap goodsâsay you walk into a pottery store and want to buy a potâyou hand the guy a dollar. Now heâs got your money⊠but you donât have the pot. He could just yell, âGet out!â and poofâyouâre down a buck, no pottery.
Or maybe he gives you the pot first, but you donât hand over the dollar. You run out the door. Same problem. This is what weâd call a non-atomic swapâone party has to trust the other to follow through.
Bitcoin changes that. With Bitcoin, you can set up atomic swaps. Meaning: the artist gives up the art and the buyer gives up the bitcoin, and either both things happen or neither do. Fully trustless.
It doesnât guarantee the art will sell, but if it does, the artist definitely gets paid. And the buyer definitely gets the piece. No middlemen. No weird escrow.
Whatâs even better is that in this setupâlike the way weâre doing it with Megalithâyou can literally see the platformâs cut. Itâs all baked in and visible. Super transparent. No funny business. Itâs just⊠a great way to do things.
Megalith.art implements immediate, protocol-level split payments to artists and collaborators, minimizing KYC exposure and reducing reliance on centralized intermediaries. How does this system enhance transparency and efficiency in artist compensation compared to the conventional post-auction invoicing and payout processes?
CASEY: Yeah, the problem with traditional auctions is theyâre just super opaque. Every artist ends up negotiating a different deal with the auction house. If youâre selling a high-value piece, maybe you can negotiate a better cut. But if youâre a newer artistâor your work sells for lessâyouâre probably giving up a bigger chunk.
What weâre doing here is way more transparent. It doesnât mean you canât do variable arrangements in theoryâbut in this case, everyoneâs getting the same cut, and you can see that theyâre getting the same cut. I think that mattersâa lot.
Iâve done events before, usually VJing, and sometimes Iâve done it for free. Then Iâd find out later that some of the DJs got paid, and I didnât. That sucks. It just puts a bad taste in your mouth. Either everyone gets paid, or no one gets paidâespecially if itâs supposed to be a volunteer thing. I feel pretty strongly about that.
Same goes for auctions. Some artists will sell for more than othersâthatâs fine. But they should all get the same percentage cut. That should be enforced on-chain, and it should be fully transparent.
With this system, you can actually see what each artist is getting from each auction. Thatâs how it should be.
See more from Parker and Casey at Inscribing Vegas on May 27th, and the Bitcoin Conference Las Vegas May 27â29th. Bidding for all Megalith.art auction lots concludes June 3rd.
Want to experience it in person? The Bitcoin Week pass gives you full access to both Bitcoin 2025 and Inscribing Vegasâplus top-tier afterparties: https://b.tc/conference/2025/bitcoin-week
This post Building FUN! on Bitcoin: Parker Day and Casey Rodarmor Talk Collaboration and the Future of On-Chain Art and Auctions first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Dennis Koch.
Full story here:

Building FUN! on Bitcoin: Parker Day and Casey Rodarmor Talk Collaboration and the Future of On-Chain Art and Auctions
Parker Day and Casey Rodarmorâs FUN! Collection is an unprecedented synthesis of photographic maximalism and protocol-level innovationâa work that stands alone within the landscape of Bitcoin-native art. Saturated with Dayâs bold color palette, surreal personas, and layered identity play, the collection is anchored by Rodarmorâs foundational role as the creator of the Ordinals protocol. Most notably, the series is inscribed directly under Inscription 0âthe first inscription ever made using the Ordinals Protocolâmarking it as an ontological outlier in the digital art canon. No other collection occupies this same foundational location on-chain, making FUN! a conceptual and technical landmark in Ordinals history.
Now expanded with new reflections from both collaborators, this interview explores the projectâs deeper ideological dimensionsâfrom the mechanics of trustless auctions to the ethics of artistic compensation, from pro wrestling and portraiture to capitalist generosity and the social roots of value. Together, Day and Rodarmor form a rare creative pairing: artist and dev, photographer and protocol architect, equal parts absurdity and rigor.
One of the collectionâs most iconic worksâfeaturing Rodarmor himselfâis set to headline the Megalith.art auction, a Bitcoin-native sale structure that concludes on June 3rd and will be showcased at both Bitcoin 2025 in Las Vegas and its satellite event, Inscribing Vegas. The piece anchors a broader lineup that includes standout contributions from leading digital artists such as Post Wook, Coldie, Ryan Koopmans, FAR, Rupture, and Harto.
Itâs less an interview than a glimpse into a high-voltage collaboration:
Parker, your photography is known for its bold color, eccentric characters, and fearless exploration of identity and persona. How did this collaboration with Casey come about, and what visual or cultural influences helped shape The FUN! Collection?
PARKER: Casey and I have known each other since high school. You could even say he was one of my first modelsâI shot his portrait for my sophomore year darkroom photography class. We kept in touch over the years, and in 2017 he encouraged me to turn my ICONS series into crypto art. I passed on that at the time, but in 2021 I did release an Ethereum NFT collection of ICONS. Right after that, Casey called me and said, âYo! You need to go even bigger! Do 10k!â And Iâm like, âYou know these are all unretouched and shot on film, right?â But with his encouragement and funding, we figured out how to produce 1,000 unique portraits.
The visual and cultural influences behind FUN! are too numerous to nameâjust a mishmash of pop culture thatâs been stewing in my brain since childhood.
The FUN! collection was released under a CC0 license, meaning anyone can reuse, remix, or recontextualize the work without restriction. In a project so rooted in persona, authorship, and performance, what led you to make that decisionâand how do you think about authorship or artistic control in the context of open licensing on Bitcoin? What would you find interesting to see done with the collection beyond your original photography methodology? What kinds of reinterpretations or mutations of the collection would genuinely intrigue you?
PARKER: I love it. As an artist, once you create something and it leaves the studio, itâs out of your hands. The audience shapes the work in their own interpretations. You have no control over it. It seems silly to say âthis is my IP, you canât do anything with it.â We live in a world of memes, of reproduction ad infinitum. It seems anachronistic in todayâs world to clutch copyright with an iron fist. And itâs perfectly in keeping with the ethos of Bitcoin to make the work CC0. In terms of value, the inscriptions are the scarce collectibles. Even more so than any editioned prints will ever be. Their inscriptionsâ provenance is on chain, directly descended from inscription 0.
Thereâs nothing in particular that Iâd like to see or not like to see done with FUN! I just hope people find meaning in it, and make meaning from it.
You two have an unusual creative relationship: artist and protocol dev, patron and co-conspirator. Casey, you basically invented a new medium to support Parkerâs work. What does it mean to build something enduring together in a space that often prizes individualism?
CASEY: I love it. I meanâI really love it. Parker and I are super complementary. We each have our own strong wheelhouses, and weâre always engaging with each otherâs work, but in this very chill, supportive way.
Like, when weâre shooting, Iâll tell her what I think looks cool or what might work well in the collectionâbut itâs never directive. Itâs more like, âHey, hereâs some data. Do with it what you will.â And same goes for the technical stuff. Weâll talk about metadata, domains, the website layoutâshe gives me her thoughts, and itâs just⊠input. Take it or leave it.
Weâre both so solid in our own lanes that it makes collaboration easy. Thereâs no weird insecurity. Sheâs the creative force behind the collectionâI know that. Iâm the technical backboneâand she knows that. That kind of clarity makes it fun.
And honestly, Iâm just really proud of this partnership. Weâve been in each otherâs lives in a positive way for so longâsince high school. Parkerâs given me Bitcoin haircuts. I was bugging her to do NFTs in 2017. Even when weâd go long stretches without talking, we always checked back in.
âHey, howâs it going?â
âSaw you on Twitter.â
âSaw you on Instagram.â
Itâs just one of those great, long-running collaborations thatâs rooted in mutual respectâand a shared willingness to go weird.

Casey, did you draw on any past modeling experienceâor take notes from Raph? And what was it like working under Parkerâs direction: more Kubrick or camp counselor?
CASEY: I think I was pretty self-directed for the shoot. I wasnât drawing on past modeling experience exactlyâmore like theater kid energy. Iâve always loved professional wrestling. Itâs incredibly cool⊠and also incredibly formulaic, so I get bored if I watch too much. But every couple of years, I check back in, see what the storylines are.
For this shoot, I knew exactly how I wanted to ham it upâlike a professional wrestler. That wild, sweaty, insane energy. The spiked ball pressed against my face. All the weird faces. American pro wrestling is super operatic, honestly.
The character I was channeling? Mostly Ultimate Warrior. Parker really nailed the eyesâthose classic, intense Ultimate Warrior eyes. He wore wild makeup and had that jacked-up look. Ric Flair was another influenceâmainly for the hair. He had this long blond hair, and when it got bloody in the ring, it looked insane.
As for Parkerâdefinitely more camp counselor than Kubrick. She sets the scene: everything ready, hair and makeup dialed, wardrobe laid out. We talked through the costumes a bit. Sheâll give direction, a few hints here and thereâbut itâs really up to the model to bring it.
You can include that (Casey snaps his fingers.)
Yeah. You know? You know.
The FUN! collection features an interactive website where visitors can filter portraits by mood, prop, background colorâeven astrological sign. What inspired that kind of functionality?
PARKER: Before FUN!, I had been thinking about an exhibition that grouped photos based on emotional expression. Even though the personas may appear wildly different, the core humanity is the same. Iâve always tried to equate disparate identities by shooting people in the same wayâwith simple fabric backdrops that strip away time and place.
The FUN! website (fun.film), reflects this idea: difference in sameness, or sameness in difference. Itâs a tool for playâbut also a way to reflect on identity in a fragmented age.
Casey, youâve described yourself as a capitalistâbut youâve also given away tools for free and pursued an almost obsessive elegance in your work. How do you reconcile market belief with this ethic of generosity? And what does that tension mean for the future of Ordinals?
CASEY: Thereâs absolutely no tensionâand thatâs because most people just donât understand what capitalism is. Like, I canât even begin to unpack what people think capitalism means.
Capitalism simply means the means of production are privately controlled. Thatâs it. Thatâs the whole definition. The alternatives? Youâve got two: either (1) violent chaos, or (2) the government owns and allocates all capital. Thatâs it. Those are your three options.
So when people say theyâre âanti-capitalist,â what they usually mean is: âI want the government to control who gets what.â Iâm not about that. Iâm a staunch capitalist. I allocate my own means of productionâmy computers, my resources, my energyâhow I see fit, not how the state tells me to.
And sometimes? That allocation includes giving things away. Thatâs not anti-capitalist. If the government confiscated my stuff and handed it out? Sure, thatâs anti-capitalist. But me choosing to make somethingâsometimes selling it, sometimes notâis 100% aligned with the spirit of capitalism.
People need to get with the program.
You asked about the tension between generosity and profit in Ordinals? There isnât one. Weâre social creatures. Itâs great to make moneyâmoneyâs fun. But the real magic is the people you meet along the way. Youâre not gonna be on your deathbed wishing you made more money. Youâll wish you spent more time with people who matter.
The beauty of capitalism is that it gives us so much productivity that we can afford to be generous. You build so much surplus, you can finally do things that arenât transactionalâmentorship, gift-giving, weird creative stuff just because it feels good. Thatâs the bounty of capitalism. It enables non-market joy.
Honestly? The best moments in this space havenât been about money. Yeah, the rare times Iâve made some have been fun. But the truly great stuff? The fun projects, the weird experiments, the friends. Thatâs the soul of it.
Like, if I had to live in some crummy little placeâbut had healthcare, enough to get by, and this incredible network of people and ideasâIâd take that any day over ten times the money and no friends.
So I hope the degens are listening.
Megalith.artâs auction model introduces a novel approach by leveraging atomic swaps for settlement. Could you elaborate on how this mechanism ensures trustless, on-chain finality for high-value digital art transactions, and how it contrasts with the delayed, custodial settlements typical of traditional auction houses like Sothebyâs or Christieâs?
CASEY: So, normally, when you swap goodsâsay you walk into a pottery store and want to buy a potâyou hand the guy a dollar. Now heâs got your money⊠but you donât have the pot. He could just yell, âGet out!â and poofâyouâre down a buck, no pottery.
Or maybe he gives you the pot first, but you donât hand over the dollar. You run out the door. Same problem. This is what weâd call a non-atomic swapâone party has to trust the other to follow through.
Bitcoin changes that. With Bitcoin, you can set up atomic swaps. Meaning: the artist gives up the art and the buyer gives up the bitcoin, and either both things happen or neither do. Fully trustless.
It doesnât guarantee the art will sell, but if it does, the artist definitely gets paid. And the buyer definitely gets the piece. No middlemen. No weird escrow.
Whatâs even better is that in this setupâlike the way weâre doing it with Megalithâyou can literally see the platformâs cut. Itâs all baked in and visible. Super transparent. No funny business. Itâs just⊠a great way to do things.
Megalith.art implements immediate, protocol-level split payments to artists and collaborators, minimizing KYC exposure and reducing reliance on centralized intermediaries. How does this system enhance transparency and efficiency in artist compensation compared to the conventional post-auction invoicing and payout processes?
CASEY: Yeah, the problem with traditional auctions is theyâre just super opaque. Every artist ends up negotiating a different deal with the auction house. If youâre selling a high-value piece, maybe you can negotiate a better cut. But if youâre a newer artistâor your work sells for lessâyouâre probably giving up a bigger chunk.
What weâre doing here is way more transparent. It doesnât mean you canât do variable arrangements in theoryâbut in this case, everyoneâs getting the same cut, and you can see that theyâre getting the same cut. I think that mattersâa lot.
Iâve done events before, usually VJing, and sometimes Iâve done it for free. Then Iâd find out later that some of the DJs got paid, and I didnât. That sucks. It just puts a bad taste in your mouth. Either everyone gets paid, or no one gets paidâespecially if itâs supposed to be a volunteer thing. I feel pretty strongly about that.
Same goes for auctions. Some artists will sell for more than othersâthatâs fine. But they should all get the same percentage cut. That should be enforced on-chain, and it should be fully transparent.
With this system, you can actually see what each artist is getting from each auction. Thatâs how it should be.
See more from Parker and Casey at Inscribing Vegas on May 27th, and the Bitcoin Conference Las Vegas May 27â29th. Bidding for all Megalith.art auction lots concludes June 3rd.
Want to experience it in person? The Bitcoin Week pass gives you full access to both Bitcoin 2025 and Inscribing Vegasâplus top-tier afterparties: https://b.tc/conference/2025/bitcoin-week
This post Building FUN! on Bitcoin: Parker Day and Casey Rodarmor Talk Collaboration and the Future of On-Chain Art and Auctions first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Dennis Koch.
Full story here: