The bill gives you a lickin’.
“When you find your sun is steady, when your roof is new and ready, when your ’lectric bill is giving you a lickin’...”
The full anthem becomes panels
The Solar Chicken Song is the chorus. The comic strip is the world around it: a sunny roof, a painful electric bill, a chicken waiting to spin the meter backwards, a super crew, and a final dot com call nobody forgets.
Episode one
The first Solar Chicken comic follows the full song line by line. Keep it simple, bold, and poster-like. The visitor should understand the story before reading a paragraph.
“When you find your sun is steady, when your roof is new and ready, when your ’lectric bill is giving you a lickin’...”
The roof catches sun every day. Solar Chicken sees the wasted opportunity.
“There is someone waiting who will spin your meter backwards — just call for Solar Chicken.”
“Free money from the state can’t over look it. Solar systems are ready so it’s time to book it.”
The punchline is the web address. The web address is the chorus. The chorus is the sales hook.
Comic strip script
The site should not hide The Solar Chicken Song inside a page. The lyric lines are the captions. The comic panels are the proof that the song has a world.
When you find your sun is steady,
When your roof is new and ready,
When your 'lectric bill is giving you a lickin'...
there is someone waiting who will spin your meter backwards
just call for Solar Chicken
free money from the state can't over look it
Solar systems are ready so it's time to book it
he will bring a super crew
and mount the system for his boss
he will bring it fast and under budget
Delivery panel
there is one thing you should learn
when there is no one else to turn to
call for Solar Chicken
call for Solar Chicken dot com
The lyrics stay visible because the comic exists to serve the song, not replace it.
Expanded panel plan
The first strip can stay short, but the full song naturally expands into a seven-panel story. This gives SolarChicken.com a real mascot sequence instead of only a single joke.
The customer has the three ingredients: steady sun, ready roof, painful bill.
Someone is waiting. The chicken arrives as the comic hero and meter-backwards promise.
Incentives and solar economics enter the story before the customer overlooks the opportunity.
The crew arrives, ready to mount the system and turn the song into work.
The installation promise becomes a proud comic-strip brag.
The customer learns the chorus: call for Solar Chicken, call for Solar Chicken dot com.
Featured episode
After the anthem panels, Solar Chicken can move into episodes. “High Noon at High Voltage” brings in the EV Cowboy and turns solar, batteries, and charging into a western showdown.
The story structure is simple: old grid habits on one side, solar-powered independence on the other. Solar Chicken stands in the middle and clucks for the future.
Mascot logic
Solar can become too technical too fast. A comic strip slows the visitor down and gives them an easy story: the bill is bad, the roof is ready, the sun is available, and Solar Chicken knows who to call.
That is the job of the mascot. Solar Chicken makes the first visit memorable before the visitor digs into batteries, costs, cooking, restaurants, or home solar design.
Build the universe
The Solar Chicken comic strip should lead visitors into the rest of the site: song, cooking, electric bills, batteries, restaurants, and ABC Solar contact.
The anthem remains the heart of SolarChicken.com.
Open song →The EV Cowboy episode expands the mascot universe.
Read episode →Turn the chicken into a literal solar cooking idea.
Cook with sun →The comic strip should always end with a practical call.
Contact →ABC Solar Incorporated
SolarChicken.com uses humor, song, and mascot storytelling to make solar memorable. ABC Solar Incorporated provides real solar design, battery backup, and installation experience.
California Contractor License CCL#914346.