James Cabello Animations May 2026

It wasn't until he began posting short, unpolished loops on Instagram around 2018 that he found his niche. His early were simple: a faceless character struggling to open a jar of pickles, a dog refusing to move during a walk, a commuter missing the bus by two seconds.

Cabello’s work does exactly that. Consider his most viral piece, titled "The Meeting That Could Have Been an Email." In the 15-second loop, a manager speaks in a droning, unintelligible mumble (represented by squiggly lines), while the protagonist slowly melts into their office chair. The animation ends with the character sinking into the floor, leaving only a pair of eyes visible. james cabello animations

However, he doesn’t cut corners on the "squash and stretch." One hallmark of premium is the physics of failure. When a character drops a phone, the screen doesn’t just crack; the phone bounces twice, spins, and the character’s hand hovers in the air for half a second too long. That half-second is where the art lives. The Evolution: From Solo Act to Collaborative Universe In 2022, Cabello expanded his universe. He introduced a cast of secondary characters: the overly optimistic roommate (dressed in bright yellow), the cynical cat (who never moves but judges everything), and the "Customer Service Bot" (a terrifyingly smiling rectangle). It wasn't until he began posting short, unpolished