During the 2000s, McIntyre played bass and shouted in garage band Thee Stag Knights as well as with The Hatchetmen/The Hatchets. 2007 saw him release the A Warning CD/DVD, a "lost 1970s dystopian film" constructed from various period documentaries. A Warning featured a soundtrack primarily performed on vintage analogue synthesizers and included vocals and additional instrumentation from Kirsty Stegwazi, Van Walker,
Cat Hope and members of Sir, Scarecrow Tiggy, Tarantula and other Melbourne acts. The same year saw him tour Europe with Naomi Evans as part of anarcho-casio pop duo the Kleber Claux Memorial Singers. During the 2000s, McIntyre ran Homebrew Press, which self-published a selection of his books and pamphlets. These included
Disturbing the Peace, a collection of pieces on Australian radical history, ''Always Look on the Bright Side of Life: The AIDEX '91 Story
, an oral history of the 1991 Canberra anti-arms protest, and Lock Out The Landlords: Anti-Eviction Resistance, 1929–36
. In 2010 he hosted a history walk based partially based on the Lock Out The Landlords'' pamphlet around the inner-Melbourne suburb of
Brunswick, which was also podcast as part of the People's Tour series. In 2004
3CR published
Wild About You: Tales from the Australian Rock Underground, 1963–68, a book which McIntyre co-wrote with Ian Marks. A tribute CD featuring Melbourne acts covering the mid-sixties bands chronicled in the book was recorded at
3CR, and a significantly expanded version of the book, also featuring
New Zealand garage and R&B bands, was published by Verse Chorus Press in 2010. In 2006
Wakefield Press published a collection McIntyre edited entitled
Tomorrow Is Today: Australia in the Psychedelic Era, 1966–70. A subsequent tribute CD, once more recorded at
3CR, was released and a festival held in the same year. In 2005 Iain produced the ''Australian Troublemakers' Calendar
, which included a radical Australian date for each day of the year, as a benefit for the SUWA show. The following year 3CR financed a higher-end version and a collective was formed to produce and nationally distribute the Seeds of Dissent
Calendar'', which came out until 2009. 2008 saw the release of an oral history,
Always Look on the Bright Side of Life: The AIDEX ’91 Story, which covered Australian protests in 1989, 1991, and 2008 against weapons fairs. ==2010s==