The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

ATRIUM #1 — Inside the High-Stakes Thriller | Steve Bynoe Interview | Comix Asylum x USDN Podcast

In this episode of the USDN Podcast, The Chairman sits down with Steve Bynoe — writer, educator, Editorial Director at Comix Asylum, and co-creator of the action-suspense thriller ATRIUM #1.

ATRIUM marks Comix Asylum’s transition from covering comics to creating them, delivering a high-stakes, cinematic miniseries where a single donor heart becomes the center of a deadly chase.

🔥 ABOUT ATRIUM #1

Paramedics Naomi and Darnell are tasked with transporting a donor heart to a mysterious patient. But when a storm derails their route and a deadly strike team ambushes them, their mission turns into a desperate fight for survival — from city streets to the dark subway tunnels below.

A five-issue miniseries packed with tension, action, and character-driven storytelling, ATRIUM blends the energy of The Transporter with grounded, relentless suspense.

🎙️ IN THIS EPISODE WE DISCUSS:

• The creation and development of ATRIUM #1
• Comix Asylum’s shift from journalism to publishing
• Building a cinematic, action-suspense comic
• Assembling the creative team:
– Steve Bynoe (Writer)
– Peter Van Horne (Writer)
– Lucas Filappi (Artist)
– Nikos Koutsis & Mike Toris (Colorists)
– Gregory Parkin (Letters)
• What readers can expect from the 5-issue series
• Future plans for Comix Asylum

📲 FOLLOW STEVE BYNOE
Instagram: @stevebynoeart
Twitter/X: @SteveBynoe47

📡 FOLLOW COMIX ASYLUM
Instagram: @comixasylum
FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/comixasylum
Web site:  https://www.comixasylum.com/

📢 INDIE CREATORS — WANT TO BE ON THE SHOW?
Email: thechairman@usdnpodcast.com

🎧 LISTEN & WATCH

This episode is available on:
✔️ YouTube
✔️ All major podcast platforms via Transistor
✔️ Facebook (Live Replay)

⚖️ OUTRO
This is The Chairman…
and the Council of Nerds is adjourned.

#ATRIUMComic, #ComixAsylum, #SteveBynoe, #IndieComics, #CreatorOwnedComics, #ComicCreators, #ComicBookInterview, #USDNPodcast, #ActionThrillerComics, #IndieComicPublishing, #LucasFilappi, #NikosKoutsis, #MikeToris, #GregoryParkin, #ComicBookCommunity

What is The United States Department of Nerds Podcast?

USDN Podcast is a cinematic indie comics interview series hosted by the USDN_Chairman and the Council of Nerds — spotlighting the creators, storytellers, and worldbuilders shaping the future of independent comics.

Each episode dives beyond headlines into the real journeys behind the books — from Kickstarter launches and creative struggles to the philosophies driving today’s indie storytelling movement.

This isn’t about rumors or recycled news.

It’s about the people creating the worlds.

Through in-depth conversations, creator spotlights, and crowdfunding discussions, USDN explores:

• The rise of indie comics
• The business of crowdfunding
• The art of worldbuilding
• The realities of independent storytelling

USDN is where indie comics come to life — for the fans, by the creators, and powered by the community.

You are listening to the USDN on the

DFPN.

Thank you.

What is up everybody and welcome to the

United States Department of Nerds where we

are for the people, by the people,

and of the people.

And tonight, the lights are flickering,

the subway tracks are trembling,

and somewhere in the storm-soaked streets

of the city, a single donor heart...

may decide the fate of everything.

Join us.

Inside the Council of Nerds tonight is

Steve, who is an educator, a writer,

editorial director of Comics Asylum,

and co-creator of the new action suspense

thriller, Atrium,

which is the first official creator-owned

comic from Comics Asylum.

Steve, welcome to the show.

It's a pleasure to be here.

That's awesome.

And you know what?

I could have kept jamming to your intro

music.

That's awesome.

Peak.

Unbelievable.

Love it.

Shout out to black over at the smoke

pit for creating that for me.

And the voice of Vader in that is

done by our friend,

Frank D of the no gimmicks podcast.

Nice.

Nice.

We have a special podcast with him and

another one of our council members

launching in January that everybody's

going to want to stay tuned for.

I'm not going to give that away yet.

Cause that one is a big surprise.

So Steve,

Everybody meeting Atrium for the first

time.

That was the elevator pitch.

All right.

So Atrium is about two paramedics who are

tasked with delivering a donor heart to a

mysterious patient.

But on route,

they and their security detail are

intercepted by a group of deadly assassins

who happen to be vampires.

That's the curve right there.

That's the one that got me about.

I think it happens about halfway through.

on the subway is when we, well,

just before the subway,

I think we kind of get the first

hint that there are vampires.

And I was just like,

I was not expecting it.

So when the vampire like first did his

little red eyes and the fangs come out,

I was like, well, damn,

I wasn't expecting that.

I was expecting like, you know,

just assassins.

But instead we got, you know,

Nosferatu meets the transporter a little

bit there.

Yeah, a little bit.

You know,

the crew here at Comics Asylum Publishing,

we totally love those kind of movies.

Oh, yeah.

One, two, three.

We grew up in the eighties.

So stuff like, you know,

Predator and Die Hard, The Lethal Weapons.

And then obviously vampires and monsters

are a big part of our, I guess,

you know, early tutelage in nerddom.

So we love that stuff along with comic

books.

And we decided, why not make something?

that would kind of combine some of the

best elements of the things that we grew

up either reading or watching it

definitely hits all our favorite elements

from the eighties and nineties of you know

action we had some it was a couple

of moments that feel almost like blade a

little bit in there and i was like

it was like for those out there if

you need something to read this holiday

break

Grab Atrium.

It won't let you down because it was

full of action from start to finish.

There's not a dull moment in it.

And it's just a phenomenal,

phenomenal book.

And Comics Asylum come out swinging out

the gate on their very first creator-owned

comic.

Thanks for the kind words.

Really appreciate that.

This has been a long time.

kind of like getting Atrium to where it

is now.

We just finished the Kickstarter for the

graphic novel.

And that combines the first five issues,

which are what we had as our first,

I guess, three Kickstarters.

And we were trying to figure out like,

do we do it as a graphic novel?

And then do we do it as like

single issues?

And it was one of those things where

the single issues work well because of

like serialized.

Like if you think like those old radio

shows or even like the cartoons we grew

up watching.

Yeah.

Tune in next week because.

And our goal was to end every issue

on a cliffhanger.

and that's some of my favorite comic books

right there yeah absolutely because like i

remember as a kid i don't know spider-man

would be falling off a building or

something like that or hoax what a hoax

villains would show up or iron man would

do something and be in a in peril

and it's like i gotta wait three weeks

for the next one hey here we are

in our forties and i still like like

Thank God this one's every two weeks

because now I'm like,

I'll be the first in line.

And as soon as I'm out at the

comic book shop and I'm sitting back at

work, I'm like.

Exactly.

I got time to squeeze this one in.

I got to get to it.

So let's jump and talk about a little

bit about Comic Asylum.

Y'all been in the industry since twenty

fourteen.

What made y'all want to leap into

publishing comics?

it was one of those things where,

you know, my partner Vaughn and I,

we started comics asylum and it was like

a digital interactive magazine that you

would want,

like you could read it on the,

on the iPad.

And so we would embed movie trailers and

we would do articles on upcoming movies as

well as it was kind of like wizard

magazine, two point.

Oh, um,

more of a digitized version of that.

And then we always wanted to make our

own books.

And I had worked in a comic book

studio here in Toronto.

And before I actually got to do my

own book, the studio kind of disbanded.

But that desire had been there from since

I was a kid.

So I remember as a kid when I

was like, you know, maybe grade two,

three, four,

I'd always either be doodling in class.

And then when I got, you know,

proficient enough,

I would make my own comics after school.

Wouldn't do any homework,

piss off my parents.

And, you know,

and so I would just make my own

books.

And my buddy, Vaughn, he's Vaughn Joseph,

who's the editorial director along with

myself.

And he also does all the great design

work that you see all over Atrium as

well as our websites.

We were like,

let's see if we can make our own.

And so we had this idea percolating and

we decided we'll go with this one because

the story was complete.

And we felt that it was kind of

one of those things where we love

superheroes,

but this story we just had to tell.

No, y'all know,

I want to take a second real quick.

Shout out to Toronto,

who is a sleeper city for talented comic

writers and artists.

I think you're my third person from

Toronto this year.

As far from an indie creator standpoint,

and there's not been a single bad one

from PowerScape, The Plague.

I think they're all based in Toronto.

Greg,

I don't know if you're familiar with Greg,

the most handsome man in the world who's

so handsome you take one look and your

head will explode.

Shout out to Nerd in the Sky.

I love that guy.

He is so fun.

Y'all are killing it, man.

Y'all are phenomenal up there.

I don't know if it's something in the

water or what y'all got going on,

but y'all are producing some amazing

comics up there.

Yeah, from indie to mainstream,

there's a lot of talent in Toronto,

southern Ontario especially,

because if you cast a wide net,

you can have people like Dave Finch,

who's like a longtime stalwart in the

industry.

We've got Jason Liu,

who's doing stuff for Marvel.

Francis Manipal,

who's doing stuff for Ghost Machine.

And I really like his current book right

now.

That book's a lot of fun to read.

The Rockefellers?

Yeah, Rocketfellas is one of my faves.

Yeah, same.

Jason Fabok is in the reach as well

too.

Rookets it is.

Absolutely,

and that's another banger book.

Dude,

I shout Ghost Machine from the top of

my lungs every chance I get the

opportunity.

The smartest thing Image ever did was nail

those guys down and allow them to have

Ghost Machine under their print for Image.

Yeah,

and I think – I'm not sure if

I'm mistaken,

but I think Red Coat –

just got a movie deal just got a

movie deal it was it is announced last

week which simon pure god bless that

handsome rugged idiot of a red coat that's

gonna be a fun movie because there's so

much they can do with him and he

is the luckiest idiot to grace a comic

book

Yeah, totally.

And so it's almost like having that much

talent in one area,

It almost feeds the energy for other

creators that are like maybe on the

outside thinking that, can I do it?

Can I not do it?

But also when you go to the shows

like Fan Expo or Toronto Comic Con or

Niagara Falls or even like traveling up

the four one to to Montreal and you

go to their cons as well, too,

you you're able to run into a wide

range of creators, both as well as pros.

Yeah, it's amazing.

And this has been a year of discovery

and growth for me on a personal

perspective when it comes to comic books

and stuff like that.

Because I've learned about a whole lot of

Italian comic book writers and artists

this year.

Canadians, South Americans,

my good friend Francisco Nilo down in

Argentina, who's always doing his part.

That's a reference to what's the movie

with the space buds?

Mars Attacks?

No, that's not Mars Attacks.

Starship Troopers.

Starship Troopers.

So that's the running joke down there.

Anytime they see their friends, it's like,

hey, we're doing our part.

And it's always funny to me.

It's always funny to him.

That's how we greet each other whenever I

have him on the podcast now.

So it's been a great year of discovery

and growth for me from a comic book

perspective.

And I think having the podcast really

helps me when I dig in a little

deeper and a little bit more.

So that's been really amazing.

So did the Comics Asylum audience help

shape this project in any kind of way?

Or was this just a love child of

y'all?

This actually predates Comics Asylum.

This idea was kicking around probably

like.

Fifteen years ago.

where our letterer greg parkin shout out

to him and the great work he did

on the on the title uh he was

in contact with some people and they were

thinking of maybe doing a short film

And so we decided, well,

maybe we can take this idea that we

have and, you know,

because it's got very few locations,

we can do it for a small budget.

And that's where it kind of started.

And then basically it was like being

outside of the industry,

how do we get this thing made?

And it was kind of like before things

like KDP and self-publishing,

this was back in the days where like

Ashcans were the big kind of indie way

to get books out.

yeah before you know you can go to

big printers that we have nowadays and get

full color runs of your stuff uh and

from there we reworked the story a few

times um had some stops and starts looking

for artists and then um we were lucky

enough believe it or not to find lucas

falapi who is the superstar artist on our

uh book we're so fortunate to have him

Yeah, I love the art on this.

Yeah, he totally, totally killed it.

And we found him on Twitter because

someone else had a shout-out looking for

an artist,

and he had his stuff in the thread.

I was in the middle of trying to

figure out what we were going to do

next because we had just lost our artist.

and saw him ask the guys they said

yup then contacted lucas and as they say

the rest is history so much so that

in a few days i'm going to be

heading to brazil into uh to sao paulo

where lucas lives and we're going to be

doing an in-store signing down there and

lucas that's amazing

Yeah, it's been a crazy ride.

Would you be okay with showing them some

of the art?

Absolutely.

And Lucas actually translated it into

Portuguese.

So it's going to be a lot of

fun.

Yeah, that's what you were telling me.

That's really, really awesome.

This always gets me.

I'm going to do a share screen.

And then...

Let me bring it.

You know what?

I have to bring it up first.

I got to be smarter than it.

It didn't scroll up.

Now I can do it.

Here we go.

Share.

Now I can add it.

There we go.

That wasn't difficult.

So this was a really,

really awesome cover.

And it does a really good job of

selling what the story is about.

It was interesting because,

and thank you for that.

That's all Lucas.

We,

I think it was Gail Simone was on

Twitter,

either Twitter or Instagram or something.

And she just had like a random,

you know, show me what you're working on.

And so we shared the cover and she's

like, I'd buy that.

That's when we kind of knew.

She's another one that's criminally

underrated and I hate that.

Agreed.

She's hilarious on social media and likes

to needle us.

Anyone who's reading her tweets and stuff.

She's on point.

I enjoyed her X-Men run.

The one that she's currently on.

It's been fun.

The artist whose name slips my mind is

phenomenal on that run.

Look at this art.

I love this style of art.

it it's it's just so good like the

focus is on the actual characters and not

necessarily the background until you get

to something like this and then they go

all out on the background yeah

Lucas, Lucas was fantastic on this.

He did an amazing job.

And one of the reasons why we liked

his work is because of how gritty it

is.

Yes.

I say this all the time.

And if anyone's seen me online talking

about HM or comics in general,

the art is just like, you know,

being a casting director.

And so if you're telling a certain type

of story,

you want a certain type of artwork,

just like you would want a certain type

of actor or even a cinematographer for

whatever your movie is going to be.

And Lucas kind of was able to capture

like the grittiness and the dark shadows

of the not only the city and the

situation, but also the subway tunnels.

And I just loved how he had a

personal touch to every single character.

They had their own individual look.

Yeah,

that was really amazing to see because

it's not like a lot of the times

with a comic like this, they can just,

you know, what's the word I'm looking for?

I don't want to say call it in.

They'll just call it in where everybody

kind of looks the same.

But each individual face,

each individual character had their own

personality.

It's always amazing to see that in an

indie comic.

And it's just that's one of those things,

even in Marvel and DC,

sometimes you can tell when the artist is

kind of tired of doing it and they

just are calling it in at that point.

You can tell where they've reused panels

and reused art from other, you know,

previous, you know, issues.

We notice that people,

we notice that artists, writers out there,

we notice when you call it in.

yeah you can you can kind of tell

and also to you know to be fair

deadlines can be kind of crazy in this

industry so it's kind of one of those

things like what's what's my shorthand and

can you use the shorthand to help you

reach your deadline but the beauty you

there steve right the beauty of the beauty

of indie okay you're back now we lost

you for about a half a second there

Okay, great.

Good to know that I'm back.

As I was saying,

the beauty of indie is that you don't

have to worry about deadlines, right?

It's one of those things where it's like,

if you need four weeks to do the

artwork,

you have four weeks to do the artwork.

And it was also great going back and

forth with Lucas because he would draw

something that we wouldn't necessarily

have written or wouldn't have seen it the

way that he represented it.

And we're like, yo,

he nailed it better than we wrote it.

So it's all good.

yeah so when you storyboarded this thing

like did you tell him like how to

face the people and like emotions did you

give him all that in advance or did

you just give him the story and be

like hey here you go

Yeah, no, gave him the script,

told him to, you know,

just kind of represent it the best way

that he thought.

If he if I wrote like my writing

partner, Peter Van Horn and I,

if we'd given him a five panel page

and he thought it would be better with

a four panel layout or six panel layout

to just go ahead and do that.

That's awesome.

I know there's some artists out there.

I know last,

I think a week and a half ago,

I had Sabe on who's Italian.

He does a shock hit at Peter,

which is another phenomenal,

phenomenal book by Ethan and Jess.

And he,

I know he likes very detailed notes in

the story.

Like, like, Hey, let's try this angle.

And like,

he's big about getting the emotions of the

characters.

Like what do you want them to display?

Yeah.

Is it at a nighttime scene or a

daytime scene?

He likes to get that in the notes

of the story.

But that's him.

He's very good at what he does, obviously.

I don't know if you've had a chance

to check out Shockhead at Peter,

but it's some phenomenal,

phenomenal artwork in there.

And there's a lot of Italian influence,

small city Italy influences in it.

Very beautiful book.

But

What has been your most surprising part of

this transition into doing this comic book

now that you've done it versus what you

were doing just on a daily basis for

Comics Asylum?

I think the biggest part of it is

just realizing how much of a machine

making a comic book is and how much

like I knew how much work has gone

into it because like I said,

I think we were talking about it before

we came on air that I was part

of a comic book studio with Ken Lashley.

Right.

I didn't mention this part,

but it was with Ken Lashley here in

Toronto.

And so we were working on like rising

stars and ghost and a couple of Marvel

books and DC books way as well as

doing toy design.

And so like, you knew how,

like how pressure packed it could be.

Yeah.

But it wasn't until we were doing this

and then you're finding out like, okay,

almost creating it's the easiest part,

like writing it easy.

Drawing, difficult,

way more heavy lifting than the writing.

But again, easy.

It's then putting it together,

doing the crowdfunding,

doing the fulfillment,

doing the social media,

coming on amazing podcasts such as this,

running our own podcast.

Thank you.

Yeah, you're a busy man.

Because I was going to say,

you have your own podcast as well that

you're doing in between all of this.

Yeah.

And part of it's promotion.

And part of it is also- That's where

a lot of Kickstarters and stuff like that

fell is they don't- I don't want to

say they don't have the funds to promote.

It's that they just don't promote.

Promotions are free.

Coming on a podcast like this is free.

Yeah.

I mean, it is one of those where,

like when I'm advertising for interviews

on Facebook and Instagram and Blue Sky

where you contacted me, I make it easy.

I tell you like, hey,

all you have to do is send me

an email or shoot me a message and

we will make something work because I

believe every independent comic deserves

this chance in the spotlight and have its

voice heard.

You're doing great work.

You're doing great work.

No lie.

I appreciate it.

And ever since I made this transition over

to doing this,

it's been completely a hundred percent

amazing.

I've got had some of the best people

in the world on,

and I've gotten to read a lot of

great comments that I may not have had

the opportunity to read or would have

never read because they would have never

seen the light of day.

And every time I see a successful

Kickstarter from somebody who was on the

podcast, I'm like,

little wins, I stack them up.

Yeah.

You know what?

We're all part of the same community.

Um,

even though we're separated by borders and

oceans and whatnot, we're all, you know,

we all love the medium.

And so any little bit that can help

totally goes a long way.

And like,

I even think about when we were starting

and reaching out to call Kershaw,

who does death, uh,

death transit Tanager up in Montreal.

I called him and reached out to him

and I said, hey,

what is it about shipping that you can

help us with?

He gave us some options.

Right now,

shipping is horrible out of Canada.

It's not cheap.

It's not cheap.

With just the current economic climate,

getting it printed and then getting it

shipped.

If you're not in the same country also

has its challenges.

So it's all these little things like,

you know,

when I'm doing interviews for comics

asylum and I'm at a con and you're

talking to an indie, um, creator, um,

or even a professional creator who's

working for Marvel or DC or,

or boom or something like that,

the questions that you ask give you

insight into then how you can help

yourself or even other creators, you know,

kind of get over some of the hurdles

that you would experience that you

wouldn't even think about.

Right.

When you're creating.

Yeah.

No, we recently, we,

as in the network and we went to,

Cape con in, in Cape Girardeau, Missouri,

shout out to Cape con and that team

over there.

They,

they put together a phenomenal con twice a

year.

They have a Cape con and then they

have an anime con as well.

And we were there for Cape con.

We got to go in, set up,

do our podcast live from there.

Great experience,

great learning experience.

It was my first time doing a panel

at a con.

Nice.

And I can't wait to do many,

many more because those are such a good

time.

Not only that,

it puts you on the ground with your

audience.

And so like you get direct feedback on

not only like how enthusiastic people are

about a given comic or a given con,

but sometimes even what you're doing.

So like when we would table at a

show for HROM,

the feedback you get either from the

elevator pitch or the very fact that

someone is willing to give you their

hard-earned money and they don't know

anything about you,

is the greatest validation you can ask for

as absolutely right we don't have the

machine of like dc or or disney with

marvel behind you to kind of like you

know get your word out there and so

having

having that kind of a response is great.

And even better is when you go to

do a show the next year and they're

like, Hey, do you got issue two?

That's even better.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

There's a few local people here that I'm

waiting for the,

like their next issue of their comic books

to come out.

But every time I see them,

they're in the same hurdle.

I'm like, dude, come on the podcast.

Let's get you a Kickstarter going.

Let's get issue two made man.

And you know, here,

I can only lead that horse to water

so many times.

Like I've even told him like, Hey,

I've never done a Kickstarter personally

yet,

but I'm more than willing to sit down

and together and we can figure this out.

So yeah,

Yeah, no, no, no.

That's a great offer.

And there are people that you could reach

out to.

Like when we were trying to figure out

some of the ins and outs,

we had outreach.

And for the most part,

the thing about comics is there's not too

much gatekeeping.

It's really not.

And that's what's great about it.

And I have a good friend who actually

was the very first creator that came on

the USDN in Bruno Caterino.

He's Portuguese, lives in the UK.

He was a very perverse person who reached

out to me when I first decided I

want to interview indie creators.

He was the very first one,

and he's been on the podcast multiple

times now.

Bruno's great.

He really is.

We've had him on the pod as well,

too, on the stream, and he's great.

He really is.

It's super smart and very,

very humble about what he does.

He has created a kind of like a

Kickstarter lessons learned or just

lessons learned in general about

Kickstarters and indie comics and that

kind of stuff.

He's got two volumes now.

of that and i'm like anytime i have

a new creator on who's never done it

before i'm like hey i have some good

resources i'm going to send those to you

because bruno's just like he sent it to

me he's like hey anybody who comes to

you with any type of questions that you

don't have answers to maybe this will help

them and he gave it to me to

pass to other creators and stuff like that

so like anytime i have somebody i'm like

hey is this your first time i have

some really good lessons learned from my

good friend bruno let me send that over

to you

And then they were like, oh, yeah,

we'll take that.

We'll take it and we'll, you know,

use it.

So it's been really awesome.

And I'm so glad he gets around.

He's such a good guy.

Yeah,

his last campaign was a lot of fun.

And then I think on our on our

the Crimson Bay.

Yeah.

Yeah.

That was a lot.

I actually just got it not that long

ago.

He's in a box already.

But yeah, Crimson Bay was really good.

Yeah, no, he's great.

And that's the thing too, right?

Like there's so many people who are in

the same space.

You might be a few steps ahead or

a few steps behind and everyone's just

willing to kind of push everyone along

because the goal is to have everyone's

stuff out there because the public needs

great stories.

And it's not just-

And I hate seeing like people treat it

like a competition.

I don't like seeing it as a competition.

I don't see it as a competition.

The more people we can get out there

and fund it in their stories with eyes

on them and read and enjoyed the better.

So those gatekeeping cut the shit out.

You're a hundred and ten percent correct

on that one.

Like, I just think that.

you know,

even if it's something you may not read,

the fact that another creator has put a

book out there means that there's another

type of reader who comes into the

industry, right?

And it becomes aware of it.

And sometimes, and this is, you know,

thank my daughter for this one.

you're not ready for,

for everything all at the same time.

Right.

So, you know,

when I was watching anime with her,

like I have my old school anime,

you know,

she would have liked other stuff,

fairy tale and stuff like that.

But then I got to appreciate the ones

that she liked.

And now that opens up another kind of

avenue of stuff for me to either watch

or read.

No, my,

my daughter has been a big anime head

manga fan for years.

And at first I didn't know what manga

was.

I knew what anime was and I knew

she watched it.

And then when she was getting into manga,

I'm like, I don't know what that is.

What is that?

And she's like, well,

it's like a comic book, but from Japan.

I was like, okay, where,

where do we get it from?

She's like any bookstore.

I'm like, okay,

well go get in the car and let's

go.

And I take her and she pissed out

what she wants.

And I'm like,

The price isn't bad on them.

Some of them are a little pricey depending

on who it is and how rare they

are.

Some of hers I still have on auto

just because I set it up on Amazon.

The new issue drops.

Amazon gets it.

Amazon sends it to my house.

I open it up,

stick it on her shelf.

I had a friend of mine recently.

He's like, hey,

does your daughter read manga?

I was like, yeah, she does.

She's very into it.

And he's like, oh, well,

my daughter was wanting to get into it.

I'm like, okay, let her.

He's like, well, you know, I'm like, dude,

your daughter is asking you to read.

Like, it's a comic book.

Let her read.

She wants to read.

He's like, well,

when you put it like that, I'm like,

dude, she's asking you to read.

Don't be mad because your kid is reading.

I don't care what it is.

They're reading.

He's like, you know what?

That's a good point.

No, yeah, that's a great point.

I remember like I'm a former teacher.

And so I taught K to six when

I was when I was working.

And they are they are an absolute joy.

They'll make you laugh and cry at the

same time.

But I remember when I was a kid,

like I had tons of comic books,

like tons of comic books.

I would always kind of like this is

back in the days.

Yes, I'm an old head, everyone.

You can get them for twenty five cents

and then you were outraged when they were

thirty five cents.

Right.

But we would go down,

ride our bikes to the variety store,

pick up like seven or eight comics and

you can get, you know,

from DC and Marvel or Archie or whatever.

Oh, Archie.

I still love Archie to this day.

I think they have some of the best

horror out there.

Anytime Halloween rolls around,

I know there's going to be fresh Archie

horror on the shelf.

And Dynamite just announced we're getting

Archie Army of Darkness.

Oh, wow.

That'll be good.

Yeah, that's going to be phenomenal.

And I was just like, man,

that's going to be amazing.

But Archie always has great Halloween

specials.

And so I don't get it on a

normal –

week in week out basis but Archie

Halloween specials guarantee I just tell

my comic shop that he knows by now

I've been seeing him for five years and

he's just like hey new Archie horror I'm

like dude don't even ask just put it

on my box dude I got it

Yeah, Archie does the best crossovers.

They really do.

Yeah, for sure.

And getting back to the books,

I remember as a kid,

the first time I ever heard the word

nanosecond was in a Superman comic.

And reading certain Fantastic Four and

Iron Man books because they're

science-based,

you get a vocab that you wouldn't normally

get if you weren't reading those kind of

things.

And so it's one of those things where

like, yes,

obviously comics have a certain kind of a

stigma or had a certain stigma and yes

they're not novels but the the vocabulary

in them it can be quite technical and

as long as you're reading and especially

in today's um environment where

everything's very visual being able to

have that visual literacy as well as the

words as well too just goes a long

way so no matter how it really does

just keep reading

like i say the same thing about music

and people are like well my kid wants

to do this in music okay do it

don't stop them my daughter's been playing

piano since she was three nice and she

still plays she she learned how to play

flute she learned how to play oboe then

she's like dad i want to learn how

to play guitar so i was like okay

well let's go find you a used guitar

and we got her a used guitar

Then we got her a used ukulele.

Nice.

She has two rooms in my house.

One room is music instruments and manga

and books.

Then she sleeps and does homework in the

other one.

She has her own little library in the

house.

That's amazing.

Except for the closet.

I took over the closet because I have

like thirty short boxes in there.

You know what?

As much as I love digital,

I still have to have the real deal.

It is something about it.

It's the smell, the feel of the page.

It's just so hard to...

And I try to explain it to people.

It's like going into that old bookstore.

Yes.

That old book smell,

but there's something about a freshly

printed single floppy issue of a comic

book.

It just feels so right in your hands.

Yes.

Yeah,

and I don't think it can be duplicated,

really.

It can't.

It really can't.

I love getting digital words.

I love reading digital words.

That's how I get most of my indie

books when people come on the podcast.

And I love reading those because I can

make the screen bigger and then I can

start finding little Easter eggs hidden.

But it's still just something about having

that page right in front of you that

is unbeatable.

Yeah, definitely.

And I think also, too –

There's something...

I'm not sure how to put it,

but when you're actually not looking at it

on the screen, the art pops differently.

Yes.

No, a hundred percent.

It's... I don't know how to put that,

but you get so many more details on

the page than you do with the computer

screen.

And...

you can you notice the little lines of

stuff you know the shading looks different

it's it's more defined on a actual printed

page it's yeah yeah it's that it's that

that ah yeah yeah that's it that feeling

it's that feeling right there let's talk

about your team steve

So Peter Van Horn has a background in

film.

You always have a background in film.

Talk to us about him and kind of

like what it was like working with him,

being a friend and knowing him for as

long as you have.

How was that like with y'all both hitting

this comic, you know, dead on together?

Well,

Peter and I have known each other for

years and I couldn't think of anyone else

to bring on board for the project.

And we've also, you know,

worked on films together.

We've done, you know,

some work as assistant directors for a

couple of films.

Peter writes screenplays and, you know,

we've worked together in terms of like

writing think tanks and stuff.

We've got some other ideas that are

cooking.

And so working with him is a joy

because it's kind of like

not quite Unimind,

but we kind of think the same way.

We kind of like the same shows,

group around the same time.

So, you know,

whether it's cartoons of the seventies or

police shows of the seventies and

eighties, you know,

mentioned some of the films earlier.

We kind of have that same sort of

DNA, creative DNA.

And so it's just great.

So if we have an idea,

if he has an idea and wants to

take the script in one way,

or I see it as a different way,

it's pretty easy to kind of,

find a spot that works,

even if you don't necessarily always

agree.

But that's perfect, though,

that you have somebody there.

Yeah, you're friends.

Yeah, you have very similar taste,

but they're also not afraid to say no

or hey, maybe yes instead.

And that to me is like the perfect

partnership to write, you know?

Yeah, it's absolutely necessary.

Like I was talking to

okay, I'll just put it out there.

The chairman is working on something.

I've already got my artist picked out with

Francisco.

Me and him are very similar taste when

it comes to horror comic books.

And he was just going to be the

perfect bet for me for this project.

But we were shooting ideas back and forth

and he hit me with something I didn't

even think about and a character I didn't

even think about for it.

I was like,

dude, no, that's perfect.

He's like, we're missing a third.

Because there's stories within stories

within stories.

And I had the first two down.

I knew what I was doing.

And he hit me one day randomly for

the third, the background story.

And I was just like, dude, that's amazing.

I'm like,

he hadn't even crossed my mind yet,

this character.

But he fits perfect into what we're trying

to do with this story.

So I was just like, yep,

save that email.

We went over to this one where we're

having our discussion because we're just

back and forth, back and forth,

back and forth.

You know, it's how you do it.

You know, when you're brainstorming,

he's my co-writer, he's my artist.

And yeah.

I'll probably reach out to some of the

other people who's been on the podcast

from an art perspective.

Like, hey,

would you be willing to do me a

cover for this book?

And it's going to be a fun book.

If you're big into universal monsters like

we are, it's going to be something fun.

Nice.

Nice.

Looking forward to that.

but so, and then you have your artists,

Lucas, the lobby.

Yeah, you got it.

You got it.

Right.

And you, we, we touched about,

were we live when we were talking about

him?

Are we still offline when we were talking

about it?

I think we might've been live, but, um,

okay.

But still Brazil,

you're heading down there soon to do a

in-store signing with him,

which is in a million years,

would you have thought you'd be flying to

Brazil?

to meet up with Lucas and sign Atrium

live in the store?

No, no.

Say Apollo of all places.

Yeah, no,

I it's kind of like it's wild,

like even even thinking back that this was

even a possibility when we started or even

going to the different cons across Canada

and in the US wouldn't have thought that

this was a possibility.

And actually finally being able to meet

Lucas is great because like

Countless Zoom meetings and catching up

with each other.

Not only what are you working on,

how far, what issue you're on,

how's the translation going,

that kind of stuff.

But also talking about each other's

families and just checking in to see how

each other are doing.

that's made this book even more special

because it's a team.

It's an international team.

You built a friendship with it, you know?

Yeah, absolutely.

And I'm just fortunate to be able to

have found Lucas and that working with him

has been such a tight fit,

but also he knocked it out of the

park.

Between Lucas.

He really did.

Oh, yeah.

And then the awesome colors by Nikos and

Mike Horst.

Yep.

That was next on the list.

Absolutely.

It's just absolutely, you know,

like when you like found gold kind of.

Oh, yeah.

And Nikos and I have been friends for

a long time.

I've done some artwork and he's done some

of the colors for it.

And he was a no brainer for us

to do this book.

and you know he helped us out a

lot in terms of like he's worked on

savage dragon with eric larson for years

severely severely underrated comic book

especially the earlier stuff from the

nineties because what i love about it is

like the nineties had this weird boom

where image just printed well not just

image but marvel dc everybody was printing

like it was going out of style yeah

like

Death of Superman isn't worth five bucks.

You know what I'm saying?

Because there were so many copies of that

printed.

I'm so happy that when they did this

thirtieth anniversary edition,

they just did earlier this year.

It didn't get a massive run.

So what we're having right now is the

thirtieth anniversary of the death of

Superman is worth more.

then the original death of superman

because the run was so ridiculous yes yeah

savage dragon from the nineties didn't get

uh just ridiculous runs like that and

neither did spawn i think young blood may

have had a kind of uh over you

know populated run but that was a rob

lightfield thing yeah

but yeah savage dragon's just always been

he's a fun character you know he's like

lobo and deadpool ugly baby yeah

definitely and and um you know working

with with nikos like we'd have

conversations as well too he's based out

of greece he and mike are out of

greece

Oh, nice.

Beautiful, beautiful area.

Oh, absolutely.

And, you know,

just with his talent and his eye and

just like both of them are just great,

great guys.

It also then helps when, you know,

you're working professionally and it's

like, hey, Steve,

you might want to tweak this with his

professional opinion on stuff.

And one of the things that, you know,

it's kind of like,

I don't know how else to put this,

but it's like, you know,

like when you have really talented people

in positions,

whether it's sports or whatever.

Oh, yeah.

Don't overmanage them.

Yeah, they know what they're doing.

Just let them run, right?

That's why you always surround yourself

with people smarter than you.

Absolutely.

All great leaders do it,

and it applies across the board.

Whether you're writing a comic book or

running a company,

surround yourself with people smarter than

you are.

Oh, definitely.

And, and we, we all kind of like,

we're like,

this is the way we're going to go

because we felt that we're going to get

more out of,

out of everyone on the team.

If you kind of let them kind of

like have loose shoulders,

if you know what I mean.

We're not going to leave out your letter,

Gregory Parkin,

who's worked on some iconic brands.

Yes, exactly.

I always say,

and I will say it to the day

I die,

lettering can make or break a comic book.

It could be the most beautiful book out

there.

It could have beautiful characters,

beautiful colors, beautiful line work,

a beautiful story.

But if those letterings are not where they

should be or they're covering up an

important piece of a story or...

just not where you want it to be,

it makes or break your comic book.

And also it could be over, you know,

convoluted with words on a page.

You don't want it to look like somebody

regurgitated the alphabet on a single page

of a comic book.

Unless the page is a splash page and

it's like, you know, like, hey, you know,

it's telling you kind of like,

Like, hey, in this CD,

it's twenty seventy eight.

And it's kind of giving you a little

background information.

That's the only time words should look

like they've been regurgitated on a page.

Right.

Right.

So the crazy thing about lettering is it's

it's it's akin to sound design in a

film.

Like you don't really notice it until it's

not great.

You know what I mean?

But great sound design makes for a great

film and great lettering makes for a great

comic book.

And, you know, it's like Voltron, right?

All the lions come together to form the

mech.

It's the same thing with a comic book.

That entire team has to come together,

whether it's your editor,

whether it's the person who's doing the

design, your writers, your artists.

Like, don't get me wrong.

The artist is kind of like the lead

singer in a comic book.

And then maybe the writer is the lead

guitarist.

Colorist might be the drummer.

Letterer might do bass.

But for the most part,

everyone has to be on point for the

final product to slap.

And we were really lucky.

And I don't want to go too above

and beyond saying that we hit all of

our marks.

But the reaction that we're getting from

people who have read the book and have

reviewed it or have come back to us

at cons,

We did all right.

You hit your mark.

You hit your mark.

I'll go ahead and say you hit your

mark.

Thank you.

If you were a quartet,

you sound beautiful.

Well, thank you.

No.

And here's the thing, right?

There's a lot of stuff out there in

the marketplace.

So whether it's manga,

whether it's comic books,

whether it's indie,

there's way more stuff out there than ever

before.

Like you were mentioning Italian artists,

there's French artists.

South America is booming.

South America is booming, right?

The Philippines.

So you have art everywhere.

Philippines is a sleeper, man.

Absolute sleeper.

Singapore as well.

Mm-hmm.

that's where our germ is from is he's

singapore right i think so i think so

right so yeah and and so when you

think about like how much works out there

like when we were kids i'm a little

bit older than you but like when we

were kids you were lucky to get stuff

out of japan right oh yeah and like

you may have kira was the really the

first thing i can remember from japan

For me,

it would have been Gatchaman or Battle of

the Planets, as it was called back then.

OK.

And then we had Robotech.

So those are kind of cool.

Yeah.

Right.

And so if you think back then,

you didn't have like and to get and

to get proper anime,

you had to go to like some like

out of the way video store that had

bootlegs.

You couldn't just stumble across this

stuff.

So if it wasn't for something like Heavy

Metal,

where you would get some European art,

right?

Oh, yeah.

It was basically just one type of,

if it was a mainstream comic book,

it was it.

Unless you like something like Tintin or

something like that, right?

So I will say I will forever be

grateful to Heavy Metal because it

introduced me to Frank Frazita.

Oh, yeah.

And I've loved his work ever since the

first time I saw it.

Definitely.

And even today,

I'm so happy that his kids are running

the Frank Frazita Museum.

So his art is still out there.

It's still being, you know,

reproduced and like you always know.

a Frank Frazito work.

Like the style, the tones,

just everything.

You see it, you immediately know.

And that's what draws me still to comics

today.

I will see something and it will look...

I'm trying to think.

Ani Press is doing their new sci-fi book

they're doing.

But it's very reminiscent of Frank Frazito

art in certain aspects.

So I'm just like...

And I love a good anthology comic to

begin with,

but anything that resembles Frank

Frazita's artwork,

or you could tell when the artist has

been heavily influenced by him.

I'm like, the story doesn't really matter.

I just want to look at the art.

If I get a good story, cool.

But if the art is reminiscent of Frank

Frazita, I'm on it.

Like I'll take that.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Can't, can't go wrong with that for sure.

And like, I remember as a kid, um,

I think it was the artist who did

Druna.

I'd love.

Okay.

I can't remember the name at this moment,

but it was almost like a pencil crayon

kind of rendering with lots of attaching,

just great stuff.

And then John Buscema,

who's doing like the Conan books,

like the sort of with Ernie doing the

inks, like it's stuff like that.

And then getting back to the original

point with all the stuff out there,

when someone can still look at your work

or a book that you're a part of,

go hey we like that that that says

something like it's a good feeling it just

means like okay we're in we're in the

right direction and you know in this

little tiny corner of readerdom some

people actually like what we're doing so

that's that's rewarding you know it's

always really cool and i always like i

know your kickstarter has already closed

but i always enjoy

like watching the Kickstarters, you know,

of people who have been on the podcast

and just watching it climb and climb.

And then when it finally hits its goal,

I'm like, yeah, people love the project.

So people are going to back it.

You, you put yourself out there and it's,

you know, you're,

you're literally just putting a piece of

your soul out there for somebody to look

at and to critique and to say, Hey,

is this good or not?

And, um,

it takes a lot of gumption to do

that yeah it it does but i think

that no matter like where you are on

the on the journey you just put it

out there because it might be your first

one like if you look at james cameron

everyone might think t-two avatar yeah but

they don't necessarily remember piranha

right

I do because I love that movie.

Right.

Great.

I love B-Horror.

I love that kind of stuff.

It's great stuff.

Right.

But you got to start somewhere basically.

And don't let kind of like the end

product of someone who's at like their

twentieth year of their journey hold you

back.

Put it out there and then keep going.

You think of Eastman and Laird and their

first TMNT books.

Right.

Yeah.

The art is not as polished as it

would have been later on because like

they're figuring stuff out.

From literally the living room of their

apartment in New York City.

Absolutely.

Right.

So, I mean, and it doesn't like young,

old, put it out there.

And with web comics and different ways of

getting it out there,

you don't have to necessarily be like,

you know, have the stomach.

Shout out to like Gumroad and Kofi doing

great things for artists like that.

and it's crazy because now marvel and dc

are doing the webcomic thing like they

realize these are spaces that you can't

ignore anymore or think that it's outside

of their purview you got to get in

there oh absolutely let's talk about the

heart of the story a little bit atrium

is a thriller but it's very deeply i

want to say it's human even though there's

vampires involved but the theme of it

is very much rooted in human um emotion

i guess is the word i'm looking for

kind of like what do you want the

people who are reading this comic to take

away from it because it very much the

the story is the word i'm looking for

it's

brain farting so bad right now it's

embarrassing but um like literally life

and death in the way humans and vampires

live together or at a standstill basically

for this one heart that could either unite

us or you know completely divide us away

from each other

Yeah,

I think what we were kind of going

for is that we wanted to tell a

story that had some stakes that mattered,

right?

It sounds corny saying it,

but it has to have heart.

I remember working with a director once

who said,

as long as your story has heart,

Literally in this case.

Literally has one in a box.

But it's one of those things where like,

you know,

like how the villain is the hero of

his own story, their own story, or,

and the hero has their journey.

We want to tell a story where like,

we all have our paths and we all

have choices,

but the main thing that we all want

to do is just kind of want to

live and survive and to thrive.

And where things get lost is like,

Maybe someone's a little bit more greedy.

Maybe someone's a little bit more fearful.

Someone is a little bit more passive.

And so then you get these kind of

ebbs and flows with things.

And so we did see some prejudice in

this story.

Oh, absolutely.

And so and, you know,

the old classic thing of what you don't

understand, you tend to hate.

Yeah.

and and and you know getting back to

like kind of like the artists and

musicians and stuff sometimes the artist

wants to be a musician and sometimes the

musician doesn't want to play in a band

they would much rather be an artist or

a writer or play sports or something so

does your destiny or does your path in

life tell you exactly what you are does

that make you what you are or is

it

how you how you go about life how

you you you do things and so whether

you know there's some vampires in the

story just because you're a vampire

doesn't necessarily mean that you act and

behave or think in a certain way yeah

no the vampires in the story were very

human and that's what i think i was

trying to say earlier is they are very

much human with human emotions and the

care for society that you feel like you

don't really know

from the way they act that they're any

different from a human,

but they are vampire.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And that's one of the things that,

that Peter and I,

when we had our discussions early on,

it was like, as well as Vaughn,

when we were, who's our, our editor,

we were trying to figure out like,

how do we make it so that it's

not every other vampire story you've ever

heard or watched or seen,

but also how does it then connect to

someone that is

Might be reading it for the first time

or isn't a fan of vampires,

but yet can get kind of hooked in.

And basically it was one of those things

where it's kind of like there's an old

Dr.

Seuss book that I remember reading with my

kids in class one day.

And it was where they had a piece

of bread and one person buttered one way

and then the other.

It's not as ridiculous.

You got to butter it on the bottom,

right?

they went to world kind of like the

half fields and the mccoys and so you've

got vampires and humans in this struggle

basically for survival and existence and

the humans don't really realize that that

struggle is happening else i think that

was also one of the things i was

trying to allude to earlier is some humans

know are the humans know vampires exist

In the story, to some degree.

There are some humans that know.

The general population does not.

Yes.

And it's one of those things where it's

like,

how do you coexist without causing mass

hysteria?

Yes.

When your food source basically would be

threatened by knowing that you exist.

Mm-hmm.

And so the, like,

there's two factions of vampires,

one that wants to live in, in,

in harmony.

And then one that are like,

you know what, why are we doing this?

And like one of the characters,

one of the brothers in the story,

not giving it away,

his family's ravaged by cancer.

He's a former vet, right?

He's a former, he's former military.

And he's seen cancer ravage,

his family and he's like if i have

the ability to not see someone go through

that pain and i think he was either

he's terminal or or he has his brother

his brother yeah right so his brother

turned that so he wouldn't die of cancer

and he decided to do it as well

too and that motivates them where it's

like we have the answer to all of

your ills but then that goes counter to

what is life where like

I know that one of the characters is

like, why would you want to live forever?

Like, that's a great question.

What would you do?

You outlive all of your loved ones, right?

So before we went live,

I had mentioned Mark Miller's Vatican

City.

In Vatican City,

the last remnants of the human race are

trapped inside the Vatican.

Nice.

And the one thing the vampires need to

become the ultimate...

you know species of earth is trapped

within the walls of the vatican and

they're basically trying to sales pitch to

humans bring this to us we'll make you

one of us but we need this right

so quite the opposite of what you're the

story you're telling but also within the

same

of the same thing, I guess,

is what I'm trying to say.

Yeah, totally.

It's in a weird way.

it's an environmental story, right?

It's like conservation versus, you know,

not like,

do we use all the resources that the

earth has or do we find a way

to kind of balance our need for it

versus sustainability?

And, and one of the things is like,

what's the sustainability going to be if

vampires overrun humans, right?

Blade three, they have human farms.

Remember?

Yep.

But then when you have something like

that,

What then do you do about free will

and all that?

So those are all those kind of dynamics

that are at play.

It's a lot of elements in a story

and going into it,

like I had mentioned earlier,

I had no idea that it was a

vampire story until I hit that one part

where the guy first, you know, transforms.

So the moment I realized it was a

vampire story, I was like,

I reread it before we went live,

to be fair.

I mean,

I read it when you sent it to

me and I read it again before we

went live.

So it's fresh in my head.

And I love a good vampire story.

Vampire stories to me have always,

they stick with you for so long for

so many different reasons because you can

play both sides of this coin however you

want to.

But it's just something about a really

good vampire story that it sticks with you

and

this is one of those where I know

you're,

you pitched this for a TV series or

a movie.

And it's like, now that I've read it,

I was like,

this would be an awesome TV series.

Well, thank you.

That's me.

Thank you.

Uh,

anyone out there who's listening and wants

to make it the chairman, the chairman is,

you know, he's,

he's spitting facts now and really

appreciate the kind words.

And we actually kind of wrote it that

way.

Um,

Peter and I,

where there's a lot of panels and pages

where there's not a lot of dialogue.

It feels very episodic.

You know what I'm saying?

Yeah, we're going for that cinematic feel.

And Lucas was able to capture that.

One of the shows that Peter and I

grew up watching when we were kids was

Miami Vice.

Oh, I love Miami Vice.

Miami Vice is peak TV.

So good.

Peak TV before peak TV.

And those rides in the car,

especially when they're in the car,

in the Daytona in the first two seasons,

where Crocs just kind of look at each

other.

In the pit alligator, dude.

Absolutely, right?

And it's just like a lot of silence,

but either the song that was playing in

the background...

or the moment in the,

in the narrative that spoke volumes.

Right.

It's amazing how the music, the mood, the,

the surrounded area can tell a story

without words needing to be spoken.

Absolutely.

Right.

And so we try to like convey a

little bit of that where speak when

necessary, but then,

and then let the action take over it

sometimes,

but also not to clutter it too much.

Yep.

Again,

that goes back to what we were talking

about earlier with lettering being so

important in a book.

No, definitely.

Y'all definitely knocked this out of the

park.

So why can fans expect coming up from

Atrium?

Well, we've got a whole world built up.

Uh,

and we're currently throwing around ideas

of where to take it next.

Cause without giving away too much,

don't fall in love with any characters in

this book.

I got that.

I got that vibe from it.

Like,

like Naomi and Darnell are kind of cool.

And there's some other characters in there

that are, that we had fun from, um,

you know, creating.

And I know Lucas was upset when one

of the characters didn't make it.

Cause I think he enjoyed drawing them.

But we want,

there's a bigger world to tell, right?

And we want to tell it.

Especially now that the heart has been

delivered.

Yes.

So now I feel like this is where

the story really picks up,

where it should really pick up with how

the next chapters go.

I got a feeling deep down inside of

me that the story is really going to

pick up right here.

Yeah,

the stakes obviously because of how things

end up are kind of shifted a little

bit and raised.

And also there's a lot more world building

that we have.

We've got some great ideas and little kind

of like neat twists on things that are

Not necessarily part of vampire lore

because we're going to bend those a little

bit.

Oh, yeah.

You have to.

You have to sit it apart from the

standard vampire.

Yeah.

So we've got some ideas and just how

we would then have them come out.

is part of like the beauty of what's

going to come next but there will be

a second um set of of atrium books

uh it might be a little bit because

we're currently working on some other

things and i'm working on uh another

project uh which will be a five issue

mini series as well too which i'll that's

that's awesome because that was literally

the next question is

Has Atrium opened that door for more

creator-owned titles from Comic Asylum

from you and your team there?

Yeah,

we have about four that we have in

various stages of development.

But the next one coming up is called

Chronicari Alpha.

And it's about two kids that are born

at exactly the same time.

But when they collide in gym class,

they unlock their ability to control time.

And so I thank you.

Yeah, they did that.

I did.

This is a novella about ten years ago.

And so I've actually drawn probably about

ninety percent of it.

I got about fifteen more pages to draw.

Are you doing the art on this one?

I'm doing the art on this one.

And then I'll send it off for colors

and letters.

I think it was a TV show or

a movie that had something similar to

that.

where they could control time.

I know there was a British show called,

Oh, I can't remember the name of it,

but there was a dude who could reel

back time.

And then I know heroes had a guy

who could control the flow of time.

Yeah.

It might be Heroes I'm thinking about.

The British one,

was it The Rejects or something like that?

I'm not sure.

I know it's the show they based Heroes

off of.

It's possible.

It might be The Rejects.

I'm going to check it up right now.

Yeah, because that show was so good.

The UK will surprise you with some shows,

and then there's some shows where people

are raving about it, and you're like,

yeah, no, I didn't feel that.

No.

Oh yeah, The Misfits.

The Misfits, that's it.

That one is, for anybody out there,

if you've never watched The Misfits,

it is a UK,

it's basically UK's version of Heroes,

only it never derailed with a writer's

strike.

It's perfect start to finish.

So true.

Perfect start to finish, and it's so fun,

and it's just an amazing, amazing watch.

So give that a watch if y'all haven't

before, because it is really good.

And watch Heroes up until, I think, what,

season three?

something like that yeah yeah heroes has a

great win uh it had so much potential

and the graphic novel thankfully is done

the correct way however the show went off

the rails when the directors and everybody

was like we can just write it ourselves

screw them writers no never ever do that

again for anything writer strikes let them

strike play some reruns until it's over

It's true.

You notice that anytime there's a writer's

strike,

whatever is being made during that time

just doesn't,

it just doesn't like come off as well

as it can.

Oh, absolutely.

Thankfully, you know, we're getting,

they're making shows like a lot.

Some shows go like season one's done.

They'll roll straight into season two,

but they're separating them out by year.

That way there's that.

And I'm okay with that.

what I'm not been okay with here lately

is the way Netflix has been doing,

but we're going to give you five episodes.

We're going to make you wait six more

months.

We're going to give you the second five

episodes or however long it is in between.

That shit kills me.

Yeah.

The show's done.

And Cobra kite was the first one I

can remember.

They did that with.

And, um,

I think it was like two weeks in

between or something like that.

The seasons.

It's done.

It's finished.

Just give it to us.

That's when the business kicks in, right?

Oh, yeah.

Absolutely.

It's maximizing the money they get off ads

and all that other stuff.

I get it, but at the same time,

I'm like,

making the same amount of money whether i

get it all right now or if i

gotta wait two weeks right exactly like in

in a way it's almost like depending on

how fully formed the show is or it

it comes to series or whatever because

like sometimes the first season they're

just trying to figure stuff out and then

it gets rolling by two and three the

more money or whatever

And then there's some shows where like

it's been in – it's been percolating for

like five, six, seven years.

Are we talking about season five of

Stranger Things?

Because that's how long it feels like

we've been waiting for that.

Yeah, kind of like that, right?

Those kids are grown up, married,

out of college and everything else now.

They're like thirty-five years old,

all of them, right?

But then you feel like after that banger

first season and then they get a second

one ordered –

you don't have the amount of time to

actually cultivate a proper second season.

And then the show dips after the first,

right?

So it's, you know,

six and one half dozen other,

depending on.

It's one of those.

I'm OK waiting a year in between seasons.

But it's when you get into that eighteen

and eighteen month mark,

that two year mark, and they're like, oh,

we're working on the new season.

I'm like, I don't even care anymore.

It's been two years.

They have all interest in this.

The only time that worked for me was

Sopranos where I was like, you know what?

Okay.

Yeah.

I'm going to wait.

I'm going to wait.

Yeah.

I can.

No, you're right about that one.

But that final season.

Yeah.

Cause it was a peak show.

Right.

But if you're not,

if you don't have the David Chase type

style of storytelling and whatnot,

Then, you know,

as long as they don't try to like

bring it something back, like they did.

Twenty four.

Remember when twenty four came back and it

was just horrid.

Like, why did y'all do this?

You ended it perfectly.

And then you do this.

No, come on.

Yeah, totally.

And because I'm a big fan of Stranger

Things.

Oh, I am, too.

Yeah.

Really interesting to see how they end it,

because.

I,

it didn't click to me how young they

were until I saw them a couple of

days ago, like some clip.

And then I think of like, you know,

how old they are in like the Ghostbuster

movies or even Millie Bobby Brown in the

Godzilla flicks.

She's literally married and they just

adopted a child.

Yeah.

Which is like, I'm like, wow.

Seven has a kid now.

Yeah.

She's twenty one or twenty two or

something like that.

And I'm like, she got married, what,

last year or the year prior?

Yeah, something like that.

I forgot who she's married to.

Jon Bon Jovi's kid.

Yeah, Jon Bon Jovi's kid.

And they're like, hey,

we're just going to go adopt a kid.

I'm like, okay, I guess.

That's cool.

Yeah, no.

Cool.

Go for it.

you have the means to do it,

then more power to you.

Yeah.

That just shows you how time flies.

Cause I remember,

I can still remember watching season one,

like it was yesterday.

Me and my daughter sitting on the couch,

watching season one together.

And I feel like my daughter was like

the same age as them.

How am I?

Well,

technically she kind of is because she's

nineteen.

So she is kind of around that same

time frame as them.

Same age.

Yeah.

But it is definitely one of those where

time flew and all of a sudden we

have adults now trying to play teenage

selves,

which they're all really young and,

you know,

they they still look really young.

So props to them.

Yeah.

It's just, you know, they're mad tall.

Some of them are mad tall now.

Oh, yeah.

Like,

we're going to have to shoot this camera

angle like this to make him look shorter.

Yeah.

I think it's like Finn.

That dude's like seven feet tall or

something.

Like, he's a tall dude.

Yeah.

Like,

he hit that growth spurt at the wrong

time for him.

Yeah, you know.

But, you know,

I'm sure they'll find a way.

Who are the brothers again?

who are doing it,

they're the Duffy's Duffy's Duffy's.

I'm sure they'll figure out a way to

make it to make it work.

Oh, yeah.

I mean, they're brilliant.

I think from a from the sibling

perspective of directors and writers,

I think there's some of the since the

Wachowski's, you know, came in left.

Right.

I think they're probably some of the

better sibling pairs of directors and

writers that are just really, really good.

no agreed yeah and and it's kind of

funny because we had this conversation on

our podcast not too long ago about like

what's wrong with comics right but there's

a lot of great stuff being made it

really is it may not be like the

mainstream titles like you may not be

totally happy with you know green lantern

as an example but you know for every

comic that you're not happy with there's

something coming out of there's ten more

just that are perfect or void rivals right

or something like that right like just

absolute bangers and so as a matter of

I was telling you earlier Aubrey

Sitterson's Free Planet has like I live

week to week to when the next issue

of that book will come out and he's

so good with interacting with his fans

about the book on his Instagram and stuff

like that nice

and you cheer for him because he's

literally like hey this next issue i'm

throwing you something that you're not

expecting and like he's really good and i

wish more comic book writers and artists

were like that i know a lot of

them really are really good about selling

themselves you know and like putting

themselves out there on social media to to

really build the hype for themselves and

their product and i wish more did that

It's funny you mention that because it was

one of the things that we kind of

learned with Atrium.

And I would pass along this advice to

anyone that's thinking of getting into it.

Because you're not creating Spider-Man,

whatever you're creating may become the

next Spider-Man or the next Wonder Woman

or the next Ms.

Marvel.

When someone is going to part with their

hard-earned money for your creation,

they're buying you.

Right.

So making yourself accessible, you know,

not taking your audience for granted and

appreciating the fact that they're taking

the time to either stop at your table

and say hi,

even if they don't buy anything.

That goes a long way in, you know,

kind of endearing yourself to your

audience, because if they don't like you,

they're not buying your stuff.

Oh, absolutely.

And I'm not saying don't be genuine.

I'm just saying don't be a dick.

Yeah, no,

and what I've discovered is it's been both

ways, right?

Like, take, for instance, my last comic,

not Cape Con,

but the last actual Comic-Con I went to,

like, they never advertised Tinny Howard.

Oh, wow.

And she was there,

so I had to get some Rick and

Morty signed by her.

And she's working on Marian Heretic right

now, which is probably one of the...

more popular books that's been out in a

while from a from a female writer and

also just boom studios consistent just

puts out bangers yeah but it's a

phenomenal book if you're into witchcraft

and nuns that hunt witches by all means

they need you need to check that out

um luanna vecchio was there with lovesick

wow which

She's French, I think.

And another amazing story, amazing artist.

Who else was there?

Tula Latoy.

Okay, cool.

That's a pretty good lineup.

phenomenal lineup and like I said they

don't really do a good job of advertising

these people are going to be there and

I pay attention to their website so

whenever like hey this is who's going to

be an artist alley I immediately go to

my boxes and I start like I gotta

get that signed I gotta get that signed

you know

But it really is.

I wish more people who are in comic

books would put themselves out more.

I know Tiny Onion and Tinian,

they're really good about hosting fan

events and that kind of stuff with comic

shops.

They're doing a world tour right now.

Nice.

I'm using that term loosely.

They're doing a tour right now for

Exquisite Corpses.

Nice.

and they're doing sign-ins all around the

united states and i think they've been

into canada a few times and it's really

cool to see how that book has because

they're literally playing a card game to

determine the next character that dies in

it like a tabletop game which is so

unique and so cool so they sit around

with mike michael wash who is the artist

on it and also the co-writer with tinian

they developed a card game to determine

who dies next of the main characters.

And it's a phenomenal, cool thing to do.

And I think there's like,

this is going to be thirteen issues.

And I'm like, yeah,

I got to run that back, I think,

you know,

because this is such a cool concept.

I've not seen it done that way.

It's a brilliant concept.

So, and I've been getting like the,

my favorite is the Michael Walsh polybag

because it comes with the card.

Ah, got it.

So you're collecting the cards,

and they've released, I think,

I can't remember if they released it yet

or not,

but they're getting ready to release the

board game version of it.

That way you can play the game when

you have all your cards.

Sweet.

That's brilliant.

Dude, marketing one-on-one, like,

that is genius level.

Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

That's, you know what?

Right?

Yeah.

And I say all that to say,

market yourselves.

Put yourselves out there on your social

media.

Yeah.

Whether you have to make a whole bunch

of social media at once and then schedule

it a little at a time because you're

busy.

But put yourself out there.

Do those little Instagram Lives.

Artists, writers, it's all there for you.

You just have to make some time to

do it.

Yeah.

And it's, you know...

scheduling it you're totally correct but

you can't not to do it um it's

it's the biggest thing right there it's a

necessary part of it and everyone likes to

get a little bit of a peek behind

the scenes of what's happening and it's a

little bit sometimes a little bit easier

if you're an artist because it's like

right in your face whatever you're doing

to process stuff

writers it's a little bit more ethereal

smoke and mirrors type stuff and it can

be a little bit kind of you know

not as entertaining but if you with all

the stuff that's out there you can

definitely make it entertaining no a

hundred percent a hundred percent but

before we get out of here steve what's

coming up next for comics asylum not a

comic book standpoint but what's just

coming up next for comics asylum

Uh,

we've got some videos that we still have

to process from the Montreal comic-con.

I think we have a Joe Rubenstein, um,

interview.

Oh, nice.

Yeah.

Yeah.

We just finished.

I just put one up a couple of

weeks ago with, uh, Jim Starlin of, uh,

Thanos fame.

And then I just had, um, uh,

the writer and editor from Pug W.

They're doing a behind the scenes kind of

like an art book.

It's called Marvel Panels Behind the

Scenes for Secret Wars.

So they take Jonathan Hickman's and Esad

Rubik's

version of the Secret Wars,

and they go behind the scenes.

They interview all the creators,

all the stories,

and they have a Kickstarter for it.

I've seen that recently on Kickstarter.

I was wondering if that was the one

you were talking about.

Yeah, so we had a chance.

Just released something like that, too.

Yeah, I'm not sure.

Is this for Walking Dead, or is it

I don't remember which one it's for.

I think it's for a couple of them.

Like just some of the,

like it might be like a tabletop book,

you know, like a coffee table book.

But I know he had something like that.

Yeah, it's like this.

This one's the artist edition size.

And so I had a chance to talk

with.

So it's like, you know, this stick.

Yes.

Monster of a book.

And Mason Rabinowitz.

And so they went through all of the

backstory on some of the stuff that's

available, not only with the Kickstarter,

but also some of the behind the scenes

stuff.

So we got that really cool.

And then, as I mentioned,

heading over to heading down to Brazil for

the in-store signing for.

That's going to be amazing.

And we're currently getting the book.

It's already translated into Portuguese

and we have that edition ready.

And then we're going to have a French

version as well, too.

So we're in the process of getting that

one done.

How's that been?

How's that process been like?

I know.

Is it?

Because it's Lucas doing the translation

for you, all right?

Yes.

For the French and the Portuguese?

He's doing the Portuguese.

And then we have Marc Roy,

who's up here in Quebec.

He's doing the French.

French-Canadian.

Yeah.

That makes sense.

Absolutely.

He's a comic creator as well, too.

So he translated it.

And then we're going to have Jerome

Gagnon,

who does a lot of work for Orange

Cone Comics out of the States.

He's going to be lettering the French

graphic novel.

it's so cool to see that you're you're

marketing it to the right people and

getting it translated into multiple

different languages to fit your creators

because i mean i don't want people to

forget that there is a french speaking

portion of canada and that's all they

speak up there is french i mean their

english is good but it's mainly french up

there and um it's really cool and the

only reason i know that is because i'll

watch letter kenny

Awesome.

Letter Candy rocks, man.

I'm a huge fan.

Ever since I discovered it,

I was just like...

And then the spinoff with Shorzy has been

phenomenal.

So I'm glad you can relate to that

because that's such a fun show.

Yeah, it's a fun show.

And then I like hockey as well, too.

I've never been a big hockey guy, but...

Watching Shorzy makes me love hockey even

more because it's AAA beer league.

Yeah.

It's fighting in beer.

How awesome is that?

Can't go wrong.

It's a little hockey thrown in.

A tiny bit.

But Steve,

let everybody know where they can find

yourself and Comics Asylum.

We'll wrap it up.

Don't worry.

So you can find us on YouTube.

We're Comics Asylum.

And then we're also on Instagram at Comics

Asylum as well, too.

And www.comicsasylum.com,

which is our regular site,

which we post all the news and stuff

from the industry.

And then if you want to pick up

copies of Atrium,

you can find us at comicsasylum.pub.

Awesome.

I like it.

So council members,

that brings us to the end of another

deep dive into the stories shaping our

corner of the universe.

A huge thank you to Steve and Comets

Asylum for stopping by tonight to share

Atrium with us.

And whether you join this live or you're

going to catch this later on our replay,

make sure you support the creators.

Check out the book.

Continue filling the community that makes

Indie Comets thrive.

And remember,

this is the USDN podcast where Indie

Comets come to life.

Steve, Atrium, Comets Asylum,

y'all are all hereby USDN approved.

It was a pleasure being here.

And with that,

this is the chairman and the council is

adjourned.

the,