The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

In this episode of the United States Department of Nerds (USDN), we sit down with indie comic creator Ben Lacy to dive into his latest Kickstarter project — Samson #2. This isn’t your typical superhero tale. Samson is a gritty blend of revenge, war, and horror set in an alternate-history world that challenges the boundaries of comic storytelling.

🎙️ Ben shares the inspiration behind the story, the unique themes he's exploring, and what fans can expect from the upcoming issue. We also talk about the creative process, exclusive rewards for Kickstarter backers, and stunning cover art tributes to icons like Jack Kirby, Frank Quitely, and Supergirl.

Whether you're into indie comics, powerful storytelling, or just love hearing how great ideas come to life — this episode is for you.

#Comics #BenLacy #SamsonComic #KickstarterComics #IndieComics #ComicBookPodcast #USDN #Crowdfunding #SuperheroStorytelling

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.

Hello there,

It's the Chairman of the United

States Department of Nerds,

where we are for the people,

by the people, and of the people.

And today is Free Comic Book Day,

but before y'all rush out that door,

I have Ben Lacey of Biting

Comics here with me to

discuss his upcoming Kickstarter, Samson,

issue number two.

You are listening to the USDN on the DFPN.

Thanks for watching!

all right sorry about that

my computer started looping

itself on the uh on the

share there but all right

everybody welcome ben hello

the usdn podcast he doesn't

know it yet but by coming

on the podcast he is now an

honorary council member of

the united states

department of nerds it's

just a perk that comes with

coming on the podcast ben awesome

But let's jump into it.

Ben, how did you get into comic books,

or what made you decide to, like, hey,

I think I'm going to do a

comic book today?

I guess I'd been, you know, I casually,

you know,

write stories every now and then,

you know, prose stories, you know,

fantasy, sci-fi, and things like that.

and I'd always wanted to do

a comic book and I'd come

up with the comic we're

going to talk about today

samson that was actually my

first big idea but it had

been sitting around for

twenty or thirty years but

I had another idea more

recently called uh about a

shark um the meg movie had

come out you know not long

before and you know I

thought to myself you know

it's just another shark movie um

where the monster shark goes

and tries to kill people

and they have to kill the shark.

And I was like,

what if he did something different?

So I had this idea where the

shark is a good guy.

He's a modified cyborg

military experiment.

So he's actually has

heightened intelligence and

can fly short distances.

And that's where I came up

with the idea of Shark of War.

At first, I was thinking, you know,

maybe writing it as a short story.

But I said, you know,

I want to do a comic book

that was different.

That would be a pretty good comic book.

That would be different.

And, you know, I'm not a great artist,

and I didn't know any artists,

so I was going to do the art myself.

And I, you know,

I knew enough computer

graphics to do art that way,

and it worked out pretty well for that.

So my first comic book was Shark of War,

which you can kind of see

on the wall behind me,

some issues of that.

And I've done now eight

issues of Shark of War.

You know, I funded it on Kickstarter, but

and you know I've done a

couple other comic books

vicious vixens and the

cthulhu man as well but I

always came back to this

idea of samson that I had

um you know as a jewish

person not a lot of jewish

superheroes even though you

know a lot of the creators

were were jewish I always

thought you know this idea

I had it for samson you know

I thought I really liked it

and I wanted to do it.

And now that I was more integrated into,

you know, crowdfunding comic books,

I knew artists and stuff

like that and how to print

and publish the comic book.

I was like,

maybe this is the time to do Samson.

So no, I, I really like it.

You sent me over the first

one to read and the mixture

of reality and

inside of that book and you

actually showing us who

these characters are

actually based off of

really hit that book home

and but we'll get into that

I don't want to get too far

ahead of ourselves here on

that one but I will say

issue one was was amazing

like oh thank you it it was

like I don't know if you've

seen the review I did on it

I gave you um I had not I'd

love to see the review

actually um I can always

see some good pull lines

for my kickstarter for for

people the whole blurb I

gave you on on um blue sky

is perfect for that I wrote

I intentionally write

smaller reviews like that so

you can copy and paste them

over to kickstarter as a

review right and um it's

just something that the

very first one I did I

didn't know what I was doing but um

I was like, hey,

here's a blurb I wrote for

Blue Sky because I'm only

allowed so many characters.

The guy who I wrote it for was like, oh,

dude, that's perfect.

I can just copy and paste

the whole thing and use it

on Kickstarter.

I'm like, perfect, cool.

I try to keep those short and sweet,

but I do usually go back

and write an article as well on it,

on the interview, and on the book itself.

I post that up to our DFPN website,

which I can send you a link

when I get done writing that.

Normally, I do the interview.

I've read the book.

I kind of take the two,

smash them together,

and I do a quick little article on it.

I keep it short and sweet.

It's like two or three

paragraphs about the artist, the book,

what I thought about it,

and then I'll post it to the website.

I try to give as much as I

can back to the person for

coming on the podcast.

That's great.

I appreciate it.

It's really hard to get reviews of

know from from media on you

know on indie comic books

and I think it really helps

you know establish

credibility which is crazy

to me so many of these out

there I'm an indie guy I

love books like you see

this is new comic book day

for this week that I

haven't recorded yet yeah

I'm always late on getting

stuff recorded but this

week was a hell of a week

and but that's going to get

recorded today in of that pile

every,

there's probably three comic books

in there from Marvel and DC.

Everything else is Image, Dark Horse,

and everybody else.

Everybody that everybody considers indie.

Even though I'm like,

Image is like probably the

second largest producer of comic books.

I'm like... Image.

Most people working at Image

are not indie.

I mean, it's like, okay, yeah,

Todd McFarlane, those guys, and

Man, I mean, I remember when, what was it?

Ninety-two or ninety-three

when Rob Liefeld and Todd

McFarlane started Damage Comets.

And they're like, oh, this indie company.

And I'm like,

and all of a sudden this

indie company was like booming.

Yeah,

they were selling a million copy issues.

Youngblood.

Yeah, for a million copies at the time.

They were setting records for print runs.

Like ten times what a comic

book today would

come close to you know even

you know probably more than

even you know something

like absolute batman is

sold nowadays is I think

absolute batman just broke

that record actually oh

really yeah I think issue

one did just break the

record if it didn't break

the record it's pretty darn

close to breaking the

record that's pretty good

for that I mean especially

nowadays when you know a

lot of comic books sell you

know twenty thousand issues

even at marvel or dc probably

when I when I was in the uh

you know we're probably the

similar error in the

seventies I would uh marvel

comics used to have to

print these these

statements on how much

their monthly publishing

numbers every now and then

if you you know if you're

the old the old comics

you'd see like this print

and every now and then I'd

look at it and I you know

spider-man would have like

five hundred thousand

copies a month printed out

on average or something and you know

lesser comic books might

have two hundred thousand or something.

But yeah,

most comic books come anywhere

close to that today.

No, they really don't.

And what I appreciate

nowadays is they do keep the run smaller,

which also adds to the

rarity of the book and

which helps the industry a

lot by keeping a low print more.

value later yeah I mean back

at that time I thought of

indie comics as is eclipse

I don't know if you

remember eclipse I don't

they they mainly didn't

their big claim to fame was

probably they were they

were the us publishers for

miracle man at the time you

know okay yeah I didn't

remember miracle man

And then Comico,

which I like because they did, uh,

elementals and, uh, and justice machine,

you know, elementals was, uh,

Bill Willingham before he

did fables and stuff like that.

So those were, those were,

those were underrated book.

If you can find it, what fables.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Elementals was pretty good too.

I liked that, that it was,

it was a few like, uh, you know,

a superhero team where the team is,

you know,

very strange and they're you

know they're kind of it's

kind of all tried to be

more real world too weekly

fighting super villains you

know I had some real world

realism and you know the

characters were kind of like

not all that nice people,

but they weren't bad guys.

They just, they just weren't, you know,

Superman type archetypes.

I've always enjoyed those

characters more though.

Yeah.

And that's why I like the Indies so much.

Indie comics,

you get more freedom of what

you want to do.

So that's why I've always

found myself more intrigued

by those types of

characters and more of the

Indie type of books.

But yeah,

So let's jump into, tell us about Samson.

That's kind of a loaded

title because it does have

biblical references to it.

But what is Samson exactly?

Yeah, Samson,

the name for the character is

going to come more from the

fact that they set him up

to be a superhero to

represent Jewish people.

And at this point in the story,

it goes from,

the story kind of cover is an epic story.

going from World War II when

he's created as a child to

the end of the Cold War.

In World War II,

the Nazis were

experimenting on young children.

This part is true.

The Nazis experimented on

young children with an emphasis on twins.

So he and his brother, who is his twin,

wind up in Auschwitz.

They are Ukrainian-Polish Jews,

much like my own ancestry.

And his first name happens to be Samuel.

So, you know,

obviously the idea of being

called Samson would make a lot of sense.

But he and his brother are

taken to this camp.

And there are two scientists

there who start

experimenting on them to find

as a prototype effort to try and, you know,

they want to test these,

these drugs they have to

give you superpowers,

which they're eventually

going to try and create a

line of Nazi super soldiers.

So that's what's going on in World War II.

Meantime, in the, in, you know,

the Berlin Wall,

the adult Samson learns

that there may be one of

these Nazi super soldiers

who survived the war and he

may have escaped to the United States.

Also something which has happened,

Nazis famously,

some of them escaped to Argentina,

a few of them actually

escaped and hid out in the

United States and were

eventually found and

brought to Israel for trial.

So the first issue focuses

on the Nazis experimenting

on him as a young child and

him trying to hunt down

this possible Nazi super

criminal and bring him back to justice.

So that covers most of the first issue.

And the second issue,

which I think really gets

into the heart of the story,

he has to return to Israel,

and we actually see the

efforts to give him

superpowers as a child kick

into high gear.

You saw the cliffhanger

ending at the end of the issue.

Yeah, yeah, that's right.

The Nazis are frustrated

that they haven't seen the

results they've hoped for.

They're hoping to kick

things into higher gear

with a more sharp effort to kick off,

give him superpowers.

Of course,

it's not going to go quite the

way they hope it does.

That's why the title of the

story is Escape from Auschwitz,

because he's going to try

and finally get free.

Yeah, no,

that was a really cool

cliffhanger at the end of issue one.

Yeah, thank you.

And it was one of those where I'm like,

this came.

Obviously,

I knew you had issue two coming out,

but the way that one ended, I was like,

man, that's...

I'm like,

issue two is either going to

start off with a big bang

or we're going to get a big

bang at the middle of the book.

I'm like,

we're going to get a good issue

two out of this.

I know that.

Oh, yeah.

You're going to get a payoff

on that story.

The other story, like I said,

extends through many years.

You're going to get to find

out what happened to his brother.

Yeah, yeah.

See what's happened to him

in Israel because at some

point he does wind up in Israel.

which is where he got his

uniform and his name

because the Israelis

government at the time of

independence wanted somebody to, you know,

symbolize what they were themselves.

So if you looked at the

digital back of the book stuff,

there's some stories on.

No,

I didn't see the concept of art that

you sent over as well when

you were picking out the –

his super suit and everything.

I thought those were really cool.

I thought you made the good

choice on that one.

Yeah.

I actually,

my audience preferred that one.

I might've gone a different way from them.

So I put it up for my readership.

You know, I was like,

these are the three choices.

What do you like?

And they liked that one.

And I'm like, okay, we're going with you.

Yeah.

I mean, they're going,

they're the ones who are buying it.

So yeah.

But, um,

No, I really.

So actually,

we we already talked about the character.

So you did say that because

his brother did disappear, I think,

probably about three

quarters of the way through

the book or halfway through there.

You know, he's he's they they they,

you know,

they originally experiment on

him and it doesn't go the

way that nothing happens.

And then they switch characters.

They changed what their medicines,

their drugs,

and starts experimenting on Sam.

And, you know, and the brother basically,

you know, is still there.

But, you know, we don't.

We are going to see that the

drugs have had an effect on him, too.

And we'll see what happens to him.

Okay.

Okay.

something to look forward to

in issue two and give those readers like,

Oh, you want to come back for issue two?

Yeah.

Oh yeah.

I think issue two and then issue three,

I think is going to be, you know,

I wish I could get these

out every two or three months, you know,

obviously that is an indie

comic guy doing it all yourself.

You're kind of, you know,

If I was if I was doing this

for a publisher, you know,

and all I had to worry

about is writing a story

and checking the art,

I could probably do it, you know,

get it out like almost like a regular,

you know, Marvel book.

But I can't.

Yeah, that would be, yeah,

sort of buy in your own

publishing company.

Yeah, the logistics are very hard,

you know, getting things moving.

All right.

So tell us about how your

creative process works for this.

Did you storyboard like the

entire series out or are

you just kind of like, all right,

here's issue one, here's issue two,

now let me start

brainstorming issue three

or do you already have your whole...

story storyboarded out

written out on on a notepad

somewhere going okay now

we're here now we're here I

kind of uh you know a rough

synopsis of the first four

or five issues and then in

my head I probably have you

know the first seven or

eight actually issues you know

And then what I normally

prefer to do is I have an idea of it.

And then I just start, you know,

what I want.

I have an idea of what I

want this issue to cover.

And then I start writing the

comic script and try to see

how it lays out on the page for me,

page by page.

I usually write page by page.

panel by panel so I kind of

give okay you know I see

this this page is having

six panels here's panel one

I see in panel one two

three and four and I I kind

of write it out and you

know usually I follow what

what my original idea is

but then I sometimes have

while I'm writing it also

you know maybe this would

be better this would be

better and the idea kind of

go and you know as I think

about it on each page by

page I can imagine try to

imagine you know

how big the panel might be,

whether I'm trying to cram,

I have a tendency to try

and cram a lot into a page.

So there are panels where I've gone six,

seven, eight, eight panels a page,

you know,

and I'm always- That's a lot of

panels when you look at it.

Average is,

sits is usually that good

number for panels on a page.

Unless it's a small panel

depicting like a POW or a

ZAP or something.

Yeah, well,

part of the reason I do that is

practical because, you know,

You know,

I try to do a twenty four page

book and I want to cover

certain things in twenty four pages.

So if I you know,

if I can't if I can't do that,

I start I start upping the

panel count a bit.

And then, you know,

because if I can't do it in

twenty four pages,

I have to go to twenty eight pages.

which obviously increases,

starts to increase the expense of price.

There's a practical, you know, again,

it's an indie comic thing.

There's a practical limit.

If I was funding, you know,

at a hundred thousand dollars an issue or,

you know, well,

even a thousand dollars an issue,

I'd be like, yeah,

let's make this a twenty

eight page book of a couple

more big splash pages.

I always have a couple of

splash pages in the book no matter what.

So I'm always planning to

have one or two big full pages as well.

So you get that big artistic moment,

which we're going to see in

the fight with Uber Kong in issue two.

Yeah, I did see the concept for that.

That concept was really dope, yeah.

You really get a good picture.

And I think I sent you one

of the... This was just, I mean,

it gives you an idea,

but there was a picture of

the fight where my artist

Nico Turan was drawing it.

And you can kind of see what's coming.

That was one of those where I was like,

do I want to show these?

And I kind of do.

And I kind of was like, no,

I kind of want to steer

people to the Kickstarter.

Yeah.

I will say this.

There is a fight with a

giant enhanced gorilla, which is...

you know,

one of those things where you look at it,

like I've seen the concept art for it.

It's really dope.

And then all of a sudden in real life,

people are talking about

could a hundred dudes fight

a gorilla all of a sudden.

And I'm like, Oh,

I've seen concept art for this,

for a comic book.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Well,

there's going to be some of that as well.

Cause you know, things, things on that,

that fight don't go totally

the way you might think they would.

You know,

Let's just say that you

should have some sympathy

for the gorilla in the storyline, too.

Oh, yeah.

Yeah.

Most definitely.

Most definitely.

But yeah.

Yeah.

So that fight's going to be exciting,

hopefully.

And, you know,

I think the other part of

the story is also inspired

by real events is what

happens between him and the

Nazi super criminal he finds.

Yeah.

let's bring this up and we

can see that right there

yeah I didn't realize it

was on the splash page but

yeah they let you add more

art now nowadays so so to

your to your preview page

you used to only just be

able to show like one one

image um so what you're

seeing there at the top is

is some of the the like I said the

The story concerns that

after the fall of the Berlin Wall,

more information about

these super soldier

projects from World War II

is being found.

And there's an effort by

somebody to start creating

more super soldiers.

And you're seeing in the top panel there,

some of the results of that

effort and some of the

super creations are rather

freakish there.

You've got the guy on the

left has got your obvious super strength,

but the one guy is what

I've called the last decide

is basically has like Mr.

Fantastic type powers.

And then,

then there's a woman called

Sprite who's hanging on him on the right,

who, who kind of has your, your Wolverine,

you know, feral, feral powers, who I call,

who I dubbed Spite.

And then below you see a

little bit of the Uber Kong

fight with our young Sam, who,

like I said,

during World War II is a child.

The other, the second,

that image there is cover

art for issue one,

which will be available to, you know,

that cover is available as

part of the issue two Kickstarter.

For issue one Kickstarter covers,

I did several different variants.

And this is actually an

artist whose parents survived Auschwitz,

and she specializes in Holocaust art.

And this is an oil painting

that I licensed from her to

use as a cover.

so so she sells you know oil

paintings that for private

collectors and also gallery

galleries and and museums

and and she let me license

this to this picture image

to use as a cover of course

it works really well

because it's two brothers

in auschwitz and it's

inspired by some famous

photos of of children at

auschwitz where you see the

photos of them behind the

uh the uh the barbed wire

And it really sends a

message to you in that painting too.

This cover is done by

current artist Nico Turan,

who's going to be the issue

two interior artist as well.

He also does Vicious Vixens for me,

one of my other comic books.

But this obviously is

inspired by one of the Alex

Ross Superman covers.

Yeah, I have that cover somewhere.

It's one of my favorite...

Superman.

I said, can you,

you think you can do

something with that photo

realistic style?

And he said, I'll try.

And he,

I think he really hit it out of the park.

I think it's not a direct copy, but,

but it's still got that

photo realistic look.

Um,

This is also probably my

most controversial cover

because of current

political issues via Israel

and things like that.

So when I published it,

put this on Facebook,

there was some backlash to it.

I'm sure, I'm sure.

And then you,

you get an article on the

real life villains, both the, uh, the,

the scientists who are

experimenting on him are

based on actual Nazi scientists who,

who experimented on people in, in the, uh,

in concentration camps.

Um, the first one there, you know,

he actually, you know,

was found guilty at the

Nuremberg trials and he was sent,

you know, he was executed.

The second one, um,

was not.

He, you know,

he went to prison for a while.

He got his license back.

He lived till be ninety.

It's crazy.

Kind of a very life is

unfair kind of thing, you know.

Yeah, no kidding.

There was no,

the justice for him was not

what it should have been, but, uh,

yeah and then you can see

that the you know I do like

this picture because the

way they protrude the

artists and you decided to

portray these two doctors

or these two people doing

the experimentations like

yeah how you can like the

pictures look like them or

resemble them to some

degree I I thought that was

like perfect for the story

and kind of really hit this

this home that you are

basing this off of real

people who did evil things

Yeah, they also, I mean,

if you look at them, they also, you know,

the pictures,

they also have a very evil

kind of creepy look in

their real pictures.

They do.

You know, Mengele is obviously the most,

Joseph Mengele is obviously

the most famous of these scientists,

you know,

since he was at Auschwitz and

was deciding who lived and

who died as people got off the ship.

trains um but but he's kind

of like you know blandly

handsome whereas you know

these guys look they look

the part of you know yeah

of villains if you saw them

you would be like oh man

those guys are scary that's

where you go like who hurt

them as a child to make

them yeah this way all

right we'll stop sharing this

No, that's, yeah.

To me, that was,

once I seen that part of the splash page,

I was like, oh damn, this really, for me,

it really hit it home.

on like yeah you're telling

a fictional story but you

have some historical facts

mixed into it as well and

I've always appreciated

that and from a

storytelling perspective

when you can you know I'm

telling you a non-fiction

or fictional story but I'm

also going to mix it in

with some non-fiction as

well in historical facts to

back some of what I'm saying up

Well, that was important to me.

I mean, there's a, you know,

this is obviously not a true story, but,

you know, the there's, you know,

most of the people who were

directly involved in this are dead.

And, you know,

the only ones that are left

are probably were probably young,

very young at the time.

And, you know,

there's obviously a group of, you know,

what they call Holocaust

deniers and stuff like that

who are out there.

So, you know, I wanted to you know,

I wanted to have the actual

reality there as well, because, you know,

a lot of people,

they aren't going to watch

documentaries about the Holocaust,

but they consume, you know,

pop culture stuff.

And they would you know,

they they see about it, you know,

through through mediums like this.

I see my very first one on YouTube,

actually,

and it was about the guy who

saved all the children

during the Holocaust.

I think he saved like eight

hundred kids or something like that.

Is that the one in Belgium

or Denmark or somebody?

Yeah.

Yeah.

And like,

he's in the audience and they're

talking about the Holocaust

and all the survivors and

then they recognize him.

So he stands up and

everybody's clapping and he's like,

and the host is like, Hey,

I want to introduce you to, uh,

some of the people that you

saved in the entire audience,

like stood up and the

emotion that that man felt

like that one hits you like

that one hits you in the feels hard.

Wow.

and I was like somebody's

cutting onions you know

yeah yeah because it does I

don't care what kind of

human being you are you see

something emotionally

charged like that it's

going to hit you as well

right and that one that one

definitely hit me and

definitely really hit it

home that this is a very

real thing and a very real

thing to happen and was

caused by really evil people but

Ben,

tell us about your Kickstarter

campaign and what people

can expect from your campaign.

OK, so we're going to have, like I said,

I'm hoping to launch

probably in a week and a

half to two weeks, depending.

I want to make sure the art,

I at least need to have the covers ready.

We're going to have at least three covers,

and I think they're going

to be very cool.

So people are going to have

several cover options.

I always do a very low cost

digital tier for five dollars.

I try to keep my base books

as reasonably priced as possible,

given that I'm printing

them and having to ship them.

individually.

So I think my prices on the

Kickstarter side are relatively low.

But the big thing is you can

read the digital issue of

the first issue on the Kickstarter page.

It will be there at the very top.

You can read issue one for

free and see if you like it.

I will tell everybody, read that.

As soon as it goes live in, Ben,

if you will send me a notification,

I will post that

notification across my

social media platforms as well.

And I encourage everybody

who is going to listen to this later,

this will go live next

Wednesday as that's my day.

I kind of push out all my

products to the worldwide

webs through my...

and um yeah read that first

issue when it comes out I

thought it was really good

um it was one of those

where it you get to see

kind of firsthand some of

the evil that was done to

these people and the

product that it produced is

now like their greatest enemy

And I thought that was just a really,

really cool concept to put

into comic book format.

It does tell a good story.

So when it comes out live, I'll post it.

I encourage everybody to

read that first issue and

then support the second

issue because it is a good story.

I always try to give out a

lot of my first issues free

because I have some faith

in my work and I'm hoping

that people read it.

They'll be inspired to want

to back the project.

You won't have to sign up

for anything or anything like that.

You just click the link and

it'll pop up in Google Docs

and you can read it and

download it and share it if you want.

I don't really mind people

sharing my digital copies

all over the place if they want.

But yeah,

so I'm hopeful that that will

bring a lot of people in

and that they'll at least

back at some level.

So yeah,

issue three is going to have some

cool stuff.

We're going to get to meet

some of the extended Samson family,

including the Omega Girl, who will be...

we'll be making an

appearance that will

hopefully shock people.

And there'll be some cover

art inspired by Supergirl,

a Supergirl comic.

Yeah, that one was one of the,

that was a really dope concept too.

I do have a question about

that here in a few minutes.

So as for the Kickstarter,

what kind of rewards can

people back in the book expect?

I know you said you had

several different tiers.

Oh, yeah, I have, you know,

not only do I have tiers

where you can get get different covers,

you can get all also get my other books,

you know, I have, you know,

three other comic books I've done.

Shark of War, in fact,

goes all the way to issue

eight is available.

And it's also got a hardcover compilation.

The Vicious Vixens now has

three issues out.

Well, the third issue just came out.

It's at the printers,

but the digital copies

already gone out to people.

And then I have a horror one

shot called the Cthulhu Man

for people who like horror.

My podcast is littered.

with hundreds of people that

are in love with horror boats.

So that's probably something

they'd definitely be interested in.

So, so, so they can, they, people can,

there are tiers where

people and add ons where

people can get all my other books too.

And I,

I try to set those at really

reasonable prices.

I mean, if you look at my,

my per copy price, once you, for,

for those,

I think I'm competitive

actually with Marvel.

If you'd like buy the whole

bundle simply because I

want people to get all my books.

So I, I,

I kind of priced them as low as I

think I possibly can.

Yeah.

Um, then, uh, then, uh,

other thing is there will be

a back you know normally my

biggest tears are these be

in the book tears where

people get to be thugs or

you know you know that's

kind of dope I've seen

other starters do that as

well and and and uh and

vicious vixens you know my

my best-selling tears are

this you get to be a thug

in the book you know who's you know

gets killed off or something

like that in a violent way.

And those sell well,

but the problem with Samson

is I'm not going to make anybody a Nazi.

So I only have a couple of D

in the book tiers here,

and they're more like cameo appearances,

like the one who's a

reporter for a television reporter.

And then there's a couple

other minor cameos,

like a judge at the trial.

um, who, who can be in the book.

So unlike, you know, I don't,

I won't have any of those

really high value tiers where I could,

you know, make,

that's why I need to get a

lot of people to back.

Um,

cause I'm going to be having to make it

more on, on volume than, than, you know,

having, you know,

a few angel backers paying

five hundred bucks to,

to be in the book for an

extended appearance in the book.

You know, last, you know,

for last issue of Shark of War, you know,

um,

We had one backer who backed

at a high amount so she

could be a lab assistant to

the evil scientist and get

killed by the monstrous

creatures the evil scientist is creating.

But that's an over-the-top evil scientist,

and these are Nazis,

so I'm not going to make anybody a Nazi.

I don't think that would be right at all.

anybody a holocaust victim

in the book so you know

yeah the tears yeah limited

choices on this one yeah so

it's really going to rely

on you know on people just

wanting to read the story

and and be part of it I I

think you know that story

to a point where

I don't think that's going

to really be an issue,

especially if they take the

ten minutes out of their

day to read issue one.

I think that's.

Oh, thank you.

That's a good selling point on it.

So.

So how many volumes do you

envision or how many issues

do you envision Samson

being before you decide, OK,

I think I've run my course

with Samson because this is

really a character that

could keep going if you wanted it to.

Yeah, my storyline currently has, you know,

six or seven issues.

And then I was considering, you know,

doing, you know, something,

a spinoff book that would

be a team book set in that universe.

The team he's on is mentioned in issue two,

or he was on is mentioned in issue two.

And I want to kind of, you know,

As part of that,

we would time jump more to

a closer to the present day.

Because, you know, like I said,

this story is kind of an

epic that runs from World

War II to the end of the

Cold War in the early early nineties.

And I kind of, you know,

at some point you got to get,

I'd want to get up more to

a more closer to the current day,

you know.

obviously the universe

doesn't have to align

perfectly between these

things and they'll probably

yeah playing around time

that's a great thing about

a comic book right you can

play with time but but I

you know I kind of view

this this world is not

totally a mirror of our own

but you know you want to

have it you know I'm always

the believer that that you

know comic book universe

should be exact duplicate

of of our world once the

superheroes start really

taking off because you know

That's one of the things I

always thought interesting about Marvel.

You know,

if we lived in the Marvel universe,

presumably the technology level would be,

you know,

way above what we're living with now.

And it'd be a much different world.

You know,

when you kind of see some of that with,

you know, the Watchmen and...

books like that where they

actually look at that.

Um,

whereas DC and we got all the different

earths in DC and there's a

new earth popping up.

Jeez.

Like once or twice a year, I guess,

you know?

Yeah.

Yeah.

I think planetary also,

but I don't know if you

read Warren Ellis's planetary,

he kind of looked at that.

Well, the, the irony there was the, the,

you know,

he had a fantastic four knockoff

in planetary and,

And they were bad guys, though.

And the point he was making

was they were hogging all

this technology they had

and not sharing it with the rest of us.

And you can kind of see he's

making a similar critique

of the actual Marvel

Fantastic Four because they

have all this fantastic technology.

And the rest of us don't

have fantastic cars and

unlimited energy and stuff like that.

they kind of always you know

hand wave it off by saying

oh it's it's really

expensive or you can we can

only make it yeah tiny

quantities but you know

that's what we need you

know that is I've I've

thought about that before

I'm like we don't have

enough like bad guy comic

books where the villain is

kind of like the star of

the book now we get one

shots here and there of a

book about a villain I

think batman is one though

dc is getting ready to do

a series on the bad guys

where they're getting their

own little individual runs

of books just about them,

which I think is a really dope concept.

But there's just no comic

book out there that I can

think of off the top of my

head that's just a book about a bad guy.

Now we got some anti-heroes

like Deadpool and Lobo and

that kind of stuff,

but nothing that's like the

villain causing chaos.

Yeah.

There's nothing like that.

To me,

that would be something that would

be really cool.

The ones I can think of,

if you've read some of Mark

Waid's non-Marvel work,

I think it was Mark Waid,

he did Irredeemable about a

Superman kind of guy who

went nuts and started wiping people out.

um that that was kind of one

though a lot of the focus

on that one was on the

people trying to stop him

but he was still the the

probably the main character

um you know if you've seen

read in just I guess the

biggest thing would be injustice yeah

which I thought was really

good for like the first two seasons.

And then I kind of went off

the rails when he became too evil.

He was like the right amount

of evil at the start.

And then he just kind of went and became,

you know.

I enjoyed the – I didn't

enjoy the comic book so much,

but I did enjoy the fact

that the video games they

made based off of Injustice

were really – it was the

comic books and video game format.

You know what I'm saying?

Yeah.

I did play the video games.

I loved them.

I played both of them when they came out,

and I enjoyed the hell out

of those because the story

was just so good in –

And they were able to play

with the story a little bit

from the comic book,

but I really enjoyed the

way they did the games more

so than the comic books themselves.

But no, you're right about Injustice.

That's a good one.

But so let's talk about the covers.

Like I did put you sent me

you sent me the like, hey, the covers.

But let's talk about it.

So you got a Supergirl homage coming.

And then you got two other

covers inspired by both

Jack Kirby and Frank Quietly.

Right.

So who come up with the

concepts to kind of use

those three particular ones?

Or was that something like

your cover artist said, hey,

what do you think about these homages?

The artist wanted to really

do a Kirby style cover.

And I really wanted to have

a cover showing, you know, the Uber Kong,

you know,

throw up.

So that kind of, that's kind of where,

where it came there.

So that, that's kind of what the,

that cover came, how that cover came out.

For the other cover,

I basically went and looked

at some different covers

with Supergirl on them.

There's plenty of them out there.

Well,

I wanted ones with both Supergirl and

Superman,

and I wanted ones that looked good.

There's some that look better than others,

and I came up with three or four.

and, and he kind of liked that.

The one I, we chose as being the, the,

the best one to, to,

to do a cover homage on.

And then for the quietly cover,

I wanted one that focused on,

on her and he's, you know,

he suggested kind of

something inspired by that,

that cut by that, that cover with, uh,

and it's actually the quietly covers from,

uh, from that, um,

what's the name of the series now,

the Superman series that he did with, uh,

was it Grant Morrison?

Yeah.

Okay.

Yeah.

I know.

Yeah.

And it's actually him and

it's Superman and

Superwoman when Lois gets powers here.

I know exactly what Ren

you're talking about.

The relationship between

Samson and the Omega Girl

is not like either Supergirl or

His relationship with either

Supergirl or Lois Lane,

it's something quite

different that will be

explained in issue two.

But, you know,

I think it's very it'll be a

very interesting and

poignant part of the story.

You know,

while we're talking about the art

of this book,

go ahead and who's doing

your covers and who's doing

your interiors?

Right now, Nico Turan's doing everything.

He's been my vicious vixens artist.

So he's probably the artist

I've worked with the most.

And I really liked his work.

And we have the artists I've worked with,

you know, him and my Shark of War artist,

Heartstroke, you know,

you know,

that I've had the best

interaction with in terms

of working together and

which is why I wanted to

have used him for this issue.

He's very easy to work with.

He's also, you know, to be honest,

affordable.

I think he gives me a much

better rate than he should actually,

cause he, I hope he doesn't watch this.

Fortunately, he's in England.

Probably won't see it,

but- I got friends in

England that watches though.

Who knows?

he gives me a much better

rate than he probably should,

which helps cover my costs.

And he's fast too,

which gets these projects done in time.

I'd say he's probably my

quickest artist as well in

terms of turnaround.

So that, you know,

I pride myself on always

getting my books out ahead of schedule.

You know, it's my fourteenth book.

So I've

plan on getting that's a lot

of books for somebody who

runs kit starter campaigns

yeah yeah and you know so I

I do you know every year I

try and do I I hope to do

four or five I wind up

doing three or so and hey

that's still a book a

quarter almost yeah you

know so that's still really

really good considering

that it's I've seen some

campaigns you know take a

year to produce right

Yeah, I understand that people, you know,

people have been burned on

Kickstarters before.

And I, you know,

I really want people not to

feel that way about any of mine.

I was proud to get a creator

we love kind of badge.

from Kickstarter because

enough people were, I guess,

thumbing thumbs up on my campaign.

Yeah.

And people don't realize

that those little small

things like that really

impact what you do on Kickstarter.

Because I've seen artists

also kicked off a

Kickstarter for not meeting.

Right.

You know what they promised.

So getting that little badge is like.

Yeah.

yeah it's an easy thing to

get but if the people

aren't saying like hey I

love this book and giving

you that thumbs up on there

it really does impact you

yeah yeah it helps to have

to have that you know a

good reputation because you know like

You know, you're relying on, you know,

as a percent of backers,

the people who backed me

before backing me this time

are probably fifty to sixty,

maybe seventy percent of

the people that are backers

who backed me in the past, you know,

not new backers,

which is what I'm always trying.

That's what you're here to do, though.

Bringing in new backers.

It's really hard, though.

I mean, it's gotten harder, I think.

I don't know if there's

something changing about

the overall economy or just

I think that's the biggest play in it.

And right now is what's

going on with the economy

and less suspendable income

for people who would

normally be buying comic books.

Right.

Which I hate to see that, you know,

I do too.

And, and, and I think, you know,

So, so you always got to try.

So I always lose some people

who backed in the past and, you know,

I don't get a hundred

percent return by any,

by any stretch of the imagination, but.

No, but if you're getting a good, you know,

if you're getting like a

fifty to sixty to seventy

percent return from backers, that,

that says a lot about you

and what you put out to the public.

So.

Well, I, I hope so.

You know, I, I hope people will, you know,

new people check it out.

And that, that's always, like I said,

the hard thing too is, you know,

the hard thing about being

an indie creator is your

reach you know you know

it's always so it's so

limited you've got a very

small view you know where

you know when somebody you

know with a name like you

know keanu reeves or uh

brandon sanderson puts out

a book on kickstarter you

know they they're gonna go

I think that's how bizarre

actually started huh

that's how berserker started

yeah yeah that's what that

was my that's what again I

was referring to berserker

um he uh you know you know

obviously yeah once he put

puts that book out on

kickstarter you know it's

gonna everybody's gonna

hear about it you know

people who aren't in the

kickstarter ecosystem are

gonna hear about it and

they're gonna go and that's

the thing you gotta

like for me I've had to go

into kickstarter and the

way I've done it is I kind

of like when you select

your selecting interest and

stuff like that you really

have to be on top of it and

you really have to be

following the social medias

to really know when

kickstarters are coming up

and what I've kind of

like you reached out to me to say, Hey,

can I come on the podcast

and talk about my new book?

And that's what I want.

That's what I'm trying to do

here for comic book

creators for Kickstarter or

just comic book creators in

general is like, Hey,

this is a place where you

can come on and we can talk

about how you got into this

and what you're trying to

achieve with what you're

trying to do on Kickstarter.

And to me,

I feel like I'm doing

something right when

artists are reaching out to me and going,

hey,

can I come on the USDM podcast and

talk about my new Kickstarter campaign?

The answer is almost always yes.

The only thing I ever ask is

communicate with me.

Let me know what's going on.

I've had several people

reach out and just like, hey,

I would love to come on and

talk about a project I got.

I'm like, cool.

What's your dates look like?

I'm open.

My daughter's in college.

And literally that's, I have no holdups.

I can do this at any point

at any given day, you know,

unless I'm outside mowing the lawn,

you know?

So I literally just say, Hey,

tell me when you want to

come on and I can make that

happen because I haven't,

my nine to five I come home

and I work on podcast stuff

so for me it's like just

say when and we can make

this happen at any time and

I try to tell people that

when they initially email

me it's like and I think I

did the same for you I'm

like hey what's your

availability let's let's

knock it out yeah I'm

retired from my day jobs

now so I've retired from

one day job already I'm on

number two this is this I

I'm mostly focused on this

and you know you know others you know

wife.

My kids are out of college

and they're on their own

for the most part.

I can do this.

I'm available.

Anybody ever wants to talk

to me about my comics,

I'm available probably twenty-four seven.

I've got an Australian

podcast I'm going on in a couple of weeks,

I think.

We're working out the time

difference about when I

would be on and when he would be on.

Bruno Caterina is in England.

Yeah.

And I've interviewed him

twice for both his last two programs.

Cinematic Figments and

Bereavement were the two

that I've interviewed him for.

And like anytime he gets

ready to launch a new book,

like the first thing he does is like,

Hey, chairman,

when can I come on and talk

about this book?

I'm like, Bruno, you know,

the rules do just give me a

time and a day and we'll

make it happen for us.

That's why I usually I like this ten a.m.

on a Saturday time spot

because it worked out for him.

I'm like, well,

it can probably work out

for guys in America, too,

because we're waking up.

We've had our breakfast.

We're drinking our coffee,

our second cup of coffee in my case.

And that pets are fed and, you know, we're

to me it's a good time we

may not get viewers but we

will get the listeners

later on when he goes live

next week and um I just

really like that time frame

of ten a.m on a saturday

for me and it usually works

out for other guests too

yeah I'm not in a rush to

leave the house on a

saturday morning so I gotta

move I'm mowing lawn today

so I mean for me it's kind of like

I'm just delaying what I got

to do in a good way, you know,

because this is something

that I really enjoy doing

is I'm glad I'm with

artists and creators.

And see, that helps me out, you know,

because I know Bruno,

he loves like after he's came on,

he goes and it's like, hey,

if you guys have a project

and you want to talk about it,

this guy is your guy to go to.

And that makes me happy.

It puts a smile on my face that.

I'm that guy for him,

and I want to be that guy

for others as well.

Yeah, that's great.

When I started, you know,

I did Shark of War five years ago,

I found, you know,

a number of people to do some reviews.

Well, not a number,

but a few people to do some reviews.

And most of those,

a lot of those websites are

gone now and they're not

they're not doing it still.

So, you know,

having somebody who's blasting and,

you know,

doing this regularly and still

doing this is very helpful.

If this could be my full

time job to where I just

get to sit around and

review comic books and

interview comic creators

man I would my day job

would be done yesterday but

that I do I still this my

passion lies with

Knowing that people trust me

enough to send me their

hard work for an honest review.

And I had to tell somebody

that the other day as well.

I'm like, hey, you know, I'm like,

I'm not sure what you're

trying to ask me.

But usually if you message me,

you either have a book

ready to be reviewed and

you want me to review it

for you and have you on the

podcast to talk about it.

Or you're asking me for some

type of input like, hey,

check out this book.

What do you think about it?

What can I tweak to make it?

And that's what I like to do.

Honestly,

the first time that ever happened for me,

I cried because that to me

was I'm doing something right.

You know what I'm saying?

People are trusting me

enough and I've put myself

out there enough to where

people are trusting me to do

this for them.

And that's like the highest form of, of,

you know,

that you can receive is that

people are trusting you to

provide them inputs for

something that they

honestly care about too.

And when other people care about it,

you care about it just as

much as they do.

And you want to see it succeed.

Right.

So it's like pouring love

into your child and hoping

that they come out good because of it.

So,

But no, Ben, honestly,

anytime you want to come on

and talk about a new book,

the door is always open and

we can do this anytime you want.

Now, before I let you go,

if anybody is on the fence

about supporting your Kickstarter,

what can you say to them

now to really drive that

point home on it?

Well, I, I think the,

the biggest sailing point is, is that,

you know, I'm, I'm offering to, you know,

if you're all a fan of comic books,

I'm letting you read issue one for free,

um, with no obligation.

So, so you can,

you don't have to sign up for my emails.

You don't have to do anything.

You just click the link on

the Kickstarter page.

If you like the book,

I hope it sells itself.

If you like issue one,

I think issue two is going

to be even better because

we're really getting into

the heart of the story.

We've introduced the main

characters and now we're getting to some

the real action and we're

gonna gonna get to some of

the most exciting parts and

for those of you who want

to see some nazi punching

which some people have been

been like oh I'm excited to

see some nazis

yeah issue one because we're

we're you know you know

he's he's being

experimented on and and

stuff like that um but

we're going to get to see

some of that initial you

know a fair amount of that

in issue two and in issue

three is this as the story

evolves along in his

involvement in world war ii

I mean we get a brief

moment where in issue one

where you see him with the

french resistance you know

because there's some you

know time skip there where he's telling

telling a story of his time

with the french resistance

when he first met really

well thank you thank you I

really enjoyed the way you

did it in issue one with

the time jumps you did they

were smooth like it and they made sense

That's something that I

think is hard for some

people to really do is do a

time jump backwards and

then back to forwards.

That's a concept to me that

you really have to put a

lot of brain cells into to

get that just right.

You did that in issue one.

I will say if anybody out

there is listening later on,

guy knows how to do a time

jump the proper way in his

book so prepare yourself

because they are a really

great thing he does them

very well and they make

sense the way he does them

so up to be free what's

that no no no no you're

good for a second no okay

yeah that was on your end then

Which, it happens.

My whole thing's frozen before.

I've had to drop out of a

live podcast and then bring

myself back into it.

but Ben, that's all I have for you.

Why don't you go ahead and

plug your social medias and

tell everybody where they

can find biting comics.

Sure.

You can find, uh,

find me at biting comics.com.

Just all one word biting comics.com.

It'll take you up to the, uh,

to the website where you

can sign up and you can get,

not only can you get free issue of Samson,

you'll get free issue of

shark of war and a free

issue of vicious vixen.

So you basically try, uh,

try a range of my product

product you know from shark

of the war is is is really

uh you know high concept

sci-fi actions uh vicious

vixens is is is is genre a

team meets charlie's angels

action um with some

attractive women if you

like attractive women um in

everybody involved as well

as you're following their exploits.

And of course,

you'll get to read Samson as well.

If you'd like to sign up for my email,

I'd appreciate it.

I'm on Facebook.

You know, I am on Blue Sky and on Twitter.

Well, X. But I have to admit,

most of my posting is on my

focus is more on Facebook, which is,

you know, I'm at...

shark of war on Facebook.

So if you go to facebook.com

slash shark of war, uh, you know how I,

I always have trouble

knowing how you find stuff on Facebook,

but yeah, it's,

it's shark of war on Facebook.

Um, that's probably where I post, you know,

most of the stuff on,

on my Kickstarter and, you know,

other things that I'm doing though.

I, I do post, you know,

on Twitter and blue sky,

but I don't cultivate as much there.

I think most of the people I, I,

I associate her more on Facebook, but yeah,

so that's, that's, and,

and Ben Lacey one on

Instagram be Lacey one on, on,

I think and blue sky.

Yeah.

Actually I'm trying to look at what I am.

Yeah.

Be Lacey one on blue sky.

That's B L A C Y one.

I don't have an E in my, uh, my last name.

Everybody, a lot of people misspell it.

L A C E Y L A C Y. Yeah.

That's, that's, that's my main things.

All right.

Well, Ben,

that's all I have for you today.

And as always, everybody,

you can find me at Blue Sky

as USDN Chairman and on all

the other social media

platforms as the USDN Podcast.

So on behalf of myself, the chairman.

the new council member, Ben,

and the Council of Nerds.

Everybody,

this USDN interview has been

USDN approved.

With that,

everybody enjoy a free comic book date.

Go out and enjoy it.

It's a beautiful weekend.