The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

🎙️ USDN Podcast Interview — “GENERAL WASHINGTON & THE LIBERTY TREE #1”
Guest: John Luzar — Writer/Creator
Originally streamed: Thursday, November 13 @ 7PM EST

🔥 ABOUT THIS EPISODE

What happens when a symbol becomes a battleground?

In this USDN Podcast interview, we dive deep into the new Kickstarter comic General Washington & The Liberty Tree #1, a bold and provocative superhero story that explores the weight of legacy, race, and national identity in a country struggling to define itself.
A decade after the original General Washington’s tragic death, the alien symbiont that granted his powers has remained dormant—until now. 

We talk with writer John Luzar about:
⚡ Reimagining patriotic iconography in the modern era
⚡ The mythology behind the alien symbiont
⚡ Superheroes in politically charged times
⚡ Working with Jason Muhr, Mark Englert, Kelly Williams, and team
⚡ The Kickstarter campaign’s goals and stretch plans
⚡ Why this story resonates right now

📌 SUPPORT THE COMIC ON KICKSTARTER
Back it here âžś https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/worthcost/general-washington-and-the-liberty-tree

Email for interviews: thechairman@usdnpodcast.com

General Washington and the Liberty Tree, John Luzar interview, Resistance Comics, patriotic superheroes, political superhero comics, indie comics, Kickstarter comics 2025, Jason Muhr art, alien symbiont comics, American identity comics, USDN Podcast interview, comic book podcast, comic book Kickstarter, new indie comic release.

What is The United States Department of Nerds Podcast?

USDN podcast is run by the USDN_Chairman and the Council of Nerds. We strive to bring you the all the latest news and rumors from the World of Nerds and consolidate it right here at USDN. USDN is for the people, by the people and of the people.

You are listening to the USDN on the

DFPN.

Thank you.

What is up, everybody?

It's the chairman here of the United

States Department of Nerds,

where we are for the people,

by the people, and of the people.

And sometimes in comic books,

it's easy to spot the good guys.

Red, white,

and blue wrap tight around righteousness.

But here in the real world,

half the country would despise anyone who

dressed up and tried to pretend to be

Captain America.

So what happens when a symbol of unity

becomes a weapon of division?

When the mantle of patriotism weighs

heavier than the armor itself?

Tonight on the USDN podcast,

we're talking with John Lazar.

Lazar.

Nailed it.

Writer of General Washington and the

Liberty Tree,

a Tom Clancy-style political thriller that

asks,

Who owns America's symbol and who's

allowed to wear them?

It's a legacy of power, patriotism,

and conflict where an alien symbiote

chooses its next host.

And the burden of a divided nation falls

on two men fighting for what's left of

the American dream.

John,

welcome to the United States Department of

Nerds.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

Good to be here.

How was that intro for you?

That was fantastic.

Couldn't have put it better myself.

That's the pitch of the conference.

I do my best work when I'm doing

an intro.

So we're done here.

I'll play it.

Absolutely.

I like the opening video and everything,

too.

It's very cool.

Very cool.

Appreciate it.

I owe that to my good buddy, Black,

who took care of me and made that

for me.

But let's start at the top, John.

What is General Washington and the Liberty

Tree, and where did this story come from?

Yeah, you know,

you put it really well yourself just a

minute ago.

It's just that idea that, you know,

I think,

and it's one of the things I love

about superhero comics, it's...

It's very clear who the good guy is

and who the bad guy is.

And we're trying to conquer the world or

rob a bank or get revenge.

But in the real world, we are fighting.

uh over different things and everybody

thinks you know they're the good guy and

people with honest disagreements are the

bad guy and if we had superheroes i

think in the real world outside our window

um

you know,

we'd be spending more time fighting each

other than, you know what I mean?

Yeah.

Then, then, you know,

then that clarity of good guys and bad

guys.

So again,

it's the idea that if anybody tried to

be captain America in the real world right

now, you know,

half the country would hate you.

Yeah.

Because we've got entirely different,

you know, I don't know.

Yeah.

Do you watch Strange New Worlds,

Star Trek Strange New Worlds?

No, I'm a Star Wars guy.

I do like the older Star Trek, though.

I'm a huge fan of the earlier stuff,

so I will watch the older stuff.

It's fair.

I highly recommend the show.

But one of the early episodes there,

I'm not a huge Star Trek guy either,

actually.

But I guess there's a big like nuclear

war in Earth's past,

like right around now, I think.

No, I think you're right.

Right.

I think it was twenty twenty five is

when the original Star Trek.

is the year I think it was supposed

to take place.

Yeah.

There's, there's a huge, and, and, um,

it's, it's,

I think it's one of the first might

even be the first episode, but, uh,

the captain is talking to this alien

civilization that's on the brink of

destroying themselves in a similar way.

And the way he puts it is two

dueling ideas about what freedom means,

not good guys and bad guys,

but two different ideas about what the

right thing to do is.

And that just,

that resonated with me so strongly

because, you know,

we've all got super strong opinions about

these things, but, uh,

You know, who decides?

Who decides what's right and wrong?

Who decides what patriotism means?

Yeah.

No, that...

It is weird to see us kind of,

like, right back into, like...

it feels like we're more divided now than

we have been in quite some time with

the,

with everything going on in the world.

And I hate seeing it that way.

Cause coming up in the military,

we were all just one,

like we were there job and we didn't

care about anything else.

We'll do our job.

We'll get our paycheck.

And at the end of the day,

we're going to go have a beer together,

you know?

we bullshit about everything and anything

and nothing in between, you know?

Yeah, no, that's definitely.

And that's, you know,

that's kind of one of the things that

I want to explore with the book and

what it would be like to, you know,

have to carry that weight.

Yeah.

You know, I think,

I think the other thing, and I, again,

I love it about superhero comics,

but like,

You know, your basic superhero story.

You get powers.

You learn a quick lesson about power and

responsibility.

You know,

it takes about twenty minutes and then

you're a good professional superhero for

the rest of your life.

That's a good two issue spread.

Twenty minutes.

Yeah.

Maybe three.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I mean, the way they expand things now,

they can do it for a year.

Mark Waid could make it brilliant.

But, you know, if it happened to me,

like if I got bit by a radioactive

whatever, I would be so bad at it.

Like, well, whatever.

You know, I don't know.

I think ninety nine percent of us would

stumble through it and just never figure

it out.

Right.

It's like, oh,

I can lift a car now.

It doesn't mean I've got hand-eye

coordination.

It doesn't mean I'm not afraid.

I would be the guy that dropped that

car on my own toe.

That's exactly right.

I'd be like Superman number one,

only I'd drop it on myself.

So that's another thing.

I thought about what it would be like

to try to...

carry that weight, that mantle.

And especially if you're just a guy,

like he's not,

the character that we introduced in the

first issue, Dale Gatner, he's just,

you know, he's a real every man,

not a Peter Parker every man,

but a real just like, oh man,

what did I stumble into?

This is really, really hard.

And, you know,

he wants to do his best.

He wants to serve his country and,

and help people and do the right thing.

But, you know,

I just thinking about it right now,

like I, it'd be a lot, man,

you know.

It is a lot to swallow all at

one time.

So the very first General Washington is

George Washington West.

Yes.

And he did that.

He held that mantle for sixty five years.

From Normandy to Fallujah,

he was like the ideal superhero for the

time.

So he's gone now.

Ten years of silence.

And then.

It kind of felt like.

the tree just wouldn't.

So let's back up.

The Liberty Tree in this story is a

symbiote,

similar to Venom and any other symbiotes

out there.

But it's very selective on who it will

basically bond with.

Yes, thank you.

And so I think that's one of the

dopest ideas ever, by the way.

It's really cool that

there's a tree, the liberty tree,

you know, is like, no, not this guy,

next.

You know, how did that come about?

It's so funny because, like, you know,

I'm trying to tell this story that I

want to tell, and, like,

the superpowers aspect is, it didn't,

it's like,

I'll work out who's got what powers later.

Um...

And, again, with that sort of, like,

idea I was just talking about of, like,

you know,

the everyman thrust in a situation that he

never asked for.

The George Washington West,

that original character, he's very, like,

don't tell Marvel, don't tell Disney,

but it's a very, like,

meant to evoke Steve Rogers,

the kind of character.

Yeah, yeah.

You a hundred percent get that vibe when

it shows the general...

I'm sorry, the George Washington West.

It one hundred percent felt like that.

Which is funny because this new comic book

day, Captain America,

seventeen seventeen seventy six came out

and that Captain Marvel was eerily similar

to your George Washington West's character

when it does the flashback to him.

yeah it's it's it's uh i it's i

i bought that issue i haven't had a

chance to look at my comics yet um

yeah like designing uh designing new

superhero characters is tricky oh yeah i i

imagine there's i don't think there's a

character out there today who really isn't

influenced

from a character of yesteryear.

It's just hard.

It's all been done.

One of the big processes of this project

has been pulling characters that are meant

to evoke

You know, it's like, you are,

you're supposed to look at this guy and

think that's Captain America,

that's Wonder Woman, that's the Flash.

But that haven't been taken by any of

the, by Marvel, by DC, by Astro City,

by Image, by all of these worlds.

And then I'm also, you know,

I'm trying to pick up on some,

because it's a book about patriotism in

America and just trying to pick up some

characters from American history.

Yeah.

You know,

we've got we've got a speedster who has

kind of an old time.

Like,

I don't know if you watch old John

Wayne movies.

Oh, no.

One hundred percent.

I grew up on that.

Yeah.

But, you know,

he's he's he's got he's got like the

old cavalryman uniform.

Right.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I did notice that.

And I was wondering where the influence of

that came from.

And I'm glad you said John Wayne,

because that's all my grandma watched

growing up.

Yeah.

Bonanza and Gunsmoke.

So as a kid, I'm sitting there going,

hey, is Scooby-Doo on yet?

And she's like,

sit your ass down and watch Gunsmoke,

Grandma.

Can I go outside then?

It's raining.

All right, Gunsmoke it is.

That's great.

No, I love old Westerns and like...

You know,

you're trying to find stuff that hasn't

been used and you get an idea that

it doesn't, you know,

it doesn't trigger anything in your

memory.

You go look on the internet,

you type in the,

You type in superhero and then the name.

And then and it's like, no, actually,

somebody in nineteen eighty two in

Squadron Supreme number four,

like use this name so you can't have

it.

But we you know,

we got the speedster and like I'm

brainstorming names came up with

thoroughbred,

which is a pretty good name for a

speedster.

It really is.

Yeah.

And somehow nobody's nobody's taken it.

And then suddenly it's just like, oh,

he can be a cavalryman.

And like that blue and that yellow,

that's such a great superhero look.

And then the secret ingredient is our

artist, Jason Muir.

Yep, yep.

I don't know if you've read By the

Horns.

I have not.

Is it a Western comic book?

No, it's a fantasy comic book.

Okay.

And it's put out by Scout.

My shop,

they've got a really great independent

shelf.

Bro, he is such an incredible designer.

And that book, he's designing not just...

humans, but like non-human creatures.

There's unicorn, big floating eye.

He's got such an incredible design sense,

which is not something that even like,

I mean,

there are so many really successful

pencillers who don't really design

characters well.

And I don't have a visual sense at

all, so I'm not pointing the finger.

But yeah, like,

and he did so much great work because

we need,

We need the golden age version of the

character.

We need a modern version.

That was one of my favorite things about

the book is the way it blended the

two different eras during the flashback of

those scenes.

Especially when you got the whole

little...

I don't want to say it was a

Justice League,

but the little Justice League from the

flashback episodes in the book.

I was like, this is so freaking cool.

The way...

even the character design itself was very

golden age then you had the very modern

looking one and i was like i can

get behind this this is cool because i

like that kind of stuff oh yeah uh

i uh the golden age wasn't that long

ago so yeah and it's like i mean

i love that like

mean i got all this i got all

my merchant stuff and like my my friends

always ask me like i don't i uh

i love the movies right mcu but like

when it comes to stuff i want in

my house on my shelf i just love

those old like official handbook of the

marvel universe

right simple colors and designs like i

know i know it doesn't look real it's

not supposed to it's a comic book and

like yeah i love all the things that

they've done in the movies to help you

suspend disbelief and make it look real

like the leather and the body armor but

it's it's not where my heart is no

uh yeah i it's it's hard you know

because i know a lot of um

people who still just prefer that era of

comic book, the golden age.

Here I am like,

I'm absolutely in love with the modern

stuff because during the modern age,

we got a lot more independent comments and

they don't have to have that.

The dirt that the Marvel universe or the

DC universe has to have.

They're not restrictive comics.

character over here on the indie comic can

say fuck.

They can say damn.

They can punch you in the face and

watch your face explode and we're going to

get a full page of your head exploding.

You're not going to get that Marvel in

DC.

You get a little bit in like the

DC dark

the old vertigo lineup you would get that

kind of stuff but it was literally labeled

plus adults on the old vertigo stuff so

i've always found myself drawn more toward

the independent scene of comic boats

So did you I don't know.

When did you get into comics?

I started I got into comics right around

the time that Spawn was born.

So like ninety three exact exact same

time.

And like, you know,

I I had a buddy who had the

old I don't even remember what it was

called.

They've done so many.

But it was a Marvel Universe role playing

game.

And like, yeah, yeah.

And it's just all these characters.

I just fell in love immediately and found

a bookstore near my house that sold

comics.

Fell in love with Marvel,

fell in love with DC.

But then I found Valiant.

Oh, that's a good one.

That early Valiant stuff.

It's funny because you talked about seeing

a guy's head explode, right?

One of the first Valiant comics I bought,

hardcore number one.

The gimmick they had there with the powers

was they've got all kinds of different

powers and they call into headquarters to

switch them, right?

And that created all kinds of fun action

scenes, but they can only have one time.

And at the climax of the first issue,

I can't remember who wrote it or drew

it, but the dude,

he's got invulnerability on,

like that's the power off.

Got a big strong guy,

got him in a bear hug,

but he's invulnerable,

so he can't hurt him.

So he sticks his fist in the guy's

mouth.

and has him switch to a power with

a force field on his fist and the

dude's head explodes.

Yes.

And I'm in like eighth grade and I

love Fantastic Four and I love the

Avengers and I love the X-Men, but then...

uh that was like it was more adults

and kids so that was me i i

i liked the darker grittier comics that we

got with the valiance and you know well

malibu was the first one that did the

first spawn before todd started image and

started producing spawn himself

And just anything like that that I could

get my hands on that was darker and

greedier than what was going on in the

rainbow world of Marvel in DC.

Now,

I did find Vertigo very early as well.

So I have some earlier Vertigo stuff with

Neil Gaiman's writing and that kind of

stuff.

And he just told a gritty, dirty story,

whether from a magic standpoint or just...

You know, something like that.

And I fell in love with Hellblazer,

Swamp Thing.

I'm just like, these dudes are gritty.

And I never really liked Wonder Woman

until I seen her in Justice League Dark

when she was the leader of it.

I haven't read that one yet.

I got a big heart of her.

There's no way, looking in your office,

that you don't have that one.

uh i love i uh uh i it's

it's it's it's on my list i it

might be next would you believe i i

have uh i have re i didn't read

my first hellblazer comic until uh god

like two years ago cy spurrier did

something with a murphy yeah um and now

there's there's like three years brun is

so good yeah he's a good writer oh

dude

Yes.

Yes.

That's all I can like.

And then Gaiman's influence.

I know a lot of people have gone

away from Gaiman due to recent allegations

and stuff like that.

But I'm never going to take away from

the fact that the dude is just such

a damn good writer and brought us so

many characters that are unforgettable.

Within that universe.

So, no, absolutely, a hundred percent.

Besides,

there's something about his Hellblazer run

that is just absolutely special.

And I actually ended up getting it in

hardback because I couldn't find

individual issues because they're just so

hard to get your hands on.

Yeah, I read, because I still, you know,

when I started making comics,

I became more interested in independent

stuff.

He did a book called Alienated for Boom,

I think.

Mm-hmm.

I love these different takes on superhero

themes and trying to do something similar

with my book.

Just a little something that people will

find familiar and hopefully a little off

the beaten path,

like you're talking about.

It's off the beaten path,

but in a very good way.

I know we were talking before we went

live how I am very much against the

discussion of politics,

but the approach that your book took to

that, it's not divisive.

You know what I'm saying?

It doesn't try to have...

political unrest,

like some of the heavy politic political

comments will do.

So how did you go about,

like finding that happy medium in this

book to kind of like,

I don't want to piss off these people.

I don't want to piss off these people.

I just want something down the middle to

where it could unite both sides of that

political fence, so to speak.

Yeah, that's really tough because,

of course,

I have super specific political beliefs

that I won't get into on your show,

brother.

I read it on your blog,

which was really cool to see.

The mask for me was like,

I like this guy,

just the mask and the coffee cup.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

That's a long story.

We'll save that one for another time.

Let's talk about General Washington.

Yeah,

you got to be able to poke fun

at yourself.

No.

So I come from theater.

And there is nothing in the world like

bad political theater.

Like...

Trust me.

Like,

we've seen bad political movies and bad

political comics.

Oh, yeah.

And it's just because it's cheaper.

It's just easier to put on a bad

political play.

And people have, like, you know,

they have the best of intentions because

you've got a point of view and you

want to share it and you want people

to think like you say, tell a story.

And...

The easiest thing in the world is to

just do a story where, like, oh,

the people who think like me are good,

they're virtuous, they're brave,

they're funny,

and people who don't think like me are

terrible, awful,

cowardly people who do vicious,

terrible things.

Right?

Mm-hmm.

I used to...

I used to read scripts for a submission

process for a, I live in Chicago.

I used to read scripts for a explicitly

political theater company.

And, you know,

I learned so much because I read,

I read scripts ranging from like, Oh,

this is really,

this is really amazing to like, you know,

don't quit your day job.

Right.

Yeah.

Yeah.

That's where my grandparents are from

originally is from Chicago.

Nice.

My dad, my dad grew up here too,

years and years ago in the thirties.

But, you know,

and you just learn that the stuff,

the stuff that is preachy and simplistic

like that,

it's not effective in terms of evoking

emotion.

Like it, believe me,

as somebody like I can get up on

my high horse and waggle my finger and

preach and,

And if you're talking to somebody who

already agrees with you about stuff,

it's nice to jerk that chain now and

then.

But for the purposes of drama,

for creating a story,

you need to be able to get inside

the head of people who don't think like

you and see

where they're coming from and not just

villainize them because that might,

you know, on a level it feels good,

but it's not,

it doesn't contain a lot of truth.

There aren't a lot of people who think

like I'm going out there to do something

bad.

Right.

Yeah.

And there's, there's a,

that small piece from both sides of the

wall that are that way.

Yeah.

And there's a time, but no, it's like,

there's a, it's, um,

You know, I want to there's a scene,

there's a scene in a book,

there's a scene in the comics takes place

at a bar.

And I've got a narrator who, you know,

stands in for my beliefs to a certain

extent.

And I thought that part was really cool.

The bar scenes.

I thought that was a really cool thing

to do.

And it is, it's just, it's,

he's got a point of view and he's

kind of a jerk about it.

And he's our narrator and we're supposed

to like him.

But at the same time, he's, you know,

he's rude and dismissive of a guy.

And he ends up hurting his feelings and

chasing him out of the room and thinking

maybe that wasn't the best.

Maybe that wasn't a good choice.

yeah and maybe i don't understand where

he's coming from which is part of the

journey he's going to go on throughout

this story because he's a you know gene's

got a little bit of a short temper

and uh you know as somebody as somebody

who's a short temper has gotten him into

a few situations over the years yeah

that's that's something that's something

he probably needs to work on that's a

chicago thing a hundred percent yeah yeah

yeah so yeah you just try to be

uh

you know,

fair and compassionate and empathetic

towards everybody.

Because, you know,

people think they're doing the right

thing.

Whatever they do.

And we bump up against each other.

Life is hard, you know?

Gotta be harder.

Yeah.

So, when this alien symbiote,

the Liberty Tree,

finally bonds with its new host, Del...

The dude's not exactly Captain America two

point.

Oh,

he's definitely on a on a different

learning curve than Captain America was.

That's for sure.

So walk us through that.

Like how like what was you going into

this?

Like like how am I going to let

this the Liberty Tree,

the symbiote pick its new hopes?

Like what kind of walk us through that?

Like how you landed on that?

Yeah, that's actually one of the big,

hopefully,

and I'm glad you're curious about it,

because I want that to be one of

the big mysteries of the book that

everybody's trying to solve.

Basically,

the idea is the character we've been

talking about, the Golden Age version,

George Washington West,

he died about ten years ago.

We're telling the story of the flashbacks

of his death,

and

Let's add in this symbiote does kind of

extend the life of the host.

So I don't any,

because it's weird when we're talking

about from Normandy to Fallujah and you're

like, well,

this guy just died ten years ago.

And I don't want people scratching their

head going, wait, what?

How does that math don't math?

The host, the Liberty Tree,

when it pits its new host,

it does extend the life of the host.

Comic book science, man.

I gotta love it.

It's like science, but better.

So much better.

You wouldn't,

you get bit by radioactive spider.

You die.

You die.

Um, yeah, no.

So the idea is that when he dies,

when he,

when the original dies about ten years

before the story takes place, um,

the symbiont just won't bond with anybody

else.

And the government tries and tries and

tries,

tries everything that they can think of.

And as you can imagine,

like invests billions and billions of

dollars,

just trying to get a new general

Washington, get a new superhero.

We wanted to do,

we want to do a world like,

unlike a marvel or a dc where there's

just a limitless supply of super powered

beings um we really want like like around

twenty or thirty in the whole yeah in

the whole universe here so that um

so that like the emergence of a new

superhuman is just a major shift in the

balance of power it's newsworthy

absolutely it's not like oh there's you

know toast man and he's got the power

to toast and will that not not the

best example but you get what i'm getting

we get where you're going with it

But can he butter the bread evenly is

the important part of Toast Man.

You need Butter Knife Man and their team.

I'll write that next.

Co-creator.

We'll work out the rights.

We'll divvy up the rights when we're off

the air.

The idea is that it's been ten years

and

during that time,

America hasn't had a superhero,

and so we just feel vulnerable.

We would, you know,

if we had a superhero for years and

years and years, and suddenly...

Especially if every other major power

player has their own.

Yeah, like the idea,

and we'll tell this story in future

issues,

like over the circumstances surrounding

his death,

the Justice League characters that we were

talking about earlier...

leave the United States, too.

In an early draft, I used, it's corny,

it didn't work,

but I used the Liberty Society of America,

and then they became the Liberty Society

International.

Of course, that's, you know,

referencing all those great Giffen,

DeMatteis,

Yeah.

And I wish I could.

I wish I could have ended up using

that because it's such a clear.

That's another thing.

Like in the real world,

if you were the Justice League of America

and then you became the Justice League

International,

that would piss a lot of people off.

Oh, yeah.

You know what I mean?

Oh, yeah.

I mean, we had a West Coast League,

you know, at one point.

Well,

they just I think they just finished the

run of that one.

But, you know,

it was like they only service the West

Coast.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So it's just, it's, it's,

it's about that long absence.

And then, and we'll, we'll, we'll,

we'll tell this story in issue three.

But like Dale Gatner is just,

he's an every guy.

He's, he's me.

And again,

you could give me all the superpowers in

the world,

but I wouldn't be able to do the

job.

But we, we see Dell in this book.

take a superb ass whipping.

Absolutely.

I mean, he gets his guy,

but the boy took himself an ass whipping.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

It's so, it's so, uh, it's so interesting.

Cause you're, you're, you're just,

you're not, you don't see that a lot.

Yeah.

I'm going to, so when you see him,

like kind of like on there,

they showed the picture of him.

His faces are all, you know,

bloody and beat the shit.

And he's just kind of like,

Just just just try and it's so it's

and Jason again,

like he's so good at capturing, you know,

you're used to seeing your superheroes as

a badass.

Right.

And and like he's just very good at

capturing, you know,

a little a little more vulnerability.

And I think seeing a little bit more

fear in your superhero's eyes,

you're not used to it.

And again, if it was me...

It was reminiscent of Superbad,

if you read that.

Like the actual comic book,

The Vigilantes.

I don't think I... No,

I don't think I know that one.

I think, was it Superbad?

The one with the Vigilantes?

I think that was it.

I don't know.

I want to say it's from Image,

but they made it into a movie.

You think it's Kick-Ass?

Kick-Ass, that's it.

I'm sorry.

Yeah, Kick-Ass.

Superbad has some of the same actors in

it.

You're right.

It's Kick-Ass because it's got Nick Cage

in it,

and that's probably my favorite role Nick

Cage has ever done.

But very much that element of this dude

just takes a supreme ass whipping but

still gets his guy.

nice yeah so have you read that i

read that it's actually not bad and in

the movie did a really good job of

kind of bringing that to the screen yeah

i definitely wanted to check out later on

my list

So while we're thinking about this,

or rather while I'm thinking about this,

how did the Liberty Tree come about

exactly?

Because I don't remember it being touched

on.

Excuse me, I'm coughing.

How did that come about?

You know, I just,

I'm telling a story about symbols.

And, you know, I was thinking about,

I was thinking about

thinking about the powers.

And, you know, it's like that,

that stuff didn't come as naturally to me.

And I know, and I know that it's,

you know what it was once upon a

time, like, and this was like, this,

this was quite a while ago when I

was working on this.

And the story was different and going in

a different place.

I was like,

this is going to be like a spiritual

successor to maximum carnage.

You read that?

Oh yeah.

Yeah.

And like that book, like, it's so funny.

Cause like when I,

I read it when it was out and

I just loved it.

And then I've got the trade on this

shelf back here.

I've read it three or four times and

it's actually,

I got to go pick up the trade

because that's,

I haven't read that in so long.

I have to go hit up one of

the secondhand bookstores around here and

find that one.

It was good.

It's so good.

And, like, for, like, you know, like,

eighth grade me, it was awesome.

But then reading it again as an adult,

it's actually this, like,

there's this great theme to it.

And it's about...

you know this previous traditional

generation of don't kill superheroes

versus a more violent venom and yeah and

morbius there's actually and uh it's it's

one of my favorite moments in comics when

uh when spider-man's he's got his ass

kicked and he's down and and the uh

the last page during the splash page at

the end of the issue is

Captain America, Steve Rogers there to,

you know, join,

join his side and give him a hand

up.

And that's like, that's,

that's the feeling I want this book to

have.

Cause we are at each other's throats about

what is patriotism, who owns the flag,

but there is still,

there is still something that we can all

understand.

rally around and unite in because like

that moment like that.

Steve Rogers helping Peter Parker do his

feet.

I know exactly which one you're talking

about too.

I think that was one of the ones

I read probably around the same time you

read it as well.

Yeah.

So, yeah.

So like in terms of the powers, like,

it's like, I need, I need, I need,

I need a power, um, for legal reasons.

He can't have a shield of course.

Yeah.

Um, and I thought like a symbiote,

a symbiont and like, but how do you,

you know, how do you make it different?

Yeah.

And so the idea of making it,

making it plant like, um,

Which I think is something Jason does such

a great job of.

Sometimes it just looks like a big old

tree trunk,

but he's also got a sense of...

I don't have the best visual sense.

I just have to, I have to be,

when I'm writing,

I have to see something so that I

know I'm not telling him to draw something

that can't be drawn.

Yeah.

But, you know,

to actually work with such a great artist

who's got that sense and to see where

he goes with it.

Like this idea was just so vague in

my head,

but the way he brings it to life,

just like I can, you can,

you can see it.

transforming and moving um so yeah that

was honestly when you kind of see like

the tree kind of envelop him a little

bit and then you realize that as he's

throwing punches it's like the tree is

extending and hardening his fist in those

punches yeah and i was like damn that's

that's kind of cool i like that because

it's so different

yeah and what another thing that i think

jason does a killer job of um you

know one of the things we talked about

uh to draw the distinction between dale

the new guy and george washington west the

original uh is like he's dale is not

good at this so he's gonna know so

he's he's all the help he can get

he needs all the help he can get

so he's just got big sloppy clumsy

constructs

And there's a panel.

A lot of this is on the Kickstarter

page,

so if anybody listening wants to check it

out.

This is in our preview art.

The original guy,

he can jump around the room and whip

it around like he's been doing his whole

life, which he has.

But Dale is just, you know,

I've got a big hammer.

It's like the difference between Silver

Age Green Lantern stuff and Kyle Rayner.

Green Lantern stuff, right?

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And then, like, at a certain point,

you know,

I'm digging around for symbols and trying

to...

you know,

put this guy's whole visual identity

together.

And, you know,

I'm just on the internet looking for stuff

and I'm looking at,

and I'm looking at quotes and the Liberty

tree thing fits so perfectly.

It does.

Yeah.

Because of that quote,

it's all over the book.

We actually sent it,

we're sending the book to the printer and

we put this quote on the, on the,

on the back of the book, Thomas Jefferson,

the tree of Liberty must be refreshed from

time to time.

with the blood of patriots and tyrants,

right?

Badass quote.

And it works so well for us here

because who decides who's the patriot and

who's the tyrant, right?

Yep.

And that's what the book is about.

So it's just in the same way that

like we were talking about a little while

ago with the cavalryman named

Thoroughbred.

Yeah.

And then you had the one guy who

was the robot.

You got a... Well, he was a...

It's a suit.

It's like an Iron Man.

Don't tell Disney.

But it's very different, though.

It was a very different set of everything.

Very different look to it.

And then George Washington West, his wife,

is very much like the Homelander stuff.

The female Homelander, basically.

Yeah, she's a little... Not the Nazi one,

the other one.

A little Wonder Woman-ish.

I didn't want to say Wonder Woman,

you know, but... But no,

it's just a really,

really cool team that was assembled there

together.

And the powers are really cool,

very unique to the individual.

And honestly,

if you went back and did a prequel

comic with just the Golden Age-looking

characters...

Would be dope as hell.

I would be all over that in a

heartbeat as well.

If the book takes off, I have plans.

I definitely have plans for that Iron Man

guy.

Dude, he was... The Indian...

Coyote.

Coyote, yes.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

There's a whole back story there that I'll

get to one of these days.

It was just so cool because it was

like you had the modern story going and

then you kind of get this really cool

flashback and you see all this whole new,

the old school characters and you're like,

man, these guys are cool.

And then we're stuck with Dale Gatner.

Yeah.

In the modern day.

Good old Dale.

And that poor guy.

Again, just imagine if it was you.

You know what I mean?

Dude, yeah.

I don't know how far we got in

discussing it, but how did the tree go?

Dale's my guy.

We're going to tell that story.

Okay.

We won't touch it.

I don't want you to give nothing away

too soon.

But again,

it's good that you wonder because

everybody in this world is trying to

figure that out because we don't have, oh,

don't worry,

we'll just get another superhero because

it's intellectual property.

It's like, no,

there's a handful of these people.

This symbiote

is a major national security asset.

So yeah,

where's the tree actually located in the

book?

Like within the world?

It's...

It's in the custody of the United States

government,

and there's going to be conflict over that

because the character we discussed

earlier, his wife, Marcia Ultrix,

she thinks quite reasonably,

I would argue,

that as George West's

you know air next and that it should

go to her but the united states government

took possession of it and you know like

you don't want that it's one of those

things where this power is like absolutely

bonkers to be in the hands of just

a everyday joe yeah

And Dale comes off as like,

I don't know,

I'm very off-stretching this,

but Dale was the drunk security guard who

accidentally stumbled in and the tree was

like, Dale's my guy.

He just was like, hey, come here, Dale.

You're not super far off.

I'm just throwing it out, dude, because,

like, in my head,

that's all I can see is, like,

Del was the night security guard.

He was still a little bit nippy from

the night before.

He comes in, and the tree's like, Del,

that's my guy right there.

And, like, why?

You know, it doesn't... Yeah,

nothing special about Del.

He's got, you know,

two divorces and three kids.

That's right.

That's right.

And he works hard, but...

yeah man like like and imagine you know

imagine if you're working for the

government and like you know they're

they're they're we'll we'll see some of

this coming up you know um because they

want i was like you know they they

want it they want to put it on

a you know on the best of the

best like you know the the elite military

guys but yeah the tree is like math

nothing no nothing works i had a you

know i had a i had a scene

that i haven't actually been able

to work in into the story anywhere is

actually one of the first scenes that came

to me, just the notion of,

you know sitting down with um the guy

we talked about earlier gene gene fuller

he's a narrator and he's he's um he's

like a rick jones figure kind of grown

up and grown old like like wanted to

be a teen sidekick in the yeah yeah

um and now he's now he's like he's

like an older guy and

sort of the self-appointed guardian of the

general Washington legacy, right?

And like just sitting down in a room

with Dale and another character who will

pop up a little later and just trying

anything in the world to like,

what could explain this?

Like George liked pancakes.

Do you like pancakes?

no do you like james taylor i like

james taylor i like james maybe it maybe

it's james so you know what i mean

yeah it's it's a mystery and trying to

figure out what makes the symbiont choose

is something that the characters will be

just is that something you will touch on

later in another issue on how like kind

of like this is thinking like how he

wants to do this or what his

his thoughts are into why he picks who

he picks to be his host.

I mean, I know exactly where it's going.

Yeah.

Okay.

Okay.

Cool.

No,

it's one of those where I love the

way you did it because you kind of

gave us where we're at today.

But by the time you get to the

end of it, I'm like,

I have so many questions.

Good.

Well, hopefully enough.

It means you did your job.

Hopefully enough to make you want to buy

issue two.

Oh, no, absolutely.

Absolutely.

So let's talk about this powerhouse team

that you assembled to bring this book to

life.

So we have Jason Muir on art.

Arthur Hesley on colors.

mika meyers on letters sean manning did

your edit in and then kelly williams is

also doing a alternate cover for this book

and mika meyers letters for quite a few

companies because that name is very

familiar yeah yeah he's uh he he's in

indie comics powerhouse he does uh yeah

zinscope

Yeah.

I, I, I, I, I found him.

Um, he was, uh,

looking for work on Twitter.

Yeah.

I, I click, uh,

I think it's portfolio day hashtag.

So, and, um, yeah.

And then Sean,

I suggested him when we were looking for

a letter, um,

Sean Manning, our editor,

I brought up like, oh,

I saw this guy in line and Sean

went, oh, he's great.

And we, yeah.

When I seen his name, I was like,

I'm pretty sure I know who that is.

I'm pretty sure I probably have.

Dirty or forty books lettered by him.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I wouldn't be surprised.

He works.

He works a lot.

And, you know, I'm like I said,

I came from theater.

Right.

And, um,

God bless all of these collaborators for

bearing with me because this is the visual

storytelling comics.

Like it, it hasn't come naturally to me.

Um, and like, if you look at,

if you look at the first couple of

books I've,

I've made on it would absolutely prove it.

Yeah.

I have those written down here to talk

about those a little bit too.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Um, so I, I'm, I'm,

I'm just very lucky to be working with

people who can help me out in that

aspect.

Well, you know what they say, right?

Surround yourself with people smarter than

you.

And that's most people.

A hundred percent.

All the best leaders will surround

themselves with people smarter than

themselves.

Yeah.

I mean, like there's, there's,

there's just like, I, I,

I love trying this new thing and learning

new stuff.

It's my favorite.

Uh, but there's a lot, I don't know.

Um, you know, like, uh,

just one example when I'm, when I'm, uh,

establishing like some of the antagonists.

Right.

And I want, I wanted to, um,

establish that some of the younger guys

were, uh,

like doing a more,

like they're confederacy themed bad guys,

right?

Yeah, they're domestic terrorists.

They're domestic terrorists.

And I wanted to establish that like these

new younger guys,

that they were initially like corny,

Like, you ever read, like,

old Marvel comics, like,

stuff like The Sons of the Serpent?

It's wonderful,

admirable stuff with a little social

justice cause in it,

but it's also kind of corny.

Like, oh, we're racist,

and we dress up like snakes.

Absolute Batman, yearly,

just literally burned an entire, you know,

house full of these people to the ground.

Yeah, it was very, very controversial.

I mean,

and the absolute Batman is an absolute

freaking unit to begin with.

Absolutely.

That's Daniel Warren Johnson, right?

Oh, yeah.

DWJ, dude.

Or Scott Snyder.

Scott Snyder.

Right.

Scott Snyder.

But I think he did the art.

Yeah.

That guy's incredible.

DWJ is phenomenal.

Like that Wolverine cover he did a couple

of months back.

I think I missed it.

Dude, you missed a classic.

That book,

I think it was like on the shelf

for nine ninety nine.

Like you weren't paying less.

It might have been more.

Nice.

Might have been nineteen ninety nine.

But the book is still like fifty bucks

right now.

And that's like today.

He's worth the first month.

It was worth it was like one hundred

bucks at one point.

Yeah.

That's raw, ungraded, as it sits,

bag and board.

Crazy.

I mean, he's worth every dollar.

I think the first thing I read of

his was that Beta Ray Bill book.

Yeah.

I think that's most people's first.

And they don't know it's him.

Because I think that was one of the

very first books that kind of like

introduced us to him.

Yeah, because I'm a huge Marvel nerd,

and second, third-rate characters,

third-tier, let's say.

Definitely a third-tier.

Like, I...

But he's so beloved.

Beta Ray Bill is just like one of

these beloved characters.

Like if you see a giant camel or

moose wearing Thor's armor and you're

like, oh, that's Beta Ray Bill.

Come on, guy.

Get with it.

That's how you know you love superhero

comics.

Like you look at that guy and it's

like, yes, I want lots more of this.

I'm the same way with Howard the Duck.

I absolutely love Howard the Duck.

And it's been one of my life goals.

Anytime I come across something related to

Howard the Duck, I'm like,

I can't not go home with that.

I should have worn my Howard the Duck

t-shirt for this.

I had one for a while.

It got washed one too many times.

Plus,

I put on a little weight since I

retired, so...

It didn't quite fit anymore anyway.

Yeah.

No, I read that.

It's here someplace.

I read that omnibus during the pandemic.

Steve Kerber, man.

Insane talent.

He's such a fun character too,

but let's focus on General Washington.

I'm sorry, we...

let's talk about the team man yeah okay

so jason um again uh i i found

by the horns and like i'm not i'm

not kidding like rush right out it is

maybe the prettiest comic book i've ever

i've ever read um you know you nailed

it and he he's so good at both

styles the modern the golden he he had

he done a very good job

of combining those yeah the styles and

again like it it's like i needed such

specific stuff and he knocked it out of

the park and put up with me which

isn't nothing um no i did um uh

on on my last one shot which was

quite a while ago um i hired him

to do an alternate cover um

And it was just, you know, first draft,

got it.

Like, it's great.

When the time came to put the team

together,

he was at the top of the list

and he was available.

And I'm the luckiest boy in the world.

We could all be so lucky.

So do you know how long you're planning

on to run this book?

Are you planning on like three issues,

a five?

Or is it one of those where you'll

let the audience let you know when they're

kind of tired of it?

So when I was putting the team together,

one of the people I talked to gave

me just a life-changing piece of advice.

Because I do.

When you talk about why did the symbiont

choose who it chose,

that's a moment at the very end of

the story that I want to tell.

Um,

and I was talking to a dude and

he told me like,

what you want to do is like,

you've got your star Wars.

You want to carve out your,

a new hope.

Yeah.

Something with a, um, beginning,

a middle and an end that you can

start with.

Cause I'm, you know,

nobody knows who I am.

Uh, and, and people, I, I buy,

I buy my comics based on, you know,

knowing the art team and, and yeah.

And, and so like, it's,

it's an uphill battle.

So for putting the story together and

eventually hopefully looking for a

publisher for it,

we've got an opening four-issue arc.

Again,

like when this when this guy told me,

do your do your A New Hope.

It was like the sky parted because I'm

staring down this like this is going to

take me twelve, fifteen issues.

How am I going to be able to,

you know,

afford that and put it all together?

So four issues for this first opening arc.

No, that's that's a good,

good round number.

Yeah.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

And if we're lucky enough to find an

audience and people want more,

I'm happy to provide it.

We'll see.

We'll see what we'll see.

No, you got a great team with you.

And I think you've found that little piece

of knowledge,

that little nugget that you needed to kind

of go, all right.

know how to do this now i think

i have this figured out and like i

said you have a a really good team

around you and thankfully they're a team

that knows how to work together because

the lettering was amazing the colors

fantastic the art the story everything

just works and flows together and i say

this a hundred times i'll say it a

hundred more

It's the most neglected thing about comic

books, and that's your letter.

And they will make you or break you.

And you've got a great letter on top

of it.

Yeah, it's crazy.

Like,

that's one of those things that I don't

understand super well.

I'm reading and trying to learn a little

more.

But, like, you know,

we've all backed Kickstarters where, like,

oh, this doesn't look like a comic book.

And it just really...

under my experience want to shout out

Arthur as well came recommended by a

writer that I know and like again by

the horns which I keep bringing up get

it it's so it's beautiful but it's it's

brightly colored like yeah

super super bright and like that's just

not quite right for this book we want

it to look a little bit like a

little bit down to earth a little more

down to earth and you know like that

was the instruction that we talked about

with Arthur right up front and again just

sort of instinctively it looks like the

real world and that's perfect for this

book and what I think you're going for

with this book and it's

I absolutely loved it.

It fit.

Everything fit together.

And like we talked earlier,

this book could have easily done this and

divided people.

It didn't do that at all.

It just towed the line very well in

the story.

And that's one of those things where I

can greatly appreciate because...

It's hard to do because you have a

certain belief system,

and oftentimes when you're reading a comic

book, that bleeds through.

And you can tell kind of where the

author or the writer of the story is

kind of like,

I know what way he goes,

and you did not do that.

And I can't imagine you just sitting there

going –

damn.

And then your editor going, Hey dude,

did you really mean it to say like

that?

You know?

So shout out to the,

to the editors of the world because those

people can make and break you too.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And Sean is, Sean is fantastic.

Keeps a,

keeps good eye on me and on everybody

helped us out.

Sean helped us find Kelly,

Kelly Williams for the alternate cover,

who is wonderful and just has that,

you know,

he does a lot of horror stuff and,

That's my heart right there.

I love a good horror comic book.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

And like, you know,

in that alternate cover,

which is selling really well for us,

check it out on Kickstarter.

You know,

it's got it's a little bloodier than the

main book, a little dirtier.

And I think that's how that's my favorite

type right there.

yeah that's why i'm such a huge fan

of these types of books of kickstarters

and the indies man yeah just you want

it dirty you want it greedy you want

it to say four or five six times

go for it because you can do it

and get away with it yeah that's right

it it's uh no accountable to no one

but myself

exactly and I had read just saying fuck

that many times reminded me of a comic

book I had read not that long ago

it's like the main character of the comic

book like every time something would

happen you could see him just go it

was just the way the art was done

and just the way the lettering was done

of that book it was just it made

it funny in a more serious book where

he was just kind of like

every two to three page on like a

random panel he's just like you're like

yes i i know that feeling oh we

all do i have to pause and do

that a few times a day so you

described this kind of as a tom clancy

meets astro city like tactical realism

meets some moral complexity

did you keep the story grounded outside of

we know you have a really strong editor

did you while still you still managed to

hit this cosmic superhero scale it like

How did you keep all that together?

Well,

I try to lean on that theater background.

I used to be an actor,

not a very good one.

But the job is to get inside everybody's

head and just put yourself in the

situation and look at it from everybody's

point of view.

And really, you know,

you just have to really spend time.

Cause again, the first,

the first temptation, the easy,

the easy road is like, ah, you're just,

you're just a piece of shit.

So I'm going to make you a piece

of shit.

Yeah.

But you gotta,

you gotta spend some time singing like,

no, like what, what actually,

what actually is it like to be this

person right now?

So like all, all, you know, that's a,

that's part of my writing process every

time just you know you do it from

one character's point of view and write

out what they do and then you switch

hats which is tricky sometimes yeah but

then and you see like okay well that's

what this guy says well what's it like

to hear that what's it like to be

on the receiving end of that

I always, you know, I start with myself.

Like, how does that, which is an old,

old, old acting trick.

You know, the place,

and I had a great, great acting teacher,

and she would always,

if you were struggling with a moment,

she would always ground you by saying,

how does this make you, not the character,

you, John Lazar, the actor,

how does this make you feel right now?

Yeah.

And you just answer that question for

yourself.

Great advice.

Oh, so like, it's so, it's so,

it's so simple.

Yeah.

And sometimes it's just,

sometimes it's just about keeping it

simple.

Yeah, definitely.

So that's what I try to do.

Hopefully it works.

So you're running this campaign through

resistance comments.

Is that like your personal brand or is

that like somebody you just have with you?

Like, or is that your brand?

Yeah.

I mean, it's, it's my brand, the,

that it's a brand.

Well, I mean, it's,

actually say the same thing about usd and

it that's why there's a chairman because i

can't do this forever and if my name's

associated with something they're like oh

that's so-and-so's but if it's the

chairman

then the name the chairman can be passed

to the next generation of the United

States Department of Nerds.

So that's why it's a brand, right?

So you can pass the resistance comments to

somebody else if you ever decided that's

something that you wanted to do.

And if anybody wants it.

Talking about teams,

I just want to put in another plug.

No, please.

The dude who created the Resistance Comics

logo and has created...

Facebook and Instagram both white it out.

Yeah, I saw that.

I don't know.

It's a weird... I'm sorry.

I can see why they tried to do

that, but at the same time,

I'm kind of like, I see it,

but I don't see what they're trying to

do.

You know,

because it doesn't really annotate

anything.

It's just like a random logo, you know?

I don't understand why anybody does

anything, brother.

Yeah.

But the guy who did that logo for

us and the guy who did the cover

logo for this book and the other books

on the Kickstarter,

his name is Winston Gambro.

He makes comics of his own, too,

but really top-notch logo designer.

yeah if you anybody at home listening

needs one plug away dude gambro very very

very very cool guy and very uh good

at his job i like it i will

never get mad at somebody plugging

somebody who helped get them to where they

are today uh so we we started going

down this road not your first rodeo you've

done marguerite versus the occupation

and you've also done odd your odd yarns

yeah so how did you kind of take

those two projects and took what you

learned from those two and kind of applied

it to you know general washington and the

liberty tree and honestly i've seen what

was it i'm sorry marguerite versus the

occupation looks so fun like just such a

cool looking comic book by the way

Yeah, and it was.

Casey Gavito,

another great artist who was wonderful in

that book.

So the truth of the matter,

like I was talking about a little while

ago about how visual storytelling doesn't

work.

Naturally to me.

The first two comics I made and

kickstarted are, you know, they're not,

they're not for sale on this,

on this Kickstarter because they're not

that good.

And coming from theater,

I'm a words first kind of guy.

And that's not,

that's not really what comics are about.

One of, I used to do,

when I wanted to,

try doing this i took classes online at

comics experience and um and i made a

couple of books and you know i was

talking with him and getting some advice

and he told me like i because i

i've had this idea general washing in it

in different forms than for a long time

and you know he just kind of told

me point blank that i wasn't quite ready

because i i didn't um

I just didn't have my head wrapped around

the video.

It's very humbling,

but sometimes that humbling is what you

need to kind of take that step back

and refocus and then go forward.

I mean,

it wouldn't have done me any good to

do this project before I knew enough about

the medium to do it right.

And if I invested all that,

all the time and money in it,

and it was still,

it was still a pretty long and daunting

process.

Yeah.

But so Marguerite was just like,

the goal was to just, just,

It's like one big action scene.

The gimmick is towards the end of World

War II, and there's a young French girl,

Marguerite,

and she's coming home to the house she

abandoned during the occupation because

she wants to be there when it's liberated

by the advancing Allied army.

a house up on the top of the

hill, right?

Where she grew up.

And when she gets there, she sees, uh,

because it's on top of the hill,

there are,

there's a German machine gun nest.

Yep.

Still occupied, still occupied.

And, and it's in her bedroom.

And so, um,

she has to do something about that.

And that's what the comic is about.

Uh, it looks fun.

I'm not going to lie.

I'll send you a copy, man.

Um, I'm, I'm, I'm real proud of it.

Real, real proud of it.

Um,

Talking about the team, it's funny.

The colorist I worked with on that,

her name is Laurel Dundee.

And you should look her up,

because she has a website.

And it's not superhero stuff at all,

but it's really cool artwork.

the coloring is not, it's, it's,

it's not like a superhero book, but yeah.

So a lot of my favorite artists don't

touch superheroes at all.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So it is crazy to think about because

I mean,

you have people like Luanna Vecchia who

did lovesick.

Her art's just absolutely amazing.

Tula Latte out of the UK, her work,

she does a lot of work for distilleries.

She does a lot of, uh,

um covers for like boom and dynamite and

that kind of stuff just absolutely

phenomenal artwork her use of colors and

like abstract colors just phenomenal stuff

and that's just the name too i don't

even want to get too deep into that

because we'll literally be here all night

talking about it yeah so much to know

man it really is it's so deep and

so rich right now

Yeah.

But like, you know, so that was like,

that was, that was just, that was,

that book was on a certain level,

just like me, just like, okay, let's,

let's, let's learn this lesson.

Learn.

Yeah.

And, you know, I,

I think it paid off and like, it's,

it's, it's, it's again, coming, coming,

coming from this world where we do

everything with dialogue, like more than,

more than film.

Like you watch a movie,

you listen to a play, right?

Like dialogue is, is,

it's going to be my first instinct for

the rest of my life,

whether I want it to be or not.

Yeah.

So to, to,

to tell the story was like, no,

the climax is an image,

not a line of dialogue, but like to,

to,

to learn to tell a story that way.

Like that's what.

It's the image in the story advances.

The words advanced the image.

Yeah.

Yeah.

It's, it's,

it's not my exact opposite of what you're

used to.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Cause I like to do things the easy

way.

But the book's always easy to hit the

easy button.

Yeah, yeah.

But the book turned out really well.

Like I said,

I seen it on the Kickstarter and I

was like, ooh, what's this one?

Yeah, it's just a nice, sweet...

little i called it an action fable mostly

because that sounds cool uh no it really

is actually i like that yeah yeah yeah

somebody somebody asked me about that in

an interview like why did you call it

an action fable and i'm like uh because

it sounds sounding cool doesn't it though

um

Plus I always wanted to tell like World

War II stories.

I love that stuff.

John Wayne.

You know what would be really cool?

It's just a book about that kind of

stuff.

Like those little action fables,

so to speak,

about that timeframe and just shoved

together where it's like five, six,

seven different stories.

It's just like two or three page stories.

And it's just like little, little, little,

little stories like that,

where you have this girl's like,

They're in my home.

Oh, no, no, no, no.

Legal fits this.

Yeah.

And you see this young teenage girl,

you know, going up against the, you know,

Nazi occupation of her home.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Somebody out there.

We need that in our lives.

Absolutely.

I'll make more as soon as I have

the time.

That would be really dope.

It's a beautiful comic.

It's available as an add-on and a rewards

tier on this Kickstarter.

Highly recommend you check it out.

I'm super, super proud of that one.

I'm glad you brought that up because

that's where we're at in the interview,

my friend.

So let's talk about the Kickstarter.

We have the book, have the digital book.

You have the alternate cover.

What else can people expect in the

Kickstarter?

um for right now like i'm just focused

on the books i would love you know

love to do merch someday um for right

now i'm just like i'm i'm at the

stage of building the readership one

reader at a time yeah get your audience

yeah so um the most popular tier has

been kelly's alternate cover

And then, yeah, you can get Marguerite vs.

the Occupation,

which we just talked about,

and the other one-shot called Eye Yarns.

That would look really unique, too.

But it would look more of a fun

story, but I'm not sure.

Tell us a little bit about that one

before we drag too far along.

Yeah, that one was...

I don't know if you've seen,

he does a lot of indie stuff.

He's done Kickstarter.

You know Lane Lloyd?

I'm not off the top of my head.

I have to look him up.

Lane is neat.

Has a really great kind of curvy,

kind of cartoony, dark humor style.

Like Scotty Young.

Yeah.

Kind of.

I was online and Lane was looking for

work and

you know sometimes is another another

thing to do in theater um do we

do these little festivals like just just

make something as quick as you can write

a play in twenty four hours and we'll

rehearse it in twenty four hours kind of

thing so i just thought like what if

what if uh what if i take this

this artist up on on their availability

and make a comic and i thought the

art style would be good

uh to pair with silver age super heroics

yeah so the idea i came up with

was to do a tribute to the old

marvel strange tales books those are so

good

Do you remember?

Because you get into comics in the

nineties, right?

It's cool and it's awesome and you get

interested enough to start looking

backwards a little bit.

And like Kirby is cool and it's awesome

and you find all this good stuff and

you find Strange Tales.

Strange Tales birthed some really great

stuff that we're just now really seeing

today like Groot.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Groot was born in that.

Yeah,

and you've got the Ditko Doctor Strange

and the Seranko Nick Fury,

and it's just mind-blowing.

Seranko Nick Fury might be my favorite

stuff.

So I just thought,

let's do a tribute to that.

Strange Tales, Odd Yarns.

I'm very subtle.

And just like,

what if Doctor Strange and Nick Fury

switched jobs?

So there's like a hard-nosed World War II

sergeant who's fighting mystical battles

and, you know,

a nerdy surgeon type who becomes an agent

of... Yeah.

Fury, so to speak.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

And then, you know,

we did the whole gimmick with, like,

fake ads and stuff, which was fun.

Yeah.

The ads are so good in those books,

though.

Yeah.

You can almost just go back and read

some of those books and just enjoy the

hell out of the ads because the story

may be hit or miss,

but the ads are always going to be

amazing.

Yeah.

I like when you can get a reprint

that reprints all of it.

It's rare.

They do the actual newsstand.

Yeah.

It's fun.

So yeah, that book, it's a little lighter.

It's fun.

I think it turned out really well.

We published it like Marvel Comics

Presents style.

Yeah.

So it's a flip book.

So we were able to get two covers

and two alternate covers.

The other one,

which you can get on the Kickstarter,

is a great cover by Alex Cormack,

who if you like horror, man, the best.

I'm not a big horror guy,

but I read Alex's stuff because he's so

fucking good.

Um, so yeah, that's the other, those are,

those are our other rewards.

I like it.

You kept it simple.

You didn't overdo it too, too much,

too soon.

You never want to do that.

You want to really establish an audience.

And then on the next couple, you can,

you can throw out the t-shirt or something

along those lines to go with it.

So no, you're doing it right.

One of these days.

Exactly.

So for the listeners out there,

this campaign is live until the twentieth?

Yeah, twentieth, probably at midnight.

So we've got about a week.

And you can find this book simply by

going to Kickstarter.

If you just start typing in General

Washington and the and symbol,

and it's going to be one of the

first ones to pop up and go give

it a look.

If it's something that sparks your

interest,

then back the comic book.

It's really that simple on Kickstarter.

It's honestly,

and if you don't want to back the

actual book itself,

you can always donate a couple of dollars.

There's always that one option on there

that says, hey, yeah, I like the book,

but funds aren't there, but hey,

here's a buck for you to use toward

whatever it is.

And this is one of the first books

I've had on the podcast that is actually

done already.

And we're running a Kickstarter so you can

get the book print off to the printer.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I like to, this is our fifth Kickstarter.

I'd like to have it done just so,

you know, so, so there's no, uh,

you know, no risk, no,

like it'll be ready in a year and

a half.

Maybe it's like, no, we're, we're,

we're done.

We're ready.

And, uh,

we will have it as soon as, uh,

you know, as soon,

as soon as we've got it in ours.

I like it, man.

That's how it should be.

But I of all people,

I have done so many Kickstarter interviews

and these are my favorite things to do

to the point that that's Kickstarters and

independent creators are my bread and

butter.

And that's where I'm putting my love and

follow behind.

Are these types of interviews here because

I enjoy the hell out of spotlighting

people who you may not know today,

but I want you to know them tomorrow

because by damn, they deserve the love.

So before I let you get out of

here,

I'm going to hit you with a tough

one.

We're going to zoom out just a little

bit.

Superhero stories have always reflected

who we think we are.

From Superman's idealism to the Watchmen's

cynicism,

now we're somewhere in between with this

book.

Where does General Washington and the

Liberty Tree fit into that evolution?

You know,

I think you hit it right on the

nose.

Like,

I'm shooting for something in the middle.

Just because I'm... And, like...

the you know superheroes are walking

symbols right there's like you you see you

see the character you see the name the

costume and you put together pretty

quickly who they are and what they're

about um i want to get um under

the hood a little bit and and deal

with the

human complexity of like it's great to

have this symbol that everybody you know

you see the symbol you make the assumption

but there's a there's a real person with

feet of clay underneath it and it's not

you know it's not as simple as you

know you fight the bad guy and on

page twenty two you beat him up and

you go home with the girl um

You know, I love.

Unless you're Dale,

you go home with a bloody face.

That's right.

That's right, Dale.

Poor Dale.

He does.

That's not his last.

He took that ass whipping like a champ,

though.

I'll give him that.

He got his guy,

but he took that ass whipping.

Yeah.

And, you know, like and like, you know,

then he's got to decide, like,

do I do I want to do this

again?

There's nobody else to do it.

I guess I have to, but oh man,

can we try something else, please?

Because I think that's what most people

will be like.

Yeah, so I'm not, you know, I... Yeah,

not the...

Just sort of the place where that broad

symbolism collides with the complexity of

reality.

Complexity is...

That's where the interesting stuff is at.

Oh, absolutely.

Absolutely.

All right, John,

before I let you get out of here,

tell everybody where they can find you.

Well, I am at John underscore Lazar,

L-U-Z-A-R,

on the website formerly known as Twitter.

You can find me under my name on

Facebook.

If you really want a lot more politics,

you can check out my blog,

showercapblog.com.

It's not for everybody.

It really isn't,

but the picture is phenomenal.

The profile picture on the website.

If you don't go there to read it,

go there just to see the profile picture

because it is that amazing.

I agree.

All right, John.

All right, everybody.

That's all the time we have for tonight.

John, you've been amazing.

What's coming up next for me on the

fifteenth?

I'll be back here with Giuseppe.

He is the artist who did Shock Headed

Peter volume one and volume two.

And I can almost guarantee you he's going

to do volume three.

He'll be joining us right here on the

fifteenth.

Fresh fresh.

as a daisy in Italy because he will

be up all day and I will just

have been waking up.

So you're going to spend that one at

ten a.m.

Let me check again.

Yep, we're going ten a.m.

Eastern Time, which is four p.m.

in Italy.

So he will probably be waking up from

his fiesta.

Or siesta, I should say.

One or the other.

And then after that,

I think we're going to have Bloodline

Comic Zone with Carmella on the

eighteenth.

I'm still waiting for them to confirm that

date.

So another huge month planned here at the

USDN highlighting these phenomenal indie

creators just like John here.

And as always,

I can't thank you all enough.

John, welcome to the Council of Nerds,

my friend.

And you, sir,

and George Washington and the Liberty Tree

are USDN approved.

That's kind of you, sir.

I appreciate your...

I appreciate your kind attention.

We'll be right back with you after this

ends.