The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

Lighting the Shadows of Heroism: Dark City Comics & E.P.I.C Explained

In this episode of The United States Department of Nerds, The Chairman sits down with Lonnie Lowe Jr (Lo) — creator and founder of Dark City Comics — to shine a light on E.P.I.C (Earth’s Protector in Crisis) and the philosophy behind Lighting the Shadows of Heroism.

Dark City Comics is building a universe where grit meets greatness, where heroes are shaped by culture, crisis, and consequence. From street-level struggles to cosmic stakes, Lo shares how lived experience fuels storytelling — and why indie comics are still one of the most powerful creative spaces today.

This episode explores:

• The origins of Dark City Comics
• Redefining heroism for a new generation
• The creation of E.P.I.C
• The indie grind and the upcoming Kickstarter
• The future vision for the Dark City universe

If you believe comics should reflect the world we live in — this is a conversation you don’t want to miss.

🔗 CONNECT WITH DARK CITY COMICS
🌐 Website: https://www.darkcitychq.com
🚀 Kickstarter: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/darkcitycomics/epic-1-the-alpha-strand
🎵 TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@dark.city.comics
📘 Facebook: https://facebook.com/darkcitycomics
📸 Instagram: https://instagram.com/darkcitycomics
❌ X: https://x.com/Darkcitycomics

The USDN Podcast — Where indie comics come to life.

What is The United States Department of Nerds Podcast?

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

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

This isn’t about rumors or recycled news.

It’s about the people creating the worlds.

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

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

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

You are listening to the USDN on the

DFPN.

I'm sorry.

Hello there.

This is the chairman here of the United

States Department of Nerds,

where we are for the people,

by the people, and of the people.

At USDN, we just don't talk comments.

We spotlight creators who are building

worlds, challenging the status quo,

and redefining what heroism looks like in

modern storytelling.

Tonight, we're stepping into the shadows.

Our guest is Lonnie Lowe,

and Lowe is the creator and founder of

Dark City Comics,

a universe where grit meets greatness,

and the heroes aren't born perfect,

they're forged by crisis.

We're diving into Epic.

Earth Protector in Crisis,

the philosophy behind lighting,

the shadows of heroism,

and how Dark City Comics is building more

than stories, it's building a movement.

The Council of Nerds is now in session.

Lo, welcome to the USDM, my friend.

Hey, man.

Thanks for having me.

I appreciate you bringing me on.

It means a lot.

Hey, no worries, dude.

The moment you sent me the pictures of

the book requesting to come on,

I was like, yeah, we're doing it.

Thanks.

But yeah, man, let's dive into it.

Who is Lowe and what is Dark City

Comics?

So I started this, shucks,

I've been working on it for well over

a decade.

This is actually a relaunch and I've been

working on the relaunch for a couple of

years and just really started going back

hard in the past six months once I

got all my ducks in a row and

decided how I wanted the relaunch to go

and what I wanted to focus on.

So I'm just, you know,

a regular guy who loves comics, man,

and got bit by the creator's bug.

I was I'm in Arizona.

I stay in Arizona and I was going

by drawing the comics.

I shout out to them.

They were having like a curbside comic

con, which is cool.

And I just walked in and I fell

back in love with it, man.

This was years ago,

but I've been I've been back in it

ever since.

I do.

I like it.

The website.

Phenomenal, dude.

I don't know who did your website,

but that thing is amazing.

I did it.

That is some phenomenal work, man.

Appreciate it, man.

When you when you're back up against the

wall, man,

you enlist in YouTube University and

figure it out.

Hey, that's how I built this, man.

I watched a whole lot of YouTube before

launching a YouTube channel.

Yeah, and that's what it takes, man.

A lot of times you just got to

jump in and figure it out while you're

in it.

So,

how did you come up with the name

of Dark City Comics?

Initially, right,

I wanted to do it where everything was

happening at night.

Like, everything.

So, it was initially that.

Like, I wanted to do... Because, you know,

most superhero comics are all shiny.

And I was like, what if it's...

always going down at night what is only

happening at night that was initially the

idea um the idea changed but the name

stuck so initially I just wanted it to

be all just dark city like a dark

city yeah it didn't go there yeah so

the name stayed but the uh you know

as you're formulating ideas and you're

building stuff you're like eh it may not

work so yeah but but I love the

name

no i i do too and that's why

i was like it's got to be something

significant there and i'm glad there was

the name stuck and it dude i like

the name because you could use that name

for anything if you wanted to open up

a comic shop dark city comics boom there

you go the name is there it's one

of those names that you could literally

brand any kind of way you want to

so yeah we we do uh i do

freelance uh film and video so we do

have a film division um working on an

apparel uh division like a clothing line

just for just for merch and stuff like

that so yeah and it's pretty much it

i just plug and play dark city comics

multi film and multimedia the apparel

division so yeah it does it does fit

in a lot of different places no i

like you plus that that sweatshirt on the

site is pretty dope too

I appreciate it.

Let me know what your size is.

I got some t-shirts here.

I literally just got a screen printer.

A heat press, sorry.

And I got some games.

Huh?

You know what a heat press is good

for, right?

I'm making shirts for my house.

You can press comic books with them too.

Huh?

You can press comic books with a heat

press.

That's what people buy them for.

Those guys who clean and press comic

books.

It's a t-shirt press.

Dude, I never knew this.

I'm tripping right now.

Right now.

Not only can you print t-shirts,

but you can press comic books.

Ain't no way.

Dude, I wouldn't bullshit you on that.

I just ordered another one.

We got one.

Well,

my business partner just had one sitting

in the garage.

And I was trying to get some clothes,

some mock-ups done,

but nobody would get back to me.

And I don't like to keep asking people

for stuff.

So I went and bought some game sheets

from a local spot out here,

Custom Print AZ.

They were phenomenal.

And I just pressed them up.

And it was so easy,

we ordered another one.

But I didn't know you can press comics

with it.

Hop on YouTube when we're done, dude,

and look it up.

There's some really good guys out there

who would do, like,

step-by-step tutorials on how to clean

them, how to press them.

There's a certain type of paper you get

at certain weights of the paper that you

put in the front cover and the back

cover, wax paper.

They walk you through it step-by-step,

man.

And it looks super easy.

I will guarantee you it is not as

easy as it looks because you're going to

have to actually –

Get older comic books that aren't worth

fifty cents and just practice on those.

And then just until you got the system

down that works for you in your T-shirt

printer.

Do I never?

Yeah, man.

That's another.

Now my brain.

Yeah, you got my brain spinning.

I'm over here like, all right, cool.

I'm ready to get on the phone and

make a call.

Hey,

get yourself another one to get to it,

man,

because that's money because people will

pay to have comic books pressed.

Man, I did not know that.

I thought it all happened in like some

wild factory where they cut all the stuff,

line it up, staple it all,

smash it together.

I had no idea.

No.

Okay.

No.

So you know how if you send a

comic book over to CGC and you request

to have it cleaned and pressed, right?

So they're going to take their time.

They're going to clean the cover.

But how they press it to get wrinkles

out of your comic book is they use

a T-shirt press.

It's literally the same press.

All right, all right.

Because you about to have me go somewhere

else.

Hey, I'm helping you make money here, man.

You got two t-shirts pressed.

Now you can do it.

I absolutely appreciate it.

But yeah, man,

if you send me your information,

I just got two game sheets.

I'll give you one of the,

it's probably one, two, three,

about six shirts.

Yeah, just give me your size.

I'll press you one up and send it

out to you.

Yeah, I'll shoot you a message after this,

but let's keep on, man.

We then got off track because I'm like,

dude, you're sitting on a gold mine.

So let me ask,

what does lighten the shadows of heroism

mean to you?

Well, just, you know, um,

What you want to do, like I said,

a lot of things,

when we talk about lightening the shadows

of heroism,

it's just bringing light to all forms of

the hero, the whole aspect.

Shining light on all aspects of heroism.

You know,

sometimes we like to focus on one side,

just him being the good guy,

the great guy.

We don't really shine light on the other

aspects.

You know,

we're kind of just a hero in general.

What kind of human being is he?

Yeah.

What kind of dad is he?

Does he hate his job?

Like, you know,

you want to just shine some more light

on the human elements,

not just the gadgetry and the cool suits

or the cool powers and stuff like that.

No, I like it.

Like a well-rounded perspective of

heroism.

No, and I really like,

because you sent me over the teaser,

and I'm thinking, if I'm guessing right,

that teaser is kind of how he gets

his powers and stuff like that.

Yeah, right at the beginning,

how it happens.

It's such a dope concept of how they

get their powers.

I personally,

I've been reading comic books of all types

for many, many years,

and that was probably one of the coolest

things

concepts of a hero origin story we

appreciate it yeah thanks man just you

know a lot of times people go you

see these long and you gotta go through

all these that's like i was like what

if you just wake up what if somebody

tips the scale set something off and

random people just wake up there's no

danger room there's no training you wake

up and you can spit fire you wake

up in your water you wake up you

know what i mean what do you do

from here

it's happening everywhere so so that that

randomness gets the wheel spinning because

now anything can happen and so now i

have to write with the idea that anything

can happen no and it's such a perfect

you know way to start a story too

it was really cool i i

Y'all, when this Kickstarter starts,

you need to jump in.

Trust me on it.

If the teaser is as good as the

whole book, then you're golden.

That's an investment.

So what kind of heroes is Dark City

focusing on that the mainstream comics

often ignore?

I think with us,

they're not as shiny as we're accustomed

to.

And then a couple are.

So you see street level, you know,

and then you'll see people struggling.

You know, we really want to.

talk about the human side and even the

villains, you know,

we go deep with the villains.

You know,

a lot of times you just see a

guy, he's a bank robber or whatever.

How do you get there?

Not everybody's motivated by evil.

Some things just happen and you end up

in this spot.

And now that you're here, you kind of,

you got to ride it out.

Like now that I'm here, you know,

so we look at it from the street

level.

We do the cosmic level.

which are big heroes,

and then we do street level,

and then we do villains from all those

sides, too.

What are the villains at this cosmic

level?

What are the villains at the street level?

What are the villains that sit in the

middle?

What are they motivated by?

You go from ordinary to extraordinary.

You really went deep-dived the different

things, and that's really cool,

because half the time you get...

maybe something over here in a book,

then you'll get something here on the next

book, and you just kind of just said,

I ain't doing all that, and just bam.

Hell no, dude.

I love that.

Just mix it all in and call it

good.

Let it roll.

Go from there.

So... Street level justice versus comic...

Well, no,

we're not going to do that because you

just gave me that answer.

We're going to...

I love when I get ahead of, like,

the person gets ahead of what I want

to talk about and we just kind of,

everything flows nicely and it just makes

my life so much easier.

But it throws off my pacing.

But what is epic at its core?

I think it is,

it's a story about a hero who didn't

ask to be a hero.

You know,

somebody who just wanted to be normal,

who was happy with the way they were.

And they were thrust into a situation

against their will.

And now they're at the epicenter of

everything that's going on.

And they're dealing with it in real time.

And we're dealing with it with them.

You know, like I said,

there's no prep time.

The minute he's epic, he's epic.

You know, there is no...

He didn't get to live in Smallville as

a child and jump over haystacks and throw

cranes.

He didn't get to go study with assassins.

He didn't get to be...

He's a college kid.

Up until the day before,

that's all he knew.

He just wanted to graduate.

And that's where the comic book starts,

right there.

Yeah.

Up until that day,

he just wanted to get through school,

you know?

So that's how fast it changes,

and it's a real-time...

It's a real-time ride.

Like, we're riding it in real time.

Like, you get to see in real time.

You don't get to see him really take

a break and be like, all right, cool.

Everything's quiet today.

Let's focus on... No, it's all...

It's all the time.

Is it cool if we bring it up

real quick?

Yeah, we can look at some of it.

Yeah, I guess, yeah,

we can pop it up.

Um... Ooh...

I'm trying to think where it's at.

Oh, it's on the website.

So, I mean,

I know I have all this stuff saved

somewhere.

All right, you know what?

We got to do it this way.

I thought I had it already pulled up

for us, but I guess not.

But we're going to take two seconds and

pull it up here.

That's all.

We put the commercial right here.

I don't do commercials, man.

I'll just cut that part out.

All right.

We just started on the website.

We'll just bring up the website.

Oh, for the prequel?

Yeah.

All right.

Here we go.

Let me add this in.

Share screen.

Window.

Boom.

Share.

Edit.

There we go.

See if he'll let me control it from

over here.

There we go.

Yeah, so the main character is right here.

Uh-huh.

It's not going to let me click.

No.

It's all good, though.

We can at least show them what it

looks like and then show them the...

I thought she was going to pop up

the preview.

That's fine, too,

if you want to show it.

Where's the preview at on the website?

I didn't put it on there.

I only sent it out.

Oh, that's right.

It's in my email.

Hang on.

I only got it specific.

I sent it out to specific people.

I didn't want to give away too much

too soon.

I just sent it out to reviewers and

podcasters.

People who I knew who were regarded a

certain way.

I appreciate you saying that, man.

That means a lot.

Here we go.

You good with me bringing it up still?

Yeah, that's fine.

Yeah, we can show some of it.

Yeah, we'll hit them with the teaser.

There we go.

That cover is still so clean.

And you know what's funny?

I'm still up in the air about what

the final cover is going to be.

I got two more coming in,

and they are amazing.

So it's...

It's still up in the air.

It could change at any moment,

even though we're like two Tuesdays away.

It could change at any moment.

We're getting there, man.

Let's not get too far ahead on that

Kickstarter.

Let's show them some of this.

This is just so clean.

Appreciate it.

Yeah.

You know,

it took a while to grab the right

artist.

But, you know,

I was looking for somebody who could

really push emotion and

you know, and the way Rom, he draws,

he has a unique style,

so I think that'll separate us,

and then he's good with pulling emotion.

So I thought it was going to work.

And then even with Laura,

the way she colors, I got, you know,

I got a solid team,

and that's me lettering.

I'm getting better at it, but, you know.

Oh, you did the lettering on this?

Yeah, yeah.

I've been at it for a while,

just practicing on my stuff,

but

I always set it up beside the big

guys and kind of see how they formulate

the bubbles.

That's how you do it, man.

You put yourself next to the legends and

you copy what works, man.

They're never going to say, oh,

you stole my style.

They're going to be like, flattery.

Yeah, yeah.

Best form of flattery, right?

Yeah, more of a style guy than anything.

Just how, you know, how they do it.

No,

that's really dope that you're doing the

lettering yourself.

Saves you a few hundred bucks too.

Yeah, and what I do like to do,

I do real-time narrative, narrating.

So the narrative blocks,

I come up with that pretty much while

I'm lettering.

So it's still fun for me.

I still get to have some fun in

the process.

Now with you doing that though,

have you gotten to a point where you're

like,

I don't like the way this is going

right here.

I got to change these words right here

because of the way you've done something.

The cool thing about having it all at

your fingertips is you can make those

adjustments.

I don't have to email somebody.

I don't have to wait for them to

come back.

I can do it.

The art is the art.

Once that's done and that's approved,

everything else you know narrative blocks

and speech bubbles can can adjust i just

you know i don't want to get it

i had to get uh one page redone

out of these nine so far dude one

out of nine ain't bad dude

no and it came back better like i

thought it was and i love it yeah

no that that's not a bad gig at

all when you send you get nine pages

back and there's only corrections on one

one yeah i've seen editors bleed all over

all nine of them yeah you know i

was i was i was cool with because

i i uh like he gets where we're

going

And so he has the script and we

talk about it.

So I'm not just giving it to somebody

who's just looking for a check.

He's paid.

Don't get me wrong.

It's a business.

But yeah,

he also is taking care of the characters.

But he has a personal investment.

Yeah, he's taking care of them.

I think that's something we don't see

often is when you're picking an artist or

a colorist or an inker or whatever it

may be,

is don't having the same amount of

investment in the creation as you do as

the IP owner.

Yeah, and I think that,

but it comes from also being open to

their ideas and open to their advice and

just really making it a collaborative

part.

Buy-in, you gotta have buy-in.

You know,

if I just- Be open to listening.

Yeah,

if I just treat you like a tool,

like, hey, just shut up and draw,

that's the return I'm gonna get.

I don't want that.

Like,

I need to know if this is working,

if there's something that could be done

better, you know,

and he's good with that feedback.

That's awesome, dude.

I'm glad you found that.

You can tell they have the buy-in because

the art looks absolutely amazing.

Appreciate it.

We working.

Let's see.

Where are we at here?

We were on the Kickstarter.

Kickstarter comes out two weeks,

but you have a pregame on the website.

For the Kickstarter.

Tell us about that.

Because that's the first time I've seen

that.

Yeah, so what I've been offering is...

If you want to buy in early...

Submit your email.

I'm giving you a five-page prequel.

Alpha Origins.

Udemsi's story.

How this power even got to Earth in

the first place.

So you'll get the backstory...

happens thousands of years before the

issue takes place and that's just just for

supporting early just a quick little

deposit hey we'll be here as a dollar

so you get a five page you know

and it'll that's digital it'll come right

to you no that's really cool like i

said like i said

I've been doing this for about a year

now,

and that's the first time I had seen

something done like that.

When will your Kickstarter actually go

live?

We go live.

We go live Tuesday, February seventeenth.

Eight a.m.

Standard time.

Yeah.

So we're going to be there's going to

be a whole thing.

I got those next two, three days off.

I'm going to be going crazy.

And so I don't really stream or go

live much,

but I think I will that day.

So that's a lie because you do comics

in the car.

but that's not live that is and you

know why I started doing that it's funny

because I don't have nobody out here to

talk to about the comments so I just

sit in the car and just talk to

my car so I was like you know

what I'm just talking to the people you

know because I have a few friends here

and there and we may talk on they

may text me but like usually when I'm

coming off of a fight read an issue

And I'm excited about it.

I got to get this energy off.

So I just run to the car.

You know,

lately I've been at work overnight.

So I've been doing it at work.

But yeah, you know,

but I haven't gone live.

I was thinking about going live.

about the wonder wonder man series but i

think i'm in may i may do a

live probably in regards to the release

but yeah comics in my car are just

born out of necessity just being excited

about a book and needing to get that

energy out yeah no that's a really dope

thing because when i followed you and i

don't know if you've seen the way my

schedule looks for the month but i am

this is the first time i've ever packed

a month within twelve hours like i was

like

that's not a bad problem to have at

all i will say it right now march

is almost the same yeah that's a good

story you know i always like to look

through people's stuff it gives me things

to talk about and bring up on the

the podcast such as comics in the car

which is a really dope thing you do

and uh the moment i see that i

was like i'm gonna be on his page

for like the next thirty minutes just

watching comics in the car

I just started it probably about a week

or two ago because KO got me started.

And then I was reading various titles.

I just get bored and I have it

on my Amazon.

I just go through and I'm like,

all right, cool.

This is what's going on.

So, yeah.

Comixology from Amazon.

Yeah.

And then,

but also Brandon's comics is right up the

street from me.

I go to Drawing the Comics and Glendale.

So Samurai Comics is right up.

So if I'm out,

like my first issue of Absolute Superman,

I got from Samurai, I believe.

And then my first issue of KO I

got from Brandon's and everything else I

pretty much get from Drawing the Comics.

If I got time to go grab a

physical copy.

The only issue of the Holy Trinity of

the Batman, the Superman,

and the Wonder Woman I have are the

Mark Spears foil variants,

the connecting covers Mark Spears did.

That's literally the only ones I own.

And then I picked up covers from each

one here and there from a specific artist

that I really like.

the nakayama covers and there's been a few

i think kirkham covers that i've picked up

here and there but it's just yeah dennis

cohen did a uh absolute batman i want

to say it's twelve i'm not sure that

it was crazy i wish i i i

wish i could get that hard copy and

i saw that i was like oh he

killed it but the joker the joker the

intro to the joker cover with him on

the cover

I did get that one.

So with Brandon's comics,

when we went up to get KO,

it was almost like a raffle or random.

All the covers, all the bags,

you couldn't tell what you got until you

opened it.

You got the blind bag.

I did a couple of the KO blind

bags just to see what I was going

to get.

I did the Mark Spears blind bags.

And then I did the Elvira Harley Quinn

blind bag, which was really cool to see.

If you're going to gamble,

gamble on a comic book, right?

Right.

That's more fun.

I'd rather do that than go to a

casino or something.

You never know.

I pulled one of the Mark Spears covers

that I wanted on his Winter Wonderland

ones he did.

The moment I opened it and Cindy was

there, I was like,

immediately bag and board.

Simple as that.

Because I mean,

I've already read the entire series and

it's just like he'll do new covers for

him and stuff like that.

But it's just really cool to get those

and just they're fun because you don't

know.

There's like twenty five,

thirty covers that are possible and.

And you gamble, man.

Exactly, exactly.

I was thinking about doing something like

that,

a blind bag or either having an artist

or

uh putting one in the tears and just

having my artist whoever picks the blank

cover whatever he draws they get you know

that'd be really cool i've never seen them

seen that done before either i was i

was i was thinking i mean i've seen

them do blind bags but it was like

blind bags of like previous comics and

maybe some like stuff that they probably

didn't sell

on the original Kickstarter,

but they had already ordered stuff in

bulk.

They just shoved them into a blind bag,

which is kind of cool too.

But to get a custom cover from

The artist would be really dope to do.

Yeah,

I'm trying to figure out some things just

to make it a little different.

This is my first one.

You know, I'll first go around.

I did it all out of my pocket.

I sold books all out of my pocket.

But I was looking at just the community

of crowdfunding,

just the community in itself.

I was like, this is a...

Just to be in it.

Just to see who's in it.

It's amazing.

Yeah, it's a good place to be in.

So I was like,

let's do this one and see how it

goes from here.

Oh, yeah.

I'll shoot you...

It's basically like a Kickstarter how-to.

It's a two-part series done by Bruno

Caterino.

I'll shoot that over to you.

And it's just some good,

quick lessons learned.

I mean, it's really good.

Yeah, I need it, man.

Like I said, I've been YouTube Universe.

I've been reaching out, though.

The cool thing about it is I've reached

out to some people who have successful

campaigns,

and they've been real upfront with the

good and the bad,

and they've been sharing information.

So I definitely appreciate all of those

guys.

So that's one good thing I can say.

Guys who've had successful Kickstarters

don't really gatekeep.

They don't mind sharing what worked so

far.

And that's what's great about the indie

community, both on Facebook...

and basically anywhere like you just reach

out to people wait a couple of days

and nine times out of ten you don't

even have to wait a couple of days

they just hit you right back and be

like hey what you need i can help

you and eat in the groups on facebook

or some of the most helpful places ever

they don't guys there's some good guys in

those groups and they don't hold nothing

back even if they don't like it they're

gonna be like hey i don't know about

this

Yeah,

but what works for some may not work

for others.

So it's good to have all that information

right at your fingertips.

And that way you can try certain things

to see what works for your campaign.

Oh, yeah.

And the biggest thing, you know,

I've seen throughout this is just keep it

as simple as possible in the first go

out.

Yeah.

And then because you're going to pick up

your own lessons learned through that.

And then the next one,

you can go all out, you know.

Yeah.

And that was I had to scale myself

back because even though.

Yeah.

But even though this is my first

Kickstarter,

this isn't my first time releasing books.

So I had to I just had it.

This is your first Kickstarter.

This is your first Kickstarter.

You know what I mean?

So I was ready to go a thousand

miles per hour.

I said, no,

I got to do this the right way.

I got to take my baby steps so

I can learn.

That way, if somebody asks me,

I can be like, hey, you know,

this is what I learned and this worked

for me.

Give me a second.

We got it.

man hey i'm in arizona man outside dude

so i just you know it's rare many

years ago yeah the early two thousands

yeah i live down in tucson oh yeah

yeah i'm in uh i'm in i'm in

tempe probably about twenty minutes from

phoenix yeah i love it dude that's that's

one of my favorite areas

I got friends that still live there,

still own houses there and everything

else.

We barbecue on Christmas, dude.

Just to let you know.

I miss that shit sometimes.

I'm not even going to lie.

Then there's days where I see the

temperature is a hundred and twenty there

and I'm like, I'm good.

And it's midnight.

You can't run from it.

Dude, I remember, it's funny,

there was a car wash in Tucson.

They had a twenty four hour rain

guarantee.

So if it rained within twenty four hours,

you could go back with your receipt and

they would rewash your car for you.

Oh, wow.

Dude, my luck,

the only time I went there,

it rained on the way back.

You couldn't even get out of the parking

lot.

It happens, man.

The weather's so funny here.

Oh, yeah.

Especially with rain.

We don't even take rain that serious

because we know in five more minutes,

it's going to be hot again.

Yeah.

And then, you know,

what's also funny is you go an hour

northeast.

And it's freezing.

And it's snowing.

Yeah.

I've been snowboarding up there.

Yeah.

Sedona, Flagstaff, Prescott.

Coolidge.

I mean, you can get four seasons.

An hour,

hour and a half outside the city.

Yeah, that's crazy.

So have you already built the Kickstarter,

own Kickstarter?

Yes.

I'm doing some plug and play this weekend.

I'm working on the intro.

I'll be swapping my intro.

And then, like I said,

I'll be looking at these other covers.

And I may or may not change the

cover.

But it's already tiered out.

It's already ready to go.

Yeah, like I didn't want to be...

You can pre-build.

That's the best.

I've been pre-building.

Yeah,

I've been doing it probably for about a

month or so.

I've been just chipping away at it and

just learning what works and what didn't

work.

And so, yeah, I got a link.

I'll send it to you if...

I'll send you a preview so you can

kind of... Yeah,

if you want to shoot that to me,

I can include it in the...

the description of this video,

the way it's there when it, you know,

the Kickstarter actually goes live.

The link is still there.

Cool.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I think I put in the link may

have been on the,

in the email as well.

It may have been, I'll double check it.

But when I shoot you the, um,

the other stuff that I told you I

would send you,

I will double check everything.

Okay.

But, um,

No, it was funny.

I was sitting here waiting for you to

get to your nephew's house,

and I got a notification of a Kickstarter

start, and I'm like,

let me check this out.

I've seen some good Kickstarters.

I've seen some amazing Kickstarters,

and the Kickstarter I just seen was

probably the worst thing I've ever seen.

It was not put together very well.

It just...

it looked like he last minute launched

without doing anything ahead of time and

it was just the the gift and the

curse about it it really is yeah the

story looks really fun but it was so

disorganized i couldn't even like look

through it i was just like i can't

do this i can't look at it the

the problem the problem

I don't know the creator,

but if he's on an island,

he's not really going to know what

resources.

And I don't mean a literal island,

but if he's off in a corner creating

by himself,

he may not know what's available to him.

And a lot of times we get in

our way, we won't ask.

This is his fourth book.

He had a whole slew of other books.

And they fund it?

It may work for him.

That chaos.

It was just way too chaotic for me

to look at.

I got to be neat and organized.

It's got to be laid out.

It's got to make sense.

As you go, it's got to

Yeah, it got to reveal.

Yeah.

And so I work chaotic,

but my results are usually neat.

So that's how I am.

By the time I'm done,

everything around me is going to look like

complete hell.

But in front of me is going to

be perfect.

It's going to be as excellent as I

can make it.

But yeah,

the process is going to be like, oh,

my God, what is he doing?

But yeah.

You see that because I go through just

out of being nosy and just out of

just wanting knowledge.

I'm like, okay, what looks like it works?

What doesn't look like it works?

Sometimes you see people who got too much

stuff.

Sometimes people don't have enough.

It's finding that healthy medium.

Yeah, it really is.

And I'm glad we're talking about

Kickstarter in this way.

What can backers expect from Epic when it

drops?

Yeah.

What you can expect is I'm trying to

take you on a ride through the campaign

without giving up too much,

still leaving some excitement for the

book.

So you'll get the gist of what's going

on.

You'll get to see some panels.

I'll throw in something that I probably

shouldn't share just to kind of let you

know, hey, it's real.

It's a whole universe.

And I may even share some other things

that we have going on because I'm

incorporating.

I do film.

and video.

We have a series called Catch Him,

which is a mixture of a comic book

and a live-action web series.

I do have the trailer for that.

I was thinking about popping that in

there.

We are looking at...

You'll get the whole...

idea,

you'll leave with a sample of the

universe.

You'll leave knowing, hey,

it's not just a book, it's a journey.

And if I want to be a part

of that journey,

I can be a part of it on

the apparel side.

I can be a part on the comic

side.

I can be a part of it,

you know, in a live action side.

You'll have options and avenues to come

take this journey with us.

It's not just one way in,

but this is our initial offering.

Do you have any rewards set up for

people?

I know you got the one for the

early sign-up on the website,

but are you going to have anything for

backers as they back the comic book?

Yeah, and...

Like certain stretch goals or anything

like that?

So our stretch goals,

without putting too much pressure on my

artists,

I really want to stretch to get the

issue to...

done so um and some ash cans done

of some other things that show different

aspects of the universe so i have twelve

so i have three stories side stories

written that'll go perfect and then um

epic is done up to about thirty two

issues

You've spent the time And you've already

got everything Yeah,

we got thirty-two issues I got two Two

graphic novels

that are not about Epic,

about other characters,

and then I'm working on something,

and then, like I said,

we're writing scripts as well as comics to

try to kind of mingle them.

So, yeah.

So do you plan at any point, like,

taking a pause on the,

not necessarily the books, but to do,

like,

a trade paperback or something like that

of, like, how to get books?

Um,

I'm tinkering with one in my head,

like a three book series.

And it's a massive undertaking.

So right now I'm at the concept of

book one,

but I do have one of my characters,

Lotto, his trade paperback is written in,

And it goes up until he gets into...

I think he comes in issue four.

So it follows his journey up until issue

four and then goes a little past it

and then brings him back into the book.

So most of my trades will follow the

characters as they come into the story.

It'll be whatever happened prior to them

getting there.

Gotcha, gotcha.

But you're not going to at any point

just do like...

Like, hey, here's volume one of, like,

the book, and it's, like,

issues one through five or one through six

or something like that.

Every run we do?

Yes.

Short answer, yeah.

Because the Alpha Strand will be a three

issue, and then Lotto's Home,

then Noble Intentions,

and then Earth's Shadow.

So, yeah,

it'll probably be four different ones.

Right now,

you're sitting outside enjoying the nice

weather.

I'm getting sleep, and it's, like,

thirty-two degrees.

Okay.

I won't hold the phone up and show

you the sun.

I won't do that.

I do that to my friends.

Don't do me dirty like that.

Don't do me dirty like that.

I hold the phone up and show them.

Because then I'll get to missing it.

And then I'm like,

Arizona's just gotten way too expensive,

man.

Otherwise, I'd already be living there.

It used to be,

before the housing market crashed...

You could get a nice house for a

decent amount of money.

It was when it crashed,

something like that.

Up until then, this was prime.

You might as well stay where you at.

You might as well stay where you are.

It feels good, man.

You're rubbing it in now.

You're rubbing it in now.

It feels good.

But yeah, man, each volume, like I said,

we'll probably do The Alpha Strand,

Lotto's Home, Noble Intentions,

and Earthshadow.

And then in there,

we'll probably do Lotto's Trade Paperback

Under Siege.

And then we'll do another one.

And then I have side stories that run

parallel to the book.

And then they come across in year two.

Okay,

and they actually come into the book.

Yeah, yeah.

I like that.

And see,

what I want to do is give those

away for free.

So I'll probably do like a four page

every month,

probably starting at issue three or issue

four,

and then just take you on that journey.

So that way,

when they intersect into the book,

it won't seem like these characters came

out of nowhere.

No, I like that, man,

because that's really dope.

Post it to your Instagram or your

Facebook.

It'll probably be...

I want to create a back channel or

a secret channel,

a secret page that through apparel and

other things,

you can scan QR codes and you'll get

access to it.

And it'll happen in that space.

You can create a members-only section of

your website and keep it behind that.

I don't know.

We may do that.

That's a good idea.

That would save you more money later in

the future.

See, I was thinking, though,

it may be more fun.

I got the idea watching Nipsey,

rest in peace,

where you scan the tag and this whole

thing pops up.

I was like,

what if we do that with books?

I know some guys are doing it.

So you can still do the QR code

and it would take you straight to the

behind the scenes of the website where you

don't have to log into it.

Or you can also do it as the

login as well.

Oh, OK.

Members.

OK.

Yeah, we may do that.

Yeah.

I may do that.

Yeah, but I want to,

I want to still,

and I still want to be able to

quote unquote give something away.

You know what I mean?

Because sometimes people not sold and

sometimes they got to see it.

So I'll do like four page,

like four page little jabs here and there

to keep folks engaged.

That's, that's the idea.

And it's already written and ready to go.

We just need to get the ball rolling.

I like it, man.

I love everything you got going on.

You have it together.

You probably got a whole bunch of

notebooks stacked up at the house.

It's ridiculous.

Thank God for a digital medium because I

would probably be buried in paper.

I would probably be buried under piles of

paper.

I'm a notebook guy.

I keep mine in notebooks and then I

transfer electronically later because I

could be at work and the idea hits

me and I keep my email open at

work.

and see that's what i do i keep

my emails open here so i got one

as i get ideas i just jot them

down on that email at the end of

the day i just shoot that email to

myself as well and then i copy and

paste it over into my my notes and

then you know sometimes i'm in the car

and i did his and i just write

it down and that's how i got

Text messages full of side stories and

ideas.

I'll send some to somebody just in case

I forget.

Random people will be like,

why you send me this?

I'm like, when I was texting,

your name was the first one that popped

up.

So you get the story.

You just hold on to the synopsis and

just send it back to me.

Yeah,

I have friends with story synopsis and

they don't know nothing about comics.

But when I was texting,

his name was like five sentences of stuff.

yeah it's like don't erase and i just

sent it to him just so i can

have somewhere to park it dude i like

that man so where do you see yourself

in dark city comments in three to five

years in the perfect world um i want

to create an all-inclusive experience for

Readers, I want to do fashion,

pop culture.

I want to do movies.

I want to do animation.

I want to do comics.

I want to be able, the writing,

I have the writing capabilities to do

these things.

And I have the vision to do these

things.

It's about finding the right team and

that's happening right now.

But I can do it.

I want to create a mini network for

creators.

where you can just come in and it's

an experience.

You come in for comics.

Oh, wow, I didn't know they did shorts.

You look at a short.

Oh, my goodness, this is nice.

What is he wearing?

It's apparel.

Oh,

there's a music that's going to the

soundtrack.

I want to do a whole thing without

making it too heavy.

Just a seamless transition.

If you're going to do apparel,

the perfect way to advertise apparel is

I put it on the characters in the

book.

That's it.

That was the first thing I'm like,

if he's going to rock apparel,

he's got to put apparel on the comic

characters.

You'll see some of them with the logos

and the polos and the hats and all

of that.

Those are my favorite kind of Easter eggs.

I'm not even going to lie.

My artist, a friend of mine,

My Chuck Taylor,

he's he's going to actually he's going to

do this secret sketch cover if we do

it.

And I think we're going to do it.

He's phenomenal.

What he used to do.

He did the first run with me.

He would always draw us in the book

randomly somewhere.

If you wouldn't tell me until it was

done.

So I'm watching the book and I'll see

him like, Chuck, what you doing?

And I flip and I'm like,

what am I doing?

You know what I mean?

So I always thought.

Thought it was cool,

but we had on the apparel.

That's my favorite type of Easter,

as in everybody that comes on.

Most of the people who've ever been on

this podcast are like me.

When I'm reading a comic book,

I can spend an hour,

two hours reading one comic book because

I'm not just reading it.

I'm studying it.

I'm studying the letter,

and I'm looking for those little Easter

eggs

In the book.

Right.

We need Easter eggs in it whatsoever,

but I'm still going to look for it.

Yeah.

And so many things turn into Easter eggs

down the line.

And that's the cool thing about writing.

That's the biggest thing right there is

like this little obscene mention of

something to happen on page two of issue

three of some random comic book.

Now you're on Easter.

issue ten of the same comic book and

that little thing that you've seen over

here on you know issue two is now

playing a big factor over here in issue

ten absolutely and unless you paid

attention you missed it because there's no

there's no telling how many times i've had

to go dig through a box pull out

an old issue of a comic book and

flip through it and be like i knew

it i knew it that's it

And sometimes it takes forever because

that's just like that's backfill right

there.

I got a closet down the hall that's

like short box after short box.

Yeah, I miss all of that.

I had I'm from Maryland.

And so my attic looks like a comic

book store.

I can start one right now with so

much stuff I have.

And then, you know, I got, like,

back there, that's, like, I do a small,

like,

quick series called What's in the Box,

Man?

And I still haven't got to record it.

So the pile gets bigger.

The big box is, like, storage bins for,

because I need to clean out that closet

back there.

Because it's a wreck.

Hey, man, listen.

It's the mind of a creator, dude.

Sometimes chaos.

Yeah, yeah.

People don't understand it.

You know, like, you got to

Sometimes I feel like I'm just here.

I'm just along for the ride.

My brain is doing what it's doing.

And I'm just here to keep it alive.

Because I got piles of things to get

to and stuff I'm excited about.

And I just can't wait to get to

it.

So my workspace, there's a pile of, oh,

they should see this.

Oh, we can't wait to get to it.

I definitely understand.

And then I got...

You know, this week's new comic book day.

I got last week's and the week's prior

new comic book over day.

New comic book day over there that I

need to still scan in,

get it added to my collection,

get it boxed and put away.

Yeah, dude.

But this right here has been like the

busiest I've ever been when it comes to

the podcast.

So I'm thankful for that.

And I'm like,

if stuff has to fall to the wayside

so I can continue to put spotlights on

Lowe and Ray, who was just on,

and Ray McKay, who was just on,

then I will put it off because that's

what I made this for,

and that's why you're here,

and this is why you're getting a spotlight

on you today.

Yeah, appreciate it, man.

I appreciate it because...

it's a lot going on and it's cool

to be able to talk about the process

and like what you're doing and to

reintroduce the university people and new

people.

Like we've been in comics probably the

same time and we've never even crossed

paths until now.

Yeah.

And it's so cool because like before I

was having a hard time getting some of

the Facebook groups to let me post and

Like they just wouldn't post me.

Right.

I don't know.

But then finally, you know,

it started happening and it started

happening.

And then I,

I knew I had like the first few

days of this month, like filled in.

I had you, I had Ray, Ray net.

And then I had somebody else.

I can't remember off the top of my

head because that's how busy this month is

going to be.

When I start forgetting who I just had

on like two days ago.

And, um,

So I made a post just like, hey,

you know, we're scheduling live right now.

Hit me up.

Here's my email and we'll ride it from

there, you know.

And then it was like, boom, then boom.

And it's like eleven thirty,

twelve o'clock at night and I'm scheduling

like people are hitting me up.

That's how I'm going to bed.

I can't look at this no more.

So I go to bed,

wake up and there's like ten more emails.

I'm like.

Okay.

That's a blessing.

Immediately the next day, I'm like, hey,

I got to close it.

However, if you still, you know,

if you could do March, hit me up.

We'll do March.

And now I'm like, shit, March is full.

I'm about to go to April.

Hey, listen,

being booked and busy is a blessing.

I promise you that.

Oh, dude.

Yeah, the opportunity.

exactly because i get to meet i get

i get to meet lo tonight i got

to meet ray rainett the other day and

you know many many more on the menu

for this month that i've never met these

people well

There's a couple that are repeat offenders

going to be on here this month.

But those are people I have friendships

with now, you know?

Yeah.

Like when you get ready to run it

back, dude, hit me up.

We will run this back all day.

Oh, I appreciate it.

Definitely.

Not from your car, though.

Hey, man, listen,

I was trying to make sure I keep

time.

I like being on time.

And then I wanted to just be like,

hey, listen, this is what's going on.

Give me a minute.

You're good, dude.

I was just one of those where I

hit you up.

I was like, hey,

you didn't forget about us, did you?

Because you were really excited.

You didn't forget.

There's no way you forgot.

You know what's funny?

I got this one confused.

I missed a

pod yesterday blew my mind and it broke

my heart because I wanted to do it.

I was like, I thought you were Friday.

And I'm like, no, this is Friday.

Now I need a scheduler.

It's funny how getting...

That's the best thing you will ever do

for yourself.

Get a whiteboard,

put it on the wall next to you.

And then as you fill up your electronic,

you know, the one in your email one,

I immediately walk over with my pen.

I write it on the board.

That way it's right there.

And I got a whiteboard sitting under my

bar.

I'm going to hang it up tonight.

That is the big,

especially when you're about to launch it,

you got to get that organized.

Yeah,

but I definitely need something more

tangible that I'm really actually

touching.

Yeah.

The whiteboard in the calendar email,

like the calendar on your email,

I can literally make an event from the

email, add it to the calendar,

and then go to the whiteboard and write

it in over there.

And it, cause I'm getting it.

Cause as I'm walking in the room,

it's right there in my face.

It's right in front of my face and

my phone will send me the notification.

Like, Hey, you have this coming up.

Yeah.

Yeah.

The hard part is,

is when you get a bunch at one

time and you've got to get them,

you got to differentiate from everybody

and make sure you're,

you're sending the right person,

the right stuff and you're communicating

the right things to the right people.

And I'm like, I need an assistant.

I need money.

Yeah.

it's coming though man you know you get

busy before you get the bodies so so

you're busy and then oh yeah yeah the

bodies will show up man i'm hoping so

man because this has been like the the

funnest i've had like twenty twenty five

was good everything started picking up and

taking off and then i've not had like

we're in february january was pretty busy

but it's always a little slow in the

beginning because people are coming out of

the holidays

But now it's like, everybody's like, boom,

boom, let's go.

And I'm like,

I got you what you want.

Like, you need a spotlight.

The chairman's got your spotlight.

That's what's up.

Yeah, man.

I appreciate him.

I've been enjoying this for,

I appreciate you having me on.

Hey, man, and like I said,

when you're ready to do it again,

we'll do it again.

This is literally what this was made for,

is spotlighting creators.

And while we're spotlighting you tonight,

why don't you go ahead and tell everybody

where they can find Lowe,

Dark City Comics, and Epic.

So you can find darkcityhq.com.

So it's Dark City Headquarters.

It's the headquarters of everything Dark

City Comics.

You'll see heroes.

You'll see apparel.

You'll see some live action stills on some

things we're working on.

And you'll also see the link to get

to the relaunch of Epic Earth's Protector

in Crisis, issue one, the Alpha String.

All social media handles,

darkcitycomicsx.com.

dark city comics facebook forward slash

dark city comics ig and uh tiktok and

even snap and fame fan base all dark

city comics were there so if you need

to help spelling d-a-r-k-c-i-t-y

c-o-m-i-c-s and you can find me anywhere

you look in dark city comics and

multimedia and as always they will be

linked down below they're actually linked

down below right now if you click on

the uh

The post on Facebook,

you'll find them there.

And when this goes live on YouTube and

also on any podcast platform,

if you hit the description,

all those links to all his social medias

are going to be right there for you.

But make sure you like, follow,

and share because this is how indie

creators get discovered and how these

stories reach the people who need them

most.

Subscribe so you don't miss future

sessions.

Drop a comment down below and let us

know what stood out to you.

And tell us who you want to see

welcomed to the council next.

Because this is the USDN,

where indie comics come to life.

And that is the council adjourned.