The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

In this episode of The USDN Podcast - Where Indie Comics Come to Life, The Chairman sits down with Alejandro Rosales Duran, creator of Drako & Sambos Inc., to discuss what it really takes to build a comic universe from scratch.

Coming from Colombia, Alejandro is working to create his own lane in the global comic space — developing original characters, telling new stories, and building a creator-owned brand from the ground up.

The conversation explores:
• Alejandro’s origin story and early inspirations
• The creation of Drako & Sambos Inc.
• His comic project Archer of Heat
• The realities of the indie creator grind
• Social media strategies for artists
• The importance of consistency and enjoying the creative process

This episode is a deep dive into the mindset, discipline, and vision required to build something of your own in the indie comic space.

📍 Follow Alejandro:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drakoandsambosinc
Instagram (Personal): https://www.instagram.com/alejorosales94
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@DrakoAndSambosInc
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@drakoandsambosinc01

📺 USDN YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/@USDN_Podcast

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👉 https://www.bcwsupplies.com/?acc=usdn
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🗣️ Business / Media Inquiries:
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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.

Oh

what is up everybody and welcome to the

united states department of nerds where we

are for the people by the people and

of the people today's episode is about

something bigger than comics it's about

building something from nothing because

joining us tonight is a creator coming out

of colombia pushing into the global space

and building his own universe one

character at a time

From Draco and Sambos Incorporated,

we're talking about the grind, the vision,

and what it really takes to create your

own line in the indie comic world.

This isn't just about art.

This is about ownership, identity,

and legacy.

Ladies and gentlemen,

the Council of Nerds is now in session.

Alejandro, welcome to the USDN.

hello jeff um it's a pleasure to be

here um yeah hey dude it is really

awesome to finally get you on the podcast

i know you've been scheduled for quite a

while now and that's just been the nature

of the podcast for the last couple of

months is we're booked months in advance

so i'm happy to get you on and

to get

your voice and your work out in front

of the rest of the world.

So let's jump into it, man.

For those who are just now discovering you

and just meeting you for the first time,

who are you and where does your story

begin in comic books?

Okay, so I am,

my name is Alejandro and I am thirty-one

years old and I started in two thousand

and nine.

I get in love with manga.

I started on manga.

Draw a copy in Night of the Zodiac.

I don't know if you know the anime.

I'm not familiar with a whole lot of

manga.

Yeah.

And I started copying and I'm good with

the storytelling.

So I challenged myself to create my own

universe.

and i i end my school here in

cali colombia and i started my studies in

university in fine arts and fine arts give

me this

concept,

this conceptualization that comic needs

and this semiotic and these matters that

help on the storytelling.

And I started from in two thousand

seventeen,

my my entrepreneurship called Rake

Ensemble Inc.

And yes,

I started developing my own universe.

I grew up learning from DC Comics,

that is my, from the two great brands,

is the one that I'm more attached to.

And also with the MCU,

that I learned to organize a universe,

that Marvel Cinematic Universe is a

very...

It helps you a lot on how to

organize a universe.

Yeah.

Yeah, tell me.

So growing up in Colombia,

what was it like for somebody interested

in comic books and that kind of things?

What was your access to get comic books

and manga and things like that?

Was it readily available?

Can you go down to the comic book

shop

No, no.

Comics in Colombia is a new thing here.

So it's very hard to see a comic

shop like you see in the States or

in Canada.

but um there's a lot of people that

loves the comic uh when the mcu started

on uh this is started uh boom here

in colombia okay so there's a lot of

people that that loves a

the comic books.

Colombia has a very good literature things

with Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

So we have the passion,

we have the love for the comics,

but there's no an industry like Marvel DC

comic, Dark Horse Image,

or manga in Japan.

But

we are growing we are growing on that

matter and you're leading the way my man

with your own line of comic books um

so what was there a moment where you

said i'm not just going to draw but

i'm going to make comic books what was

when was that for you where you were

just like i have this talent i'm going

to use this talent to make comic books

Well,

in two thousand and eleven I was more

younger and I was more immature on how

the world works and more in the comic

and art industry.

and i come to the states and i

go to disney and and see and i

watch all the the process of wall disney

with his industry and i was i and

i was thinking i i wanted it to

to make the same and grow my own

universe.

And I started,

before I started drawing comics,

I started drawing toons,

like Mickey Mouse and all these things.

And I started drawing two dragon toons

that are called Draco ensembles.

That's why I started,

And from these characters,

I grow all my universe.

That's why it's Drake Ensemble Sync.

OK.

Yeah.

I learn from my own.

I was...

I started drawing and improving my skills

on myself.

But in... Before I...

After I ended my studies on Minority,

I started watching the tutorials of David

Finch, and James Ray,

the box office artist.

Oh, yeah.

And I get in love with that kind

of

of way to draw and how they tell

stories.

That's Mark Silvestri's school.

So I go to that kind of school

and I started to my own universe.

So what is Draco and Sambos?

Draco and Sambos Inc.

is my own comic brand here in Colombia.

I'm trying to build an industry like

Marvel and DC created in the States.

And I'm trying to build

an industry independent to the American

industry or Japanese industry.

I'm trying to build my own thing and

helping other new artists here in Colombia

and tell them that it's possible to work

on comics,

create their own brands or or yeah live

live with it that is right now this

hard but I'm trying to get an easier

life in the in the comic industry here

in Colombia no I like to hear and

I know before we had gone live a

friend of mine who was on the podcast

not long ago with his book he had

actually flown to

down to columbia i believe it was columbia

to meet his artist to go to a

local shop like a small comic shop to

do a sign-in of the book that they

had did together so it's really cool to

see

the industry there growing and for people

like you creating your own companies to

help that industry move forward in

Colombia is to me that's the coolest thing

ever is taking something that doesn't

exist there yet

or it does, but just in small pockets,

but trying to push it to a bigger

scale, not just in your hometown,

but through the whole country.

And that to me is just really cool

to see you doing that, man.

So why just create,

why create a brand instead of just being

an artist?

You could have just been an artist and

did work for other people.

Why go all that way to create this

whole brand

That's a very good question that I'm still

asking myself in this entrepreneur

process,

but I don't like to copy or work

with another

intellectual properties i like to to

create my own i i i challenge myself

to create my own characters to to make

a new thing to innovate on in in

a comic industry in a global comic

industry that

already have Superman, Spider-Man,

and all these superheroes that we all

know.

And I'm trying to create new superheroes,

new universe that show the audience new

things and new perspectives from the

superhero genre and all the genres that

you can draw in a comic.

So is all your characters and your IPs,

are they all within the same universe,

or are they separate?

I have two lines that are a warrior's

power that are my superheroes.

And a school that is a zombie industry.

Zombie universe, sorry.

Zombie universe.

OK.

So let's jump in and talk about your

projects that you currently have right

now.

Let's talk about Archer of Heat.

And how did that project come together?

Because that's the one you had sent to

me that I got to read.

And I like it is dude,

it's just this cool new concept that I've

not had a chance to read something like

it before.

So how did that come about?

And how did you put that together?

Okay,

I create these characters in my school

time.

When I was in school,

I get inspired by my classmates and

myself.

So I create with the personification of

the character.

of my classmates,

I create superheroes like their own

identity,

superhero identity from themselves.

So from a girl classmate,

I create this Archer of Heat,

this Captain Joel.

I developed her universe,

I create another ones and I create my

my comic universe to step-by-step which

comic I will be releasing,

which I will be working.

And so Archer of Heat is a galokinetic

superheroine, an archer.

That...

that I always loved archer superheroes

like Rean Arrow, Hawkeye,

like Legolas in the Lord of the Rings.

So I created her and I developed this

color kinetic power on her.

And I love the

I love that characters have these common

issues on their life,

these inside conflicts that make more

human the characters for the audience get

attached to it.

So that's exactly how I create Archer of

Heat.

I'm not listening to you, Jeff.

No, I'm listening to you too far.

What do you mean?

Oh, sorry.

No,

I had muted myself because I had coughed

and I didn't want to cough into the

microphone, so I apologize.

Don't worry.

It happens sometimes.

My cat walked in at the same time,

so...

You've been at this now for quite a

few years.

What has been some of the important

lessons that you've learned across this

journey into comic books?

What I learned is don't be rushed on

the process to love every part of the

process.

I am a, I have to say,

I'm a hand drawing comic artist.

I don't like digital art.

I prefer a traditional comic art.

So what I learned is to enjoy the

process too.

enjoy the penciling, the inking,

all this part.

And I'm the only one working on my

universe.

So I write, I draw, I ink,

and I color my own comics.

So...

I haven't learned a lot of the writing

aspects.

I learned a lot about the drawing skills.

And as I told you before,

I said I love this David Fincher,

Mark Silvestri style.

So I love these details that they do

on their drawings.

What I learn most is to enjoy the

process.

Oh, no, dude.

I mean, if you're not enjoying it,

I mean,

it's kind of like you're cheating yourself

if you're not enjoying it, right?

Yes.

So tell us about some of your other

projects that you have going on.

You have Golden Fleet.

Right now,

I'm developing the second issue of Archer

of Heat.

Okay.

I'm also preparing the script for my first

Colombian superhero.

Oh, okay.

An anti-hero.

And I am developing another one.

doesn't have yet a script,

but I'm developing another one,

a Brazilian superhero,

is that right now we are living in

a very global world.

Doesn't matter if you live in Colombia,

you know what happens on Brazil,

on the States, on Canada.

So I'm trying to develop

characters that not only come from

Colombia, but it comes from Europe,

from the States, Colombia, Mexico,

Argentina, Japan, Africa.

So they are more superheroes from Earth,

not from any specific country.

Okay.

No, I like it, man.

I like that you're not just like,

you're looking at it from a global scale

and bringing it to life, dude.

That's really cool to see that you're

doing that and that's something that you

are working on.

Can you kind of walk us through your

process from your idea to like a finished

comic page?

Because you're writing,

you're also doing the drawing, the inking,

the colors, you're doing everything.

Kind of walk us through that process a

little bit.

yeah okay normally before i start a

process i read a lot i read a

lot not not only comics i also read

books and and

I love the process, for example,

that use manga.

The manga normally investigate,

read a lot, for example, from mythology,

myths.

So I read a lot on that.

And from that, I took the...

I create my superheroes.

I also...

create a concept for the conflict.

For example, Archer Pit, with her,

I normally, and his calokinetic powers,

I try to, with her,

all his story is from his emotional

emotional vulnerability.

So I grow all his story around this

emotional vulnerability.

So I tried to do that,

create a logline with that.

And I start from them.

and create the character and the story and

all the characters around her.

Also, I think I, and yes,

that's how I, the writing part.

And then I, with InDesign,

I create how I will be a,

establishing the pages and how I will be

drawing the panels.

And from them, I start the layouts,

the thumbnails,

and start drawing on my table.

So do you lay out a storyboard and

then start the whole process of drawing

it?

Yeah.

Okay.

I like it, man.

I like it.

So I know you said you prefer...

Do you do like...

everything by hand?

Or do you do the drawing and then

do you take the picture of the drawing

and then upload it to your iPad and

then do the coloring there?

Or are you just straight colors and all

on paper the whole night?

No.

I only do the drawing and the inking

on paper by hand and the color in

Photoshop.

I scan the drawings and in Photoshop I

at the colors.

And I think that's how most people are

doing it these days anyways.

I don't know how many people are actually

inking, or not inking,

but doing coloring by hand anymore.

So it's one of those things where I

kind of feel like,

I don't want to say people aren't doing

it,

but I think it's one of those processes

that's kind of dying off as new technology

comes to life.

I don't think that that is dying.

I think that also adding this AI growing

and developing right now is that we are

going,

it's the AI and the digital is growing

so, so,

so fast that people will get saturated

very easily.

drawing by hand or not only drawing a

painting and all this art that is that

was normally doing by hand people will be

We'll be getting back to it lately.

For example, Snowbird,

this short film from Aaron Blaze.

I don't know if you see it.

I don't honestly get to watch a whole

lot of TV at all.

It's a short film from...

old to the traditional animation artist

from Disney create his own short film

By hand.

And right now it's also winning prizes and

Academy Awards and all of this.

So people are trying to return to these

traditional ways to do.

So I don't think that is Zion.

this process.

No,

it's one of those where I don't want

to see it disappear because like the

colors and the drawing,

I think you lose some of the passion

when you do it through, you know,

whether it's Photoshop or what have you,

the passion isn't there.

you know, when it's done that way.

So I really do prefer to see things

done by hand the traditional way.

So what part of the process do you

really enjoy the most?

The pencil and the ink.

Okay.

Most of the inking part.

As I said before,

I watch a lot of these David Finch,

Mark Silvestri tutorials and their

process,

their lives on YouTube or this process of

the box office artist, James Race.

And this obsession with details,

the inking part is the most that I

enjoy most.

Okay.

So what do you think is actually the

hardest part about finishing a project?

Finishing the process.

It's starting and finishing the process.

Yeah.

Yes,

and normally when you are in a process,

your mind starts to create a new one,

so...

So you're getting in a position that you

want to end or stop to create a

new one.

And yes, sometimes you get lazy.

I don't know.

Human mind is hard sometimes.

um just so the the hardest part is

is finishing the process starting and

finishing the process dude i uh hundred

percent agree it's the same doing this

it's one of those where i know i

have work to get done whether it's

creating clips or writing questions for an

interview

It's one of those sometimes it's like you

got to give yourself that kick in the

rear end to get yourself going.

But then once you're going, you know,

you can crank them out really fast.

But, man,

it's just so hard to get yourself there

sometimes.

Sometimes, you know, you have to –

literally just force yourself into it.

And it's hard to do.

I wholeheartedly agree with it.

So let's talk about a little bit about

like the social media concept of

creating because without it,

we're nowhere, right?

We rely so heavily on our social media

to whether it's advertising your

appearance or advertising an upcoming

appearance of somebody else.

Social media is a grind upon itself,

despite the workload that we are already

doing in regards to building interviews,

getting ready for a show and that kind

of stuff.

what which like what works for you in

that in that mind frame of is it

instagram is it youtube is it tick tock

what kind of works for you to help

bring in people to the projects that

you're working on you have to understand

you have to understand and accept that

social media is growing the world oh yeah

if you don't use social media it's hard

to to grow up

in the industry um instagram is very hard

instagram if you don't get the algorithm

it's very hard to and it changes so

often it that's been my hardest that and

threads i think have been the hardest to

to kind of to crack into like i

would say like the last

three to four months, probably,

I've gotten my best growth.

And I'm still continuing to see that grow,

thankfully.

But yeah,

those two are the hardest to by far.

Instagram is a very good channel for your

social circles, for your friends,

your family,

all these people that know you and you

know them.

But for artists, your...

best help is youtube and tick tock and

more tick and tick tock is is the

most friendly social media for artists it

helps you a lot to to grow up

tick tock a lot a lot a lot

and youtube youtube is more a consistency

you need to be more consistent in youtube

it's hard because uh create a

A real or a short or a great

video is very hard.

So these short videos on TikTok is more

easily TikTok.

The algorithm of TikTok is very friendly

for new artists.

OK.

No, I go back and forth on TikTok.

Like, do I want to start TikTok,

just share my short clips on?

Because I get good traction with those on

Instagram and YouTube shorts.

So it's one of those where I'm like,

if I could leverage TikTok to grow my

other platforms, it may be worth it,

but I don't know.

Because you never know what the algorithm

is going to be and whether something is

going to work on one platform or the

other.

um so what kind of content works for

you is it like your where you're

illustrating or what you're writing or

you're coloring what kind of content on

your social media gets you like the most

reactions

I don't show my writing part.

Normally the writing part is on my

backstage process.

But I normally...

sometimes I'm doing my own characters and

other times I'm making commissions or fan

arts or projects with another with another

universe for example right now I'm making

a

a cinematic process,

a poster of DC Comics, of Superman.

Okay.

But normally my insights on social media

react more when I'm drawing my own

characters than when I'm drawing other

intellectual properties.

Okay.

Yeah.

Dude,

it's such a tough nut to crack on

social media, man.

But it's once you find what I think

works for you is when it really starts,

you know,

the algorithm starts working in your

favor.

It's just finding what works like.

I know my, uh,

my shorts go to everywhere.

They go to Facebook, they go to Instagram,

they go to threads, blue sky.

And it just depends on who I was

talking to or who the interview was with

that really determines what kind of

reactions I get because they're there to

see the person I'm talking to.

So for me, it's like,

I have to borrow.

um the lights and the clicks and the

follows from that person basically and

trying to bring them over to enjoy mine

as well because i'm talking to your

favorite today but i hope to maybe the

person i'm talking to in a couple of

days you will also like and give them

a follow and follow me as well because

To me,

that's like the inner circle of life of

social media, right?

When you do what I do from my

perspective is I have to dip my hands

into everybody's pot of gold, so to speak,

and try to convert into my followers as

well.

So you're still building Sambos from

scratch right now.

What is keeping you motivated and keeping

you going when you just feel like,

you're getting nowhere like what keeps you

going and pressing that forward the i know

that i have a lot to tell uh

to my readers so that is my uh

my main motivation motivation and uh i'm

I'm trying to become with Reconsemble Sync

like DC and Marvel is in the States

here in Colombia so

That motivates me a lot because I know

what I'm carrying on me.

I know it's hard.

Right now, I'm having my comics on Amazon.

I'm in Global Comics.

Okay.

but it's hard it's very hard when you're

in the economy and just starting it's very

hard because nobody knows you and and the

real the reality is that the industry is

is

how can I say,

is more focused on DC and Marvel and

the many American comic brands and manga.

But

I am really motivated.

Right now I'm trying to search this

publisher here in Colombia that can help

me distributing more of my comics here and

maybe thinking in an international way.

My goals are here in Colombia.

I want the comic industry here is a

thing.

So that really motivates me a lot because

I'm helping myself and also helping

new artists in the industry here in my

country.

And I love to hear you say that

because that's one of my driving factors

into doing what I do and presenting indie

creators like yourself here on the podcast

is to put you in front of a

newer audience that way we can expand

what it is your reach in your audience

to new people.

And it's really cool that you are doing

what you're doing for Columbia right now.

So how do you stay consistent when things

are kind of slow?

Like, if it's slow, and you know,

just you don't feel like you're getting

anywhere?

How do you stay consistent with what

you're working on and what you're doing?

Well,

you have to understand and accept that

it's a long process.

When you're starting an entrepreneurship,

doesn't matter where,

in the comic industry and other things,

it always will always take a while if

you want to get

get an after getting in the market and

getting a readers and so you have to

understand that there is a long process

it's um and enjoy it that the most

important thing is that you enjoy it

because

It is very normal that you have bad

seasons and that you will have good

seasons.

So if you enjoy it,

you will carry on all the process.

It doesn't matter if you have a bad

or good season.

So what advice would you give new creators

starting right now from nothing like you

did?

Hmm.

to read a lot, to...

use social media,

with social media like YouTube, Instagram,

you will know these artists like David

Finch, like Jim Lee, like Brian Benjamin,

like all these artists that already have

their career.

So do you know what is the style

that you want to draw or if you

want to write?

or if you want to color or ink.

And yes, that's my big advice.

And my biggest advice is to enjoy it

and don't rush.

Don't rush.

Enjoy the process.

Everything will come.

So what does making it...

look like for you?

That people enjoy what I do,

that I keep enjoying my process.

If for some time I

uh stop enjoying what i did i i

will i will stop doing this and um

and yes that people enjoy what what i

publish and that i still enjoy it still

enjoying it yeah so where do you see

draco and sambos in let's say three years

in comic cons like i i have been

my own stand-up there showing my comics i

right now i'm publishing my comics a

digital on in amazon but i'm trying that

my comics are getting sales a physical

yeah so seeing my comics on on in

shops

That's my goal for three years with

Reconsemble Sync.

Here in Colombia, in international,

that's after.

No, dude, I like it, dude.

You have to, you dream big.

And, dude,

there's nothing more than I want to see,

you know,

walk into my local comic shop one day

and see, you know,

your comic book sitting on the shelf or

going to a Comic-Con and seeing you and

your work there at the Comic-Con and you

selling your work,

that'd be like the dopest thing, man.

Just knowing where you started this

journey to finally being there.

You know what I'm saying?

Yes, totally, totally.

And will be a dream to sharing Comic

Con with all this, with David Fincher,

I know.

These things,

these artists that already have their

profession on comics.

Dave,

the only thing left to do is to

do it, right?

You got to make it happen.

Yes.

So if someone discovers your work today,

what do you want them to remember?

That's a very good question.

I don't know.

Come on, man.

My growing style,

the way that I tell my stories,

how I develop my characters,

and they feel...

emotionally attached with my characters.

The same way that people react with

Spider-Man or Superman,

I want to create the same.

That's a thing.

I like it.

And I'm going to tell you what I

want them to remember.

I want them to remember Alejandro as the

dude who put indie comics...

On the same level as DC and Marvel

in Columbia.

That is what I want them to remember.

I want them to know that you're the

guy who's going to be responsible for that

happening in Columbia.

Because, dude,

you're motivated and you're doing it.

I'm certainly more motivated and you have

to, you have to.

A hundred percent, a hundred percent.

And I tell you what,

let's do this again in a year.

I'm open.

Or six months.

Let's say six months.

Let's,

let's do this again and let's see where

we're at and where you're at.

All right.

So put it on your calendar,

on the calendar with me in six months,

because dude,

you're going places and I really want to

keep up with the journey that you're

taking, not just your cell phone,

not just Draco and Sambos,

but the ride that you're getting ready to

take Columbia on and with your comic books

and with what you're trying to do to

help bring other comic book artists,

other comic book writers

along with you in colombia to a bigger

stage and dude let's make it happen all

right that helps me a lot and it

will be like a like a kind of

training for me on on this podcast bar

and speaking to

I like it, dude.

And if you want to do another podcast,

I know a couple of them who also

work with Indie Comics,

and I will shoot them your information and

your name and see if you can get

on one of their podcasts as well.

That way you can, A,

you can practice some more English with

them, and B,

you can talk about your work some more

with them as well.

All right?

Of course.

That will be a very helpful tool for

me.

All right.

I'll shoot them a message when we're done

here tonight.

But let's do some rapid fire questions,

all right?

OK.

Favorite comic artist?

I got a feeling I know what you're

going to say.

David Finch.

I knew it.

Indie comics or mainstream?

Depends on the character and the artist.

Okay.

Dream collaboration.

DC.

DC Comics.

Okay.

Do you prefer physical copies or digital?

Physical copies.

Oh, same, same.

It's nothing like holding a comic book in

your hand.

Or a book.

Or a book.

Exactly.

All right.

Alejandro, now's the time.

I want you to sell...

alejandro and draco and sambos to

everybody and then i want you to tell

them where they can find you on social

media all right yeah um you can find

all my comics on amazon i have three

comics there and you will see my social

media in instagram as draco and sambos inc

uh alejo rosales

In TikTok as Drakensambosing.

And in YouTube I have my Drakensambosing

TV channel.

There you will see my streamings.

My own streamings.

And my process.

I like it.

So for everybody wondering,

I will have all those links down in

the description.

It might be in the description now if

you look at the YouTube version of it.

All the links are already in the

description.

And when this goes live on both YouTube

and podcast platforms,

you will be able to find all his

links to his social media there as well.

Alejandro,

I can't thank you enough for giving us

the opportunity to talk to you tonight and

to let us introduce you to the rest

of the world, man.

It was such a blast to have you

on and to talk to you and help

you practice English, man.

I loved it.

It was fun.

You did so good.

so yes and i thank you also i

appreciate that you that you give me these

these chances on the podcast to get myself

known and

It's my first time in an English-speaking

podcast.

It's my first time in a podcast in

general, not only in English.

You did great.

You really did, dude.

And like I said,

I'm going to pass your information over to

a friend of mine who does something

similar to what I do.

He focuses a little bit more on the

process.

So you can talk about how the process

more with him,

because that's kind of what he does.

And but I'll shoot you his information or

shoot him your information and let you

have a conversation with him and see if

you can't get a date figured out for

you to appear on his podcast as well.

but ladies and gentlemen this is what it's

all about creators stepping up building

their own worlds and putting their vision

out into the universe alejandro is proof

that you don't need permission to start

you just need to drive to keep it

going make sure you follow his journey

support his work and keep your eyes on

what he's building with draco and sambos

It is going to be big,

not just for himself,

but for the country of Colombia and

possibly the world soon.

And to everyone out there chasing

something of your own, keep building,

keep creating, and keep pushing forward.

Ladies and gentlemen,

this has been the USDN Podcast,

where indie comics come to life.

The Council of Nerds is adjourned.

Y'all be safe out there.

Thank you, Jeff.

Yes, sir.

Alejandro, I'm going