The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

🎙️ USDN Podcast: “Memoirs of the Morbid: The Orange Edition” — An Evening with Grant Lankard & The Ghoulmaster

Step inside the crypt with The Chairman of The United States Department of Nerds (USDN Podcast) as he sits down with Grant Lankard, creator of Beowulf, League of Cryptids, and the haunting horror anthology Memoirs of the Morbid.

This episode dives deep into The Orange Edition — the latest volume in Lankard’s macabre series inspired by classic 1950s EC horror. Expect twisted morality tales, dark humor, and ghoulish satire, all introduced by the delightfully dreadful host, The Ghoulmaster.

💀 In this chillingly fun interview, we cover:

The eerie origins of Memoirs of the Morbid and its EC horror inspiration
How Grant transitioned from graphic design to full-time indie comics
A behind-the-scenes look at The Orange Edition — including stories like Cubicle of the Damned, Bubble, Fiona’s Fantasy Forest, and Invaders
The incredible creative team: Brian K. Morris, Will Conway, Alberto Pessoa, Samir Simao, and David Schuler
The challenges (and joys) of creating a modern horror anthology in 2025
Tips for indie creators ready to bring their own nightmares to life

If you love Creepshow, Tales from the Crypt, or EC Comics classics, this episode is for you! 🕯️

🧠 Featuring:
Grant Lankard — Creator / Writer

🎙️ Hosted by: The Chairman of USDN Podcast

📘 Back the Campaign:

🧡 Memoirs of the Morbid: The Orange Volume on Kickstarter →

👉 https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mrgrantastic/memoirs-of-the-morbid-orange-volume?ref=discovery&term=memoirs%20of%20the%20morbid&total_hits=3&category_id=249

📸 Follow Grant Lankard on Instagram:
👉 https://www.instagram.com/gwlankard/

🪦 Follow the Team:
🌐 www.RisingTide.pub
🌐 www.willconway.co.uk

🎧 Subscribe for more indie comic interviews, horror spotlights, and creative deep dives — only on The USDN Podcast.

#USDNPodcast, #MemoirsoftheMorbid, #GrantLankard, #TheGhoulmaster, #horrorcomics  , #indiecomics , #kickstartercomics , #comicbookinterview , #horrorpodcast , #independentcomics , #supportindiecomics , #eccomics , #TalesFromTheCrypt, #creepshow , #usdn , #indiehorror , #horroranthology , #usdnshorts , #comiccreators , #thechairman , #horrorfans 

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.

Thanks for watching!

what is up everybody and welcome to the

united states department of nerds where we

are for the people by the people and

of the people and tonight we step into

the cobweb corridors of horror nostalgia a

place where the ink drink drips darker

than blood and the punch lights

punchlines bite harder than the ghouls who

tell them.

Our guest tonight is Grant Lankard,

the creative mind behind Beowulf,

League of Cryptids,

and the Haunted Horror Anthology that we

will be talking about tonight,

Memoirs of the Morbid.

And this is going to be the Orange

Edition.

Grant, welcome to the show, my guy.

Hey, how's it going tonight?

We're going

Pretty good over here.

Grant, first of all, welcome to the USDN.

And let's rewind a little bit back to

the nineteen nineties when comic creators

were like rock stars.

And so what was it like growing up

surrounded by that kind of energy and what

particular comic book kind of made you

grab a hold of that and bring it

into what this book is today?

Um, yeah, I didn't, I didn't really read,

I didn't really read too much horror comic

books when I was a kid.

It was, um, okay.

More superhero.

Um, as far as what was it like?

Um, yeah,

the nineties were an exciting time for

comic books.

Um, you could,

you could get comic books almost

everywhere.

Um,

For those who don't know,

there was what's called a speculator boom

in comic books,

which means that even really bad comic

books were selling hundreds of thousands

of copies.

To put this into perspective...

The highest selling comic book of last

year probably would have gotten canceled

in nineteen ninety three due to low sales.

Like it's true.

That's how that's how crazy it was at

that time.

You also had a lot of really exciting

creators,

at least creators that at the time I

thought were really exciting.

Some of their some of their work has

not aged yet.

as great.

Give us an example of a few of

them that you would kind of,

you enjoyed in that timeframe.

Well, I mean, some of them,

some of them that have aged pretty well

would be like Jim Lee, Mike Mignola.

Some of the ones that haven't aged as

well,

I would say would be like Rob Liefeld.

Still can't draw feet.

Right.

Um, and I mean, and that's to say,

I mean, um,

there's definitely a lot of excitement in

Rob Liefeld's drawings.

Um, they were definitely different.

They, um,

he definitely was not following any trends

or anything like that, but, um,

Yeah,

pure artistic skill was not really great.

That's true,

but he could put together a good story

with Youngbloods.

He helped bring image to the map with

Todd McFarlane.

He's one of the original founding fathers

over there,

along with Jim Lee and a few others.

So I give him his credit.

Without him,

I don't think we'd get the image we

have today, and that image is booming big.

Right.

Yeah, I didn't mention Todd McFarlane.

His comic books were kind of in the

middle, like not really bad,

but not really good either.

I also should mention Eric Larson.

I really loved Savage Dragon when I was

a kid.

Okay, yep.

He was there when Image,

when they first started.

Oh, no.

I will put Todd McFarlane on a pedestal

because I am still reading Spawn today.

Oh, really?

I've never wavered.

Even though he doesn't draw it anymore?

He still does issues.

He still does covers.

He still does some writing.

I think he kind of steps in when

the story needs a new direction.

I think he kind of steps in,

starts it on a new path,

in a new direction,

and then kind of hands it off to

another writer to let them do their thing.

But yeah, he still does some writing.

He still does a lot of covers and

stuff like that.

You might be right about that.

I don't know if that's official or not.

He's in a multi-million dollar business

right now,

so I can't really knock the guy if

he wants to take his hands off and

kind of give it off to some of

these amazing creators that he does have

working on it.

But let's dive into a little bit more

of

what you're bringing to us today.

So you've, you started,

your very first book was Beowulf, correct?

Or was it the other one?

Okay.

Give us a little bit about what Beowulf

was for you.

You mean my comic book or the inspiration

for it?

Yours and kind of what, what inspired it?

Yeah,

so the comic book is essentially the guy

you learned about in high school but

reincarnated in modern times.

Now, why Beowulf in particular?

I remember as a kid,

my parents had one of those like time

life books, uh,

different fairy tales and myths and stuff.

And I remember reading the Beowulf story

in that.

And what struck me at about it was

the fact that it reminded me of like

a superhero story.

Um, and I remember thinking like,

you know what, why, why not?

Um,

kind of combine the two.

And that's why Beowulf stood out for me.

Now,

a lot of people have mentioned to me

that from a marketing standpoint,

it was a good idea to do Beowulf

just because as much as everybody's heard

of Beowulf,

but there aren't a lot of modern versions

of Beowulf.

I can't think of any really off the

top of my head.

Well, there's a few here and there.

There's the Angelina Jolie one from like

the early two thousands.

We don't count that one.

As opposed to Robin Hood or King Arthur

or Hercules,

which get revamped once every couple

years.

Beowulf,

pretty much very rarely gets adapted.

That's true.

And I've seen the more modern...

I thought the Grendel,

the more modern version of Grendel was

really good.

I did not enjoy the Beowulf as much.

But... So let's do this.

So this book...

has kind of been a bridge from the

golden age of comics into like a modern

horror anthology.

So how did this evolve with the red

edition, blue edition,

and now the orange edition?

And kind of why did you go with

color schemes?

And what does this new chapter bring to

the table for you?

So I went with a color scheme as

opposed to volume one, volume two,

volume three,

because all of the stories are

self-contained.

I didn't want people to think they had

to read volume one and then read volume

two and then read volume three.

Yeah, that makes sense.

You can read these books in any order,

or it doesn't even matter if you read

volume one at all you can just go

straight into volume three or the the

orange volume okay no i i think that's

a cool concept and a cool way to

do it versus uh making an anthology where

kind of one story continues into the next

book and stuff like that kind of like

how hello darkness does for boom studios

yeah so no that's a really cool concept

i like that and so

Let's talk about what's coming up inside

the Orange Edition.

You got four stories plus a bonus segment.

And each is like its own little twisted

mirror.

Let's start with the Cubicle of the

Damned.

And I feel that title in my chest

every day.

I walk into my office.

But give us a little bit of background

on that particular story.

so so all of the stories are i

would say are there's a lot of besides

being a lot of horror there's also a

lot of humor in this uh anthology and

i would say of all of them i

think uh cubicle of the damned probably

has the most humor

I was describing it as kind of like

Office Space meets The Exorcist.

In other words,

it takes place in an office,

but it's got a lot of horror elements

in it.

Essentially, the idea is there's a young,

like,

twenty-something kid who has his first job

After college,

he gets a job in an office,

and he realizes slowly but surely

something in the office is kind of

draining people of their life force.

And, you know, people are telling him, oh,

that's just what working in an office will

do.

And eventually he finds out that there's

something supernatural behind how his

coworkers all kind of look like they're

having the life drained out of them.

So this to me was probably my favorite

story out of them because I can relate

to it a hundred percent working in an

office like that.

Granted, I love my day job,

but there are days,

especially like today where the weather is

like hot garbage outside and you're stuck

inside watching it through the window,

just pour down rain.

And it is slow.

It's our slow time of year with the

holidays coming up.

So yeah, that one was,

that would definitely resonated with me a

whole lot bud but um so up next

we have um the bubble it's kind of

like a time travel a scientist and what

he believes is a caveman with shocking

origins right this one was also really

good like and i think i got it

but i'm not sure i'm pretty sure i

did but kind of what inspired that one

and

for you?

First of all,

I should note that I didn't write that

one.

That one was written by William Conway.

What I enjoyed about it was,

like you said, I think I got it,

but I'm not a hundred percent sure.

I like

kind of that ambiguity where, like,

at the end, you're not quite sure.

Yeah.

You think you have an idea of what

happened,

but you're not a hundred percent sure.

No, I'm right there with you.

And it was a very fun one.

And I was like,

i kind of got it from the beginning

on that one but i didn't want to

like just speculate right away i wanted to

see where it was going and uh i

enjoyed it immensely the writer on that

one nailed a fun story yeah it's a

little bit spooky it has a little bit

of um like the jewels burn kind of

aesthetic um

not just in terms of of the story

but also you know just the whole kind

of vibe of it yeah a hundred percent

because i mean he's working on time travel

yeah so you get that element to it

and then him just all of a sudden

finding this random stranger that he

decides he needs to help

And that was what was weird about it.

I'm like,

why would he decide that he needs to

particularly help this one specific

person?

So I thought that was interesting.

There had to be a draw there.

So a really good one.

And next up was Fiona's Fantasy Forest.

A children's host revisiting her imaginary

world going horribly wrong.

Kind of like Mr.

Rogers meets Silent Hill here.

Right.

So the idea behind this story is a

children's host.

Think of like either Pee Wee Herman or

like Mr. Rogers or somebody like that.

They take a break from going to their

imaginary land.

And one day they decide, you know what,

I'm going to go back to the imaginary

land.

And all hell has broken loose in this.

in their imaginary world where, you know,

everybody's fighting,

everybody's having a war,

a revolution is broken out.

Um, some of the background characters, uh,

have gotten kind of evil in, uh,

different kinds of ways.

Um, I'm trying,

I'm trying hard to describe it without

giving too much.

Um,

so if you're a comic book reader and

if you have read Scotty Young's,

I hate fairy land,

It's very much that type of vibe with

fantasy creatures.

Like Dora the Explorer's world exploded.

And all the creatures all of a sudden

hate each other.

And they're pillaging villages.

They've broken off and they have their

own...

Like the elves are one thing and the

animals are another thing.

The lumberjack is like menacing to

everybody.

It was a fun, eclectic, wild story.

And I enjoyed that one immensely.

It very much gave me Scotty Young.

I hate fairyland vibes.

And I was there all about it.

And I can't wait to see it fully

colored because I got a feeling that's

going to be a spectacular edition once

that one is colored.

So, and then up next, we had invaders,

which it was a hundred percent complete

when I got,

when you sent it over to me,

but I kind of got what it was

about,

but it's a sci-fi horror space survival

with alien confrontation.

It kind of,

it was giving me that the cinematic feels

of like predator or alien or something

along those lines.

So what can you tell us about that

when it kind of like,

what was some of the inspiration behind

it?

So I didn't write that one either.

My friend wrote that one, but, um, yeah,

so it's, it's, uh,

you're definitely going to get, um, alien,

um, vibes from it.

It's a, a woman is on a spaceship.

She discovers that she's not alone on the

spaceship.

There's also an alien on there.

Um,

And it has kind of a shocking ending.

I'm not going to give away what the

ending is, though.

So if you guys are sensing a trend

here that all of these stories kind of

have like a twist ending,

that is true to...

the original uh ec comics like tales from

the crypt or creep show that's that was

very that was coming up next this is

a good segue you had a sponsor for

this comic book with job corpse and the

staffing agency for the post living which

is genius marketing and the whole comic

book is hosted by this ghoulish figure

reminiscent of the crypt keeper which

be honest probably my favorite part of the

entire thing because he brought that light

humor to each story as it was kicking

off and i was always a huge fan

of the tv show so kind of where

did your idea of that come from was

it the ec comments and the creep shows

and that kind of stuff yeah uh i

mean he's kind of a parody of of

uh the the crypt keeper he's maybe

he's maybe halfway between a parody and an

homage, but, um, uh, yeah.

So, uh,

basically he's like the Crypt Keeper if

the Crypt Keeper was really bad at his

job and he's way more worried about,

you know, what,

like how big his trailer is then.

Um, uh, he is a diva.

Yeah, exactly.

Yeah.

No, that was really fun, dude.

Who come up with Job Corps?

So my wife and I kind of were...

So that story, or the bonus section,

was co-written by my wife and I.

my wife is a, um,

is a pretty good writer.

She just, she doesn't like,

how do I put this?

She doesn't like putting the effort into

getting her stuff published.

So, um,

she writes a lot of stories that kind

of, um, kind of,

she doesn't really submit anywhere.

So, um,

she came up with this.

Well,

I would say we both came up with

this idea.

Like we were kind of bouncing ideas off

of each other.

Um,

and originally where the idea came from

was she, she went into a,

a pharmacy to get her prescription.

And she, when she came back out,

she was like, Oh my God,

you should have seen this girl.

She, she,

she looks like they propped up a zombie.

And so we,

we started like bouncing ideas off of each

other.

Like, you know, what if,

what if there was a staffing company that

provided zombies?

And I was like, yeah,

this could be a section in Memoirs of

the Morbid.

And he said, well,

instead of making it a story,

wouldn't it be better if it was like

an infomercial?

And yeah, that's where the idea came from.

Dude, it's brilliant.

And like I said,

the stories were fantastic,

but I enjoyed seeing the ghoul in between

complaining about his trailer,

complaining to his manager and then

sponsoring the job corpse and those little

vignettes that you did between the

stories.

Thanks.

Probably my favorite part.

So shout out to your wife, too, man,

which leads us to the creators.

So you've got a pretty good team of

creators here,

an international team for sure,

from Pittsburgh to Brazil, London.

And then you worked with Brian Morris,

who is your editor and horror

co-conspirator.

Exactly.

Yeah.

So tell us a little bit about that

team and how this team came together for

this.

So a lot of them.

So actually, crazily enough,

William Conway was a recommendation from

an artist who actually ended up not not

finishing his story for the book.

Like there was no drama or anything.

He just didn't have time to.

Yeah, no, that happens all the time.

It's it's just a part of the business.

So, but, um, William, he came on,

he told, he told me the concept.

I liked it.

Uh, I told him to,

to write it up.

And then, uh, Alberto Pessoa, uh,

the artist on bubble, he was, he,

he was awesome.

He's worked on, uh,

memoirs of the morbid before.

He's always really easy to get along with.

He, he's a great artist.

He has a full time teaching gig.

So, uh,

He can't do...

He can't do a regular monthly comic book,

but something small like this that had

really relaxed deadlines,

he was great for.

Now, obviously, we mentioned my wife,

Angie Dudas.

Obviously,

I know her because she's my wife.

And like I said, I...

you know, it used to bother me that,

that, you know,

my wife had all these ideas for stories

and then she never really put them out,

but you know,

it doesn't seem to bother her.

So I don't,

I think she's happy writing these stories

but not necessarily getting them

published.

It's her release and how she blows off

some steam,

sits down with a notebook and writes out

some stories.

That's a really cool way to do it.

I'm pretty sure a lot of people have

a lot of good stories just sitting on

a shelf somewhere that nobody will ever

see.

So she was actually going to write a

much longer story in this story.

And she just said, like, you know,

I don't know if I have the,

if I want to do that.

So we did this story as kind of

a compromise.

It's a great compromise.

It was a lot of fun.

Thanks.

So then I did the story and the

art for cubicle of the damned.

Um, uh, Cuba,

I did the art and the, the,

the story for cubicle of the dam and

the story definitely comes from me.

Um,

Definitely comes from my days working in a

cubicle.

I know you said you love your day

job.

I really do.

So I'm retired,

and then I got a day job that's

almost identical to what I did when I

retired.

So for me,

it's kind of like I love going to

work.

There's days where I'm sitting in the

office,

and it just sucks the life out of

you because there's not a whole lot going

on.

And it's just an ebb and flow of

things.

So that was more my experience from

working in an office was, yeah,

feeling like the life was getting sucked

out of me.

So then as far as, like I said,

one of the artists dropped out and didn't

finish their story.

So I actually, I don't know,

I got the idea for Fiona's Fantasy Forest

and thankfully Samir Samoa was free.

So I wrote down this idea and I

got him to do the art for it.

And...

No, I mean, they really nailed because,

I mean,

it feels like it blown in the nineteen

seventies with the original EC comics and

the original creep shows.

But it felt modern as well.

And which shout out to EC comics,

by the way,

they are producing some really great in

the horror anthology series right now.

And they dip their toes into to sci

fi as well.

And they have some really great stuff out

there.

And I know I recommend EC Comets all

the time,

just simply because I think they're that

good.

Ani Press now has them.

So they're underneath the Ani Press

umbrella,

but they are producing some really good

stuff right now.

So, I mean,

if you're going to be inspired by a

series,

EC Comets is definitely the perfect

choice.

Yeah,

it feels like it's making a comeback,

right?

Oh, it's huge.

Yeah, absolutely.

They're selling really well.

Their specialty is anthology comics,

and I enjoy horror anthology,

anthology sci-fi, and that kind of stuff,

like the Hello Darkness from Boom Studios.

I feel like I'm getting a little bit

more for my money,

even though I have to come back the

following month to get the next one to

continue the story.

And I'm okay with that because I enjoy

the artists in those books.

I enjoy the storytellers.

I know before they did Epitaphs of the

Abyss,

it ended and they started Catacombs of

Torment.

But within...

Epitaphs of the Abyss,

Karina Beko is writing a story called

Blood Type,

which now has spun out of Epitaphs of

the Abyss into its own comic book,

which is the very first time that EC

Comets has pulled an anthology story out

of their anthology comic book and gave it

its own story.

And that's being written by Karina Beko,

who is an absolutely phenomenal writer.

And it's such a good story.

So I think they're really on top of

their game right now.

And Ani Press has Rick and Morty as

well.

I don't know how many people enjoy Rick

and Morty the comic books,

but the comic books are a lot of

fun.

And I know they're ending in December.

They will print their last issue of Rick

and Morty in December.

Oh, wow.

Okay.

It's a little heartbreaking,

but we'll see what comes of the comic

book after this.

but let's see you also had a david

schuler did you mention him already so

dave was a friend of mine from college

and um i think we we we said

earlier this comic book is almost finished

we're still waiting for his story which um

The only reason why his story is taking

a little bit longer than we thought it

was going to be is because his wife

just had twins.

Oh, wow.

Congrats to him, man.

That's wild.

Can you imagine what that poor lady went

through?

Right.

So that's why he's very busy at the

moment.

But I...

him confident.

He still had, he,

he's gotten a lot of work done and

I'm very confident that he's going to get

the rest of the story finished like in

the next month or so.

Sounds good to me, man.

I'm excited to get it in my hands

fresh off the presses when it is released.

Now let's talk about the Kickstarter a

little bit.

And, um,

What's it been like for you in running?

I know this isn't your first radio when

it comes to Kickstarters,

but what's it been like for you to

run a Kickstarter?

What are some of the lessons learned from

your perspective?

Oh, God.

I wouldn't even know where to begin.

I do feel like it's getting harder.

I don't know if you ran a Kickstarter

recently,

but

it, it does feel like, you know,

I'll do the same amount of promotion and

get less, um, less of a,

I don't know what the word for it

is less, you know, bang for my buck.

You know, when I,

like it used to be, you know,

I could send out a newsletter and, uh,

you know,

get four or five backers from that.

And now I'm lucky to get like one,

you know what I mean?

Yeah.

Um,

As far as what all have I learned?

I mean,

the main thing is if you're going into

Kickstarter thinking that people will

gravitate to it on their own,

they're not going to,

you have to be the one doing the

promoting.

Yeah.

Have you dipped your toes into any of

the digital marketing side from Instagram

or Facebook?

I want to say even Kickstarter allows you

to do digital marketing from,

from the platform.

You mean like paid advertising?

Yes, like paid advertisement.

I haven't.

I would like to... Well, okay,

that's not true.

I have done it in the past.

I don't feel as if it's been super

effective.

And I think at least part of that

is because I don't think that I'm very

good at it.

Yeah.

I don't...

It's a weird one.

I wouldn't say that you're not necessarily

good at it.

It's I think,

really putting yourself into it to do it,

I guess is what I'm looking for.

Maybe.

Yeah.

Because I know I've seen other kit

starters who have done the digital

promotion stuff.

And I see their stuff everywhere.

Like I can't get away from it.

It just is there.

So I don't know.

That's definitely something I would look

into.

I mean,

I've not ever run a Kickstarter yet.

That's an announcement for much later down

the road.

But I have a notebook that's compiling

notes right now on a series that I'm

going to be working on.

So that's the bit,

the big advice I would give to people

who want to do Kickstarter.

Um,

just go and take a look at Kickstarters

that you think are successful or maybe

attainable.

Like look at what they did,

maybe even back a few comic books that

you're not that interested in just so that

you can follow along and see like, Oh,

so he did this, this, this, and this.

Um, and like you said, take notes.

Um,

I would also recommend Tyler James.

He has a podcast called Comics Launch.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend...

He also has a paid tutorial that you

can pay extra for to do that.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend that,

but I would recommend listening to his

podcast because I think you learn most of

what you need to know from

from the podcast.

Um, yeah.

So I will say this.

I know, um, Bruno Catarina,

who's been on the show a few times,

he has a free lessons learned or lessons

that he's learned from Kickstarter.

It's now in its second volume.

So if you sign up for Bruno's, um,

what's it called?

His, um, what's his name?

Bruno Catarino.

He's out of the UK,

but he has a monthly newsletter that he

sends out,

and you can go to some of the

back issues of his newsletter,

and he has a link to some lessons

learned in there.

I think he's on volume two now,

and I think he's got a whole lot

of – Do you know his last name?

Yeah, C-A-T-A-R-I-N-O, Catarino.

He's a cat guy too, just like us.

Cool.

I'm always in favor of stuff like that.

People who are doing the work and have

recommendations.

If you want to see a huge and

I do mean a huge Kickstarter I think

it's in the top one percent and it

made like eighty grand on his was Dark

Pink Comics.

with Chris Ford, very successful.

And he did a lot of digital marketing

for his as well.

And another thing I like for kickstarters

to do is give updates.

So once it's been launched,

I enjoy personally seeing the updates of

the comic book kind of like,

how you can have the ability to go

in and post updates and stuff like that

i like seeing those it just gives lets

me know like i know the writers and

the artists are actually working on the

book and it because you hear a lot

of bad stuff come from kickstarter oh you

know like oh they were just there for

money and they didn't produce anything and

that that put a lot of hesitation on

myself when i first started supporting

kickstarters

But thankfully,

I got over that pretty quickly,

and I've worked with a lot of great

people like yourself with Kickstarters and

having them on the show.

It's definitely put me at ease to be

more willing to back indie creators like

yourself.

Sorry, my camera's jostling.

I have to plug my computer in.

Oh, no, you're good, man.

Yeah.

So like I said,

this is not my first Kickstarter.

This is now my – how many have

I done now?

Probably closer to twelfth Kickstarter.

But every other Kickstarter that I've done

has been finished when I put it up

on Kickstarter.

Unfortunately...

And I'll fudge that a little bit.

Sometimes it won't be completely done.

I'll have a little bit of lettering left

to do or something.

This is definitely...

The most work that I've had to do

left on the Kickstarter.

But really... This is...

Like I said,

I do have a history of fulfilling all

of these Kickstarters.

So if you're nervous about the fact that

it's not a hundred percent done, you know,

I just want to say,

don't worry about it.

It's definitely going to get done.

I definitely have confidence in Dave.

Yeah, no, I'm with,

I feel the same way you do now

about that because I've had some comments

that haven't even like,

they're in the very early stages,

but I have a hundred percent faith in

the creator of that,

that comic book that it's going to get

made because you, you,

you can hear it in their voices.

You know that this is their passion

project and they're going to do what they

have to do to make sure it gets

back.

So.

Thank you.

Yeah, man.

Um,

So with that,

before we let you crawl back into the

crypt,

where can people find Memoirs of the

Morbid, the Orange Edition,

and where can they keep up with you

on future releases?

So Memoirs of the Morbid is available on

Kickstarter.

Hopefully you'll put a link somewhere in

the show notes or in the chat.

It's out there already.

I've got it shared across all my platforms

so they can find it easily.

Cool.

As far as me,

if you want to keep on following me,

I have a really distinct name,

Grant Lankard.

The last time I checked,

I'm the only Grant Lankard on any of

the social medias.

So, yeah,

I'm on all the major social medias except

for Twitter because I hated Twitter.

But, yeah, follow me on any of those.

And most importantly, my sub stack.

I do have a sub stack if you

want to follow me there.

Perfect.

But yeah, I have everything linked.

I have your Instagram linked.

I have the Kickstarter linked below all

the posts about Memoirs of the Morbid.

Before I let you go, though,

describe this new volume using one

terrible pun that the Ghoulmaster would

say.

Don't make a grave mistake by missing it.

Love it.

So with that, everybody.

I am going to go ahead and announce

right now.

So if you didn't stay to the end

or if you're listening later on October,

I'm going to have a bonus show that

I did not include on my calendar for

the month.

And I did that because I wanted to

have one last surprise for everybody.

So if you're a fan of cosplay and.

If you're a fan of comic cons,

if you're a fan of zombie movies,

if you're a fan of the old eighties,

be real horror movies like I am that

are just full of the blood and the

guts and the zombies and the fun nostalgic

of those types of movies,

I will have the creators of zombie con.

Volume one live here on the United States

Department of Nerds on thirty October at

seven p.m.

Eastern Standard Time.

We are going to have a blast talking

all things zombie con and how they made

their own indie horror movie on a budget

about the size of your grandma's Lincoln

Cadillac.

So tune in for that one.

You're not going to want to miss it.

Grant,

welcome to the United States Department of

Nerds.

You're now officially a member of the

Council of Nerds.

And with that, everybody,

be good and be safe out there.

And we will see you on the thirtieth.

We are out of here.

Y'all be safe.