The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

Legacy Rising: Building Gods, Monsters & Myth with Gary Seaward

A story carried since 2008 finally takes shape.

This week on The USDN Podcast, we welcome creator and artist Gary Seaward to discuss Legacy: Idols & Bones — a new indie comic universe blending superhero mythology, sci-fi scale, and horror-driven consequences.

We explore the origins of the world, the characters shaping its future, and the Kickstarter campaign launching Issues #1 and #2.

From Eidolon and Carcass to Pulse, Widow-Maker, and Re’Ordain — this is a deep dive into building modern indie mythology from the ground up.

🔗 Kickstarter Pre-Launch:
 https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/garyseaward/legacy-idols-and-bones-issues-1-and-2

🔗 Read Issue #1:
 https://globalcomix.com/c/legacy-idols-bones

The USDN Podcast — Where Indie Comics Come to Life.

#IndieComics, #ComicPodcast, #USDNPodcast, #KickstarterComics, #ComicCreators, #CrowdfundedComics, #IndieStorytelling

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.

Please forgive me again.

I am still a little congested,

but we are going to get through this

with Gary here.

But let's dive into it.

So some stories wait.

They live in sketchbooks and late night

ideas in the quiet persistence of creators

who know the world they're building.

just hasn't had its moment yet for gary

that moment has finally arrived legacy

idols and bones isn't just a comic it's

the unleashing of a universe more than a

decade in the making a brutal collision of

superhero mythology sci-fi dread and

horror

fueled violence wrapped in an unapologetic

spirit of your favorite nineteen nineties

comic energy.

Today we sit down with the creator behind

the chaos to explore the birth of a

new legacy,

the cost of building gods in a broken

world.

Ladies and gentlemen,

the Council of Nerds is now in session.

Gary, welcome to the USDA, my friend.

Thank you for having me.

Thank you for having me on a Saturday.

Dude,

I told you Saturdays are for my friends

in the UK.

That's what we're here to do.

Even on Valentine's Day, right?

Yeah, my wife's fine about it.

It's okay.

Mine's at work right now, so we're good.

But let's dive into it.

So this idea has lived since two thousand

and eight.

Why has kept this book alive and why

is now that perfect time?

Um, yeah,

I'd say probably around two thousand late,

certainly where the designs for the

characters sort of started popping into my

head.

Um, and it was just me drawing,

you know,

Eidolon and carcass and just sort of

going, oh, that's quite a cool character.

That's cool character.

Um,

I don't think I didn't even have a

story then.

Um,

by the time that I started thinking about

the story, it was probably,

it was literally just a rip off of

the death of Superman.

Um,

And there's still a lot of that in

there, um,

but it's definitely gone off in other

directions.

Um, but yeah, so, I mean,

I always knew that it was going to

be sort of quite a few issues long

and that's, that's the problem, isn't it?

Instead of trying to find the time to

sort of go,

how on earth would I do something that's

several issues long?

Um, and I think,

I don't know when it would have been

probably around,

around the sort of,

probably just before that,

I did actually draw, I think,

thirteen pages of it,

and I absolutely hated it.

It was just like, nah, this is rubbish.

I wasn't good enough at what I'd done.

And that completely went to the side.

I think I put those pages into the

deluxe PDF version of issue one,

so that people can still see my years

of where that came from.

And then,

It would have been all the way to,

what would it have been, in twenty twenty.

And the horrible,

the even worse C word of Covid.

Yeah.

And I was furloughed off work the entire

time.

And I was just like, where's that comic?

I wanted to do that comic.

I'm sat at home.

I'm literally sat at home.

doing nothing so this is twenty twenty and

I did I think I drew about twelve

pages and I had another twelve pages that

were all in the various levels of laid

out and pencil etched up things like that

and then you know furlough came to an

end and and you're back to work and

you go okay it didn't happen push it

to the side push it to the side

don't worry about it

And then it would have only been probably

about a year ago,

maybe a year and a half by now,

because obviously I'm on issue two.

Well,

issue two is done and I'm working on

issue three,

that my hours changed at work.

So I used to do full-time hours and

now I'm home two days a week.

I do part-time.

And I was like, what about those pages,

those horrible pages that I drew?

Let's have a look at them.

Yeah.

on the computer and you have a look

and you go do you know what these

aren't as bad as as i remember i

quite like this so that would have

obviously been you know twenty four pages

of the first issue and i said no

i need to i need to prove to

potential readers that i'm serious so i

thought i'm gonna lump issue two in with

issue one so technically issue one it's

forty eight pages of story

A lot of stories.

Is actually what I wrote for a friend

of mine to do the script for the

first issue, the first two issues.

So I was like,

I'm going to be serious about this.

I'm going to finish what I've already

done,

but I'm then going to draw another twenty

two pages and get that all into issue

one to prove to myself that I'm serious

about doing it.

Um, so yeah,

so that was what I did.

I got, you know, yeah.

Pages, uh, printed is.

Did a Kickstarter.

I wouldn't say it did fantastic,

but it got, you know, covered my goals,

covered print costs and at the end of

the day, that's all you can hope for.

Right.

Yeah.

And it gave me enough sort of motivation

to go, yeah, I'm carrying on with this.

I'm, you know, say issue two,

I'm always going to have the entire issue

drawn before I put it on Kickstarter.

This won't be like it's fifty percent,

it's seventy percent, none of that.

It's a hundred percent.

That issue is drawn and it is now

going on Kickstarter and I'm already on

the next one.

nice i like that so you mentioned that

you brought that off the shelf and you

know that that makes me think of how

many artists and how many writers out

there have like just what could be a

banger just sitting on their shelf or

saved to a hard drive somewhere you know

what i'm saying yeah it's crazy to think

about it was just sat on my computer

and in the back of my head it's

always there you know it's always there

going and especially um

As I say,

I do freelance design work home two days

a week, and it's very sporadic,

the amount of work you get in.

Work was there, I was doing it,

and I was pushing myself trying to get

work coming in,

but you're still sitting around,

you're watching TV, you just sort of go,

and then you just think,

why am I sitting here just watching TV?

There's that thing,

there's that thing back here.

Why am I not looking at that?

And now it's taken over.

So I'm not taking on any new work.

I've got a few existing clients,

so I'll still do work for them,

but this has taken over.

So as long as I've still got money

coming in from the part-time work I do

and things like that,

I can keep this going.

So you are a graphic designer by trade.

How did that professional background shape

the storytelling of Legacy?

I don't know if it's shaped the

storytelling at all.

I think if anything,

all it's really done is it's given me,

you know,

it means that I know exactly how to

Not just,

I don't know how to draw a comic,

you know,

that's the one thing I'm working on.

But as a graphic designer,

I know how to get my pages laid

up.

I know how to get things ready for

print.

I know sort of like, well,

this has got to be CMYK and,

you know,

I've got to make sure this is a

print ready file and stuff.

So, yeah,

it's certainly the time I've had at work

has made it a lot less stressful to

know exactly what I've got to do.

And it also means that I know printers

as well.

So I can contact printers and go, look,

you know what we, you know,

I've done some, you know,

so with you going to printer though,

that automatically puts you in a league of

your own and a step above others who

have to go out and find a printer.

You actually know a printer who does work

for you.

So that's really cool.

Yeah.

So through the company that I work for,

we can do very small limited runs and

I can certainly do my own like test

prints there and get them stapled and

guillotine down to size.

But we wouldn't do sort of a large

run.

But yeah,

I know several printers and I can get

several different prices for all different

things.

And go, come on, mate, come on.

Some built-in cheat code.

Look at you with the built-in cheat code.

let's talk about legacy here so legacy

idols and bones lives at the intersection

of superhero mythology sci-fi scale horror

consequences what defines the tone of this

universe tone's a difficult one i'd say

that what i'm trying to to do with

it as someone who's been reading comics

since i was and i still read superhero

comics now

but I'd say I read more sort of

horror comic, sci-fi comics,

is I want consequences in my comic.

I mean,

I absolutely love the MCU because I'm

forty seven and I came from an era

of when like comic book films were,

you know,

things like that were coming out.

That was so horrible.

Yeah, exactly.

So once the MCU.

We did get Blade in that era.

yeah you know we started getting the good

ones and the x-men came along and so

what i'm saying is like i i love

the mcu but it is aimed at you

know it's got that twelve a rating and

it's you know if you had a character

even a character like war machine if

you've got a character like war machine

out there with you know guns on his

shoulders people are gonna die there's

people dying

There's people accidentally getting in the

way.

There's, you know, things like that.

And so issue one starts with a character

who's very much a sort of machine type

character.

And he just opens fire on a beach.

And I don't care if you are Superman,

people on that beach are going to die.

You can get in and you can stop

that guy.

Yeah.

but it's, it's consequences.

You know,

if you've got these incredibly powerful

people running around, you see it in,

you know,

the boys and other things like that.

Um,

but the comic book is just so good.

Hopefully when it gets ready to finish,

that's the route they go is the comic

book route.

Cause that ended or the comic book was

amazing.

Yeah.

But I do want,

I want everything in my comic to be

sort of like, if this happened,

these are the consequences that would

would follow on from it and obviously

within that you know I want to have

action if I'm only getting to draw a

couple of days a week I mostly want

to be drawing cool stuff and there's

obviously there's of course stations and

there's you know people in buildings you

know just you know a chat you gotta

have that because it's still you've got to

push the story forward there was I think

this is actually one thing I forgot is

that

Before I got back into doing issue one,

I was reading an Avengers trade.

I can't remember who wrote it,

but I was reading an Avengers trade,

and you've got Thor and Captain America

and whoever else was with them.

and they rock up on this island,

and there's these, like, massive kaiju,

you know,

snakes and monsters and all this sort of

stuff, and I'm like, oh, okay, okay,

this is going to kick off.

There's going to be a big old,

good old, big old fight here.

Turn the page,

and Thor was standing on top of a

big snake-type creature,

holding Mjolnir in his hand, going, ha-ha,

we beat them.

Yeah, I don't like that.

I'm sorry, what?

There's like three pages of action missing

there.

And it was like,

let's go and have a discussion with Dr.

Doom.

I'm sorry.

I'm sorry.

What?

This is a comic.

This is a comic.

I want to see the massive fight with

the monsters.

That's the whole reason you buy the comic,

right?

Because you want that action.

You can still push a story forward during

the fight.

And if you're really good at it,

but if you are really good at it,

you can definitely push a story forward

with a fight.

That can be what is the story of

it.

But I literally was just like,

I cannot do this turn the page and

you've you've you've skipped action why

would you do that and I don't remember

anything else about that book because I

was just like that's horrible

And that would probably cost you fifteen

ninety nine.

I want to draw things that are like,

and trust me,

I wish I could draw big old cities

getting smashed up because in the first

issue it would have been set in a

city.

But my background drawing skills are not

that great yet.

So I ended up being in a quarry.

You took the Rob Liefeld method,

just draw it behind a rock.

But yeah,

that's one of the things I want from

my comic is big action,

but big action that has consequences.

And then everything in issue one,

all the characters that pop up, you know,

they're not just there for no reason.

So a character like Widowmaker in the

first issue, you're going to see her.

She's a badass.

I mean,

it sort of feels like maybe people think

she's just there to introduce Carcass,

which she is.

Obviously,

that's how I wanted to introduce him.

But she's not gone.

That character will come back.

Other things are happening.

And her motivations will also be continued

on.

Yeah.

Dude, I'm not going to lie.

Her introduction in the first book was

amazing.

Just her standing over a carcass with a

knife in her hand.

I was like, that is so badass.

So badass.

Dude,

there's a lot of really good pages in

that book.

The fight afterward was really good too.

But that one midsection of that page,

just phenomenal.

Thank you.

But let's keep it going.

So this legacy captures the spirit of the

nineties, which is amazing.

It's one of my favorite eras,

although everything was overprinted back

then.

But how did you keep that nostalgic feel

without it being like,

Well, let me rephrase that.

It captures the spirit of the nineties

without becoming nostalgic because this

doesn't feel like, yes,

it reads the nineties, but it, it doesn't,

you know what I'm saying?

I think that goes back to what I

just said about this Avengers comic.

You wouldn't have had that in the

nineties.

You know,

I love the fact that you can have

these fantastic stories in modern

traits and you know we both completely

agree that comedy is more than just

superheroes it's a genre it can be

absolutely anything and you can have you

know stories telling anything and you

didn't get so much that in the nineties

but I do think that like the action

it was just big and just out there

and it didn't try and strain itself to

sort of like well that's just not

realistic you know it was just it was

just a bit mad and like

I picked up Issue Spawn.

I was quite late getting into that comic.

It was Issue Forty-Five that I picked up.

I think I was about seventeen then.

And that just blew my mind,

because I was just like, what is this?

And I went back and got all the

various things,

and then bought all of the, you know,

up to about Issue One Hundred,

like just great Capullo.

So,

there's people out there who say the first

one hundred are the best run.

I will argue that from...

About three hundred Ford,

it gets good again because I picked it

up around.

So I picked up like I think I

have like the first ten issues.

I need to go back and get like

eleven through ninety nine or something

because I think I have issue one hundred.

But I got out of comic books for

a very long time just simply because.

I traveled a lot and I just did

not have the money to support a habit

like that, so I gave it up completely.

So,

but I did pick it up after I

settled back down and, um,

Now it's like short box after short box.

It's still one of my favorite reads.

I have the compendiums because, again,

I'm not going to track down all those

comic books that I don't have because

they're overly priced.

And I'm not going to track them down.

But the compendiums were there.

Grab the compendiums.

And I will admit, you know,

after one hundred,

it kind of went downhill and it pissed

up again.

I think about two fifty.

It did three hundred forty.

Yeah.

I've picked up issues, three hundred,

and then I have in the last certainly

couple of years,

I'll pick up the odd trade.

I think it's not that Spawn is a

bad comic.

I could never say that.

I mean,

just what Todd McFarlane has done for the

industry is unbelievable.

But it's fallen into the trap of it

became a massive IP and now Spawn,

to me,

would be exactly the same as me picking

up just like Spider-Man or Superman or

anything like that.

I'm sorry,

I just don't have an interest in now.

Not because they're bad,

but I'm done with it.

You know, I read them.

When I was in my... Well, I mean,

did split it,

because now you have the Scorched.

They did a Violator short run.

They have Salmon Twitch.

Yeah.

They have King Spawn.

They have Medieval Spawn.

God, they're always so well-drawn.

She Spawn is going to get her own

five-issue run.

Written by Gal Simone, I think, isn't it?

Huh?

I think it's written by Gal Simone.

I think so.

I think it is Gail Simone,

which is amazing.

All praise Gail Simone.

She is amazing.

And I'm so happy.

She's getting a lot of love.

It still comes back to me as like,

we're at a point where there's no

consequences.

There's no consequence with comics because

it's an IP.

It's massive.

You know, it happened to Spider-Man,

Superman, Batman,

Spawn is now in that list.

It's too much money for them to really

break the mold and try and do something

else.

Spawn broke that mold and became what it

wasn't.

You know what I'm saying?

It wasn't the Batman.

It wasn't the Superman.

It wasn't the X-Men.

Codman Farland broke the mold,

rebuilt the mold,

and now he is the mold.

Yeah.

Which is wild to think about what this

crazy indie company that popped up in,

I think, in nineteen ninety three.

It has become this massive market of

creator owned comics.

And that's what I still love about them.

Creator owned.

I mean,

my my favorite run would be Invincible.

Oh, phenomenal.

Phenomenal ride.

I hate the fact that that series ended,

and I love the fact that that series

ended.

Isn't it the way it should have been,

and when it should have?

Any more or any less would not have

been right.

I don't want to give spoilers to anyone

who's never read Invincible because that

is the one thing I would say.

It feels like every other show Invincible

gets brought up and I'm like,

read it before you watch it or if

you're watching it,

stop watching it and go read it.

Yeah, it managed to run, what,

a hundred and forty-four issues.

There were a few trades and things like

that.

You could get the trades or the...

I personally own the compendiums.

Like,

I went and got the entire compendium as

a set.

Gorgeous.

And it was just the art, the writing,

everything is just beautiful.

Yeah.

The animated series does not do it

justice.

No, it's before this,

obviously we were talking about, you know,

our kids and things.

My daughter will watch Invincible with me

and she will get very excited about a

new series coming along.

And she's like, Oh yeah, Invincible.

And I'm like,

Got all the trades out there.

I still think that the comic is better

than the animated series.

I think series two and three got better

than series one.

Oh, it got better.

Like a hundred times better as it went.

But

It's like, just go and read that.

So they also did The Walking Dead as

well.

And in the beginning of the TV series,

I loved it because they were doing Old

Man Carl.

And the Old Man Carl arc in The

Walking Dead is the main story.

And it was amazing.

It's one of the best written storylines

ever.

a comic book in my opinion it is

my favorite writer yeah definitely yeah

old man carl amazing amazing story arc and

then they killed him i was like what

the are y'all doing like you were building

his story this was his story it is

his story and you just killed him

And I turned it off,

and I haven't watched it again.

I only collect trades.

I very rarely pick up comics.

But I was collecting all the Walking Dead

trades,

and a series came along while the comic

was still going.

And I was speaking up with my friend

at work.

He was a massive fan of the show,

but he's not a comic book fan at

all.

And he would sort of say to me,

like, oh, is that from the comics?

And I'm like, yeah, some of it is,

some of it isn't.

It diverged off so much and became such

a massive thing that even though Kirkman

is my favorite writer,

I am pretty sure that I've never actually

finished reading The Walking Dead.

It was too much.

I only have the Old Man Carl arc

in trade paperback because I wasn't in

comics at the time.

When The Walking Dead started,

that's when I went and picked up the

first trade paperback of the Old Man Carl

arc and started reading it.

And I was just like,

I got to have this.

I got to go pick up more.

And I ended up collecting the whole arc

because it was just so good.

Like,

I could just pick it up and read

it and be disappointed in the TV series.

I still got the compendium,

the first compendium, which covers, like,

what, first forty-something issues?

Yeah.

I'm sure I got that signed by Charlie

Adler at one convention I went to.

Yeah, I'm sure he signed it.

Oh, that's really cool.

Yeah.

I did read the rest of the trades.

I literally only kept that compendium

because I just felt so burnt out.

by the series, easy.

I need space back on my shelves and

I wish I hadn't,

I should have kept him.

So what'd you think about them stripping

battle beast out of invincible and giving

him his own comic book run?

I,

I am absolutely delighted to see Kirkman

and oddly working together again.

Absolutely.

I think, you know, they, I wasn't,

I wasn't a fan of oddly on Spider-Man.

I'm a huge Hulk fan,

but I didn't like the Hulk role.

His art was great,

but it didn't let him run loose with

it like he could have.

So to see them back working together puts

joy in my heart.

People rave about the character of Battle

Beast, and I'm like, yeah, I like that.

I personally like it, you know,

because he's supposed to die.

His only goal in life is to die.

And he's got to go out fighting.

So, like,

it's amazing because his only goal is,

like, he will die in battle.

As well, you and I,

having read Invincible,

we know what happens to that character.

Oh, yeah.

And I'm just sort of like, well,

I know what happens to that character.

And I'm going to read it and I'm

going to enjoy the hell out of it

because it's one of my favourite writers

with one of my favourite artists.

But I think there's part of me that

wishes that they had come up with

something new and different rather than

delving into the world of Battle Beast,

as much as I'm enjoying it.

i'm enjoying it and i can see where

you're saying with that but i've enjoyed

it so much and they teased it i

think back in twenty twenty one twenty

twenty two they released a single issue of

battle beast because i got the uh signed

battle beast i will always pick it up

because oh yeah what was it he picked

up um they did something was it called

solid blood

Did you grab that issue?

I did not, no.

So they literally, they did this,

I wish I was downstairs and I could

go and grab it.

They did this whole, like,

it's not April Fools,

I don't know how to describe it,

but Kirkman was like,

I've gone into the warehouse and there's

this palette of comics that I don't know

anything about,

but apparently I wrote it and Opley drew

it.

And it's literally issue seventeen of a

comic called Solid Blood.

by kirkman and otley and it throws you

right into the middle of a story like

an issue of these characters was it is

that one issue it wasn't um i don't

think it was put in like previews or

whatever you know you get these days yeah

that's really cool though into the comic

shops um and yet that i probably wishes

they'd you know they'd done that but i

love that two of them did that i

think that was fantastic

So let's dive into your characters.

So for your heroes, you have...

I'm going to attempt to pronounce his

name.

Is it Eidolon?

Eidolon.

Eidolon.

So it's like an idol.

Okay.

Eidolon.

Okay.

And then Carcass.

And then Carcass, yeah.

And then for your villains,

you have Pulse.

Yeah.

Widowmaker, who is probably my...

Just so amazing.

Like, jeez,

your introduction to her was phenomenal.

And then Reordained.

Yeah, Reordained, yeah.

So even there,

to show what a crappy writer I am.

Because I'd always had that character in

my head, Uriodain,

as basically a doomsday character.

You know,

he's the mastermind for the fights,

the superhero.

Well,

another word for doomsday is foreordain,

like F-O-R-E-D-A-I-N, foreordain.

So I just took the first two letters

off of that and stuck an apostrophe in

it and called him real name.

If it works, it works, right?

It sounds like a cool alien monster name.

Obviously,

the things happened to that character in

the first issue,

but the effects of what that character did

will be felt for quite some time.

So for discussion here,

so are they protectors or problems?

What truly makes these powers dangerous in

this world?

And is this more the story about heroism

or more about legacy of the characters?

I think it is about legacy.

It's because, you know, not being an IP,

you know, none of the characters are safe.

Anything can happen to any of the

characters.

And yes, it's... What's this?

It's confused me.

Yeah, sorry, you've confused me.

What was the question again?

No, you're good, man.

That's fucking hilarious.

So are they protectors or problems or what

truly makes these powers dangerous in this

world?

The characters,

so certainly Eidolon is a superhero.

He is the front-facing number one

superhero of the world.

Even in issue one, you know,

there's adverts in there for the eau de

parfum or whatever you want to call it.

Dude, that had me cracking up.

I'm not going to lie.

Those two commercials you did on the

inside of them, those were awesome.

And I want to, so the plan was,

there's a sidebar here, every issue was,

will have uh hopefully if i can figure

it out we'll have a full page artwork

that probably won't have any like dialogue

on it that does push forward or build

the world um so very much the fact

that there is simply a um an advert

in the in the comic showing the idolon

has his own range of you know aftershave

or whatever dude so it reminded me of

those old school nineties yeah commercials

with the eau de parfum and the dude's

just like yeah because he he just sees

himself as like the sexiest guy on the

planet which

definitely plays into a lot of where the

story goes.

Well, I mean, if we read the story,

I mean, he has no problem with ladies.

No.

At the moment.

Yeah, that is true.

And then obviously the other page in issue

one is the kids menu, isn't it?

Yes.

Yeah.

With a,

with a toy on top of it and

stuff.

And then it also has the little box

where you could draw your favorite hero or

whatever.

And then the kids drew him.

Yeah.

So that even that,

comes back.

Like, I'm trying to sort of, like,

nothing in issue one is throwaway.

You know,

every time that first issue will more than

likely get touched on or brought back in

a big way as it goes on.

So, yeah, so certainly, you know,

Eidolon is the forefront of superheroism

in the world,

even though behind the scenes.

I never wanted him to be

He's not a loose guy from the boys.

Are you talking about a blender?

Yeah, yeah, Homelander.

He's not Homelander.

He's not an evil guy.

He's not a bad guy.

He is a superhero,

but behind closed doors, he'll, you know,

he's taking drugs and drinking and just

having sex with whoever's around and

whatever.

But I don't think he's a bad person.

He still will go out there and he

will, you know,

save that cat in a tree if he's

told he has to go and do it,

he'll go and do it.

Yeah.

But he's not, he's not a bad person.

um and then obviously you've got someone

like carcass but i think his motivations

for doing it are very different and a

lot of that plays into because they're

brothers we've said that yeah yeah no we

didn't see it yet but they are brothers

yeah they are brothers yeah and i think

the reasons he does it much more plays

into um their father and his

his effect on the world because you know

again what i really liked about carcass is

he doesn't look like your typical

superhero no like when you first see him

on the cover you're like oh that has

to be the bad guy because that's what

in your head what a bad guy is

supposed to look like but he's not he

he's the one of the other hero in

the book yeah yeah and i mean even

even in the first three pages of the

comic,

they're a bit of a sort of fake

out because it's set, what,

sixty five million years ago.

But that all comes back.

And I'm hoping that, you know,

if everything goes well,

that if I manage to get a second

arc or, you know,

even if it's just a couple of one

shots or something that the the characters

seen in those first three pages, you know,

they'll come back.

It's.

It's all just world building.

No,

I'm glad that's a perfect segue because

we're going to talk about issue one real

quick.

So it's fifty two pages,

forty eight pages of story,

and it builds this foundation for you.

Fifty two pages is basically a graphic

novel.

I don't even want to think about how

many pages are still ahead of me at

the moment because I've I'm talking to

other artists and stuff and a friend of

mine who's done a pin up.

uh initial two matt timpson who's just

done a pinup that's just blown me out

of the water glad you brought him up

too because that's that's the next topic

please go yeah um so if yeah it's

it's a hell of a lot of pages

ahead of me i don't want to think

about that and yeah so he's doing a

one shot that he's going to put on

kickstarter soon that i've been very lucky

to he's showing me some pages

um and everyone's going just do one shot

just do just you know just do or

make it less issues make it less issues

and maybe it's because i'm i'm having to

now write it myself i'm like no i

know what happens in issues three four

five all the way through to issue six

which technically obviously as we've said

earlier would have been issue seven

because yeah one is two issues you know

it's got two issues worth of story in

it so it's a seven issue essentially

I'm drawing but while I'm still enjoying

it and you know it's a lot ahead

of me but I'm excited because I obviously

know what's coming up I'm like oh I

can't wait to get to issue five where

that thing happens and I get to draw

that it's awesome just to see how much

you're enjoying this and how passionate

you are to get this done,

which this week it's over.

It really does.

It bleeds over.

It is awesome to see dude.

So you also have a pinup coming from

Dan butcher as well.

Yeah.

Who did, who does,

he's a co-host on another podcast and he's

got his own web comic called Vanguard,

which I admit I've only started reading

sort of the first seven or eight issues

into that.

I, I,

Obviously,

I'm drawing it's why I'm doing this.

But I will very often draw,

like be obsessed with a smaller comic like

did you did you read a comic called

petrol head?

I didn't.

You haven't I see that.

That's it was by Rob Williams and pipe

up.

And I think it's the best comic I

think it came out in twenty twenty four.

Definitely look into the trade for petrol

head is fantastic.

Okay.

reading it I was like I've got to

draw that factor I've got to draw it

because it just feels like the ultimate

kind of sign of I don't know about

respect but a sign of like I think

what you've done is really cool and I

want to so when when Dan Butcher came

to me and said would you be interested

in me doing like a either a variant

cover or a pin-up or something for your

comic I'm like hell yes to have someone

else

Draw my characters.

For someone else to go,

I think you've done something that I want

to draw them.

I want to have a go at drawing

your characters.

You just go, oh, a hundred percent.

That's dream.

Yeah.

So that's, that's dude,

just segue in so well.

I love it.

I was,

the next question was literally how

important is community collaboration in,

in the world building?

And you just summed that up perfectly.

Yeah.

Form of flattery.

it is they contact you and go can't

i draw your characters yeah and i i

did say to dan um because he's working

on his own indie comic at the moment

i i i have pledged towards it it's

either called red viper or viper i can't

remember um towards it and he's drawing

page online and i said to him look

i i definitely want to draw one of

your characters for something you've done

if you if you would like me to

you know if you're interested in doing

obviously i'm i'm so busy with with one

I've got to try and find the time

to do it.

But I would, yeah,

I would love to draw, you know,

other people's indie characters because

everyone's drawing, you know, things.

And I don't want to go into a

whole AI rant here.

People are pumping out so much AI stuff.

They are.

Of characters and stuff.

And I love the Hulk.

I'm on several Hulk Facebook groups.

And the amount of times you're just like,

oh, my God, no, no.

Yeah.

It's just so much fun.

For someone to go,

I want to take time out of my

day to draw your thing and for me

to maybe say that to someone else is

just the highest compliment.

Dude, I will say this.

The indie comic book community on Facebook

is some of the best stuff.

Everybody is so helpful.

Everybody...

And they're not afraid to call out

bullshit either.

And I love it.

I'm in multiple groups, obviously,

for what I do here,

because I advertise in those groups.

And a lot of people I meet come

from those groups.

And

everybody is always really cool and really

chill.

Like I wish I could participate more,

but I just don't have that time and

freedom to do that because obviously I'm,

once my advertising is done and I fill

a month, it's literally just becomes,

okay,

now I got to focus on the people

now and get, you know,

and building this stuff.

But yeah,

I can't say anything bad about any of

those communities really.

Like some of them are pretty bad about

the AI stuff,

but I just don't think it's admin the

proper way.

But for the most part,

they're all really phenomenal communities.

And I can't encourage people enough to

join those communities.

Not only share your work, but, you know,

help others.

And I'm blown away by the quality of

most indie comics.

Now it's,

it's a tough sort of thing to get

into.

And,

You know, I hope mine does well,

but I'm looking at what other people do,

and I'm like, oh, my God,

this is considered indie?

Like, this is fantastic.

It's crazy, right?

So much you can pledge towards.

You're like,

I'd really like to look at that guy's

one, but then, you know,

I'll only just pledge towards that guy's

one.

Yeah.

And it's like so I had Chris Ford

on here who does dark pink comics like

he was his Kickstarter was seen by one

of the bigger like cover artists for like

Marvel, DC, other indie comics.

And he was just like, hey,

I got to give you a cover.

That was it.

And he made him a cover.

And I love that.

Because even the bigger names out there

are starting to recognize not just

Kickstarter,

but other indie creators because they were

there once.

And they're giving back to those

communities as well.

I'm telling you,

Indie Comics has one of the best

communities out there granted just like

any community it has some toxicity it has

some bullshit but from a overall

perspective we have one of the best

communities out there yeah everyone just

wants to enjoy comics we all just want

to do it well you know and as

i say there's phenomenal art out there and

there's sometimes stuff that isn't as uh

professional looking let's keep let's keep

it but you're still going on they're going

oh good for you

good for you you still you start somewhere

right you start somewhere yeah i mean i'll

say that like this isn't my first comic

i actually did do one in which was

a one-shot comic um and i haven't really

shared that very much because i'm not very

proud of the artwork in it but part

of me is thinking well maybe i should

put that on at least global comics or

do something with it just to show sort

of

how I've improved or how I think I've

changed and moved on.

That's one of my favorite things,

to be fair,

is when you see the person,

the story and the art evolve throughout

multiple issues.

Oh,

I think issue two of Legacy Idols and

Bones looks better than issue one.

And it's fascinating because I've

obviously,

I have got printed copies already and I

can't go back.

I haven't got time to go back.

But there's definitely pages in issue one

where like Claire and Dr.

Green are talking.

It's not good artwork.

You know, I had my comic sales,

but I definitely think, oh,

they're like bad.

But I do think what I'm doing now,

and I want to go back and change

it, but it's just like, no, look,

you've got to keep going, moving forward.

So I hope that, you know,

by the time I am on issue sort

of fives and six and things like that,

that maybe it doesn't represent, you know,

the artwork, how it looks in issue one.

But hopefully it's improved.

And also,

the other thing I'd actually like to say

is the story does go off in some

quite dark directions.

I mean, well,

it's certainly violent and things like

that.

But it goes off in some very dark

directions.

And I want to make sure that I'm

always interested in drawing the pages.

That means me trying different styles and

doing different things.

I'm going to do it.

Because why wouldn't I?

It's my comic.

That's what's great about it, right?

It ensures you do whatever the hell you

want.

Yeah.

So there is a good chance that certain

pages, as it goes on,

will not look the same as it did

in those first issues.

And I hope it does.

I want to try new things.

I want to keep being in it.

You don't evolve unless you do it, right?

Yeah, exactly.

Yeah.

And everybody wants to evolve.

I want to evolve and be a better...

know podcaster a creator i get every time

i do clips i get better and better

and better and you don't get better i'm

trying to sit down literally as i say

i'm home two days a week and look

at it as like okay i'll normally start

from about sort of eight o'clock in the

morning through until sort of five o'clock

in the afternoon um because that's when

i'm in the house by myself you know

i'm married and i've got not young kids

i've got daughters it difficult when

there's people around so i am like

like nine hours of the day,

I'm going to sit and draw.

And I do think that because I've now

solidly started doing that, yes,

I'm definitely improving.

If you can say that about yourself,

I think you can.

You can, a hundred percent.

My friend Matt, he's also gone, look,

I think this is a step up from

what you've done.

Dude,

my first show to where I am today

is night and day, a hundred percent.

Yeah.

And I'm incredibly excited.

of issue one i think you know i

got forty eight pages out and how many

people can say that you know it's this

thing but you know i i do think

it's improving and this stuff i'm i'm

definitely proud of some of those pages

like you said the widow maker page i'm

incredibly proud of dude certain pages

where um like jcbs are involved in the

beach scene that beach fight scene was

like insane too which is pretty true that

was drawn in like twenty twenty

Dude, that scene is insane.

It's bloody, it's violent,

it's disgusting.

It's everything you want in a comic book.

If you've got people out there that are

swinging punches that could take down a

mountain,

then no one's coming out with just a

black eye, you know?

No.

Like, his jaw got knocked the fuck off.

How about that?

The end of issue one.

But as you know, from reading issue one,

things happen to our our delightful hero

that that will definitely follow through

um through the entire series because you

don't walk away from a fight with a

giant monster with a couple of scratches

you know and you definitely proved that

and it was dude so in comic book

it it's one of those things where if

it's going to be extremely violent make it

extremely violent and bloody

Give me all the juicy bits, right?

Yeah.

But if you're making this slice of life

story, cool.

Yeah.

Perfect.

I like those two.

I want to make sure that – I

don't want to say what happens to him,

but – Don't spoil.

No spoilers.

But what happens to him I think is

what would happen to you if you were

fighting –

you know, this giant monster.

A hundred percent.

That's what you want to see though.

Yeah.

It isn't just violence for the sake of

violence.

And it's not just nudity for the sake

of nudity.

I do think that if you're in a

situation where, you know,

you're in a room and you're having sex

with a couple of women and taking drugs

and stuff,

there's probably going to be nudity

involved.

A hundred percent.

If it fits the story,

it fits the story.

If it's the, the,

the charm and allure of the story and

the, it works, it works.

Go with it.

Right.

Talking about that though.

So as I say, issue one is on,

um, global, global comics.

And we were going to talk about the

Kickstarter itself.

And normally I asked, you know,

why crowdfunded?

I'm not going to,

on global comics i've only ever had one

guy coming comments to one and it's

actually seven hundred people read it but

and i know people don't often comment but

i don't comment on things i have one

guy comment on it and he said um

the artwork isn't very good or something

like that and i was just like okay

i'm i'm just i'm just a guy who's

trying to make it but you know you

are welcome to your opinion and he replied

back saying

for a raunchy comic your art isn't good

enough and in my head i was like

it's not a raunchy comic that was what

i took from that i was like you

think yeah comic no it's a comic that

has violence it has sex it has profanity

But it's not a raunchy comic.

Yeah.

I didn't take that from it.

So I don't know what the hell he

was thinking.

Yeah.

I just found that really weird.

I'm like, no, this isn't.

I think he went into it expecting it

to be a more not safe for work

type of comic book.

And then when he didn't get that,

he felt the need to say, oh,

it's not raunchy enough and the art sucks.

Yeah.

And I just.

That's not what this comic book is.

You just got to laugh it off.

You just got to go.

You really do.

Because if you,

if you took everything to heart,

you would never make art.

Exactly.

Yeah.

I know I'm not a professional comic book

artist and I wish I had put more

effort in,

in my twenties and maybe I could have

been there,

but I'm going to keep doing it and

I'm going to keep putting the effort in

now and see where it takes me.

No, a hundred percent.

And I've enjoyed, like I said,

I enjoyed the hell out of issue one.

I think other people who enjoy a comic

book for what it is,

which in this instance is a bloody

violent,

not safe for work scenario type of book.

So if that's what you're into,

then that's what you're into.

Then you will definitely enjoy this book.

If you're a big fan of the boys,

you're going to love this comic book.

Yeah.

I think I need to go back and

properly read The Boys one day, I think,

because I've read sort of three or four

issues and I've watched the entire series.

What I'd say about the series of The

Boys, as much as I enjoy it,

a lot of the violence in it often

feels like they're just doing violence.

Yeah.

That's what I'm saying about this comic is

it is incredibly violent and it has got

blood and guts and gore.

but it's because of what is happening to

that person.

And then what are the consequences of

what, of that violence, you know,

and it's still fun.

I want people to, and it's, I think,

I don't know how long it took you

to read it.

I don't think it's a long read.

I think it's not a very long read.

You read through it in like, ten,

fifteen minutes.

But a lot,

I think still a lot happens in it.

And even issue two, which will only be,

um, twenty-four pages of story.

Um,

I'm not great at getting loads of dialogue

in there.

I'm not, you know,

people having huge conversations.

I want their actions to push the narrative

forward.

Well,

that's what I always say is the art

tells the story.

The words push the story along.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And that's what a comic book is.

If you're going to a comic book to

read a full narrative story,

like you would in a book,

you're looking at a comic book for the

wrong reason.

You're looking at the comic book because

the art is telling the story in the

words or pushing the narrative of that

art.

Yeah.

I think as part of me, you know,

you want to build your audience.

I'd love to obviously have a massive

audience following and you think, well,

maybe I should go on Twitch or something

like that.

and, you know, draw pages on there.

But I'm always sort of like, well,

if it's just a page of people talking

without the dialogue on it,

who's going to want to watch it?

You'd be surprised.

And if it's a page where there's massive

action and consequences,

I'm giving plot away.

Yeah, you don't want to do that.

So I'm still sort of very hesitant about,

you know,

sitting there and doing any sort of live

drawing stuff.

I know there's a lot of big name

comic book artists out there that they

have YouTube channels where they do the

art tutorials and they just draw and show

people how they draw characters.

And it's really fun to watch them,

just the precision they have with a pen

or a pencil.

Yeah.

I mean, maybe I could sort of,

I still need to obviously do covers and

things.

So maybe I could start,

try doing something like that.

But let's talk about the Kickstarter.

The Kickstarter is live now.

It goes until the twentieth of this month.

So there's about six days left.

Yeah, a week today.

So I'm in the UK, obviously.

I think it ends,

I think I've got it ending at ten

o'clock Saturday morning.

So it was only a twelve day Kickstarter.

And again,

this is through talking to friends of

mine.

who have done previous ones,

and this is mostly being able to come

onto podcasts like this and other things

I've done.

I want to be able to push, push,

push, push,

push the whole time that it's on

Kickstarter.

And if I'm going thirty days,

I just feel like maybe by day sixteen,

seventeen,

people are just going to get pissed off.

I don't think so.

I really don't.

In twelve days,

I feel like you're selling yourself just a

little bit short.

Don't get me wrong.

I'd love it if that doubled right now.

That'd be amazing.

But yeah,

I just wanted to sort of be able

to push it really hard for ten to

twelve days.

And there's certain days when I'm at home

and I wanted to make sure I was

at home on the days that it started.

So I was just trying to be around

for that.

But I'm still blown away when you

obviously have friends and family that put

money towards these things.

But just to see, like,

I don't know who this person is and

they've just pledged money towards

something I've done.

which goes back to people drawing your own

characters,

just to see people where you go,

I don't know this person,

and they've just put money towards,

they've looked at what I've done and gone,

I want to support that.

And that, again,

just blows me away because it's just,

you know.

It's amazing, right?

Dude,

that's me every time I get a new

guest on this show,

that this person is putting their trust

and faith in me to deliver them a

show.

and to have them on the show and

that they're trusting me to come on my

show to talk about what they're selling.

I get the same feeling every time.

It's amazing.

So I am very pleased with how Kickstarter

is going.

I kept it quite a low amount.

I figured out what my print costs were

going to be for the various items.

I'm hopeful that it will cover it.

I was more interested in reaching an

achievable goal

than completely worrying about,

is it going to cover all my costs?

Because let's face it,

most of us are doing this for the

passion of doing it rather than making

money.

Oh, yeah.

Don't get me wrong.

I wish I was making money.

A hundred percent.

A hundred percent.

At some point,

I was going to knock on my door

and offer me money for the IP.

But as of yet, wow.

But walk us through your Kickstarter and

what people can expect from your

Kickstarter,

like any goals that you have and anything

else that they may be interested in.

I'm trying to keep it like really as

simple as possible.

So obviously issue one is already out,

but I always want to make sure that

people can get hold of previous copies.

So I think this being issue two,

I think there's a PDF of issue two,

a PDF of issues one and two.

printed copy of issue two and a printed

copy of issues one and two and then

i'm doing uh foil art prints which is

um the front cover of issue one and

then there's not suitable for work front

cover of issue one that i've got printing

on them bookmarks and stickers like vinyl

little vinyl stickers of the logo eidolons

chest logo and the caucus skull.

So three separate stickers.

So that's its own, uh, uh, pledge thing.

Um,

and then one where you can appear in

the comic, uh,

which have only got three spaces.

Cause obviously you've got to find a page

where you can actually have people on it.

Yeah.

um and two of those have already gone

so there's one of them left which i

think is like fifty quid i really just

wanted to keep it as absolutely as simple

as possible um because i'm a guy that

just wants to read comics and generally

i'm not that i don't i know people

a lot of people out there like varying

covers i don't give a shit about varying

covers generally um i want to read a

comic and i guess maybe that's because i

i would only pick up

not only just a trade,

but if there was a cover I like,

I'll pick that one up.

But I'm not worried about that.

I won't do variant covers.

I will put a variant of the artwork

in the comic.

So issue two,

both issue one and issue two and issue

three when I get it done,

there is like a not suitable for work

variant version of that cover artwork,

but it's not going to be a variant

comic.

It will just be on the inside back

page.

There'll be

the sort of version of it.

Yeah, I just do as possible and go,

look, if you want to read a comic,

pledge here.

And I'll do my best to keep the

prices as low as possible.

So I know the pound prices.

I don't know the dollar, I'm afraid.

But I think issue two,

I'm doing for like three quid.

And obviously, if that's a PDF,

then you're not paying any postage.

What's that going to be like?

Four dollars, I think, maybe?

Yeah, I think just shy of four dollars.

for a thirty-two page comic.

You know, I'm doing my... Yeah,

a thirty-two page comic in the comic book

shop is going to rain and eat nearly

nothing.

While I'm, you know,

I have got another job and that brings

enough in for me to get by,

I'm like, look,

I just want people to read this.

And this is again why we talked about

being on Global Comics because like seven

hundred people have read it on Global

Comics, which, you know, is pence,

dollars, cents.

But it's, how do you get that exposure,

you know?

You're getting it from Kickstarter.

But let's start closing this out.

Who is Legacy for?

For me.

Dude, I love that fucking answer,

to be fair to you.

At the end of the day,

who are we doing this for?

Obviously, yeah, completely to get it out,

get that little niggle out,

lack of my brain.

I want it out there,

but also I want people to read it.

I've been asked this before, and...

It's a mature reader comic for all the

reasons that we've discussed.

When she read the first issue,

my daughter was sixteen, and I was like,

do you want to read the first issue?

And there was stuff in there she didn't

particularly appreciate,

as you can imagine.

Of course, yeah.

But I do think a sixteen-year-old is...

I think her as a sixteen-year-old was

mentally capable of reading it.

I think there are possibly

sixteen-year-olds out there that aren't

mentally capable.

There are twenty-five-year-olds out there

that aren't mentally capable of reading

it.

But it's certainly aimed at I would hope

I think it's going to help if you're

a comic reader.

If you're like me,

you've grown up reading superheroes and

maybe you're a little bit jaded by

by the fact that it never ends.

I want someone to come in,

I want those readers to come in and

go, this is different.

This is the superhero that I've been

wanting to read for the last few years

and I haven't seen it elsewhere.

And I'm not here to say there aren't

other Kickstarters and other indie comics

out there like that.

There probably are because I'm not reading

all.

I don't think I've reinvented the wheel

here, not at all.

But I certainly think that what I've

created

if you've been reading comics a long time

and you're just sort of like, oh,

I can't read another Spider-Man,

I can't read it, not because they're bad,

but because it feels like I've been doing

it since I was a teen,

this is where you come.

You come to Legacy Idols and Bones because

what happens to these characters will stay

happened to these characters.

No magic healing overnight.

Yeah,

and it's going to be consequences for

everything.

As I say,

even that kids menu that you see in

the first issue,

That's got a lot more to it than

it just being a kid's menu.

You will see little things like that will

come back in issue three that I'm working

on now.

That's freaking awesome, dude,

that you're maintaining continuity

throughout each one and not just like, oh,

he had an arm ripped off.

Well, it did happen in issue two.

No,

you're still seeing those effects in issue

two.

So that's really cool that you're doing

that.

But Gary,

plug your work for everybody so they know

where to find you.

So as we say,

it's on Kickstarter at the moment.

So if you search for legacy iris and

bones,

it would come up and it is issue.

The Kickstarter is issue two,

but obviously it is issues one and two.

So chances are that, you know,

if you haven't read issue one,

which the vast majority of the population,

then go to Kickstarter and get both of

them.

If you are on Global Comics,

then issue one, again,

just search for Legacy Isles Bones.

issue one is on there i'm going to

be completely honest i'm not going to put

issue two on for a good few months

yet um i want the kickstarter to really

have you know had the chance to do

well and i don't want people to think

well i won't do the kickstarter because

i'll just read it on global comics yeah

you know i'm gonna leave that a couple

of months it will go on there but

just not straight away but i will i

will keep adding to global comics um i'd

created a Facebook group.

I was quite specific to create a Facebook

group, not Facebook page,

because I want conversation.

You know, if I did it,

I'm the only person that can post on

it.

Whereas if it's a Facebook group,

I want the people that have read it.

And even if you didn't like it,

just post, you know, on it.

And, you know,

I want conversation on there.

So I'm really hoping that when, you know,

issue two lands and people's emails are on

their doorstep,

I am going to be sort of like,

look,

what'd you think of it?

Get onto the Facebook page.

Yeah.

Uh, there's a,

I've got an Instagram for it.

So I'm sharing, uh,

images and things on there as well.

Um, yeah,

just trying to get in your old blue

sky as Gary Sears, blue sky.

I mean, cause I have, so I have,

um,

uh on instagram obviously got a gary

seawood instagram and then i've got some

bones instagram uh on blue sky i've only

got blue sky so you might see a

picture of like my dog or something like

that yeah hey i share my cats all

the time it's no wrong with it but

gary i want to say thank you for

coming on man it was been a blast

pleasure i love talking comics and i don't

have

uh really any comic book friends you got

my instagram and you got my facebook so

feel free to hit us by people time

you want to talk about not just my

comic but just to talk comics i could

sit here for like ten hours with you

mate but take some more whatever it is

But, yeah, dude, don't be afraid.

Hit us up.

We'll talk about comic books all day.

Issue three in another four months or so,

and I'll be back on again.

Let's do it.

Hey, shoot me a message.

You know how to do it now?

I will do it.

I've got your email.

Perfect.

Thank you.

So every universe begins somewhere,

sometimes with the questions,

sometimes with a sketch,

sometimes with the creator deciding that

the story they've carried for years

deserves to finally exist.

Legacy,

Idols and Bones is more than a comic.

It's a commitment to building something

lasting in a space where indie voices

continue to redefine what modern mythology

looks like.

Gary, again,

thank you for bringing us into your world

and to everyone watching.

If you believe in universes,

bold storytelling,

and the future of indie comics,

support the mission, join the legacy.

The Council of Nerds is adjourned.

This has been the United States Department

of Nerds, where indie comics come to life.

Y'all be safe and happy Valentine's Day.

Thank you.

Gary.