(interview conducted by BlkKnight!)
Greetings, you have been selected to participate in a small survey. Are you ready for eight hours worth of mind-destroy…er super-happy-fun questions?
Oh man, it's another one of those automated call surveys. I hate these things. At least it's not a customer service agent that doesn't speak English…. Very well, I accept your terms. But I warn you, my answers may be incredibly cynical and sarcastic. :P
1) While this survey will keep all of your personal information confidential, please tell us something about yourself. The more interesting, the better.
My head isn't the only part of my body that's bald?
…Too personal?
Alright, let's go with this then: I have been making comics since I was in 3rd grade. The first comic that I ever did was called “Stupid Man,” and was about a kid that could fly and fought the school bully - rather violently. In later issues, he ended up becoming Fireball and used firecrackers to help him run super fast. He also had red-hot candy that he could spit at people.
I ended up selling a comic in middle school to fellow students that I worked on with another friend of mine, called Moon Rise. It was basically a rip off of Batman. However, later issues started to get very original and interesting. Then I went to high school and stopped writing it.
I did comics for people instead of birthday cards. Unfortunately, I never kept copies for myself so all of that hard work is long gone. I did a series for my friend Kristin that was over 30 issues of 24 pages each.
In high school I read a comedy book about superheroes and it inspired the creation of G-Man: The Defender of Food. It was hilarious goofy goodness, and I hope to restart it again someday.
This summer, I'm going to be published in an anthology from Ronin Studios that benefits a non-profit, and I have several pitches out to some of the more indie publishers at the moment. So my professional comic writing career has officially begun!
Also, I have had athletes foot on my left pinky toe for the last decade.
…Also too personal? ;)
2) We notice you have two active comics. Would you mind telling us about these comics for those who have never heard of them prior?
If you haven't heard of my comics, then you're a loser. The only way to drop this loser status is to read them both all the way through, and then perhaps you can obtain the rank of “peon” in the mighty Horde Army. :P
Oh man, did I just make a WoW reference? I don't even play that game….

The Temple of a Thousand Tears is a sci-fi fantasy samurai story that spans millennia. There's a lot of action and themes of vengeance and justice. It's a very stylized book utilizing gray scale with red and blue mixed in for good measure. The current storyline is called Hikari (which means “light” in Japanese), and follows two women fighting to discover who was responsible for the explosion at a cathedral that killed many innocent civilians. In 2008, it was nominated for “Most Profound webcomic” in the Drunk Duck Awards.
I also have pitch videos for each of the chapters:
Original Temple
The Legend of Abraham
Hikari

My other webcomic series is called @$$hole!, which follows a web comic creator (who looks a lot like myself) and his demonic roommate, the little girl from The Ring, as they go on wild and crazy adventures. Recently, Trevor has encouraged Susie to get a job, and she finally landed one as a barista - by killing her boss! There's also a photo-world in the comic where stories are told that more resemble my real life situation. For example, currently photo-Trevor has moved to Chicago (because I just moved to Chicago). The comic was nominated in 2008 for “Best Experimental” and “Best Photo Comic” in the Drunk Duck Awards.
I even made a little pitch video about the comic: @$$hole!
Does that answer your questions, ya leeches? ;)
3) Between Temple of A Thousand Tears (Temple for sort) and the comic with the title outside of this survey's vernacular (@H! for short), which comic do you consider to you be your primary comic. In other words, which one gets the most attention from you?
Man, what's a guy got to do to get a sandwich around here? Last time I was interviewed by Wizard magazine they at least offered me blow and hookers….
I spend more time thinking about Temple, but working on @$$hole!. The reason being that Temple is a much more fleshed out world with layers and layers of character relationships and a lot of history, while @$$hole! is much more fun and light hearted - and usually involves less thought. I've outsourced the artwork duties on Temple to my good friend Olivia Kasle, who has really latched onto the material and started to make it her own. I'm very proud of the work that she puts into the pages. That said, it means that my work on the comic just comes down to writing right now - which, with the process that I use, makes the scripting process pretty quick.
@$$hole! is just a fun place to go and play. Since I do the artwork (or direct the photos), it involves a lot more work. A lot more time. The process for that one hasn't been refined yet, and I just started updating it twice per week. I've actually been thinking about turning it into two comics: one illustrated and one photo. But I need to spend some more video game time pondering that one.
Anyone have a preference?
4) Temple is styled in grayscale + red and in book format, while @H! is in full color and in strips. Do you prefer one to the other? Also, will Temple have a colorful future?
Temple actually has a colorful past (both literally and figuratively), since the first prequel (The Legend of Abraham) was all done in watercolors.
I think that the presentation for each comic represents the story itself, so I don't really have a personal preference - but both are fitting and fun to do. Temple originally started in gray scale because it was easier to do, but it was also a reflection of the world that these characters lived in. The color had been drained from their world, as everything they know gets turned around and up-side down. The red and blue colors used in the comic were a stylized choice to emphasize the graphic nature of the violence or technology and how significant it's appearance was in the story.
For @$$hole!, I wanted to play with color more in Photoshop and have an outlet to play and experiment with story and effects. So some of the stories are in black and white, and some are done with photos…and some are done with both illustrations and photos!
But mostly, I did @$$hole! as a break from the seriousness and structure of Temple. The comic was draining me emotionally and physically, and I needed an outlet for some funny jokes and a way to poke fun at things going on in the world. My favorite reoccurring characters are Big Oil guys, because they're just so clueless about the world and have next to no moral barometer. They're tons of fun to write.
Both Temple and @$$hole! will be seeing print, just an FYI. I'm planning the prequels to Temple to be individual (and possibly collected, if the demand is there), and @$$hole! will come out in (I'm currently thinking) a digest-sized collection. No date on that just yet, though. Probably late this year / early next year.
5) Temple appears to have a religious backbone. Particularly, religion altering the truth. What inspired you to write a story with such a basis? Do you think people will make such connections between this and real-world religions?
Temple certainly has a background in religion, which strikes people as very odd since I myself am the furthest thing from religious. But the point of the theocracy that exists in Temple isn't about altering the truth so much as it is about control and interpretation. Like any form of government, the Holy Order of Abraham wants to control it's citizens and keep them safe while making them productive members of society. But there's a hidden agenda going on that we find out about in Hikari (the second prequel series and current storyline).
Temple was inspired by a lot of different factors. First, the events of 9-11. There was a lot of talk about religions and the various factions that would disagree and fight against each other - even though they basically believed the same thing. There has always been religious persecution throughout history - in fact, the United States was built from it. The Protestants trying to flee the UK and have the freedom to worship what they wanted as they wanted. So even within the religion of Christianity, there has been persecution and misinterpretation. The Holy Order of Abraham is no different from that. Their actions just tend to be more blunt and violent and apparent to the reader.
The second thing that inspired Temple was the classic films of Akira Kurosawa - one of the greatest film directors of all time. His samurai movies are absolutely excellent, and have themselves inspired such great films as Star Wars and countless westerns.
The third thing that inspired Temple was a song from the trailer for Xenosaga 2. The story for the original Temple was going to be about a group of people searching for 7 mystical Dragon Hearts on these different planets, and the swordsman was going to be a giant robot pilot. But then I realized that I couldn't draw space ships, and I decided to tone down that plot….
So the religious implications of 9-11 came into play. I've never been a fan of organized religion because of how militant people get about it, and my numerous interactions with people who don't even follow their own belief system but will chastise anyone who doesn't believe what they do. It's the whole “do as I say, not as I do” bit. It's hypocrisy. And I'm not saying that everyone does it or even that most people do it, just the bulk of the people that I've met in my life. And I've just never understood that mentality. So part of the inclusion of the militant theocracy in this story is my brain trying to understand that mentality and try to put it out there how it appears to someone like me.
…I'm sure that probably pissed a few people off. Feel free to berate me, though, as everyone's entitled to their own opinions. I'll move on now before digging myself any deeper into this hole. ;)