This episode was originally broadcast on July 31, 2014.
Mike and Greg invited cartoonist Jim Rugg into the center-of-the-earth recording studio to drop some truth about his career in general and his first published work Street Angel, now re-released from AdHouse Books, in particular. Jim is one of the most flat-out creative talents working in comics today, and the lads could not be more thrilled to present this wide-ranging conversation.
Robots From Tomorrow is a weekly comics podcast recorded deep beneath the Earth’s surface. You can subscribe to it via iTunes or through the RSS feed at RobotsFromTomorrow.com. You can also follow Mike and Greg on Twitter. Enjoy your funny books.
Greg Matiasevich has read enough author bios that he should be better at coming up with one for himself, yet surprisingly isn't. However, the years of comic reading his parents said would never pay off obviously have, so we'll cut him some slack on that. He lives in Baltimore, co-hosts (with Mike Romeo) the Robots From Tomorrow podcast, writes Multiversity's monthly Shelf Bound column dedicated to comics binding, and can be followed on Twitter at @GregMatiasevich.
In tandem with our episode last week with writer Samuel Teer about his upcoming OGN Brownstone, we represent his chat with Mike and Greg from June 16, 2016.Dark Horse Month continues both at Multiversity and here on the show, as the lads welcome writer Samuel Teer to the underground recording studio for some talk about […]
Returning to the show today after a nearly eight-year absence is comics writer Samuel Teer. His new book, Brownstone, about a teenage girl connecting with her Latin heritage and her estranged father without speaking a word of each other’s language as they renovate the title structure, hits shelves on June 11th. The road from his […]
Having finished with the Man of Steel, today’s episode is the first of three looking at the best Caped Crusader stories of the Seventies to the mid-Eighties with the DC3Cast’s very own Vince Ostrowski! Come for the Neal Adams, stay to find out more about double-threat Frank Robbins, the mad genius of Bob Haney, Ra’s […]