R. Alan Brooks is Denver-based writer, artist, and professor. He teaches graphic novel writing for Regis University’s MFA program, and Lighthouse Writers Workshop. He’s the author of the graphic novels “The Burning Metronome” and “Anguish Garden”, and his award-winning weekly comic for The Colorado Sun, “What’d I Miss?” has been praised for its direct engagement with social issues. His viral TED Talk on the importance of art has nearly 2.5M views. Alan also has graphic novel work featured in the Denver Art Museum's recently renovated Western exhibit.
In this special bonus episode of How Art is Born season 2, R. Alan Brooks and guest host and MCA Denver Digital Producer, Dele Johnson, discuss Alan's love for comics, his time as a hip hop artist, his decision to close down his insurance agency to pursue his dream, and more!
Welcome to How Art Is Born, a podcast from the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, about the origins of artists and their creative and artistic practices. I'm your special guest host, Dele Johnson, podcaster, producer, editor, and radio host. Today I'm joined by Denver based artist, writer and professor R. Alan Brooks. What's up Alan?
R. Alan Brooks (:Hello. Thank you for having me.
Dele Johnson (:Oh, of course. Familiar but unfamiliar at the same time. A little bit for this show, particularly
Yeah, we're Justin to the role reversal here,
Wow. Congratulations.
R. Alan Brooks (:Like two weeks ago I finished it, so this.
Dele Johnson (:Nice!
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Um, and yeah, I'm just, I guess, an artist around town.
Dele Johnson (:Hmm. That's a good question. Now I'll say, I, I guess for people who are listening, uh, they should know that you are producer and editor of this podcast if they haven't heard your name before. But, so we're both doing this role, we're both getting into the roles that we're not comfortable in. Yeah. So this is an adventure for both of us.
Okay. I didn't know that.
R. Alan Brooks (:He, uh, wrote for, uh, he ran the money section at USA Today for like 30 years.
Dele Johnson (:Mm-hmm. So writing runs in the family.
R. Alan Brooks (:Right.
Cool. My favorite hero.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. I read, uh, the, it was, uh, it was a period where Barry Allen was on trial for murdering the reverse flash. Oh, yes. So, uh, yeah. So that's when he got me in the comics. And I think, uh, as someone who liked drawing and liked big words,
Need some anoma, a little bit too
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:There a certain shop that your dad would take you to, uh, to get comics?
R. Alan Brooks (:Well, okay. So actually my, I was, uh, in Asheville, North Carolina when I was five. Okay. Yeah. Uh, my dad was the first business editor that their newspaper ever had. Wow. Yeah. Um, so there, I don't even know, it was probably like seven elevens and stuff like that. Mm-hmm.
Wow. That, that feels like a high budget.
R. Alan Brooks (:It was good. And then she would come back like an hour later and it would be like such a math thing. I would like, I would have a stack and I'd be like, uh, can I get this? No. But if I don't get this one, then I can afford these other two. You know? Yeah. I almost never buy independent comics back then, because they were, uh, more expensive and black and white. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. A little bit
R. Alan Brooks (:Of bait. Yeah. Like it, uh, and it had nothing to do. They were just, it was just called X Mutants, and it was like, uh, I don't even remember who printed it, but it was a black and white comic, and I bought like one or two, and I was like, what is this
Yeah. Only, only for a short time though, so I was like, right.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. I saw people Scam
Dele Johnson (:Yeah, you know, X-Men was my favorite for a long time. It was the Dark Phoenix Saga, like right after that period.
Dele Johnson (:Oh, yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. So where before Wolverine was everywhere and on every team, and, you know, like he was a sort of the underdog, and I liked him a lot, but the first books I got, uh, subscriptions to was before I got into X-Men. My mom was like, um, she, you know, in, in Marvel comics used to do her own subscriptions. Like you would order and they would send it out to your house mm-hmm.
Oh, the Defenders. Yeah. I, I like the Defenders as a team. I know there's, there's been some rotations over the years, but
R. Alan Brooks (:Right. And the TV show is atrocious, but Oh,
Dele Johnson (:It felt like B-roll from all the other shows,
Mar bang for your
R. Alan Brooks (:Buck. Right. And I didn't even care about Avengers or Defenders. I was just like, most superheroes. And, but then when I got it, I, you know, I had a year of reading both of those comics and I really dug them. Cool. Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:Uh, at that time, did you have ambitions? Did you have dreams about becoming a comic book writer or artist?
R. Alan Brooks (:Oh, that, you know, it's interesting cuz Yeah, I wanted to draw comics. Um, and I, you know, I drew comics all the time in school. And, uh, art teachers used to insult comics and they hated the fact that I drew them. Um, but I had one good art teacher in eighth grade, Mrs. Carns. And, um, she was basically, she was introducing me to Renaissance artist, and she was like, in the whole class, she was like, this is Albert doer Alan, if you were a Renaissance artist, this is who you would be
Was that supposed to be a compliment
R. Alan Brooks (:Or It was Okay. It super got me into him. Okay. Uh, so he's most known for like, uh, drawing, like the praying hands that you see all the time. But like, he did a lot of wood cuts, but they look like comic book illustrations. And, uh, also he signed his name with like, uh, an A and then a D underneath it where it was all together, like the, the top of the D formed the cross bar and the A. Mm. So then I started signing like Alan Brooks, I started signing in my name like that, you know,
Yeah. Um, but yeah, it was such an interesting thing. So I basically was thinking I was gonna draw comics until about 12 when I got more into hip hop. Um, and honestly rapping, so comics were not cool during that period. Like, they weren't Right. That
Dele Johnson (:Was, it was the what the nerds did
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Right. And nerd wasn't a positive thing back then right.
Dele Johnson (:Right And you were in Atlanta. Yep. Which is, you know, a, a black mecca in, in many ways. And, you know, blurred
Yeah, yeah. Right. So, like, uh, I did not know any white people, the occasional teacher here and there, but it's an all black city. Mm-hmm.
Right.
R. Alan Brooks (:And I loved hip hop for some of the same reasons, cuz it was a lot of like clever words, wordplay, um, things that would be considered dad jokes. If you put 'em in a battle rap, then suddenly people like them. It's Right. Kind of a weird thing. Yeah. But it's the same like, uh, engine of wordplay is used in battle raps that are used in puns. Mm-hmm.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. It became that cornerstone for you. Um, and, you know, at the, at those times, finding your identity, finding a place to belong mm-hmm.
Well, I was deep into Native Tongues, which I know you are. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Uh, so De La Soul, but like De La Soul was like my pinnacle group. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. One of the
R. Alan Brooks (:OGs. Yeah. I feel like he, uh, made a mistake by investing too heavily in New Jack Swing
Which is a great period of time. I, I love the new Jack Swing, but it, it didn't last.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And I think, uh, the beats that he was rapping to don't, like you don't really hear people play his songs much anymore, but he was mm-hmm.
Yeah. I remember when I was like, uh, I went to college early. I went to college when I was 16. Oh, wow. Yeah. And, uh, I came out when I was 19 and then I came back to Atlanta and I was like sneaking in the clubs to battle. Yeah. Like, I didn't even care about dancing or talking to women or it was just like, I just wanted to battle to
Dele Johnson (:Battle. Yeah. Yeah. You wanted to get those bars off. Yeah. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:And you know, I did Okay. Like, um, I usually, I usually usually won. Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:Yeah. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:There was one dude though. There was one dude, uh, back in the day. There were two dudes that I definitely lost to. One was called Soldier and there was another dude called, uh, Warlock. And, uh, I remember Warlock in particular, he was not dope. And I was just like handling him
Dele Johnson (:He went out and got high and came back and suddenly he was dope with
Performance Enhancing Drugs.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And I remember that however many years later.
Dele Johnson (:Yeah. I mean, that, that's a great line. Yeah. That is a great line.
R. Alan Brooks (:Especially free styling, but I don't even, yeah. I wonder what happened to that dude.
I went through a few actually, but, uh, okay. So I battled in battles, but like, when I'm performing like in front of a crowd, they're not usually trying to hear that, you know, they wanna hear songs about different things. So, so then I would do songs, but, uh, when in my twenties I was the fisherman, um, and I, I grew up in, uh, church in the South and it came from like, be fishers of men. Jesus saying that. Uh, and so that was the name that I used and I would, yeah, I would rap and battle under that name. But then, uh, later it became Soul Daddy, which was more, um,
Dele Johnson (:I like that one
On
Yeah. Okay. I might have to go look
R. Alan Brooks (:Into that. Right. No,
Dele Johnson (:Change your life.
You know, it's an interesting thing with me in Dancing, man. Uh, so I mean, in the nineties with hip hop, there were obviously like those like gymnastic kind of dances that everybody would do the jumps and flips and spins, you know? Yeah,
Dele Johnson (:Yeah. And break dancing and Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Uh, I learned a little of that stuff, but like, um, I have this distinct memory of being like 12 years old. My mom, uh, took me to a party, like a party of her friend's children. So like, we're all like 12 ish, you know, like in the basement they got music playing and all of us are too nervous and insecure to dance. And my mom was like, what are y'all doing? Y'all need to get this started as she starts dancing and making everybody dance, you know? Okay. And so, uh, I mean, so it's obviously in my jeans mm-hmm.
Okay. Cause that's what I was gonna say, like, is is this the Soul Train
R. Alan Brooks (:Classic? It is, yeah.
Everyone wants to look cool. Yeah. Everyone's posted up at the bar Yeah. And their
R. Alan Brooks (:Cliques right at
Dele Johnson (:Tables.
R. Alan Brooks (:You got it. Yeah. So basically for all of my twenties I didn't dance. Um, and then, uh, in my early thirties, I started realizing I would go to like, there was like a Afro Afro booth thing that would happen here in Denver mm-hmm.
Yeah. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:And then I started going to solution at me Garch and goodness. And, uh, I just started making it a part of my life and I realized that, and as I got to the point where I was dancing like two to four times a week, but I, I realized that it was like cathartic to my soul, you know, like mm-hmm.
You know, I'll, I'll see people like, you know, uh, even on the show it comes up a lot. Like they're people that I like, oh, we first met dancing. Yeah. But we've never really had a conversation because we just know each other from the dance floor. Yeah. But or
Dele Johnson (:You express yourself with body language. Right. Not words.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And I just love it. It's, I I really love it. It's a beautiful thing. Uh, I think anything that, I mean, obviously it's a good form of exercise, but anything that's heavy on my soul, if I can just lose myself in dancing, um, it is, it's just beautiful. And I think as a result of that, I don't really dig, um, I don't dig group dances. Like, I, I don't, I don't electric slide
Dele Johnson (:Like, like choreographed. Yeah. Or Oh hey, like electric slide Yeah. Cupid shuffle. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:What have you. I let everybody do that, you know, and it's fine. Like you guys enjoy it. Yeah. But like, uh, for me having to like regiment what I'm doing actually reduces my, um, enjoyment of it. Mm-hmm.
Don't wanna be the center of attention. Yeah. So like, if there's a dance circle happening,
R. Alan Brooks (:You got it. I always
Dele Johnson (:Leave. Yeah.
I'm out. People are constantly trying to push me in their dance circle or force me to do their soul train line. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Yeah. That's interesting. I, uh, as, as a kid, uh, soul train lines would form at these like African parties that we would be at where, you know, the adults are having their party and the kids may end up having their own separate party somewhere else. And I always loved the soul train line, but I never wanted to get into dance circles. It felt more performative. Yes. And I think that the dance circles for me always happened at like homecoming dances and like high school and stuff like that mm-hmm.
The
Dele Johnson (:Enclosed ring of, of a dance circle.
R. Alan Brooks (:That is a whole other thing. Yeah. I mean, like, uh, you know, being in an all-black city dancing amongst other people of color, it does not feel like they're waiting for you to entertain them, you know? Right.
Dele Johnson (:Everyone just wants to express themselves. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. But sometimes dance circles and white spaces is very, it just makes me think of like step and fetched. Like, I'm not here to entertain you, you know, like mm-hmm.
But the problem might even pick up a mover too.
True. Yeah. Right.
Ah, no, I'm here as a spectator purely
R. Alan Brooks (:Right.
Yeah, absolutely. Totally understand that. Yeah. Um, so we've talked about comics and, and hip hop and dancing, um, but there, there was a point in time where you were not a professional writer. Yeah. Um, and you know, through various episodes I've gotten to hear bits and pieces of the story. I could put the puzzle together, huh. But now is my opportunity to, to really ask you how you began your journey as a professional writer.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Okay. The whole story happens here. Yeah. Right. Okay. So when I was younger, I wanted to be a comic book artist. And, uh, I would draw all the time. And like I said, hip hop kind of way laid me. So in terms of my development as a visual artist, it probably stopped when I was 15. Um, and so I just didn't draw for a lot of years. Um, but with music, as I mentioned, I got to the point where I was doing a few tours. I got to the point where I, in Denver, I would do like 50 shows a year, and I would have jazz musicians back in me. Um, so usually a bass player keyboard, a Rhodes player, um, and a drummer, and then sometimes other things. But, so I, I had to generate enough money at gigs that I could pay them and pay myself mm-hmm.
And so, uh, so I was doing that for a few years and it was going well. Um, but I had a few musicians who were like negative souls, I guess mm-hmm.
So
You only get out of it what you put into it. Yes. Right.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. So it taught me different kind of the hustle, but it taught me that I could survive doing that. Yeah. I didn't have to like, work on somebody's day job necessarily. Right. Um, but the company I was working for at first were very dishonest. So I quit and went to another insurance agency and I moved to health insurance and they were really cool. They were actually probably the coolest as far as jobs go. Coolest group of people I had ever worked with. Um, but it was the only period in my life where I wasn't doing any art and I was feeling like sort of empty. And there was this, there's this thing with health insurance, right? When you sit down with somebody with health insurance, you're like, Hey, uh, this is the policy. They'll say, well, um, can I take this off and save money?
(:And I'll say, well, if you take this off, if something happens, you will not have this coverage. Oh, I don't need that. I'll be fine. And I'd be like, okay, it's up to you. You know? Um, so they would take it off and then invariably six months later, a year later, they would, that thing would happen. They wouldn't have coverage and they would call me furious Right now, even though intellectually I know it wasn't my fault cuz they chose to take it off. And I explained it to them emotionally, it was hard for me to have people angry with me over something that I don't care about. I don't care about insurance. Like if you're angry with me about like, my belief in human rights, okay. You know, but you're mad at me about insurance. It was just so, it's taking its toll on me.
(:So I basically did insurance from 2012 to 2016. And then 2016, I was like, I can't do it anymore. So I was at this point where I had to like determine, okay, what is my life gonna be? Um, if I have to choose between these two extremes, one extreme is being wealthy and unhappy and the other extreme is being happy and maybe poor, which would I choose? Now that answer's not the same for everybody, but for me it was, I would rather be happy and possibly poor. So I shut down the insurance agency and I was like, what was my first love comic books
Dele Johnson (:All the way back to Yeah. Those, those days at Titans.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yes. Right. Yes. Oh, well done.
Dele Johnson (:Yeah.
The callback,
Dele Johnson (:the easy way for me to remember that is because Titans is one of my favorite super teams.
R. Alan Brooks (:Ah, nice.
I'll never forget that one now,
R. Alan Brooks (:Right?
But it was, uh, and then in Berlin and I, I talked to the guy who owned the three biggest comic book, the biggest comic book store chain there. It was just cool. Like, it was cool to connect with people internationally over something that I had always loved mm-hmm.
Oh, cool. Yeah. So that was, that was pretty cool. So it was all his art mm-hmm.
Oh wow.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Which nobody ever gave me money for my rap stuff. So I really, I didn't expect it
Dele Johnson (:and not to that total right? Five figures. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And, and, and like when I was looking like somebody shared it in the alumni group from my college on Facebook, that I was not a part of, cuz I'm not, you know, a joiner
I have a copy.
R. Alan Brooks (:Ah, right on. It's outta print now. We're gonna have to get it back, but it's sold out when I did the Ted Talk, but I'm jumping ahead. Okay. So Friend met
Yeah. The, the big names.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And, uh, you know, they all shrugged at me, which is fine.
Off the strength of The Burning Metronome. Never met you. Don't know anything about you except for that book.
R. Alan Brooks (:It's, well, they read it and they invited me to teach a seminar first, so I think they could see how I do. Okay. Yeah. And then, uh, well the trial run there. Yeah. Which I didn't know. Yeah. I didn't know that that was a trial. I thought they were just inviting me to do a seminar. Yeah. And then I did a seminar and then they were like, I wanna talk to you about teaching. And I was like, really? You know? Yeah. Cause I've never taught before. Yeah. So, uh, so that book made me a professor, uh mm-hmm.
Yeah. Yeah. Uh, so some of them left and started their own paper called The Colorado Sun. Yeah. Um, and they kind of like checked around for like, who's a comic book person in Denver. And they found me, uh, and one of, one of the two founders, well actually I met both founders the first time we met at Mutiny in a mutiny information cafe. Yeah. And, um, they were like, Hey, we're starting this paper, um, we're wanting to know if you're interested in doing a comic for it. And I was like, give me a week. And so I came up with a pitch for it, you know mm-hmm.
Yeah. And I mean, gosh, even some, you know, newspaper comics is maybe even one or two panels
R. Alan Brooks (:Right, right. Like Farside or Yeah, like classic. Yeah. Yeah. So I was like, I don't know how I'm gonna do this, but, uh, but I pitched this thing called what I Miss. Um, the premise is basically a black man, his twenties, his white neighbor, she's in her fifties. She was in a coma for 30 years, hence the name What I miss. Ah, okay. Uh, and they, I don't know if I was ever aware of that detail. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So that's like, uh, that was the only reason I could think of, of why they would be just out talking about things. Yeah. Yeah. And, uh, but we've moved away from that, uh, in the years since, like, it's there, but it's not like, it's not, it's not so much him filling her in, it's just their friendship. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:So, you know, we've been doing that. I think we're like hitting five years on that. And that comic is one. Oh, and Corey Redford is the artist on that one. Okay. Yeah. She's really dope. And, uh, we've won two journalism awards for it.
Dele Johnson (:Wow. Congratulations.
R. Alan Brooks (:Thank you. Which is, when I got the first one, I was like, I didn't know I was a journalist, but
Yeah. I think that's kind of
R. Alan Brooks (:Beautiful. Yeah. And it happened around Father's Day. Yeah. So that was kind of cool.
Dele Johnson (:Yeah. Perfect.
R. Alan Brooks (:And I'm named after him, so, uh, I go by my middle name, but he's, uh, Rodney Alan Brooks.
Dele Johnson (:Okay. So that's always been burning question for me
R. Alan Brooks (:Me. What's the "R"?
Dele Johnson (:Yeah. Or, or more so Yeah. why the, the R. Alan. And I, I wondered if it was maybe just, you know, you're classing it up a little bit as a, as a professional writer now
Well, I mean, really practically speaking, like, uh, most of my life it was just Alan Brooks, but in order. Uh, but there's such a common name, so Yeah. In order to be Googleable mm-hmm.
Yeah. And top result.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. It's opened up a whole new world. Yeah. So maybe let's, let's go a little bit into that. Now you have, uh, you have work on view in the Denver Art Museum.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yes. Which in true rapper fashion, I want to dedicate to all my hatin' ass art teachers when I grew up
And so, um, I read Nat Love. So Nat love's a cowboy from the 18 hundreds. Um, there was a fictionalized version of him in the Netflix movie, the Harder They Fall. Yes. Yeah. Love that movie. Yeah. It was funny. I found that really enjoyable. Yeah. Yeah. And it's funny we didn't know about it, but the exhibit opened at the same time pretty much that the movie was releasing. Oh yeah. Which was just a funny coincidence. Yeah. But I read this dude's bi autobiography, it's a public domain now, so you could just download it. And, uh, it's really fascinating because it was during a period where cowboys were selling their stories. That's the term. Tall tales come from that. Yeah. So basically cowboys were living their life. People in New York were telling the stories of cowboys. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. When you start telling our own stories. Yeah. Um, but they're known for exaggerating, um, right. Cuz that's kind of like what they were doing. Like that's what they were supposed to do in a sense. Right. They're trying to top each each other. Yeah. So when you read Nat Love's Autobiography, you don't know how historically accurate it is mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Everything is very cinematic. Yes.
R. Alan Brooks (:And I, so I, I took that for inspiration. I think his is way better than mine, just so you know, but
She sat in on a recording of the show
R. Alan Brooks (:As well. Yeah. Yes. Right. Yeah. I forgot you met her. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, so she got to see it and then, uh, my dad is coming in February, so he's gonna see it. Cool. But, uh, so that went well. Then, uh, a year later, which was last year, uh, they approached me again about, uh, conve, uh, exhibit that they had opening called Saint Sin Lovers and Fools. It was Flemish art from the 15 hundreds, um, largely religious iconography, but in that art, so, okay. That's, I was thinking like, what's the knock on Windy way? All right. So in the Bible, the three Kings, you know? Yes.
Dele Johnson (:Okay. So, hey, and today is January 6th, which is Three Kings Day. Oh,
R. Alan Brooks (:I didn't know. That
Dele Johnson (:Actually is a Christian holiday. Oh, wow. Does Mark the end of the Christmas period. So most very, uh, Orthodox or Yeah. Traditional Christians would celebrate from the 25th to the sixth. Huh?
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Okay. So it's not just Insurrection Day
Dele Johnson (:Sense. Right. Okay. So, uh, in the Bible itself, they're not called kings. It doesn't say they're three of them. Mm-hmm.
Oh, what a surprise. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:So this art for this exhibit at the Denver Art Museum was some of the first art to ever show him as a black person. Wow. Yeah. And so, so, uh, when Lauren was reaching out to me from the Denver Art Museum about it, she's basically like, um, I think it would be interesting to do something with Valar mm-hmm.
Specifically. Mm-hmm.
So it feels, you know, like a leather bound book. So it feels like it's part of the exhibit. Yeah. Um, cuz I don't think touchpoint would work for, to accompany art from the 15 hundreds. Right. And so, uh, my girlfriend helped me research, uh, companies that create those books. So there's a book, um, I think it's in, there's a company in Scotland who, um, basically whenever you watch a movie and they have like the book of old Yeah. They make that prop book. Yeah. And so, um, we, Denver Museum was down, we contacted them, they took my story, they printed it in a few pages and then created this prop book. Um, it's like goat skin leather. It's like $700. It's like crazy, you know? Yeah. Um, but it's perfect for the exhibit. Yeah. You know, um, so it's like so many things have blown my mind like to come from being a child where, um, everyone I knew, I mean, other kids thought I was stupid for reading comic books and then teachers hated that.
(:I read comic books and like Society at Large looked down on comic books. And now at this age, comic books are, uh, the thing that made me, a professor brought me into museums to museums mm-hmm.
Know, it almost doesn't sound real. Right. It's like a story from
R. Alan Brooks (:A book, right.
So you've had this meteoric rise, let's call it. Um, and you're publishing your own stories. Uh, you've got newer books coming out. You've got the Anguish Garden Yeah. Series. Um, which I've been reading. So thank you for those copies. Nice. Um, I've been enjoying it a lot Hmm. And myself being a comic book lover. Yeah. Uh, I am curious, you know, you try to reach out to the big names in comic books and to Noah Veil mm-hmm.
Who would you choose?
R. Alan Brooks (:Oh, that's an interesting question. Well, okay. So for me, um, all, all my comics typically have some kind of like social commentary or like, my art is my way of contributing to a better world, right? Mm-hmm.
Completely anonymous.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yes. But, uh, you know, it doesn't seem like in the cars for me. So, um, my interest in writing for say like a Marvel or DC is is that like creating a bigger platform to tell the stories I wanna tell mm-hmm.
Right. Um, but with Spider-Man, it doesn't matter how you write Spider-Man, it matters how you write Peter Parker. Right. So that was really interesting. Um, so I think DC characters will be, are, are more interesting to me because, because there's a lot more room to define things with them mm-hmm.
Yeah, very much so. So, so for me, like one of the things that I've always made sure that I've done is know about like the black and brown characters in these comics. I've always wanted to see myself. Ah-huh.
R. Alan Brooks (:So Mr. Terrific. Right? Definitely. Definitely.
R. Alan Brooks (:So, okay, Mr. Terrific. I feel like, uh, is often used poorly. Um, he has such an audacious, ridiculous name, like Yeah. Uh, but he's named after No Fear, right?
Oh,
R. Alan Brooks (:Interesting. Yeah. Because the arrogance that it requires to call yourself Mr. Terrific. Yeah. And to announce that you're the third smartest man in the world. Right. I think could be really fun. Yeah. You know, it could be like a comedy adventure
Dele Johnson (:And in many iterations, a tech billionaire Right. Of sorts. Some sort of really, uh, visionary type of person. Large personality.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Yeah. I mean, he's black Tony Stark in a lot of ways. Yeah. But yeah, so like, I think it could be a, a fun kind of thing, especially if he had somebody who wasn't as pretentious as him or was smarter. Hmm. You know, like that would really burn him up as
Dele Johnson (:Like, as like a foil as his adversary. Uh,
R. Alan Brooks (:Uh, I think, uh, a comedic foil. So it could be like his cousin who's like Oh, sure. Who's like real hood. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. So it doesn't like, uh, play into the social conventions. He plays into Uhhuh
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And so like, you know, whereas Marvel, I think has spent more time investing into the personality of their characters. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Yeah. That's interesting. Um, you know, I guess one thing that I associate with like masks and comics and things, there's always, you know, I mask is like a shield, it's like a protector. It's a way to maybe disguise yourself, protect yourself. Mm-hmm. Um, it evokes ideas of fear for me. And obviously it wouldn't be an episode of how Art was born. Um, if I didn't ask you about, um, how you deal with fear, maybe perhaps how you've dealt with fear in, uh, your comics writing career thus far. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:That Ryan, by the way. Oh, I did It didn't see Skills.
Dele Johnson (:It means that it doesn't stop me. So like, I feel the fear and I still send it, you know, I still send it to the printer. I still send it to the producers. I still send it to the artist. Um, and then eventually it goes away. You know? Yeah. I think a lot of us are constantly trying to talk ourselves out of fear or pretend like it doesn't exist. Mm-hmm.
And it's something I've been teaching here and there. I teach it at Regis, at Teach It at Light House. Um, I'll be teaching in a Regis Tomorrow effect. Oh, wonderful. Uh, and also, uh, we're doing a video of it, like, uh, have a, it's, it's, oh, I guess it's done now. It's just, we're gonna premiere it soon. But like, uh, just a video. Cuz I, I basically, I wanted other creative people that have something to be like, these are ways to walk through fear and still create by heart. Cuz I think we just, I don't know. I feel like most of the advice is just like, you just gotta keep going. You just gotta ignore it.
Yeah. It can't just be that simple. Right, right,
R. Alan Brooks (:Right. You gotta do something to get Yeah. So, um, yeah. So it's basically just ways to help people. But like for myself, it's really like fear is, is a constant companion. And instead of trying to deny it, just accept that it's there and move forward. Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:I love that. And, you know, I think I'm gonna try to employ that in my own life. I, I think, you know, fear for me mostly manifests in like imposter syndrome.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:Um, and like yeah. The fear of putting things out, how will it be accepted? I usually will feel good about things as I'm working on them, but Yep.
R. Alan Brooks (:When
Dele Johnson (:It's done, then it may just stay on a hard drive or in a file on my computer or on my phone.
R. Alan Brooks (:It happens. So many that's our, that's the tragedy. Right. But here's the other thing with imposter syndrome. Like, I look at, you know, all of us, anybody who's creative has opinions about the art that comes out. Right. And, you know, we might not say names, but all of us have something where we're like, that is garbage
Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And I think, um, I think we're all imposters in terms of however imposter syndrome is defined. Mm-hmm.
What a Legend.
R. Alan Brooks (:Right Now it says something about his audacity. Yeah. But I think it also says like, um, everybody's making their best guess. Mm-hmm.
Wow. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. And so, like, and that book now, you know, however many decades later, all these movies, you know?
Dele Johnson (:Yeah. Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:So I mean,
Dele Johnson (:Now Dune is in the zeitgeist. Right,
R. Alan Brooks (:Right. Yeah. And it might not have been if he had listened to all those people. Right. So I think, you know, like people, everybody's making their best guess. So if we feel like an imposter, like, you know, there may be things to work on as an artist and, you know, we can accept, uh, feedback mm-hmm.
Unless it's in that spy sense, he is an imposter.
Um, well, Alan, it's been an amazing conversation with you. Yeah. Likewise. I'm happy that we've had an opportunity to have it. Um, so before we close up, um, I just want to hear from you about, uh, what's on the horizon. Um, and then of course we have to hear about your, your geeky pleasures. What are you into lately?
R. Alan Brooks (:It's almost like you produced this show or
Dele Johnson (:Something. Yeah, I guess I, I might know a thing or two. Really. Yeah, that's right. You know how it goes. I'm just flying off the cuff right now.
All right. So, uh, I mentioned the movie thing, uh, that actually came from somebody I knew from the dance floor too. Uh, it is spiritually the sequel to the Breaking movies from the eighties, uh, Boog Go Shrimp. Shrimp who played Turbo in those movies. Mm-hmm.
Uh, loosely. Okay.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. So it's where, uh, I would say most young people in the world get their comics cuz it's free. Yeah. They're all designed for scrolling on the phone. Yeah. So it's, it'd be hard to adapt a existing comic and put it into that format cuz it has to be that square.
Dele Johnson (:Right. It has to already fit the, uh, yeah. The dimensions there.
R. Alan Brooks (:You got it. Yeah. So, um, I'm doing that one with an artist in Bangladesh named Sachi Chama. And, uh, an artist here, Lonnie m f Allen, is going do the Colors, Uhhuh
Ghost. Oh, interesting.
R. Alan Brooks (:That's a good reaction to that name. Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:That's No, I like, I I I like that. I like that.
R. Alan Brooks (:I'll tell you briefly, the idea is basically, you know, the scene that you see in movies, it's always the scene where, like the drug kingpin is about to take out one of his, uh, lackeys mm-hmm.
Have a choice. Yes. You you, you're making me
R. Alan Brooks (:Do this. You've seen it. Right? Oh yeah. And the person who's about to die is like, just promise me my family will be safe. Mm-hmm.
And they're not doing well.
R. Alan Brooks (:They're in the afterlife. So they've been killed. Oh. The Kingpin did not keep their promise. So now this story is about him figuring out how to go back to Earth and take his revenge Yeah. On the kingpin who killed his family. Yeah. Um, and strangely it's a comedy. I I'm not, I don't think I explained it well. It's a comedy, but
Dele Johnson (:It's a comedy. Yeah. I can, I can see some dark humor coming out of this whole supernatural, uh, setting.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah, you're right. So, uh, the character designs have happened. Uh, I got a logo and, um, I've written it, so now I'm just gonna try and get a few episodes in place before we get them on Web Tune. So I'm excited about that one. Yeah. And, uh, I think I know I'm gonna write another graphic novel this year. Yeah. I just dunno what it is yet. Oh yeah. Bernie, me on two is being colored. Oh,
Dele Johnson (:Cool. Yeah,
R. Alan Brooks (:Part two. Yeah. And, uh, I have a Paton, I'm teaching, uh, I'm gonna start teaching classes, comic book writing classes on the Patreon for people who, um, can't afford like a university thing. Mm-hmm.
Geeky pleasure.
R. Alan Brooks (:Oh yes.
Dele Johnson (:What are you, what are you into, what's bringing you joy?
R. Alan Brooks (:Well, there's always weird Al but we
I was thinking of South Side, but that's Oh. Or the Motown
R. Alan Brooks (:Show. Okay. Yeah. No, that's good. Thank you. They're two guys who are from Chicago who make a show called South Side, which is set in the south side of Chicago.
Dele Johnson (:Yeah.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Uh, have you seen it?
Dele Johnson (:Uh, I haven't seen it, but I am aware of
R. Alan Brooks (:It. It's really funny. It's good, I guess, like, surprisingly good. It reminds me, uh, it re Okay, so it's Hood and Intelligent mm-hmm.
Oh, I love a, I love a good
R. Alan Brooks (:Documentary Okay. Of a fake Soul Train show. Yeah. So, uh, and the, the music of the imaginary artist on the fake Soul Train Show mm-hmm.
Yeah. Uh, from Little Brother.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yep. Yeah. And, uh, Foreign Exchange. Yeah. Yeah. So, um, so that, that one's really funny and silly. Uh, I'm enjoying that. Uh, one of the actors from there was on, was in the Top Gun sequel.
Dele Johnson (:Oh. Jay Ellis?
R. Alan Brooks (:I don't know their names.
Dele Johnson (:This is Tall, tall Guy played Lawrence and Insecure as well.
R. Alan Brooks (:Oh no, no. Oh, different one? No, uh, it's a shorter kind of port brother. One of them is named like Diallo, like they had those kind of names, but I can't remember. But, but yeah, so he was in there and, uh, while he was filming it, he told Tom Cruise about their shows and Tom Cruise liked South Side. Yeah. And then called into the writer's room to tell him how much he liked the show. Wow. Yeah.
Dele Johnson (:So that's, he got the co-sign from Tom Cruise. That goes a long way in
R. Alan Brooks (:Hollywood. Seriously. Yeah. Yeah. So, no, I'm really digging those shows and, uh, yeah, I don't know man. I tend to like a lot of silly stuff cuz I write a lot of heart stuff, but, um, yeah. Oh, oh, glass Onion. I really love Glass Onion.
Dele Johnson (:Glass Onion was great. I I thought that, I thought that that was a great, it's not a sequel necessarily. I mean Yeah. You still got your main character. Right. Um, but yeah, I thought that was a great way of, you know, doing another sort of knives out thing Yeah. And not replaying all the same beats.
R. Alan Brooks (:Right. Yeah. Yeah. I really enjoyed both of those Knives Out movies. That was inspiring to me. Uh, just in terms of how he could take what was familiar and flip it. Mm-hmm.
Yeah it's hotly contested as a, a topic of controversy in
R. Alan Brooks (:Not like Star Wars fans,
Dele Johnson (:Any nerdy room for sure. Right.
R. Alan Brooks (:But Star Wars fans hate everything, so, uh, yes. With the exception of the Mandelorian, like for the most part.
Dele Johnson (:Right. Like that's why I struggle to identify as a Star Wars fan. Yeah. Cuz I don't wanna be lumped in with all those terrible incels, but.
R. Alan Brooks (:Yeah. Yeah.
That's dope. Well, now I have some things on my list and hopefully some listeners have some things on their list to check out as well. Right on. Cool. Well, Alan, thank you so much, uh, for being our guest today on How Art is Born for this special. It's an honor. This episode