Part 2 of the Bart Sears interview continues as Bart walks David and John through the high-pressure years where every career move looked massive and every deadline came with teeth. Bart talks Eclipso, DC exclusives, the frustration of not getting one of the big characters, and the Valiant jump that put him on X-O Manowar and Turok right as the 90s boom was cooking itself alive. Then things get even more beautifully ridiculous with ToyBiz figure designs, Wizard pseudonyms, Brutes and Babes, and the launch of Ominous Press with a first issue that was basically a comic book, trading card set, collectible object, and logistical nightmare all at once! Along the way, Bart gets brutally honest about missed deadlines, silence with editors, depression, burnout, and why communication can save a project before everything goes sideways. It’s funny, brutal, and honest as hell — Bart Sears tells the truth about surviving the machine. Captions:“I wanted one of the main characters or I was gone.” — Bart Sears on asking DC for a bigger book before leaving for Valiant “They manufactured that heat.” — Bart Sears on how Valiant built demand by under-shipping early books “Wait, are you claiming that you ended the comic book industry in the 90s boom?” — David calling out Bart after the Turok sales talk “I screwed myself with Valiant.” — Bart Sears on taking X-O Manowar and Turok at the same time “If I’d stayed communicating, I probably would have been fine.” — Bart Sears on deadlines, embarrassment, and the editor relationship “I’ve never really enjoyed drawing.” — Bart Sears on the brutal honesty behind burnout, talent, and the job Splash Page:[00:57] – Eighty Pages of Pain: Bart remembers the Eclipso 80-pagers and the line technique that looked great but turned into a time-sucking monster. [03:09] – The Gem Cover Defense: The infamous Eclipso cover gets defended with the most collector-unfriendly solution possible: just buy two. [04:02] – Give Me Batman or I Walk: Bart explains why DC’s refusal to put him on a bigger character pushed him toward Valiant. [07:32] – Valiant Builds the Furnace: Bart breaks down how under-shipping created demand, heat, and eventually a sales bubble nobody could sustain. [09:32] – Two Monthly Books, One Bad Idea: X-O Manowar and Turok looked like a payday until deadlines, style choices, and pressure turned the whole thing into quicksand. [11:17] – Silence Kills Pages: David lands a real editor lesson for younger artists: communicate early, because quiet makes everybody panic. [15:24] – The Wizard Pseudonym Game: Bart explains why “Whitman” and “McNabb” showed up on Wizard covers while everyone with eyeballs knew it was him. [22:36] – The Monument Edition Madness: Ominous Press launches with loose cardstock pages in custom plastic cases, hand-packed in Bart’s mother’s garage like the most 90s comic object ever created. Support The Corner Box:David Hedgecock (https://funtimego.com) - The Corner Box Co-Host John Barber (https://www.pugworldwide.com) - The Corner Box Co-Host The Corner Box (https://www.thecornerbox.club) - Official Website Dive Deeper Into the Back Issue Bin: Bart Sears (https://www.bartsearsart.com) - The guest of honor, walking through Eclipso, Valiant, ToyBiz, Ominous Press, burnout, and the giant-art choices that made his pages impossible to ignore. David Hedgecock (https://funtimego.com) - The Corner Box co-host steering the conversation with collector brain, editor instincts, and full-on Bart Sears fandom. John Barber (https://www.pugworldwide.com) - The Corner Box co-host bringing the editor’s-eye view on contracts, deadlines, layouts, and why Bart’s pages never felt like anyone else’s. Joe Quesada (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Quesada) - Mentioned by John in connection with young artists leaving when publishers would not hand them bigger characters. Steven Massarsky (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Massarsky) - The Valiant co-founder Bart says was actively wooing him away from DC. Gareb Shamus (https://www.instagram.com/garebshamus/) - Wizard founder referenced during the Ominous Press discussion and the choice to launch with Brute and Babe. Todd McFarlane (https://mcfarlane.com) - Comes up during Bart’s Violator story, where deadline expectations collided hard with burnout. Christopher Priest (https://digitalpriest.com/about/) - The writer on Captain America and the Falcon, where Bart turned boredom into huge Cap and Falcon visuals on the page. Ron Marz (https://www.ronmarz.com/) - The writer on The Path, where Bart happily blew up the layouts while working inside CrossGen. Rob Hunter (https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Rob_Hunter) - The inker Bart wanted on Captain America and the Falcon because he knew Hunter’s line would make the heavy rendering sing. Andy Smith (https://www.andysmithart.com/) - Mentioned as part of the studio and Silver Surfer-era orbit around Bart’s post-Valiant scramble. Mark Pennington (https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Mark_Pennington) - The inker Bart discusses in relation to The Path and its blown-up marker layouts. Eclipso (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eclipso) - The DC villain and crossover work that pushed Bart into massive 80-page assignments and one very memorable gem-cover controversy. Justice League Europe (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_League_Europe) - Bart’s DC title before the Eclipso frustration and the “why won’t they give me a bigger character?” breaking point. Valiant Comics (https://www.dmg-entertainment.com/ip-universes/valiant-comics/) - The hot publisher that pulled Bart away from DC during the early 90s boom. X-O Manowar (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-O_Manowar) - One of the Valiant books Bart took on while trying to chase a more illustrative style under impossible monthly pressure. Turok: Dinosaur Hunter (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turok:_Dinosaur_Hunter) - The Valiant hit Bart connects to the massive sales spike and speculator-era overload. Wizard Magazine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wizard_%28magazine%29) - The 90s comics magazine where Bart’s Brutes and Babes tutorials and pseudonymous covers helped boost his profile. Toy Biz (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toy_Biz) - The toy company behind the Marvel figure work Bart was designing around the same time he was trying to build a studio. Ominous Press (https://www.bartsearsart.com/folio-9) - Bart’s creator-owned publishing swing, built on huge mythology, Brute and Babe, and the infamous Monument Edition packaging gamble. CrossGen (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CrossGen) - The publisher where Bart became art director and pushed layouts hard on books like The Path. Captain America and the Falcon (https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Captain_America_and_the_Falcon_Vol_1_1) - The Marvel series Bart discusses for its big figures, silhouette vehicles, and heavily rendered approach. The Path (https://crossgen-comics-database.fandom.com/wiki/The_Path_%28comics%29) - The CrossGen series Bart used to experiment with two-page spreads, marker layouts, and page design that ignored the safe route.