ED PISKOR TM
T R I G G E R WA R N I N G S
TM
vii
Foreword
O N E
1
Rat queens
T W O
25
punkins
T H R E E
51
ISLE of RED ROOMS
F O U R
75
MR NFT
Red Room First Draft PA R T 2 O F 3 105
D I R E C T O R ’ S C O M M E N TA R Y
A Glimpse Into the Mind of a Maniac 139
After the first 100-plus pages of Red Room, I really hit my stride with the book you’re holding in your hands. I got comfortable with the universe I built. I can see different kinds of themes and patterns emerging over time that help nudge the narrative in its proper direction. These kinds of things are not always obvious when you set out to make a comic. Keeping the thought of trying to make a modern-day horror comic with a subject matter that was unavailable years before really opened the floodgates beyond cryptocurrency and the Dark Web. Maybe the clearest theme that’s unraveled is the construct of class hierarchy in many different forms and each issue (episode) in this volume looks at this theme at different angles. The lead-up story featuring the Rat Queens started with a simple germ of an idea: “Let’s see a complete red room video from start to end… and make it one of the crown jewels of this sick subculture.” Looking at it through the lens of class hierarchy you have the lowest class being the queens, who are looked at by everyone else as mere product. Davis Fairfield is a worker bee who has some success, but there are clearly people at the top and those people at the top do not get into any trouble when it’s all said and done. And then there are those pesky customers in the chat room who keep the entire ecosystem moving: super wealthy assholes who have their hands on the hamster feeder and want to be entertained for their money’s worth. The second tale, “Punkinz,” made me think of who the nouveau riche would be in this sick subculture. It would be copycats who exploit the “meme” of red rooms to their own ends. “Memes” on the internet have a kind of pyramid scheme quality to them, where the closest copycats share some big rewards as the derivatives continue to trickle down.
vii
The third story is the weirdest. I had a lot of thoughts with this one in mind. Lots of notes were taken during the whole Jeffrey Epstein saga. I also heard some weird conspiracy where there was an island where rich dudes like Trump go to meet exotic, future trophy wives… And then I read about the depravity that occurred at the Pitcairn Islands, which is stranger than fiction. All these pieces fit comfortably in a Red Room universe, and class — the “haves” and “have-nots” — is still a big factor in these spaces. Circling back to the sickos in the chat rooms who fuel the red room culture, I had to use the fourth story to explore who the hell some of these people might be. You might be able to tell that I had a lot of fun thinking about these fools and how they’d handle a little bit of hot water. There’s always room for a bit of catharsis in comic making. I can comfortably say right now that after 10,000 hours practice by doing 200+ pages of Red Room, I’m even more solid about where the comic needs to go, and I can’t wait for you to see the next book. Ed Piskor Topeka State Hospital, 2022
viii
27
53
77