Josman’s style was rooted in the "Western Animation" tradition. His characters possessed the exaggerated facial features, the clean lines, and the expressive eyes reminiscent of Hanna-Barbera cartoons or The Flintstones , but filtered through a lens of hyper-sexualization. His men were rarely twinks; they were "daddies," blue-collar workers, mailmen, construction guys, and coaches. They were hairy, barrel-chested, and possessed of a distinct, comforting masculinity that felt grounded in American suburban nostalgia.

Josman has hinted that the next "Phase 2" of the CBR Exclusive program will involve . Not for speculation, but for verification. A cryptographic key embedded in the CBR file that proves authenticity without requiring a blockchain viewer.

Became an "overnight sensation" in 2002 after the internet release of My Wild & Raunchy Son .

: A colorist named Frank Martin (not Josman) is frequently cited in CBR exclusives for high-profile DC projects like Absolute Batman .

The exclusive is not just a file format. It is a fortress. It is the blueprint for how artists will reclaim their work from the digital void.

A "CBR Exclusive" means that the comic is released only in this raw, page-by-page format directly through Josman’s own storefront or select partner websites. It is not available as a streaming asset. You download it; you own it. For fans of Josman’s often dark, textured pencil work, this is crucial. Streaming platforms compress images, muddying the fine hatching and shadow work Josman is famous for. The CBR file preserves every pixel of the original render.