Archive for 2008:

'Where's Rogan?' Struts Silverlight Down Catwalk

Where's Rogan?Where’s Rogan?, a new fashion web series released by NYmag.com this week comes complete with the latest in contextual advertising all built upon Microsoft’s new Silverlight programmable browser-within-a-browser. The highly stylized scripted series features friends and fashion personalities associated with designer Rogan Gregory (the artist behind organic lines Loomstate and Bono’s EDUN), who happens to disappear mysteriously during New York Fashion Week 2008.

The project came about when Microsoft was looking for another way to show off their spiffy new Silverlight platform to the world. Silverlight’s first coming out party was when NBC chose it as their exclusive video platform for the Olympics on NBC.com. (NBC later ditched Silverlight, citing a lack of user adoption and the mass use of Adobe’s Flash.)

But in the fashion world style trumps mainstream accessibility, and Silverlight may have found its high-end image ambassadors. We talked to producer Rob Veksler of Hat Trick Media who pitched Microsoft the idea of doing a fashion-based show. “I brought them NYmag as a channel for distribution,” says Rob Veksler. “Microsoft’s stated goal was to build an advertising case study around Silverlight. We brought NYmag to the table as a partner that had the earWhere's Rogan 2 of possible sponsors for the content and a highly coveted reach. Strategically, the partnership made perfect sense to us all.”

Appearances by fashion personalities like Rogan’s real-life friends and fashion industry insiders are littered throughout the 10-episode series. Of course the sponsors’ products also make healthy cameos  — TRESemmé, Olay, Continental Airlines — used not only by the show’s characters but also in floating, clickable graphics on the side of the Silverlight player every time a new product appears. While the products are undoubtedly distracting at times, they are integrated in a kitchsy kind of Blade Runner holographic, glowing world of commercialism. According to Veksler this is all on purpose.

“It is ultimately an avant-garde project with blatant sponsorship, which to us served multiple purposes,” said Veksler. “We wanted to incorporate the sponsors as smartly as possible into the storyline but still have fun with it. On set I would be yelling at John Guttierez (the director) to use more TRESemme on the actors. A couple of them definitely finished their work day with immovable, weatherman hair.”

Where's Rogan 3

Directed by John Gutierrez (The Last Poets) and written by South African playwright Nadia Davids, the series releases two new episodes each week on the Where’s Rogan? site leading up to the finale on November 19th. A killer score from UK-born composer Jett Craze completes the vogue aesthetic.

While the show may be flashy, the three-minute episodes are a bit thin on storyline. While the search for Rogan is supposedly the main focus, more time is spent interviewing fashion personalities than is spent actually looking for the missing designer, with some interview shots repeated in multiple episodes. For uber fashionistas and industry insiders on the other hand, there are some fun inside jokes. “There is no way Diane Von Furstenberg would have let me do some of the stuff we did on Where's Rogan? - titlethis, but Rogan was game.” Others were game as well. Rogan’s nemesis was played by Terrence Bogan, the head buyer at Barney’s. “We wanted to interweave fiction with real life,” says Veksler, “And hopefully deliver some inside jokes.”

“When the series comes to an end in a few weeks we are going to put this together as one continuous film – it should run approx 20 minutes,” Veksler adds. “So really that’s what this is, a serialized short film with integrated product placement wrapped in an elegant player.”

Hat Trick has some other projects up their sleeves. Veksler said other large online publications have approached the company about product intergrated web series, not to mention, Hat Trick is taking meetings in Hollywood for the development of feature films. In the meantime, maybe someone will finally find Rogan.

YouTube's 'Video Your Vote' Shows You Can't Elect Bush 3 Times

The brainiacs at You Tube partnered with PBS and came up with a Michael Moore-inspired idea for participatory entertainment / public government watchdog that actually has an effect with their November 4 project, Video Your Vote.

Considering America’s long-standing tradition of voter intimidation – and especially after the 2000 Florida elections debacle – citizen journalists, and just plain citizens, tried to keep this election clean by filming their own Election Day voting experiences, which they then uploaded to the nifty Video Your Vote site. Over 1500 and counting clips highlight what happened on election day through the eyes of you – the voter.

The curtain in the polling booths was pulled back with videos capturing the excitement and energy of what it means to take part in the electoral process, centering on voter perspective, long lines, polling place problems, broken machines, as well as the pure joy of being able to be a turn out and exercising our rights in the US of A.

And there’s also this guy. A confused Texas man who wanted to vote for Bush for a 3rd term and ended up casting a blank ballot. No, I’m not joking.

Read On…

Atomic Wedgie's 'Secret Girlfriend' Loves You

As much as we all love it, the internet can be a sad place. For all the bright colors and cheerful banner ads, you eventually have to realize that all the people interacting on the internet are, in real life, sitting down in front of a screen and typing, while the world zooms by around them.

Just kidding! LOL! Teh internet rulez!!1! Though it might not be improper to suggest that many netizens are in need of a little face to face interaction.

If Match.com seems like too much effort, web producers AtomicWedgieTV.com and Ross Novie have come up with the next best thing; made to order video text message from (seemingly) real girls, all of whom are cute, funny, and absolutely, positively wild about you, the viewer.

Secret Girlfriend is yet another exploration of the first-person confessional style web video, which may in fact be the internet’s first unique cinematic genre.

Read On…

Strike.TV Reviews – Part 3: 'Joe & Kate' and 'Unknown Sender'

This is part 3 of a multi-part review of the initial lineup of Strike.TV’s original web series.

Joe & Kate

Kate PurdyJoe & Kate’s tagline sums it up: ‘awkward and honest moments in the everyday life of a couple’. So short and sweet it leaves you wanting more. At one minute in length it’s as awkward and funny as a premature ejaculation, as Kate returns from the bathroom to the bedroom and Joe proceeds to inquire about how a vagina works. No wonder the series is sponsored by K-Y Jelly.

Written and performed by Joe Kelly and Kate Purdy this show could become a cult hit if it sticks to its premise and is marketed well. Just left of being totally real, Joe and Kate seem like amateur actors, and no offense if they’re not, because it’s exactly what works for the show. There’s a comfort to them that makes me think they might actually be married as Kate uses a teddy bear to explain the anatomy of a woman’s nether regions and Joe nods thoughtfully asking slightly confused questions that I have to admit, I don’t know the answer to, but would like to.

And that’s just it. It’s totally relatable, from the writing, to the acting, to the simplicity of the setting in the bedroom before sleep time. Please please please let them stick to the short-and-sweetness, the uncomfortable comfort and the things you always wanted to know but were afraid to ask and this fun little show will speak to millions of couples the world over.

Unknown Sender

(Spoiler alert) This is good, but I have to admit, I was bored in the first twenty seconds. Really? A talking head? Well, that’s how this fictional confessional begins with Timothy Dalton speaking directly to a camera, recording a suicide note to his wife, Carolyn, in which he tells her she’s been completely cut from his will.

Steven E. De SouzaDalton’s performance is subtle and genius as is to be expected, though the confessional is a little lackluster as it’s written, and I can’t help but think their lavish life could somehow be funnier. However, it’s really in writer Steven E. de Souza’s (Die Hard, Tomb Raider) plotting, where the story works and brings on some hearty laughs as Carolyn, played by Joanne Whalley, enters and proceeds to shoot Dalton, the performances of which, on both actor’s parts, are hysterical.

I’m not totally sure what to expect from this anthology series, which is supposed to bring us new episodes culled from random internet posts collected by the mysterious ‘Unknown Sender’ (all obviously fictional)—a somewhat wonky description of the series—but nevertheless, I like this one and can only hope they are at least this good if not better.

[Ed. Note: We know you guys don’t always agree with our reviewers’ opinions, so please post a comment to let us know what you think of the series! Read Part 1 and Part 2.]

Ashton Kutcher's 'Blah Girls' Ink Distribution Deal With MySpace

Blah Girls - Tiffany, Kystle and BritneyTechCrunch is reporting that Ashton Kutcher’s animated teen girl web series Blah Girls has signed a distribution deal with MySpace, giving the sassy ladies their own channel on MySpaceTV. We confirmed this with MySpace, though few details as to terms of the deal are being released. So far 16 videos have been added to the channel, while it appears that 18 are out on the Blah Girls site. The original series from Kutcher and partner Jason Goldberg’s Kataylst Media (known for its TV reality shows Punk’d and Beauty and the Geek) debuted at TechCrunch50 in early September as the LA-based production company’s first episodic web project. Pop cartoonist Todd Goldman’s David & Goliath (known also for some spiffy t-shirts) severed as the animation partner for the project.

Seems like the Kataylst-MySpace deal is the typical lovefest, with both parties getting gooey for each other. “We are thrilled that the Blah Girls will soon find a home on MySpace,” said Ashton Kutcher. “Since we launched the first season of the Blah Girls, we have been refining the content and working to find an ideal platform for the property. Given MySpace’s passion for entertainment and the company’s dedication to bringing original, high quality video to consumers, we are strategically matched with the path MySpace is on to be the Web’s leading entertainment destination. The Blah Girls love MySpace.”

“When Ashton and I met at TechCrunch50 I knew MySpace should work with Katalyst Media,” said MySpace co-founder and CEO Chris DeWolfe. “Blah Girls is great fit for MySpace, as the content is designed for pop culture enthusiasts and mid-older teenagers. We expect the MySpace audience to connect with the Blah Girls, and we look forward to bringing this new Web series to our advertisers–especially brands seeking to reach influencers young and old.”

The weekly series was getting decent buzz on its own site, but now will take advantage of MySpaceTV’s massive user base of over 150 million MySpace profiles which delivered some 51 million unique video streams in August according to comScore. Season two will be syndicated by MySpace when it comes out in early January as well as all of season one.

[UPDATED – 11/6/08: Added comments from Ashton Kutcher and Chris DeWolfe as well as more info on season two.]

Atom Likes it Raunchy As 'Best Friend' Gets Comedy Central Debut

My Best Friend is My Penis on AtomAtom.com rolled out another raunchy and offbeat comedy web series last week, proving that penis jokes and sex talk are still surefire ways to crank out views. My Best Friend is My Penis, stars Jonathan Togo (CSI: Miami) and Will Carlough in a buddy story that’s both original and all too familiar — a man (Togo) who’s best friend (Carlough) is literally his wise-cracking male appendage named “Will.”

As is typical with some of the hotter series on Viacom-owned Atom, the series will air on Comedy Central’s weekly late-night half hour AtomTV block on December 8th. Togo and Carlough wrote the series and produced along with the new media division at Crossroads Films. Carlough is a longtime Atom video auteur known for a number of breakouts including his “Tarkin ‘n Friends,” which took the prize for Best comedy in the 2008 Star Wars Movie Challenge.

I caught up with Will to chat about the series and how it was working with long-time friend Jonathan. “Togo and I have known each other since our freshman year of college, when we were in a band called Skabba The Hut.” (We looked a little more into Skabba The Hut and apparently you can still get to their old MySpace page.)

Will CarloughWe wanted to know what led to their choice of partnering with Crossroads on the project. “We ended up talking to a bunch of production companies,” Carlough tells me, “and Dave Title at Crossroads was the coolest guy we talked with, so we went with them.  So, in short, we didn’t think it out that well, but it worked out, fortunately.”

When asked about more episodes in store for the series? “I mean, we’d love to make more,”  says Carlough.  “That’s all up to Atom and Comedy Central.” (Translation: it depends how many views it gets.) With episode one (above) already touching on 100,000 views since its release and Episode 2 at just over 12,000, it could use a little help.

The serial-auteur Carlough is nonetheless hard at work on his next project which he couldn’t yet divulge publicly. “I do have something super secret in the works and that’s all I can say, other than there’s a hint to what it is in this sentence,” hinted Carlough.

'Italian Spiderman' is 1970's Faux Italian Cinema at its Finest

If Dario Argento had a secret love baby with Sergio Leone it would look like Italian Spiderman.

Brilliant isn’t a word that should be thrown around lightly, but I’m gonna chuck it right at your face. Italian Spiderman is brilliant. Sometimes there are things that are so subversive, so inspired, so damn…brilliant, you are left staring at the screen. This is one of them.

A dead-on parody of 60’s and 70’s Italian cinema (heavy on the Diabolik), this student project-turned comedy web series is a Return to Supermans with a modest budget, and a serious trip (I haven’t experienced anything this psychedelic since I mainlined that slurpee and listened to the Porpoise Song on repeat).

The real creators of Italian Spiderman are cloaked in secrecy, so I’m going to roll with the ruse.

Read On…

MTV's Kurt Loder Gives My Damn Channel a 'Lapdance'

Children of the 80’s, your favorite news anchor is back and on your medium of choice (the internet!). In this sentence I would normally introduce Kurt Loder, link to a bio, and talk a little bit about how for a few sad/happy childhood years he was my #1 source of what’s going on in the world, but this sweet MTV promo does such a good job of all that:

Today, My Damn Channel Ambassador to the World Wide Web Grace announced Loder’s new series, Lapdance, where the former face of MTV News “saves the world – one interview at a time.”

I’m not sure where global salvation comes into play, but on the show Loder will chat with filmmakers, musicians, and other notable personalities laptop to laptop (hence the punny title). Below, hear him talk with My Damn Channel regular Harry Shearer about a possible Spinal Tap reunion(!!!):

Read On…

Strike.TV Reviews – Part 2: 'House Poor' and 'Daryl From OnCar'

This is part 2 of a multi-part review of the initial lineup of Strike.TV’s original web series.

House Poor

Yay! Mindy Kaling saves the day! Strike.TV redeemed! House Poor is about writer and actress Mindy Kaling’sHouse Poor - Production Still foray into impoverished home ownership. Written by Kaling and Lester Lewis, the mockumentary pilot begins with Mindy throwing a baby shower for herself in order to furnish her home. Hilarity ensues when Mindy gets annoyed at her guests for actually buying gifts for a baby girl and not checking her registries…at Crate and Barrel and Z Gallery.

I don’t watch The Office so I’m not predisposed to LOVE Mindy Kaling, but for some reason, the moment she appears onscreen at the opening of the show, I laughed. A combination of her sudden close-up, a glint of sardonic wit in her eyes and the fast throwaway joke about fellow writer and the previous owner of her home Mike Schur, elicited a quick but very real guffaw. And this is just the beginning.

Strike.TV must have a production value mandate, because this show looks great. The music cues are right on, the casting stellar, and Jessica Landaw’s direction is spot on. At three minutes, it’s the perfect length and totally watchable. I’ll definitely be coming back for this one.

Daryl From OnCar

Daryl from OnCar - Production StillHmm. So I’m trying to understand how this is ‘Episode One’. At twelve minutes or so, it feels like they’ve told every joke possible with this particular concept: the omniscient ‘state-of-the-art on-board navigation/concierge/emergency help system with analog curb-feelers’ that comes standard with main character, Ted’s, new minivan.

From helping Ted unlock his car to directing him to the nearest whorehouse, writers Ron Corcillo and Russ Carney of America (yes, that’s how he’s credited), seem to run the gamut of humor in this faux commercial spoofing the OnStar navigation system. It’s way too long, but definitely funny in spots and the actors, Bob Clendenin as minivan owner Ted and Michele Scarabelli as his wife Judy do a good job. But, I just have to ask, what’s next?

As is the modus operandi of Strike.TV, production value is high and Clendenin and Scarabelli are talented and vaguely familiar. Daryl, the OnCar voice played by Russ Carney of America is funny and spot-on in his dry, matter of factness. And the morality tale ending with Ted’s gratitude to Daryl for ‘boning’ his wife (you have to see it) and ‘teaching [him] how to love’ is pretty funny. So, I guess, watch it, but watch it in three minute stints so it feels like a good web series and not just a long overdone one-off.

[Ed. Note: We know you guys don’t always agree with our reviewers’ opinions, so please post a comment to let us know what you think of the series! Read Part 1 and Part 3.]

'Where's Rogan?' Web Series Premiers on NYmag.com

Fashion Network TV, the news source in the alterworld of Where’s Rogan?, will give you the skinny, but on what exactly, it’s hard to tell.

Read On…

Mindy Kaling is Comedy Rich but 'House Poor'

Hordes of Americans may be standing outside their foreclosed houses with their furniture sitting on the sidewalk, but TV’s Kelly Kapoor has the exact opposite problem – a big house with nothing to put in it. What’s a girl to do?

So the star of House Poor isn’t really the chattering scourge of Dunder Mifflin, it’s the actress who portrays Kelly, Mindy Kaling, and in this Strike.TV series she takes on the role of slightly fictionalized version of herself. Suffice to say, the show features plenty of faux-reality humor that fans of The Office will recognize (Kalin is a writer for the NBC show and she co-writes House Poor along with Lester Lewis). But clocking in at three and a half minutes, House Poor has a slightly better ratio of laughs to program length.

In the first episode, Mindy explains she recently bought a new house from another Office writer who had to skip town on account of some human trafficking charges (It’s a true story, btw. Who she bought her house form. Not the trafficking charges.). The owner of a dream abode that’s slightly out of her price range, Mindy sets about furnishing her empty home by faking a pregnancy in order to throw herself a baby shower and squeeze some gifts out of her friends. What could possibly go wrong?!?

Read On…

'Creepshow Raw' Peepshow: Official Trailer Released

I still remember the first time I saw George A. Romero’s Creepshow – it freaked the bejezzes out of me. The re-imagined adaptation, Creepshow: Raw, helmed by Wilmer Valderrama of That 70s Show fame, promises to do the same. Today’s release of the much anticipated trailer has only confirmed our best suspicions: it’s going to be bloody, disgusting, and oh so creepy.

Creepshow: Raw PosterThe series has been been generating some serious buzz over the last couple of months, with exclusive footage captured on set back in August, as well as a very active rumor mill covering the latest in all things Creepshow crisscrossing the blogosphere. The series isn’t light on star power either. Wendi Mclendon-Covey (Reno 911!) plays opposite Michael Madsen (Resevoir Dogs) – neither of whom are strangers to web television. Mclendon-Covey launched her own series, GILF, on 60Frames last winter, and Madsen headlined WIMO’s heavily promoted Crackle series COMA early this summer. Outside of their apparent obsession with fully capitalized series titles, Madsen and Mclendon bring their very real acting chops to the table for Valderrama’s directorial debut.

In an interview with Wendi in September, she told us that production company HD Films is putting “lots of money into it, and there’s a lot of support behind it. The footage that I saw was stunning! The special effects, the lighting…it looked like a big budget film!” Produced by Todd Roy, Creepshow: Raw will be released as 10-13 episodes, 6-8 minutes a piece, sometime in early 2009. According to Bloody Disgusting’s interview with Roy “Wilmer Valderrama’s enthusiasm and attention to detail while directing and Stephen Reedy’s great eye for the action, we really made something special.” We’re looking forward to the show!