13 Minutes to Midnight bills itself as throwback to the camp found in classic television horror titles like Vampira and Tales from the Crypt. I’d say the self-aware silliness and homegrown aesthetic makes it more of a low-budget, macabre-themed Mister Rogers and/or Clue that could, at any moment, break out into the kind of softcore you see on Skinemax. B-movie scream queen and co-writer Erika Smith stars as the host of a Halloween party that attracts the likes of Nightmara (Heather McDonald), Paranora (Elizabeth Killmond), Vampira (a tranny version of the original), an unfortunate whodunit incident, a Perez Hilton cameo, and lots of product placement.
On a phone interview Manzella explained how he’s looking at all angles of the production as possible marketing opportunities. Certainly, licensable character names, obvious shills (including shoutouts to Monster Energy Drink, Bosco Chocolate Syrup, Smith Brothers Cough Drops, Netflix, and Sears), and trying to appeal to a worldwide audience (you can watch the trailer in six foreign languages) aren’t novel dollar-generating ideas to the web television industry, but Manzella’s experience may help him succeed where others have not.
Beginning with Vanna White in 1985 and continuing today with a client roster that’s included Pamela Anderson, Jenny McCarthy, Sugar Ray Leonard, Suzanne Somers, Tony Little, William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, and more, Manzella’s made a lucrative career from being both a star maker and engineer of celebrity-endorsed products. Over the years on QVC, HSN, and other outlets, Manzella estimates the stars he reps have done over $5 billion(!!!) in sales. “So with that background,” he said, “and me watching Madison Avenue struggle, I thought, here’s a clever way we can play the game.”
And that’s where the 3D comes into play. Manzella wanted a way to make everything marketed in the show really pop (including the brands and Erika Smith, who, if you haven’t figured it out by now, he represents). Producer and co-writer Peter Capozzi called up Robert Acezado to help make it happen. A fast education in 3D camerawork followed, a vertical rig employed (which I think looks something like this), and two episodes-worth of footage shot in 1080p, stereoscopic 3D.
But James Cameron shouldn’t worry about Avatar ticket sales just yet. Even though 13 Minutes to Midnight was shot in the same kind of 3D as movies likeMy Bloody Valentine, Capozzi told me you can’t watch it that way on the web. “For that kind of 3D online, you need a stereo player that can have two independent video streams. Video-sharing sites don’t currently have the technological capabilities. Right now you can view it on Dailymotion in anaglphyic 3D (aka the red and blue glasses).”
View counts are still hot button issue, with Revision3’s CEO Jim Louderback venting his frustrations this week. We too are frustrated with unverifiable view count claims, and so we requested to audit the backend analytics of IKEA-backed Easy to Assemble’s nearly 2 million views in just three weeks. Our breakdown looked at how they engaged the IKEA faithful who hav rallied behind the cult series.
ChillerCircle of Ei8ht debuted on MySpace, giving the site a much needed return to scripted web series.We asked readers what they thought, and so far the verdicts are mostly positive. And TheWB.com snuck out a little treat for web drama-thriller fans with all 18 episodes of Blood Cellreleased this week.
Here’s the idea: someone wakes up in a cell, doesn’t know who they are or how they got there. This may not seem like a lot to go on, especially when I tell you that CELL(not to be confused with Blood Cell) just wrapped production and won’t be hitting the web until 2010, but hear me out on this one.
Produced by Austin, TX-based Lovable Varmint Productions, CELL is the brainchild of writer/director Mark Gardner. The film was shot entirely in Austin and Smithville, Texas, a tiny town about 40 minutes outside the city. In true indie fashion, the majority of the series takes place in one location, built out of an old Dollar Store, and the majority of props and tools used to build the set were donated by local businesses. The crew was made up of volunteers just wanting to be a part of it, some even having to be turned away simply because there wasn’t enough food for everyone.
I talked to Gardner about the indie spirit of this production, beginning with how the idea for CELL first came about. “I came up with a framework of a show that would have minimal cast and minimal locations”, said Gardner. “Great. Good start. Then what? Well that’s when story rears its ugly head. Not only did the show need to have simple locations and cast, it needed a great story. That was what was most important. So I came up with the idea of CELL. Within the framework I’d established, I started writing a series about finding yourself and what it means to be an individual. At least that was the goal. It may have ended up being about the latest craze in fashion or apple oatmeal. We’ll see how it fleshes out in the edit.”
Though the filming was done on a budget, that didn’t mean Gardner and his crew scrimped on production values. His team shot the series on a Panasonic HPX-170A camera, using 2.40 aspect ratio to give it a cinematic feel. “Our DP was a finalist for a couple of Student Academy Awards so she fought hard for that ratio,” explained Gardner. “It also helped us to hide our set, which became an issue with one of our leads being 6’3.”
From what we hear, the actors were so dedicated to the project that they would sometimes sleep on set. One of the actors even brought a camera on set overnight and cut his own “Unofficial” trailer (below), which interestingly actually has more views than the Official trailer.
Gardner is already looking ahead for his series. “There’s an entire mythology that exists that we’re going to expand on in Season 2”, he reveals. “In fact we are in the process of hiding some easter eggs around the interwebs for some intrepid viewers to stumble upon that just might start to give some hints about the conspiracy and mystery that is all over the place in the show.” We can also expect to eventually expand out from the cell itself. “By the last episode… let’s just say our “world” gets blown wide open.”
CELL is set to premiere Tuesday, January 12, 2010. To keep up-to-date on the progress of the series, visit their production blog or visit the shows Facebook page
In a previous life I think I was a fluff girl so I’m kind of sensitive about behind the scenes porno shows. While most of you were laughing it up watching Trey Parker shave his balls in Orgazmo I was strapped into a 94-minute emotional roller coaster ride of painful memories.
So what can be expected from Blue Movies, a new web series from creator/director Scott Brown? Well if you don’t have painful and repressed memories of pleasuring the leading man off camera while trying to support three children all under the age of four I think you’ll be getting some pretty fantastically good awesomeness out of this one.
Episode 1 (above), “The First Time,” opens with a “pivotal scene” from a special Batman adaptation, “The Dark Night: Full of Hot Freakin’ Orgies,” where an actually well costumed and acted Joker Zack Gold reenacts the famous disappearing pencil scene. Here though, instead of using someone’s forehead they cleverly use a mammoth purple dildo surrounded by various orifice filling jokes – nice! When it works it works.
The show follows an idealistic film school student, Tom, played by Back Bennet, as he interns for Pornamount Studios, (you guessed it) an adult film company. Only Tom isn’t clued in on the whole porn aspect of the company until a topless starlet complains about having to do a “thing” with three guys and a little guy that used to be a chick. Overworked assistant Anna Sascha Alexander, who seems to be the glue that holds everything together, reassures her that “nobody is going to be putting 3 ½ anythings anywhere.”
Of course Tom, being the film school type who is all into film as art, has a bit of a meltdown about the whole thing and demands some face time with sexual renaissant director, Max Chapman, played by Jareb Dauplaise. Max is able to quickly defuse the whole situation by educating Tom in regards to all things grand and universal and yes, artistic, about porn. At one point he quips, “Every minute more people are watching porn than live in Rome.” Well, I’m sold.
The writing and dialogue here is great. I can’t believe how many excellent lines are packed into such a short segment and yet it never feels rushed. Everything flows naturally keeping the pace right for a web short. It is full of the overplayed and over joked porn show names taken from actual movie titles but instead of being groaners they are actually witty and original. My two favorites are “Men in Black Men,” and “Lawrence of a Labia.” And the best line so far has to be when director Max is arguing with one of his actors: “You want to get paid or not Brando? I can pick up a whole family of Mexicans that will do this sh!t for free AND mow my lawn.” You have to respect a show that isn’t afraid of a little racial insensitivity in this day and age.
So, for all you boys and girls out there who aren’t living the American dream by fluffing all the cool kids to ensure their success at your own expense, you owe it to yourselves to strap-on er…in and watchBlue Movies at KoldCast TV. It will not disappoint.
Somehow without much fanfare, all 18 episodes of Jessica Rose-starring Blood Cell snuck out this week on TheWB.com. What was once one of most anticipated (if YouTube trailer views mean anything) series cooked up at the now-defunct 60Frames, is now tucked away on TheWB.
Right off the bat, this on is, well, gripping. A girl has been kidnapped and her friends Julia (Rose) Alex (Sara Sanderson) are lopped into the hunt when a late night call from their kidnapped friend Susan jolts Julia. Being a web series, the media-rich phone shows a video friend Susan—crying and scared. The kidnapper is a disturbingly grotesque thing (think Saw’s tricycle riding clown and you wouldn’t be far off), but there’s a catch: Julia can’t turn off her phone – if she does, her friend dies. A text message hits the phone moments later: “Dead Cell = Dead Friend.”
Over a year ago we looked into what happened to Blood Cell, which seemed to have squandered its healthy web buzz. The trailer, which featured a sultry close-up pan shot of Rose, racked up almost 7 million views since its release in April, 2008. Now the thriller web series, created by genre director Eduardo Rodriguez and produced by Jeremy Bell, is finally online—though unfortunately the roll out made no use of the show’s popular YouTube channel.
The episode titles actually make for a decent recap poem:
I’ve been Kidnapped
Dead Cell = Dead Friend.
Alex, I’ll be at your place soon.
Where are you Alex?
He wants you to listen.
Finally, Susan’s place.
Who’s the redhead in the picture?
It’s all gonna be okay.
You’ll know what I want in 30 minutes.
Susan mentioned a big bird.
Can you give me a hand?
The picture is a fake.
I could use a ride.
Stop the car!
I’m coming Susan!
Julia where are you?
Get me out of here!
Oh, my God…
Side note to TheWB: The Verizon FiOS pre-roll ads on site are acting funky, as in every time you pull away from the window the video is playing in and then return, the ad repeats itself. The glitch is making the player almost unwatchable.
One of the biggest concerns amongst web content creators is that branded entertainment will destroy artistic expression as product integration increasingly compromises story and vision. However, producer/directors Alex Johnson and Lance Weiler of the Workbook Project (WBP) are attempting to do just the opposite with RADAR, which premiered on yesterday on Babelgum.
RADAR, produced by WBP Labs, is a weekly three-minute, made-for-mobile and web series that goes behind-the-scenes of innovative projects and events across different creative disciplines. Season Two highlights include episodes about the live art event Art Battles, 3D printing startup Makerbot/NYC Resistor, performance artists Undetermined Measurements and Mark Horowitz’s Google Maps Road Trip. Johnson, a former interactive strategist at Adventure Pictures and advertising agency Deep Focus, is taking the lessons she learned there and using them to support and showcase cutting edge work. In the case of RADAR, the brand is the art itself. Says Johnson, “My background is in branded content and in advertising, so it’s really working with the contributors to put their product on a pedestal and ask ‘How can we help you?'”
By contributors, Johnson means the subject of each piece. RADAR refers to them as such because each is integrally involved in the making of their episode. By treating each subject as a collaborator, RADAR directors are able to go deep behind the scenes of the creative process, share material with the contributors and work out the best way to showcase the group or event. Explains Johnson, “Rather than being reportage or news, where we just cover something that’s happening, we try and talk to the contributors and figure out how do we take this to the next stage in terms of representing what they do in an interesting and visually engaging way. And sometimes that’s actually putting on an event ourselves or helping them do that.”
The series is a good example of WBP’s belief that artists should be working and collaborating in genres and media formats other than their own. Just about a year ago, Babelgum approached Weiler and Johnson and said it was interested in doing some film-centric content with them. The duo proposed RADAR, which though relevant to filmmakers, had a more expansive outlook than traditional film content. Plus, it would take advantage of Babelgum’s mobile platform, which was another priority for the distributor.
“What we came up with in terms of the sort of sweet mini-stories was really based towards mobile pass around,” explains Johnson. She envisioned people hanging out in bars, passing their phones around, sharing RADAR stories on the spot and then heading off to attend them. She adds, “For me it was really important that it felt very, very inclusive so that if someone watched this on their cell, they felt they could either tweet that person involved, email them or go see them in a very easy way.”
Weiler and Karol Martesko-Fenster, General Manager and Publisher of Babelgum FILM, have known one another for close to twenty years, so once they solidified the concept for the series, a deal came together quickly. WBP presents the potential subjects to Babelgum and they do a quick review. After approval, WBP has final cut. Babelgum provides a minimum guarantee, which is essentially a pre-buy of worldwide Internet Free on Demand (IFOD) rights. They have a four-month exclusive for online and mobile, and then non-exclusive rights in perpetuity. After the advance has been recouped from advertising, Babelgum and WBP split the overages 50/50. WBP keeps the rights to the final pieces, but Babelgum gets carried in perpetuity via the “produced in association with” credit.
Says Martesko-Fenster, “The traffic patterns and the high quality of RADAR, along with the exploring of the creative process, is what made it easy for me to sign up for a second season of RADAR.”
Last season, Johnson directed all of the episodes herself, but this season she has taken on the role of creative director, overseeing a roster of dynamic helmers. Season Two directors include Leah Meyeroff (the upcoming Allison Anders executive-produced film Unicorns), SXSW award-winner Ry Russo Young (You Won’t Miss Me, Orphans), and Webby Award winners Ryan Bilsborrow-Koo and Zachary Lierberman (online series The West Side). Johnson is looking forward taking advantage of each filmmaker’s unique style and flair to up the aesthetic ante of each episode.
Of course, this is flair on a budget. Due to financial constraints, each piece shoots for just one day. Often there are multiple locations (15 is the RADAR record) of different types involved. The directors and crew have to be flexible enough to go from covering an event to shooting an interview to shooting recreations. And sometimes being quick on their feet comes in handy in unexpected ways, such as when they got chased down by the police when shooting an episode about street artist Aakash Nihalani. Though permitted for the street, they were shooting on the first deck of the subway…which was apparently NOT part of the area covered by the permit. Lesson learned.
Often, documenting process can be difficult due to its nebulous nature; therefore a key part of the RADAR production routine is a one-hour interview with each of their contributors. “A lot of people consider that a long time for a three-minute piece,” says Johnson, “but that’s where we get what we need. Towards the end of the interview, you usually get those magic moments where people are really starting to open up about their process.”
Additionally, Johnson developed a comprehensive curatorial checklist that aids the team in evaluating candidates for the series. Questions they ask as they are determining whether to cover something include: What kind of relationship would we have with the contributor? Can the project be represented visually? Does the project have an online/offline overlap?
This last question has become increasingly important to WBP. After Season One, WBP put on a “RADAR Experience,” in which many of the contributors participated. The Bambi Killers and Eclectic Method performed, and they held a 15-minute Dr. Sketchys where drawing pads were handed out to the audience and a model posed. Says Johnson, “We’re all about creating this network of roboticists and doctors who do radiology art and flash mob organizers and artists and musicians, so that’s why we do the RADAR Experiences. We do the live versions of the content in the videos, and bring everyone into the same space to experience it. There is this very natural extension of the community, and hopefully that fosters more work between them.”
Johnson is excited by the feedback she has so far received from Season One contributors. Several people have included the pieces in their press kits, and some have gotten additional work through the exposure provided by RADAR. Johnson reflects, “I hope what we sort of provide is that we create something where they have this piece of branded content that helps them. Even though they are all well established in their own right, it’s good to have this video that represents them. We’re very lucky in that pretty much everyone we’ve worked with has come back and said ‘You captured this exactly, you get what we’re doing.'”
Photos courtesy of WBP.
Tamara Krinsky is an actress, journalist, new media producer and regular contributor to Tubefilter News. She has appeared in web series such as Back on Topps and The Shaman, along with a variety of film, TV & theater projects. As a reporter, she focuses on entertainment, science and tech news. She hosted the weekly tech show THE SPOTLIGHT for TomsGuide.com, was a correspondent for PBS’s WIRED SCIENCE, and was a Webby honoree for the independent film series AT THE FEST, which she produced and hosted. She is currently the Associate Editor of DOCUMENTARY Magazine. In addition to her adventures on camera, Krinsky became intimately acquainted with the business of web video while working for 2.5 years at the entertainment marketing firm Crew Creative, where she strategized and produced online content for clients including the Discovery Channel, TLC, Warner Independent Pictures, Picture People and Overture Films.
As part of our ongoing effort to grow the web television space and evangelize the inherent advantages of an open entertainment medium, Tubefilter has partnered with creative communities all over the country. NYU’s Tisch School of The Arts has a longstanding reputation as a hotbed of talent for visual arts, and we’re honored to join them in programming the web-focused installments of their renowned Director’s Series.
We’re very excited to announce that the next installment of NYU’s Web Directors Series will be a candid conversation with CollegeHumor TV moderated by Tubefilter on November 9th at 6:00 PM.
When they began posting funny photos and stories on the Internet as college freshmen, CollegeHumor.com creators Ricky Van Veen and Josh Abramson didn’t realize they were creating an entertainment sensation. Since its launch in 1999, CollegeHumor.com has grown into a massively popular site for 6 million visitors monthly, a comedy tour, a T-shirt business, books and even a television series, MTV’s The CollegeHumor Show. The parody and sketch focused content is a favorite of men ages 18 to 22. In 2006, media mogul Barry Diller acquired a majority stake in CollegeHumor through his holding company, IAC.
Join us on November 9th at 6PM in New York for a candid conversation and screening with the wacky, irreverent crew behind one of the web’s most successful home-grown entertainment brands.
If you’re interested in attending, please sign up below. Space is very limited.
NYU Web Directors Series
‘A Conversation with CollegeHumor TV’
November 9, 2009 at 6PM
721 Broadway, NYC RSVP Here
Imagine if Eeyore, Oscar the Grouch, Scrooge McDuck, and Grumpy from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs were related. Throw in a dash of the Addam’s Family and you’d be at a good place to start understanding the concept behind The Gloomers. With the tagline “No matter how bad your day has been, The Gloomers day is always worse.”, the family greets you with slick flash-animation, a catchy theme song, and the promise that this won’t be all gloom and doom…there is a lot of laughs to be had as well.
Behind The Gloomers are some veteran broadcast TV vets trying to make the show the first series at the center of their new animation studio focusing on the “Hanna Barbera style” of animation. Charles Mechem, the former CEO of Taft Broadcasting, which owned animation studio Hanna Barbera from 1967 until 1990 serves as the outfit’s ‘Chairman.’ His son Dan serves as CEO and penning the series is senior writer Neal Barbera, son of the late Joe Barbera. Neal often wrote or co-wrote episodes for Yogi Bear and Scooby Doo.
The Gloomers also boasts a fantastically designed website that is ripe with interactivity possibilities. Upon signing up, you are immediately prompted to build your own “Gloom Room”, where you are encouraged to celebrate everything that makes you feel down, off-kilter, or just plain bummed out. It’s a place “where Gloom meets laughter”. The series is also trying to build up its community presence on Facebook.
“The Gloomers debuted at Comic Con this past year,” said Rachel Rhee, head of marketing for The Gloomers. “We’ve had a lot of the tech/geek crowd show a lot of interest in our series. We will have special announcements during the holiday season to cater to this part of our fan base.” This includes their most recent episode, a Halloween special (above) featuring Evil Dead II writer and horror director extraordinaire Scott Spiegel. Web star Veronica Belmont (TekZilla), will also be a guest star in an upcoming episode.
There’s probably no bigger hot button issue right now in the web series world than view counts. After exposing MySpace’s paid auto-plays (which were being reported as regular views) on their BFF series, we received numerous comments and emails on the subject. Emotions ran high on this as creators with decent views cried foul to cheaters trying to pass off paid impressions as actual intent-driven views. We listened to you and we’re going to be taking a deeper look at the issue on Tubefilter News, including examples of those who are actually getting real viewers without cheating.
Panelists on the gabby digital media conference circuit love to spew phrases like ‘go to where your audience is’, and even we have written on the benefits of finding your audience. There aren’t however many examples to point to of those who have actually done that effectively. The Guild still stands as one of the best at connecting with a thriving World of Warcraft fanbase, though even its success with that group wasn’t accidental. Creator Felicia Day is well known for her tireless commitment to outreach and connecting with new fans of the show.
When IKEA-backed Easy to Assemblelaunched its sophomore season a few weeks back, along with its closely-tied spin-off Sparhüsen, it came with a red carpet premiere well-attended by the show’s recognizable cast. But early fanfare can fade, and the proof of actual success is, as they say, in the pudding. In this case, that means how many people are actually watching the show.
A Little History
Easy to Assemble often gets lumped in with pure branded entertainment fare, with most people thinking it came straight off a whiteboard at IKEA’s ad agency. But the series is actually entirely independently owned by its creator-star, Illeana Douglas. Douglas in fact first rolled the concept of celebrities working retail with her Illeanarama: Supermarket of the Starsweb series on YouTube back in late 2006. Douglas then pitched the scripted series in early 2008 to IKEA, who loved the idea of having Douglas and her offbeat friends—Justine Bateman, Tom Arnold, Ed Begley Jr., Jane Lynch, Jeff Goldblum, Kevin Pollak—working at the company’s Burbank store.
After some modest success of the first season, IKEA agreed to sponsor a second season, this time with an increased production budget and the addition of new cast members like Cheri Oteri, Tim Meadows and Ricki Lake. Then came news of a secret spin-off show about a fictional Swedish rock band named Sparhüsen, and the casting of film star Keanu Reeves. For the new season, Douglas teamed up with Wilson Cleveland at CJP Digital to help with marketing and distribution of the shows, whom she had met prepping for the OnFrontsNYC event in June.
Cleveland and the CJP team inked a distribution deal for both shows with online comedy network My Damn Channel, and embarked on an aggressive outreach campaign that would involve tapping into IKEA’s rabid and loyal fan base. Since launching on October 8, 2009, the two series have racked up over 1.9 million views, an impressive start for a scripted web series, with just four episodes of Easy to Assemble and two episodes of Sparhüsen released so far. We are taking a deeper look at how exactly they pulled this off.
The Raw Numbers
Note: In researching this story, we audited the view counts from across the different distribution channels for the series and were given access to non-public view counts by the producers. Given the various platforms, there are differing definitions of what constitutes a view, though all entail some direct intent to view (clicks) from a human viewer.
Series launch date: October 8, 2009 (Data measured through October 28, 2009)
Easy to Assemble episodes 1-4, collective views so far: 1,099,619
My Damn Channel’s onsite player: 545,131
My Damn Channel’s YouTube channel: 6,601
My Damn Channel’s Dailymotion: 1,019
Easy to Assemble’s YouTube: 29,153
Easy to Assemble’s Blip.tv player: 251
Easy to Assemble’s Facebook player: 702
Easy to Assemble’s Dailymotion: 364
Easy to Assemble’s Funny or Die: 55
easytoassembleseries.com: 4,846
IKEA fan site players:511,497— (see below for more on this)
Sparhüsen episodes 1-2, collective views so far: 330,934
My Damn Channel’s onsite player: 320,790
My Damn Channel’s YouTube channel: 10,144
My Damn Channel’s Dailymotion: 1,019
Total collective views of both shows (episodes only): 1,430,553
Combined views for the shows’ trailers (launched the week of 9/15): 532,587
Total views of both shows including trailers: 1,963,140
Empowering The IKEA Faithful
Susan Martin runs arguably the most popular IKEA fan site, appropriately named IKEAFANS.com. Her site boasts over 320,000 unique visitors a month, most of them hyper aware of the myriad of funny-named furniture and household products on IKEA’s shelves. The Sweden-based retailer is one of those gilded brands, like Apple and Southwest Airlines, that inspires customers to the point of almost cult-like adoration.
“IKEA has that most elusive combination of respect and love from their customer base,” said Martin over email. “IKEA is an experience. IKEAFANS personalizes that experience. And of course, there’s the meatballs!”
When Cleveland was looking for ways to grow the Easy to Assemble and Sparhüsen audience, he knew he needed to connect with this crowd. “Nothing from last season seemed to include IKEA’s huge existing fan base, said Cleveland. “I thought there’s got to be something to that. I really want to make the fans of the brand part of the distribution strategy.”
Just emailing these fans however and giving YouTube embed codes only goes so far. So Cleveland decided to make a little competition out of it, by approaching the top 4 IKEA fan sites and offering them a custom embeddable Ooyala player that only works on their sites. From the backend, he can track the performance of each of the sites in terms of how many people they get to watch each episode. The site that gets the most genuine views throughout the season will get written in to Episode 11, the season finale of Easy to Assemble where viewers find out who won the fan-voted ‘Co-Worker of the Year’ between Illeana and Justine.
The outreach benefits are a two-way street, helping add relevant and recurring content to the fan sites. “October has been our best month ever in terms of traffic and unique visitors, and I attribute some of that to the success of ETA and its spinoff Sparhusen,” said Martin. “The IKEA Fans community (120,000+ members in our forums) stretches far and wide, and it’s fun to see someone like Illeana Douglas embracing IKEA. I also think it’s terribly funny that she thinks she’s the biggest IKEA Fan!!”
Cleveland likes to throw around the phrase ‘pride of ownership’ when talking about empowering the brand’s fans. “If there’s a brand sponsoring a show and that brand clearly has an existing community of enthusiasts, you want to give each of them some pride of ownership in the show and making sure it succeeds,” Cleveland added.
“Being able to embed the player into our site’s architecture and knowing that the number of views from our players were to be counted for a competition made it a lot of fun,” Martin said when asked about the competition. “After revamping our site’s infrastructure last year, we’re also in a better position now to participate in promoting the show, to feature the series on the homepage and as an ongoing feature in our sidebars.”
“Smart companies know who their fans are,” said Cleveland. “Having an entertainment property associated with a brand not only gives its enthusiasts something to discuss and enjoy, but it can always engage those audiences who weren’t fans before.”
IKEA has given Douglas and her crew quite a bit of free reign both creatively and in terms of promotion of the shows. That’s helped them master step number one in web series success—having entertaining content. For the company, the show is a marketing vehicle, associating showing the brand’s cool but humorous side, gently poking fun at its Swedish corporate culture. For ROI on the sponsorship, IKEA is looking at how many real people watch and engage with the show, among other factors, rather than purchasing ad impressions. “It’s important to them that people watch, like and remember it,” added Cleveland.
The Next Wave
While the online fan sites and sizable reach of high-brow comedy curator My Damn Channel make up the core of the early phase of the Easy to Assemble and Sparhüsen release, the next step may in fact be where the bulk of new viewers come from. Starting in mid November, the series will be available on Roku set-top boxes and even WNBC’s NY Nonstop channel through Blip.tv’s wide distribution roll-out. And come early 2010, the show will be featured on Hulu, Verizon FiOS and The Hotel Networks’s in-room DoNotDisturb TV channel. Talks of a DVD release are also happening, says Cleveland, with it potentially ending up in full-season version on Netflix and Amazon Video on Demand.
It’s been about two months since the release of CSI-creator Anthony Zuiker’s cross-platform crime thriller, Level 26: Dark Origins, the first true integration of a novel with a companion web series. Finally today came the release of the Level 26 iPhone app and desktop movie through the iTunes App store, which actually marries the text and video all in one seamless experience.
Before this, readers of the 400-page book had to enter a printed code at the end of select chapters that would unlock the ‘cyber-bridge’ episodes, a process that even web video junkies found tedious. Though coining a new term with their “digi-novel,” the actual experience was still lacking any real innovation until now.
“The Level 26: Dark Origins App and iTunes Extras makes reading more entertaining than ever,” said Zuiker about the app release. “We’re delivering new levels of engagement way beyond mere white pages.”
Zuiker and his Dare to Pass team even applied for a trademark on the “digi-novel” term, which after an initial rejection from the USPTO, appears to have made it through on a supplemental approval. (The whole back-and-forth between Zuiker’s lawyers and the PTO is worth a read if you’re into that sort of thing.)
The app is the experience that Zuiker was most excited about when I interviewed him back in July at Comic-Con, even whipping out his iPod Touch to show me the demo version he had already. I got the sense that even he would have like to go out with it the same day the book hit shelves back in September. But in terms of timing of the release, it makes sense that the publisher, Dutton, would want to hold off. The $12.99 iTunes price is less than half of the book’s $26.95 list price. Each subsequent release of most entertainment properties get cheaper the further along in the cycle it gets.
While the $12.99 app gives reader the book and video elements together, it is on the pricey side for paid apps, which may keep it out of the iTunes Top Apps charts. Still, it’s way shy of cracking the “Most Expensive Apps” list either. No word yet on whether or not the subsequent digi-novels in the series (it’s a trilogy) will go straight to iTunes or whether the publisher windowing will win out.
Screenshots of the Level 26 App, developed by LA-based 23divide:
Halloween mayhem week is upon us and with it comes the infamous Halloween Special. Television has been tackling these for years, going back to 1966’s It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and now the web series world has jumped on this bandwagon, throwing out their spookiest, creepiest, oftentimes hilarious and even adorable fare of tricks and treats.
So in honor of this seasonal trend, we at Tubefilter decided to put together a list of some that might be worth the clicking…if you dare. Muhahahahaha.
Everyone’s favorite janitor has received his 25 years of service award…but how is this possible when he doesn’t look a day over 30ish? He’s a vampire of course. Break.com’s Elevator gives us this four-part epic featuring LG15 alum Jackie Jandrall.
Spook House Dave! Halloween Special Spook House Dave! is an online puppet series for kids (and cool parents) about a young boy being raised in a haunted castle by a bunch of monsters. Nice shout-out to Homestar Runnerwith the Trogdor poster on the wall in the first scene.
BONUS: For a more adult version of a monster series featuring puppets, check out Transylvania Television.
Picking up where his Showdown winning short Twilight – 5 Years Later leaves off, Jake Fleisher shows us how even a relationship with a vampire can fizzle. Featuring a cameo from Squatters‘ Cooper Harris.
The Guildies take to the streets for some real-life looting. Hightlight: one of Clara’s kids in a chicken suit. Prepare to melt from the cuteness. The episode was written by Guild producer Kim Evey and guest directed by her hubby, Mediocre Films’ Greg Benson.
Rumor has it that this video is the ramp-up to a Halloween episode that will result in Fred’s death?!? And it doubles as extended marketing for the new Fred dolls. That Lucus Cruikshank is always thinkin’.
Have a Halloween episode of your favorite web series you’d like to share? Tell us about it in the comments!
On the surface the Circle of Ei8ht premiere today on MySpace is just another cool looking web series with an exclusive distribution deal. Behind the scenes however, stands one of the most complex digital entertainment deals we’ve seen yet, with no fewer than six companies—MySpace, Paramount Digital, Milchan/Van Eyssen, Mountain Dew, Adobe, and even Blockbuster making the show’s official press release. There’s even a few more, William Morris Endeavor and Endemol that had a hand as well. We dedicated some serious pixel time in August to breaking down this well-oiled conference call machine of a project in our Anatomy of a Deal feature.
The business of this whole thing aside, it’s now time to figure out the big question that actually matters for viewers—is this thing any good? First, there’s the plot setup, which is horror flick ready with a spooky downtown LA loft building full of overly attractive twentysomething artists. There’s a new girl—(isn’t there always?)—a spunky young woman named Jessica (Austin Highsmith) who moves into The Dante as the impressively shot series begins.
DJ Qualls, the most recognizable of the cast from his Road Trip breakout, plays a nosy, handicam sporting neighbor working on a documentary on the place. (We can’t help but notice his similarity to another downtown LA loft set web series, Woke Up Dead, with Josh Gad as Jon Heder’s Zi8-obsessed roommate.) And internet references are a plenty, with another neighbor, India (Natashia Williams) having made a name as a web series star hosting “a political talk show in her panties.”
Everyone in the building, except our protag Jessica, seems to be hinting at what exactly is going on with the building and share an oddly clairvoyant awareness of things. Her potential love interest, a beefy nice guy Evan (Ryan Doom) who seems pulled right off the set of The Lake, appears to be Jessica’s best shot at some answers to this mystery. As viewers, we’re unsure why exactly Jessica would have moved into this dingy beatnik joint sight unseen, but somehow it seems like she didn’t have a choice in the matter.
Thankfully, the interactivity wasn’t an afterthought on Circle of Ei8ht, with four different interactive clues per episode, each activated within the custom Adobe Flash player by rolling your mouse over the frame. From there, the Mountain Dew integration comes to into focus as viewers are taken to a Green Label Art bottle with hidden messages burned into the labels. The product integration doesn’t stop there though, as one of the characters in the series joins the Dew’s Green Label Art community where selected art-inclined fans create custom collectible Dews bottles.
Web to DVD
This is Paramount Digital’s first official foray into web series, having had some success with a web release of Jackass 2.5 movie, the first studio-backed film release online. Following Sony/Crackle’s model of an online release driving DVD sales (Angel of Death, Star-ving, Woke up Dead), PDE has scored Blockbuster as an exclusive distribution partner for the full-length DVD of Circle of Eight—which includes a “surprise alternate ending” for an extra incentive for fans. By December, the DVD will be available to rent and download-to-own through Blockbuster stores and On Demand.
Three episodes are released so far on an impressive custom MySpace page, with two more coming next week. The full release schedule of the ten five-minute episodes is as follows:
October 27: Episodes 1-3
November 3: Episodes 4-5
November 10: Episode 6
November 17: Episode 7
November 24: Episode 8
December 1: Episode 9
December 8: Episode 10
We want to know what you think of this series—Are you going to keep watching? Did you track down any of the clues? Is the product integration too much? Leave a comment below and we may use it in an upcoming review of the series.