When is Big Mouth Season 4?

The wait is over (mostly) – It’s launching December 4!

Netflix finally announced it today, along with dropping the season 4 trailer. I watched the trailer again this morning and sometimes I forget how much crazy stuff we packed into one season.

The cast for s4 is just as crazy – Maria Bamford, Zach Galifianakis, Seth Rogen, Sterling K Brown, Lena Waithe, John Oliver, Paul Giamatti (FYI you will be surprised which character he is in the show), and a bunch of other people that they probably haven’t announced yet.

We started this season back in January 2019, so we are excited for everyone to get to see it. Check out the trailer below!

Google’s First Ever VR Google Doodle

BackToTheMoon01.png

Google released their very first VR / 360° Google Doodle and it celebrates the work of the guy who pretty much invented special effects, Georges Méliès.  There are all kinds of references to Méliès’ films and his techniques baked into the short – lots of stuff I totally forgot he invented.

For being VR this had a smart setup – building the stage out as a set that can shift and evolve so they didn’t have to move the camera around for new new locations (much like how Méliès made his films – based on theatrical stage tech at the time).

Great animation and design – lots of fun.  These crappy screenshots don’t do it justice – just go watch it.

If you don’t have a VR / Google Cardboard, you can still check it out in plain old 2D too (with a mouse controlled camera)

BackToTheMoon01a.

Here’s the link to the short: Back To The Moon

 

More info about behind the scenes and the making of “Back to the Moon” here:

https://atap.google.com/spotlight-stories/melies/

https://www.google.com/doodles/celebrating-georges-melies

Big Mouth / Titmouse / Netflix

BigMouthTrailer.png

What is Big Mouth?

Big Mouth is the amazing Netflix Original primetime animated series a bunch of us have been working on over at Titmouse for the last year or so and it’s finally launching / premiering / dropping September 29.

It’s created by the collective brains of Nick Kroll, Andrew Goldberg, Mark Levin and Jennifer Flackett.  The principal cast is just nuts – tons of incredible talent:  Nick Kroll, John Mulaney, Jenny Slate, Jessi Klein, Jason Mantzoukas, Richard Kind, Fred Armisen, Maya Rudolph and Jordan Peele (and the guest cast is just as nuts).

The show is about kids growing up, going through puberty and dealing with all the garbage that life throws at us as we try to get through it all.  Even though this is a show about kids, it’s not for kids by any means (btw the trailer below is slightly NSFW) .

I will be posting more about the show as we get into it (and after it launches), but now that it’s finally about to be out in the wild, figured I’d throw it out there for anyone who’s been wondering what we have been working on at Titmouse.  Enjoy!

 

Is TBS Taking a Big Risk on Primetime Animation?

 

CloseEnough01.png
JG Quintel’s Close Enough

Lots of animation is happening all over town in LA right now – largely due to Netflix and Amazon, but also now some significant / worthwhile work is happening at TBS.  Clearly they are investing in animation trying to channel some of the momentum Futurama and American Dad brought to the network.  TBS is launching four new, original animated shows – Final Space, Close Enough, Tarantula and The Cops.  That is a big buy in for a cable network that has not traditionally specialized in animation.

FinalSpace01.png
Olan Rogers’ Final Space

Since these shows are on cable (vs broadcast tv), I’m hoping the execs can let ’em breathe a little, take some risks and try things out.  All things considered, Final Space and Close Enough seem like fairly safe bets.  I’ve seen a few great space show pitches over the years from really talented creators – it’s an area that still feels largely untapped (with the exception of Futurama).  JG Quintel’s show is sort of a family comedy sitcom but grounded in a very JG sort of way.  Both are approachable (despite being a little fringe / weird) and both make sense from a content buy standpoint for TBS.

TheCops01.png
Louis CK / Albert Brooks – The Cops

The new Louis CK / Albert Brooks show The Cops is probably the most linear bet out of the group, but knowing Louis CK, it will push some boundaries.  There is not a lot that Louis CK or Albert Brooks does that won’t be doused in social commentary and challenge some status quo nonsense.  Sounds like a lot of Rick and Morty board guys are coming back to Starburns to work on this.  It could definitely be a solid show based on the talent they’ve lined up, but we haven’t seen much from it yet.

Tarantula01.png
Carson Mell’s Tarantula

Tarantula though – that’s the wild card.  It is created by Carson Mell, who wrote for Silicon Valley, and also is the creator of some really weird / cool animated shorts.  Looks like the series is based on his animated Tarantula shorts he made a few years ago.  It’s about the adventures of a tattoo artist and the other inhabitants of a hotel in the desert.  The clip they showed at SDCC is kinda far out for TBS (in a good way I hope).

In the clip (which is mostly animatic, but has some animation), these guys move around a giant magic mushroom and the psychoactive bits get into their bloodstream triggering a series of trips that seem more at home in a JJ Villard short than an 8pm Fox show.  It’s ambitious and weird and I dig it.

Maybe this means TBS is trying to get into that primetime / Adult Swim hybrid-niche space.  I hope so – there’s room in that area to make more great animation.

Tarantula02.pngWho knows – it’s just a SDCC clip, but it looks like TBS is trying something different, and that’s a good thing.  Even with Final Space and Close Enough, TBS is going after a more indie animation vibe, rather than chasing straight primetime sitcom (Seth / Groening style) animation.

TBS is obviously taking some risks here – on the actual content and making a big four series bet on animation trying to compete with Netflix / Fox / FX / etc.  I hope all these shows do well – I like seeing networks trying new things (and I like seeing friends employed).  It means more gigs and more (hopefully good) animation out in the wild.

Final Space is being made out at Shadowmachine, Close Enough at Cartoon Network Studios, The Cops at Starburns, and Tarantula over at Rough Draft. 

I’ve included links below to the original pilot for Final Space, the SDCC Close Enough trailer, one of the Tarantula shorts (and the SDCC clip if you haven’t seen it).

What do you think about TBS buying all these shows?  Think they have a chance?

Why The Simpsons Keeps Going

background-15226

Why is the Simpsons still being made?   I think it’s a simple answer:  After all these years, it still makes money, lots of money.  The second question is maybe slightly more relevant: “Does Fox have a show to replace it yet when the Simpsons money dries up?”   Continue reading “Why The Simpsons Keeps Going”

Future Worm is Coming

FutureWorm01Future Worm is an upcoming Disney ‘XD’ show from creator Ryan Quincy (Out There, South Park) about a twelve year old boy who discovers time travel and teams up with a fearless worm from the future (also a special appearance by a robotic fish who explodes in every episode).  They’ve got a fantastic cast and crew, and most importantly – it’s funny.  All the pieces are here for a great show – and by the looks of it, they are trying some new stuff to make sure this launch is successful. Continue reading “Future Worm is Coming”

Youtube Ads = Better Returns Than TV

1614358a

Google has thrown down the gauntlet (again) – the claim is that Youtube ads provide a better return dollar-per-dollar vs. TV ads.  They are spinning this not as the destruction of TV ads, but instead as an alternative.  Spend smart money on Youtube ads as a good place to spend on digital. Harmless, right?

However, this is an interesting downward spiral – if advertisers start spending more money on digital because it banks better profits, they will continue to spend more there, which leads to → less inventory on TV → less money for TV → worse content on TV → lower ratings → less consumer interest → less advertising dollars … and continuous downward spiral.  You can start to see why pay TV and broadcast TV are a little stressed. Continue reading “Youtube Ads = Better Returns Than TV”

Cartoon Network – Apple & Onion

Screen Shot 2016-05-15 at 7.43.11 AM

Apple & Onion is a very funny and heartwarming animated short / pilot I produced on for Cartoon Network Studios with creator George Gendi last year.  Finally this super secret animation was released into the wild online and now you can watch it millions of times!

It’s about two friends, Apple and Onion who are just trying to be good guys and figure out how they fit into the world, but they are clearly out of place in the big city.  Everyone in the world of Apple and Onion are different types of food – I never asked George why, it just kind of works. Continue reading “Cartoon Network – Apple & Onion”

Why NFL + Twitter

American, playbook, play.

If you didn’t see this in the news, it’s not too surprising.  This content creation and distribution game is changing quickly.

Twitter now has a deal with the NFL to broadcast games online.  This is the latest big deal – not financially (it’s actually a smallish deal for the NFL), but this is another ‘the beginning of the end for pay / traditional broadcast TV.’  Continue reading “Why NFL + Twitter”