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Archive for March, 2011

The 31-Second Web Series

by on March 31st, 2011

The 31-Second Web Series

The best thing about the uber-short-form – my descriptor for serial episodic programming with installments clocking in at 60 seconds or less – is that its short. If that sounds redundant, that’s because it is, but the importance of the brevity of the genre is worth repeating. It’s the foundation for a Marshall McLuhan-influenced relationship between the content creator, the web as an entertainment platform, and the viewer.

When a content creator creates an uber-short web series, he or she gives the viewer’s time and the interenet a helluva lot of respect. An online environment presents a billion distractions hidden behind a million places to click. Those distractions are all competing for the attention of potential viewers, whose attentions are in turn demanded by things not connected to a series of tubes.

This is something the uber-short web series creator understands and respects. By creating a 31-second web series released in 31 installments over the course of 31 days, he or she is saying, “Hey, I know you’re busy. Heck, I’m busy a lot, too! But watch this for 31 seconds. If it’s good, great! If it’s not good, it only took you half a minute.”

Is the idea of uber-short show a little gimmicky? Is it just as much a marketing tool to entice eyeballs as it is a legitimate format? Sure, but it’s a gimmick I like. It’s also the gimmick Director L.C. Cruell and Executive Producer Dawn S. Smith use for their uber-short form thriller 31: The Series.

The first of the 31 31-second installments debuted today on March 31 at 3:31PM EST. A new episode will drop at the same time every day for the next 30 days. Here’s the synopsis:

She wakes up alone, trapped, surrounded by darkness, with no memory of how she got there or even who she is. Will she escape? And even more importantly, who or what awaits her outside her prison if she does?

And here’s Cruell’s pitch for the show:

It has the story arc of a film with the structure of television, told cliffhanger by cliffhanger, within the attention span of the Internet. It’s the best of all three worlds.

So, is 31 good? Meh, it looks okay. If you throw enough shaky camera, scratchy edits, dark rooms, and girl screams into anything it’ll probably have some semblance of scary and decency. But it’s really too early to tell. We’re only 31 seconds into the series!

But does the format work? Definitely. If it’s good, bad, or mediocre, I’ll for sure be tuning into episode 2. Worst case scenario I’m not entertained and still have 29 seconds left to start that distance run Kipling’s

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Public Broadcasting Envisions Future With Attacking Robots

Futurestates, the public broadcasting web series that “imagines America’s tomorrow today,” launched its second season featuring 10 new episodes.

The sci-fi series, funded by The Independent Television Service, is a collection of “short narrative films created by veteran filmmakers and emerging talents transforming today’s complex social issues into visions about what life will be like in decades to come.” Debuting at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival, the second season of Futurestates promises 10 filmmakers’ visions of America in the not-too-distant future: what we’ll do, where we’ll live, and who we’ll be.

The lineup:

Beholder by Nisha Ganatra Sasha
A resident of the socially conservative gated community Red Estates, makes a discovery about her genetically engineered unborn child that causes her to rethink her allegiances.

Remigration by Barry Jenkins
In a future San Francisco that is entirely upper-class, the city starts a program to bring working-class families back to the city that pushed them out. When one such family returns, it must decide whether to stay.

Asparagus by Robby Henson
In a regimented greenhouse laboratory, an isolated agricultural engineer named Dekard learns lessons about life and love from a fertilizer delivery agent and a renegade asparagus.

Spring of Sorrow by Suzi Yoonessi
Two sisters live a nomadic life, displaced by global warming. Trapped in the desert in the midst of a water shortage, Isabelle tells her younger sister Lily a fairytale that explains how this tragedy came to be.

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It’s Opening Day for Baseball, Enter the MLB Fan Cave

The 2011 Major League Baseball season officially starts today. While President Obama is absent from the proceedings, the league welcomes two individuals with a little less domestic issues and foreign affairs on their plates.

MLB and Endemol USA recently dubbed Mike O’Hara and Ryan Wagner winners of Dream Job. For the next seven months, the two will eat, sleep, and consume all 2,430 regular season baseball games (that makes for 21,888 innings and 131,328 outs), as well as every post season game within the walls of the MLB Fan Cave, an apartment on 4th St. and Broadway in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village that’s been transformed into a bachelor pad-like shrine to America’s favorite past time and product placement.

When O’Hara and Wagner are not glued to what must be a very large number of television sets, they’ll dine in the Pepsi Cafe, shoot pool in the Budweiser game room, and entertain fans who swing by to to see the Steiner Sports Collectibles mini-museum, play MLB ‘11: The Show and Major League Baseball 2K11 on the Fan Cave’s Playstation 3s, and attempt to not hurt their shoulders while hurling fastballs in the pitching ally speed station.

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Skittles Gives YouTube the Finger

Interactivity on YouTube is nothing new. It’s something we’ve covered here at Tubefilter a lot. Content creators use the site’s annotation tools to create compelling Choose Your Own Adventure style stories. Brands design YouTube pages with clever ways for viewers to engage with more than a play button.

But what is new is an advertiser asking for your tactile participation. (It’s not new to Ze Frank has, of course, but it’s new to advertisers.)

Skittles wants you to give YouTube the finger. Literally. The rainbow-colored, fruit-flavored candy just launched a series of videos in which you’re asked to lend a digit, place said digit on a specified location on the screen of whatever device you’re using to watch the videos, and then watch the pivotal role that digit plays as the action unfolds. Pretty clever. Here it is in action:

If you think the interactive advertisements look slick, that’s because the guy that filmed them is a helluva talent with the resume to prove it. Tom Kuntz – the director of those Old Spice commercials that other brands wish their commercials should be like, as well as a set of Skittles TV ads and what appear to be NSFW spec spots for the AVN Awards – seems to be the latest it director for things original, irreverent, and good-looking.

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‘Silver Lake Badminton’, ‘Relapse’ Take Top Prizes at Celebrate the Web

I’ve always been a fan of web series on big screens. Despite the obvious irony in that, web shows that are shot well (and in HD) just look better in a theater, especially surrounded by a hundred or so fellow web series fans.

Celebrate the Web wrapped up its fourth installment last night with a screening of the thirteen entrants in its “Raising the Bar” festival at the ACME Theater in Los Angeles. The festival tasked web series creators from all over, with one entry hailing from the UK, to create an independent web series pilot in just 7 days. In a nod to the 48-hour film festival model, entrants had to incorporate three elements—a William Gibson quote, a globe image and the number 42.

Taking home the Judges Prize last night was The Silver Lake Badminton and Adventurers Club (or TSLBAAC for you acronypsters), from “Team Tax Deductible Charity Organizations” made up of Matthew Smith and Avi Glijansky. The duo are veterans of the scripted web series scene with Smith editing several seasons of The Guild and Glijansky fresh off of his first season of Cupid & Eros, which Smith also edits.

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‘Hawaii Five-O’ Web Series: Where’s Danno?

Waves. Crime. Jack Lord. Yes, Hawaii Five-O is back—with a companion web series. Yesterday CBS.com debuted the original web series Hawaii: Undiscovered, inspired by the CBS Television’s remake of the 70s classic.

The eight episode series takes viewers around the island of Oahu, giving them a behind-the-scenes look at set locations and background on the island’s culture and history. The series is sponsored by Chevy Cruze and features a sweepstakes offering fans a chance to win a trip to Honolulu.

Hawaii: Undiscovered is hosted by Jim Brasher of Yahoo: Weekend Edition, who’ll be interviewing advisors and experts from Hawaii Five-O, including a Navy Seal advisor, the Hawaiian Language and Cultural advisor and the show’s location manager.

The first episode “Find Your Own Break” features Hawaii Five-O star Grace Park’s surfing instructor, Hans “The Man” Hedeman. Other adventures will include shark diving, ATV riding, parasailing and visits to Hawaii Five-O set locations.

“The island of Oahu has become the fifth character on Hawaii Five-O, and we’re excited to give fans a deeper look in to the culture and landscape that is a major part of the show,” said Joe Ferreira, SVP, Network Liaison and Original Content.

New Hawaii: Undiscovered webisodes will debut every Monday at 12:00 pm, PT, with the first

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Dr. Horrible Book Breaks into Amazon Top 100

It was nearly three years ago when Neil Patrick Harris once again donned the title of Doctor for a role in a Joss Whedon web series about a guy with a blog and a love interest who likes to sing and wants to be evil.

Since then, the critically-acclaimed, Streamy Award-winning Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog has (thanks to top-notch performances, an amazing storyline, beautiful production values, and the good people of the Whedonverse) maintained a top position on the iTunes charts, spawned a successful comic book spin-off, launched a DVD complete with fan-made Evil League of Evil applications, and most recently, released a companion to the web series in the form of a book.

This week Titan Books published Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog: The Book, complete with an uncut version of the script, behind the scenes photos (including shots from the First Annual Streamy Awards), annotated script pages, Joss Whedon’s original lyrics, commentaries from the actors involved in production, and sheet music for the entire score. It’s selling well.

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New York Times Paywall is Up, Video Still Free…For Now

This week the New York Times launched its “groundbreaking new business model in which the news website will charge people money to consume the goods and services it provides.”

new-york-times-paywallThe source with all the news that’s fit to print now places all its content (save 20 giveaway articles per calendar month per user) behind a paywall. That goes for all the articles on its iPhone App application, too, with very few exceptions. One of those exceptions is Video.

So, why can users of the New York Times iPhone App view NYT video content for free? Are the videos meant to serve as a free taste of all the content you can consume behind the paywall? No. Do the comparatively high CPMs of video advertising make it lucrative for the company to serve as many mobile streams as possible? Good idea, but still no. Did the video content creators negotiate some type of agreement outside of whatever standard contract the New York Times Company gives its reporters? Nah ah.

For the answer, I went to the Grey Lady herself. Kristin Mason at the New York Times told me why the video is gratis:

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