Downsized

Writer’s Guild East Signs 13 More Digital Media Creators

Writers Guild of America, East, (WGAE) announced today that the New York based union has signed an additional 13 digital media production companies in the fourth quarter of 2009, bringing the total new media signatories to 22 for the year. The new additions join the previous group from earlier this fall, though some of the new signatories were inlcluded in our in-depth look at the WGAe’s efforts in new media, dubbed The Writer’s Guild 2.0 Initiative.

The announcement, part of the Guild’s effort to organize the bevy of new original web series productions, included some light hearted joking from the comedy writers in the group. 9am Meeting’s co-writer Matt Koff quipped, “I joined the guild for the same reasons as everyone else: respect, recognition, and Joss Whedon’s eternal friendship.”

While some creators have griped at the idea of sharing scare digital revenues for other people’s pension plans, for now the stamp of legitimacy for the young creators, along with some degree of health care benefits, seems to be enough to jump on board with the 98 year-old labor union. “I joined the WGA so that I wouldn’t die; out-of-pocket health care, just like my failed attempts at sustaining a Hollywood drug addiction, is just way too expensive,” joked Don Hooper, writer and owner of Jamtown Films Productions.

WGA West, the sister union of WGA East, also has a new media contract in place which some web series, like Joss Whedon’s Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog have chosen to use. But so far the East has been much more active in engaging new media productions than the West.

Full list of new WGAE signatories:

9am Meeting – Award winning and “disarmingly laid-back” animated web series from creator Dan McCoy on Channel 101 NY. (Ep. 1 below)

Alex Bloom and Ben Zelevansky – Creators of Unleashed, a popular animated web series follows the trials and tribulations of animal actors in Hollywood. The series is ranked #16 in the iTunes directory of Top 100 comedy podcasts. (Episode 7.6 below)

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‘Downsized’ and the Moody Characters of Recession

Web television aficionados will probably find Downsized to be something of an enigma through the first few episodes, and with good reason. As is the case with other mediums, the most successful of web series tend deal in the currency of escapism, whether they’re meme-ripe comedies or eye-dazzling action/adventures. Downsized, on the other hand, has no interest in taking us away from the real world or its concerns. It’s instead best described as a series of dramatic vignettes, following three sets of characters throug lean times while providing a clear message: everybody feels the recession, but they do so in their own, personal way.

The characters are familiar, not because of their conformity to archetypes or because we’ve seen them before, but rather because they’re so close to real. There’s Beth (writer and director Daryn Strauss), the smart, career woman who’s brusquely let go from her company; Lowell (Duncan Murdoch), the sharkish “efficiency expert” who deals in corporate cliches like “being a team player”; Astrid (Shannon Conley), the smarmy-yet-sympathetic beauty pageant coach who squeezes money out of gullible clients to pay her credit card bills; and Leyla (Esra Gaffin), the immigrant cleaning lady whose tearful workplace breakdown makes her less invisible than her broken English ever could. These are not the type of people we visit YouTube to watch—they’re the people we pass on the street every day.

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