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  Toonami Infolink :: View topic - How Does Adult Animation Rate?
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How Does Adult Animation Rate?

 
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Andromaton

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Joined: Nov 17, 2003
Post subject: How Does Adult Animation Rate?
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By Joe Strike

Forty-three years ago, the sight of two cavemen sneaking out for a night of bowling behind their wives’ backs via a foot-powered helicopter was considered a breakthrough in adult animation. Then again, no one had ever programmed a primetime cartoon before, and third-place ABC didn’t have much to lose by airing The Flintstones.

Four decades and several seismic cultural shifts later, things are somewhat different; perhaps only some prehistoric spouse swapping (or an episode exploring Bedrock’s version of ‘a gay old time’) could help Fred and Barney capture an adult audience today.

Pebbles or Bamm Bamm certainly wouldn’t know what to make of their successors, specifically the foul-mouthed moppets of Comedy Central’s South Park. The show that didn’t just push, but shredded the animation envelope and gave the rest of the industry permission to follow suit now boasts more than100 episodes in the can and another 15 set to roll out in March and October of next year. Comedy Central recently began stripping reruns of the show weeknights at 9:30 pm while airing new episodes through the end of the year in the show’s regular Wednesday 10:00 pm slot. “The Strip is doing extremely well,” according to the channel’s Lisa Chader. “South Park is still the number one show on Comedy Central; the Wednesday night first-run episodes have been averaging 2 million viewers, which for us is fantastic.”

Repeating that trick can be a little trickier the second time around. Kid Notorious, Comedy Central’s high-profile Hollywood satire starring Robert Evans as a cartoon version of himself recently premiered in the post-South Park 10:30 pm Wednesday spot, hoping to inherit that show’s audience. “The ratings were good, but we lost some of the lead-in audience,” admits Chader. “We’d like to see it perform a little better.” Then again, following Comedy Central’s best-known, most successful series might prove daunting for any new show. Hedging its bets, the channel relocated Kid Notorious to Tuesdays at 10:30, where it hopes it will prove more compatible with Crank Yanker’s rude puppets.

In the meantime, Comedy Central continues to air a floating, late-night block of animated reruns that at any time may feature Dr. Katz, the channel’s first animated series Dilbert, The Critic, Duckman, UPN’s short-lived clay-animated Gary and Mike series or the legendary and hysterically funny cartoon version of Kevin Smith’s Clerks that was given the hot-potato treatment by a seriously-freaked ABC after two episodes. The channel also has several new animated series in development. Furthest along is House Arrest, wherein recorded stand-up routines are transformed into animated vignettes; a Dennis Leary-starring pilot is targeted for airing in 2004.

The former TNN Network, now rechristened Spike TV, set out this past June to make a splash (and attract young male viewers) with The Strip — its very own block of first run animation. With great fanfare the Channel revived John Kricfalusi’s Ren & Stimpy’s Adult Party Cartoon, introduced a Stan Lee-created, Pamela Anderson-voiced Stripperella and brought Kelsey Grammar’s Internet toon, Gary the Rat, up to the cable big leagues.
PostTue Nov 18, 2003 1:47 am
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Andromaton

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On opening night, 1.4 million viewers checked out The Strip, a more than respectable basic cable rating and a sizeable increase over the channel’s pre-Spike audiences. Yet by October all three series were shelved, supposedly to avoid over-exposure. Observers couldn’t help but notice that Stripperella and Gary the Rat went on hiatus in spite of unaired episodes, while John K. had only delivered three of nine ordered Ren & Stimpys.

The network denied rumors that it was bailing out of the animation game by pointing to a slew of projects in the works from high-profile creators, including a The Immigrants, a Klasky Csupo series about a pair of tenement-dwelling newcomers to America (voiced by Hank Azaria and Eric McCormack) set for a spring 2004 debut. Further down the pipeline, Howard Stern is developing a series starring himself as a misfit high schooler; John Leguizamo will portray both Zilch and Zero, a pair of movie-addled video store slackers in a one-shot special that more than likely would set the stage for a regular series; producer Warrington Hudlin (responsible for the little-seen, inner-city animated feature Bebe’s Kids) is working on Big Headed People, a political satire sending up everyone from Osama Bin Laden to black Republicans.

Spike TV is also putting together six half-hour compilations of shorts mined from the Spike and Mike features. According to the network, The Strip itself is due to return in early 2004, with the new shows added to the mix. Gary the Rat will return on its own, starting Dec. 2.

Pay cabler Showtime recently produced (with animation house Film Roman) seven episodes of Free for All, an animated series based on the five-year-old syndicated comic strip of the same name for late-night airing. It’s not the channel’s first cartoon effort if one counts its fey funny animal Web cartoon Queer Duck, but it is the first to go directly to air.

Why did Showtime go with Free for All over other animated series pitched to them — or decide to air animation in the first place? “We kept trying different forms,” explains Gary Levine, the channel’s executive VP of original programming. “We’re always trying to balance the range of programming we do and distinguish ourselves from what you can find on the advertiser-supported networks. “The development process was just very fruitful,” he adds. “We liked the people involved — both Brett Merhar, the comic strip’s creator, and Merriwether Williams, the exec producer/writer who ran SpongeBob SquarePants for years. We liked the talent [a voice cast that includes Jonathan Lewis and Juliette Lewis], we liked the tone, so we said this is something Showtime should give a try.”

With two ‘Generation-Y buddies, a murderous, sex-crazed grandmother and a drug-addicted lab ferret, the show definitely deserves to be described as ‘edgy,’ the adjective of the moment. In spite of good reviews and “some really positive buzz” (and without the ad revenue-pressure of having to produce ratings numbers) the show’s fate is up in the air. “We are heading towards a decision about renewal” is as far as Levine will go at the moment. Would Free for All be replaced — or joined — by another animated series? “We only do six or seven original series at any time,” says Levine. “It’s unlikely that more than one would be animation because that would start to take us out of balance. It’s not ever going to become something that overwhelms our programming.

“We probably get pitched one animated project a month, and we’re actively developing one that’s kind of exciting: The Adventures of Cheech and Chong. Through the miracle of animation they’re magically transformed into their old selves here in the present day. They’re involved in conceptualizing, writing and voicing their characters.” As for the small problem of Tommy Chong stuck in the slammer for the crime of selling bongs online, Levine is unworried: “He can do voice over from anywhere.”

An interested onlooker in Free for All’s fate is Sidney Clifton, svp head of development at Film Roman (recently acquired by and now part of IDT Media), the show’s animation studio. “We’re just waiting to see if we’re going to get picked up or not. The networks don’t have to give us pickups right now because we want them.
PostTue Nov 18, 2003 1:48 am
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Andromaton

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“I’m not positive what’s going into Showtime’s mandate right now. I know they had a change in leadership recently [with a new president of the channel’s entertainment division], that’s part of it too. Free for All may do well, but it just may not fit into the strategy of the new leadership.”

Clifton sees the boom in adult-directed animation as a result of a number of factors, including the simple fact that “the audience likes them. Adult audiences know that cartoons aren’t just for kids anymore. Anime has helped that, videogames with sophisticated animation have been around for a while now and the gamers are getting older — that’s also had an impact.

“Of course I’m biased towards The Simpsons, but I think South Park really opened up the field,” she continued. “Comedy Central took the chance of putting it on and audiences responded; South Park made it cool to watch cartoons. People saw it can be funny, it can be outrageous. The show has levels of social satire that people tend to forget about while they’re counting how many times they say ‘shit’.”

According to Clifton, things are more open in cable because production has gotten less expensive and the cable outlets cater to a certain kind of niche. “The writers are writing to 18-34 year-old or younger guys, mostly; you can say ‘ass’ and people respond to that pretty well,” she said. “A lot of these shows just are what they are. They’re aimed at a specific demographic and they do what they’re supposed to do. Stripperella is the most demographic-specific. It’s aimed at young adult males who are watching while they’re doing something else. I’m not overly impressed with a lot of them — I’m not sure about their longevity.”

The cable channel that first introduced anime to the U.S. market — and then walked away from the genre — will soon return to animation via its first original toon series. Like Spike TV’s Gary the Rat, the Sci Fi Channel is developing Tripping the Rift from its Internet ‘webisode’ origins into a full-fledged CGI-animated series, co-produced by CinéGroupe and Film Roman.

“We never really went away from animation,” according to Thomas Vitale, Sci Fi’s svp of acquisitions, scheduling and program planning. “We’ve aired features like Fantastic Planet, Cool World — we just aired the Final Fantasy movie, and animation is a regular part of our Exposure shorts series.

Sci Fi gave up on anime, and animation programming in general due to a number of reasons. “At first we got ratings with anime. The viewers responded and the press wrote about us. But once the genre got familiar the ratings went down. Once the excitement wore off viewers stopped watching and the press stopped talking about it. Other networks jumped on the bandwagon too — Cartoon Network started airing more teen and adult-oriented cartoons, not to mention competition from video and DVD.”

Vitale expresses no regrets at dropping anime. “Too many other networks were there, it couldn’t have become something we would’ve owned. Our viewership is still mostly adult men and women. We need stuff that appeals to a very broad range of viewers. We didn’t have the door closed to animation either — we took animation pitches like we took any other pitch

“It wasn’t like ‘we have to have an animated series’ as a stated goal, either,” he continues. “It was more like ‘we have to find programming we think will get ratings, shows that people will care about and we care about internally.’ We had always kicked around the idea of doing animation someday — could we have our own version of success with animation like Comedy Central with South Park or FOX with The Simpsons?”

Tripping the Rift made it onto Sci Fi’s schedule for starters because “the short made us laugh out loud,” Vitale explains. “The pitch was really smart in terms of what they wanted to do with the characters and where the plot they created for the series would take them, since the short was just a one-shot.

“They didn’t come to us with 13 fully fleshed out episodes,” Vitale continues. “There was an idea for a series, the characters and potential episodes, and we got them into development. We hired the writers and started developing scripts, started working on the voices and the casting.”

Tripping the Rift turns space opera on its head, focusing on a smuggling ship (the Free Enterprise) in place of the usual hierarchical military vessel. The ship’s crew features an assortment of motley characters, including a purple alien captain and his slacker nephew, a robot slave, and (with a nod to Star Trek: Voyager and perhaps to The Prisoner as well) a sexy and super-intelligent cyborg who goes by the name (actually number) “Six.”

Rift is set to premiere March 2004, pushed back from a 2003 start. Vitale dismisses rumors the delay was due to conceptual or production problems: “We’re planning to pair it up with another half-hour show that will appeal to a similar audience — possibly the second season of Scare Tactics (the channel’s prankster series) or a new show we have in the works called Mad, Mad House.” According to Vitale, the chances of a second animated series eventually joining Rift depends on how well Rift itself performs.
PostTue Nov 18, 2003 1:49 am
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Andromaton

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Showtime and Sci Fi have plenty of company in their efforts to hit animation pay dirt. In December, AMC will premiere its first cartoon series, a stop-motion spoof of entertainment news shows called The Wrong Coast from New York-based Curious Pictures. With Glenn Eichler of Beavis & Butt-head and Daria fame heading up the writing staff, and Mark Hamill among the voice artists, Coast may be a perfect match for the new, younger-and-hipper AMC. Curious is also responsible for the Jon Cryer-voiced Hey Joel, a send-up of the pop music world airing on Canada’s Bravo! NewStyleArtsChannel.

After Comedy Central, the showblock that has made the biggest splash in adult animation is the aptly titled Adult Swim on Cartoon Network. On Swim, high budget, off-network shows like Futurama and The Family Guy rub shoulders with outrageous, low-budget parodies of classic that turned Saturday morning characters into talk show hosts and trial lawyers.

“We knew back when we started that we had large audience outside the 2-11 demographic,” reflects Cartoon Network’s Mike Lazzo, svp of Adult Swim. “Because we did not have a lot of money to make original programming at that time, we started going into the library and repurposing shows because it was quite inexpensive to just rewrite existing animation.

“When Space Ghost Coast to Coast went on the air there was no adult block. It just sort of sat out there on Friday nights at the beginning. In essence, it was the first show we ever made aired outside in what we would call adult parameters, but because it aired at 8:00 pm on the west coast, we didn’t write racy material for it — we had to be careful that it was just kind of goofy.”

Space Ghost’s success led to the Adult Swim block. While the off-Fox cartoon sitcoms perform the best, Lazzo says the lower-budget, quarter hour spoofs deliver an equivalent bang-for-the-buck. “The quarter-hour shows — Space Ghost, Brak, Sealab and the rest probably get half the audience of Futurama or Family Guy, but at one-tenth of their budget.

“The shows are designed to be an inexpensive laboratory. We can produce 10 to 20 episodes of them and because the budgets are not huge you can try different things, you can try ‘em faster, and if something pops you can put more resources against it.

The point of these shows is to try and find that breakout hit like Beavis & Butt-Head or South Park, or indeed a Simpsons, which began as an interstitial. We’re still looking for it, but right now Aqua Teens and Sealab are doing very well.”

On the subject of Spike TV’s animation block, Lazzo notes, “I don’t think any of their shows were bad, they were OK, but to some degree maybe not as compelling as some have been.” As for adult animation in general, he offers a note of caution to Cartoon Network’s competitors: “It’s a very hard thing to do — you can’t dabble in it. One of the great things about Cartoon Network is that it’s an animated environment — you have an audience that expects animation and looks forward to new animation. I think that’s far more difficult for programmers who don’t, who might just have a show or two. I just think it’s tougher for them to bring in or just convince their existing audience to watch a new show — although a great new show in any genre will be a great new show and people will watch it.”

With six broadcast networks and dozens of cable channels in the U.S., as well as hundreds of DVDs to choose from, fans of adult cartoons can watch great, not-so-great and downright bad animation pretty much any time they feel like it. Like any TV programming genre, the total number of series on the air may wax and wane. However, now that producers know they have a waiting audience capable of generating Simpsons or South Park-style profits, don’t expect adult animation to go the way of the dinosaurs anytime soon.
PostTue Nov 18, 2003 1:50 am
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