Posts Tagged funny

Table Read Tonight!

Posted by: Scott

The day is here.

It’s weird. We’ve opened out (tiny) office for Tights and Fights: Ashes. We’ve hired key positions. We’ve cast. We’ve signed contracts and got a (for us) large lump o’ cash. As you read a couple of posts ago, we sent a day on a super hero costume road trip.

So why is the table read the thing that makes it feel real?

I guess, being mostly a writer, this is the moment where suddenly it’s not just silly, funny words on a page that made you giggle to yourself, now actual people have to listen to other actual people say them out loud. And it either works or it don’t.

I know I promised a part two to the writing history, and I’m getting to that (this has been a crazy time for me) but I would remiss if I left you with the impression that I wrote this entire series sitting in my basement, or something. By the way, if you’re wondering, I’m using remiss in the sense of, “be an asshole.” And I don’t have a basement.

Nor was I alone on this journey. I named names in the earlier post, but the only reason this show is going to camera is because we surrounded ourselves with people funnier, smarter and prettier than we are. And now they’re gonna dress up in funny super hero costumes and say silly things to the world.

But still. I want it to be funny, and fun, and – perhaps the greatest challenge of all – make sense across more than 180 episodes. It’s scary. I’ve never had to make sense for longer than five minutes at a stretch. One of my biggest fears is that a year from now some YouTuber’s gonna watch the latest episode and post, “Can you explain what’s going on, here?”

This is a massive narrative, with plot threads coming and going like the paths of dogs playing in the dog park. And it’s always been my job to keep track of them on a big picture level. So I do feel a sense of responsibility when it comes to the read through. Some people who will be attending are going to be experiencing the story (at least the first third that will be read this evening) for the first time. I’m proud of the scripts, the writing, the talent involved. And today is the start of the long road of sharing it with the world. I can’t wait slash scared shitless. Which is pretty much normal for me.

The biggest challenge tonight is that all three of us, Courtney, Christopher and I, need to have our heads in the table read, which means that none of us can be making sure things are running smooth behind the scenes. But we’ll try to figure out a way to live tweet the read, so we can share a tiny taste of it with you.

Wish us luck, and watch this space!

Scott

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Three Biggies

I will get back to the history of the scriptwriting, but I thought I’d quickly pop in and keep y’all up to date.

Full of possibilities!

Christopher, Courtney and I had a big ol’ meeting on Thursday to try to keep on top of all the tasks we have to do between now and launch. Things are busy now, but August is gonna be insane! Hopefully as we get into production and launching things will settle into a rhythm and we won’t be mental juggling 18 things at once.

There are really 3 big things that could still derail the whole project if we don’t figure them out.

One, is the costumes. This being about comic book heroes, the costumes are key elements to almost everything we need to do. Working with our Art Director, Stephanie Avery, we think we may have found the perfect wardrobe person to get our costumes done. (As a quick aside, Stephanie Avery, is a key collaborator who has been our Art Director on every live action shoot we have done.)

Two, office space. Between working with interns, each other, and an ongoing Transmedia writing team, having a dedicated working space for Tights and Fights: Ashes is a must. Just after our meeting  on Thursday we found a place that, while it may be small, would meet our basic needs and come in under our utterly ridiculously small budget for office space.  It seems like a miracle. We’ll know soon if we get it and you, dear reader, will be the first to know!

Three, sponsorship and advertising. Big stumbling block. We’re talking with a few very talent and exciting people, but we honestly aren’t sure about how close we are to nailing this down. This is a tough one because, push come to shove, we could squeak by if we do everything else ourselves. We could even continue to work out of our living rooms and probably deliver all we promised to the IPF. But we’re not just looking to “squeak by” or even deliver our minimum requirements for this one project. We’re looking to use Tights and Fights: Ashes to jumpstart a profitable, on going concern making narrative content in the digital space. And to do that, we need an ad guy (or girl) that knows that world and speaks that language. We can’t do it ourselves with any reasonable expectation of success. And if we want money coming in before Christmas, we need to start now. Like I said, we have some very exciting candidates, but I’ll feel a lot better when someone is actually picking up the phone on our behalf.

On the plus side, so far everything is coming together. We’re getting some enthusiastic responses from our early, informal requests for volunteers and interns. Our lawyer is looking over the contract with the IPF, once that is signed the money starts flowing. The scripts are done (more or less) and we’re going over them with a fine toothed comb. Production plans are being laid out. Web sites are being programed. Oh, and we’re forming a new company for the production.

And speaking of the new company,  the need for one came out of a meeting with our lawyer, Martin Krys, who raised many interesting points but here’s one all producers (big and small) would do well to help in mind; just because a worker is working for you short term (i.e. your entire crew on a film shoot) doesn’t mean the government doesn’t consider them employees. Which means you are on the hook for taxes and benefits,  something that very few producers actual pay,  assuming the worker is being contracted and not employed. The questions that are asked to determine whether a worker is an employee or contract worker are these;

1)      Does the worker have any input into how the task is completed, or are they required to follow your directions to complete it?

2)      Does the worker provide their own “tools” required to complete the job, or are they provided by you?

If the worker has a large amount of latitude in how they complete the task and they provide their own tools required to complete it, they are a contract worker. Otherwise they are employees, even if only employed for a short term, and you gotta pay taxes and benefits.

Please remember that I’m not a lawyer and I only understand this stuff on the broadest possible level, if at all. My point is film crew members are often treated by productions as contract workers,  when legally they are employees, leading to more than one producer being handed a massive tax bill after production has wrapped. Not fun.

Lots to learn, lots to do! Exciting times and no catastrophes yet!

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History of the Writers’ Room – Part One

I promised you a little bit about the writing process. And no, we don’t use pens much in this time of computers, but the pictures sure look pretty, right?

And here’s the thing about writers and pens. You’d think that writers would be all about fancy pens, maybe even pricey pens that have just the right balance and glide across the page. Most writers do use pens to some degree, so you’d think they’d take it seriously. Nope. You’ll always spot a professional writer cause they’ll have the oldest, most worn out, leaky, crumbling shitty plastic pen that they have lost and found about thirty times.

Oh, and they have super dirty keyboards. Seriously. I don’t know a single real writer without a keyboard that looks like it has a nice honey Dijon glaze over the keys. Even as i write this, my attention is drawn to the sticky nature of certain keys on my own keyboard; a wireless one that as been running low on batteries for about 16 days, but I have forgotten once again to bring in batteries sitting at home bought just for that purpose.

All of that is an aside. We’re here to talk Writers’ Room.

A little background for those who need it.

If you know all about Writers Rooms and are super pressed for time (maybe Dancing with the Stars is about to start, who knows what you do with your spare time) you can take your puffed up self down to the next bit. For all the rest of you, I’ll give a little context.

I come from a sketch comedy and TV writing background, both of which tend to involve a lot of collaboration. The way most TV shows are written is through what is known as a Writer’s Room – essentially a big table and a whiteboard. All the show’s writers are jammed in there, and they work their way through each script as a group. Either the showrunner (the writer who is in charge of every aspect of the show) leads the group, or more frequently once the steamroller of production starts up, the showrunner is off doing the million things they need to be doing to get the show on the air and a senior writer runs the room.

The room becomes your life. You cease to be an individual and you become part of The Room. Being in The Room is a prize often sought after by aspiring writers. It can be a place of intense, joyful creativity – or a place where good people go to die (or least get bitter and develop an ulcer) depending on what The Room is like. The Room is the all important engine of TV – on many comedy shows the script is literally written line by line by The Room, as very funny people compete to get their joke into the script. On a drama, there’s a lot more thoughtful conversation and silent periods of thought. Either way – it is mentally and emotionally exhausting. And there better be sandwiches – sandwiches are the life blood of any Room. Okay, it doesn’t have to be sandwiches, but you need to feed a Room well.

We did have sandwiches.

Tights and Fights: Captain Euchre (which we sometimes refer to as ‘Season 1′) set the tone to the property, and the good Captain would often tell us stories of his crime fighting colleagues. When we decided that we would do Tights and Fights: Ashes, and it would involve more characters, we had quite a few to draw on. We knew that we were going to hire talented writers/performers to take on each character, and we knew we needed a particular skill set, so we started with going down the list of people we knew and worked with to populate our world. I knew I was going to be the bizarre Evil Trojan Borscht. But who else would join us in this insane voyage?

Scott Watkins had made something of a cameo in Tights and Fights: Captain Euchre as a plumber held hostage. We knew that he was an amazing improviser and he and his writing partner Adam Swimmer are very, very funny. Adam, Scott and I had been working together in various forms for years and so we have a shared sensibility, and we’re all comic book geeks. (Sorry guys, if you were keeping that a secret.) Scott played Dr. Phallus in both incarnations of Jake Moxie, the comedy show that Adam and I wrote and tried to get produced. The animated version was the first time I worked closely with Christopher. All that is to say we knew and trusted Scott and Adam, and the idea of that plumber deciding to be a super hero after being held hostage by Captain Euchre made us laugh.

Next up was Melanie Hunter. She’s a very talented comedian, actor and improviser. Melanie just comes alive when she’s on stage or in front of a camera, and we thought that her comedic persona would be a good fit for the character of Fantabulous Gal. When we told her that we were considering her for the part, she blurted out, “I say fantabulous all the time!” When we started, we didn’t have much more figured out for the character than the name, so all the details and connections between Fantabulous Gal and the other characters is largely all Mel.

When it came time to find the voice of Major Faultline, fate took over. I went to grade school in Ottawa with Conor O’Hegarty, and flash forward 20 years (or so) we reconnected over Facebook. Conor was in the very first sketch I ever did, and I was shocked to discover that he was acting in Toronto. He came in as the Major, and quite frankly, some of the stuff he came up with is by far the laugh-out-loud funniest stuff in the series. All I’ll say is future space monkeys. And, seriously, if that’s not enough for you, make an appointment with your doctor. Conor decided not to appear in the series, so Jeremy Knight will be the Major’s face over the next year.

The last role we needed to fill was Leopard Woman, Major Faultline’s wife. We tossed around a couple of names, but nothing really clicked so we decided to have an audition. We saw a bunch of great actresses, but Chelsea Larkin knocked us off our computer seats when she sent us a character monologue delivered to her webcam of a Bronx Goldilocks. And then she came in and read for us, and she was not only hysterically funny, but she played fast and loose with the script – which is exactly the process we’ll be using when we shoot. From that moment on, Chelsea was our Leopard Woman.

I knew I needed help keeping organized and keeping an eye on the voice of the series as a whole. So I brought in a writer that I had worked with quite a bit  my sketch comedy days, Neil Jones. Neil has a very logical mind, and is a much bigger comic guy than I am. Neil was invaluable; he always focused the discussion by outing (quite often) that we had stopped making sense. He also wasn’t shy in declaring what was funny or not funny, but in a way that you couldn’t help but love him for it. Neil did a pass on each and every script we did, clarifying and adding jokes.

And the guy in charge of keeping us all organized and making sure we had sandwiches was Joel Grossman, our Writers Room intern. Not only did Joel keep us fed, made sure the jokes and ideas being yelled around got written down (cause we were already on to the next one), Joel went through the 6 hours of script and made sure that they were in the correct order to the events that were going on in the story – not as easy as you might think since at any given time the five characters could be off doing entirely separate things that suddenly cross and overlap.

And so, the team was assembled! The Room was waiting. Next post, I’ll pick up and give you a peek into what the actual process was like! I might even have pictures!

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Winning the Money for the First Time

When you are just starting out as a producer you basically just have to get some stuff actually made.  That’s the first hurdle.  Then maybe you work toward making something good.  Then you are going to want to start doing projects that are larger than your credit card limit.  That’s been the hurdle Scott and I have been at for the past few projects, but being a recipient of the Independent Production Fund has even bigger implications for my life.  It has given me the opportunity to produce full time for the first time since I was on EI in 2002.

So this Monday marked a major milestone for me as the beginning of the first week free from the hum-drum of office life.  No more commute to Scarborough, no more coffee room pleasantries.  Although I might buy Courtney a cake for being awesome (its time to form our own little rituals), those office antics that have found their way into our past shows are over with for now.  Well it didn’t start all that different, in fact that snooze button was even more inviting than usual.  I did enjoy eating at home and running my own schedule, didn’t really get out except for a trip to the store so that’s some thing I have to work on.  I love the skype calls with Scott and Courtney, where we all look at the same documents and generate a real feeling of moving forward.

Scott, Courtney and I have very different backgrounds so we have very different perspectives.  Unfortunately I’m the one handling the financial realities and repercussions of our productions, and that hasn’t changed in this project.  The big difference…lots of extra zeros.  Its funny how things change when there is a larger pool of money.  We never before ventured into E&O insurance, which a requirement of the IPF and is high on our minds now as because its a large line item in a budget that needs to cover a massive project.  Otherwise we are still working at a fraction of television industry standards.  The Tights and Fights: Ashes project will produce content at an estimated cost of under $300/minute, a far cry from both the $10′s of thousands per minute of traditional television fiction, and the $100 per minute target of our previous projects.

I wanted to write a little about the process of applying to this grant in particular, because I actually found it very helpful and would recommend this fund to all developing producers.   There were two stages in the application process.  The first one asked for an impossibly short 6 page outline of the project.  Smart, because who wants to read 166 hundred-page applications?  From that a committee narrowed it down to 26.  Of that they awarded funding to 11 teams.  That two stage process and meetings we had with them really helped us form a solid proposal.

Anyway, all in all…I could really get use to this.

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This is how we do it!

Happy Monday, everyone!

We’re slowly ramping up, and realizing the scope of the work to be done for Tights and Fights: Ashes. I think we’re doing some interesting things in trying to keep ourselves organized until we have a central production office. We’re all working from home but at the same time stay co-ordinated and on task.

Sure, we’re doing a funny, little web series about comic book heroes, but we still need to do all the same things the big boys do, more even so. (How much time do you think NBC Universal spends worrying about SEO and discoverability? Probably not so much.) And there’s just the three of us so it’s easy for things to get lost  in the cracks. Here’s some of the tools we use to communicate and co-ordinate.

Since we’re using both PC and Mac computers, we’re big users of Google Docs. Not only is it easy to see what other people have done, but there’s no problems in who’s using what type computer when; easily one of the biggest challenges in working with a group of people. (You know, “How do I open a docx file?” “This file is too big to email.” “What do you mean CS3 won’t open it?”)

The nice new-ish thing about Google Docs is that you can upload files, even if Google Docs can’t display it. We use Google Docs to distribute scripts written in Final Draft. That way, everyone has access to the latest draft. The sharing is already configured, you just upload to the right folder and everyone can access it. The big drawback is that you need to be your own tech support, because there will always be the guy new to Google Docs who needs extra help in figuring it out.

Once you get rolling, Google Docs is a great tool for production management. We wrote our application to the Web Series Pilot Fund using it. We use the spreadsheets to manage our time and resources, keep our contacts organized, make our script breakdowns and production board – almost everything. And it is free!

We also use Skype calls as meetings when we can’t meet face to face. (Although there’s no real substitute for face to face!) When we’re in a crunch, like the night before a big application is due and we’re all frantically writing and revising, we turn on Skype and leave it on – that way if there’s a question or a concern you can just blurt it out and hope someone will answer. It’s almost like creating a virtual office, and in some ways it is even more efficient than actual working in the same room!

Mandy.com is a service we use a lot. If you don’t know it, check it out. It is sort of like Craig’s List, but only for entertainment related type ads. It gets used primarily for casting (at least, in my experience) but you can put up an ad for just about anything.

I won’t go through every service we use (like seeing how we make videos, we spend a lot of time navigating Youtube) but there’s two that if they didn’t exist, we might not have been able to do all the stuff we do. One is WordPress. You’ll hear Christopher talk about it a lot. We build all of our web properties on WordPress. It makes it so easy to throw up new content that even I can do it! The other one, that you might not have heard of before, is TubeMogul. TubeMogul is a service to organize, launch and track your videos across just about every video uploading site on the web. You can stage your videos, tell it which to upload to when, and move on to another of the ten million things that need your attention. It’ll launch the videos on your schedule, and then if you want to track your stats you simply go the dashboard – all of your views and comments across the net are in one place. Very handy. We are planning on moving to a slightly different launch strategy for Tights and Fights: Ashes – one that won’t use TubeMogul for our ’first tier’ launch, but we still plan on relying on it heavily for our ‘second tier’ of video distribution.

One of the things that I obsess about is backing stuff up – I’ve seen it happen to too many writers and other creative workers. Your computer and your files are your life and your livelihood – if your hard drive goes crunch, how are you going to pick up and keep working? We used to use Microsoft Live Mesh, which has morphed into Microsoft Sync. Yes, I know, we’re all supposed to think that all things Microsoft are lame and evil, but they are doing some interesting stuff in moving away from the old, ‘one computer, one saved file’ way of working. We back up both across our computers using Microsoft Sync and on my networked hard drive in my apartment.

And, as if this post wasn’t boring enough (hey, I actually like talking about this kind of stuff!) I have one more piece of advice in working with a group – figure out how to share your computer’s files over a local network. It’s different with a PC and a Mac, but it’s not that hard. And it’ll make your life so much easier in the long run.

Those are the key free and sorta free online services we use to keep the GopherX.net team humming along. Don’t worry, not every post will be this geeky. Tomorrow I plan to talk about the part that, for me, is the most fun… the writing! How the heck did we get 180 video episodes written? Tune in tomorrow!

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Our Company

Lead, Follow, or get our of our way!
Our focus is on comedy series that can be seen online, on TV and on your cellphone. We’re still a new company, but that’s okay because multi-platform series are still pretty new, too.

There are two things we do better than anybody else. We design and produce videos that fill the niche between user generated content and high budget, studio productions – and make ‘em funny, too. And we “promote” these videos online in ways that you haven’t even thought of. That means we’re experts in building, and growing, online fan based communities by leveraging social networking websites like YouTube and Facebook.

What we do transcends simple ‘webisodes,’ ‘mobisodes’ or traditional TV broadcast episodes. We long ago stopping thinking of those as separate, unique things. That’s why we call what do just plain sodes.

At its heart, Gopher X is a partnership between Christopher Guest and Scott Albert.

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Tights and Fights

Watch more Tights and Fights

You on the tights and fights?

Sure, we all know the fights and the powers and the gadgets, but what’s a super hero’s daily life like?

Tights and Fights is a video diary comedy series that peeks into lives of super heroes, starting with Captain Euchre. He’s a bit of his own worst enemy, constantly bickering with his team mates on Ronan Force, while looking for love and battling super villains. You thought you had problems? Check out how bad things get for the good Captain…

Watch all the madness of Captain Euchre in Tights and Fights.

www.tightsandfights.com
www.captaineuchre.com – Season I, the Story of Captain Euchre

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Watch

You made it to the good stuff!

Everything we do revolves around one good idea. A super hero who can’t catch a break. A newt that gives advice. We know we’ve got something when one idea leads to another and another and another…

Then we set out to make the thing. Our plan is to make series that fall between user generated content (home movies and amateur video) and big budget, multi-million dollar studio productions. There’s a huge range in between those two extremes. That’s our canvas. And we’re going to fill it.

So check out our shows. We hope that you like ‘em!

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GopherX.net Launchs New Web Series

For Immediate Release

October 22, 2007

Captain Euchre is Fighting Crime… without a Full Deck!

Tights and Fights, An Innovative New Canadian
Comedy Series, Launches October 26!

(Toronto, ON) Soon to be airing on Movieola—The Short Film Channel (www.movieola.ca), the short form, multi-platform comedy Tights and Fights will be available for viewing online starting Friday October 26, 2007, at www.tightsandfights.com.

Tights and Fights is a fictional video diary of the ups and downs (and sideways) of a Canadian super-hero, Captain Euchre (played by writer/producer Scott Albert). Once a highly ranked player on the professional Euchre circuit, Captain Euchre now fights crime using a Euchre card deck which was exposed to mysterious cosmic radiation! Using his webcam, Captain Euchre keeps us updated about his daily life – whether he’s bogged down in meetings with Ronin Force, fighting Librarian Marm or the Salad King, or dating Dynagal, each hilarious episode contrasts the comic book clichés of being a super-hero with the frustrations of modern life.

Created expressly for the demands of multi-platform distribution, Tights and Fights is simultaneously distributed online, on mobile, and traditional broadcast. Each episode is less than five minutes long, making it ideal for viewers looking for a “content snack” on the go or just a quick break, while the ongoing storyline is also perfect for someone to sit back on the couch and watch a number of episodes in a row. The current storyline of 52 episodes will last until March 2008, with plans for a new batch of episodes to begin soon after.

With this ongoing series, GopherX.net is building on the run-away success of our previous multi-platform series, the animated six episode limited series The Retired Porn Producer’s Guide To… which has received over 100,000 views across the internet since its launch last year. It is currently airing on Movieola—The Short Film Channel and is distributed on mobile by Big Bang Pictures. A second 12 episode limited series, Team Leader, is currently in post-production, with a launch expected by the end of the year.

GopherX.net is a partnership between Christopher Guest and Scott Albert. Gopher X and The Retired Porn Producer’s Guide To… has been featured on G4 Tech TV’s Torrent TV, and has been covered by C21 Media and Playback Magazine. Tights and Fights can currently be seen on Movieola—The Short Film Channel and after October 26, 2007 at www.tightsandfights.com.

For More Information, please email contact@gopherx.net

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