Nag Early and Often

August 10th, 2007

Webster Webfoot and Jimmy Weldon

Next Wednesday, August 15th, you’re in for another rare treat. I’ll be on Stu’s Show on Shokus Internet Radio. But Earl, you say, you’re on that thing all the time. Yakky Doodle Title CardYes, but this time I’ll be co-hosting with Stu and our guest will be Jimmy Weldon. In case you’ve been in a cave since WW II, Jimmy was a kid’s show host with his pal, Webster Webfoot for many years, but most of you probably know him as the voice of Yakky Doodle.

This will be a great experience as Jimmy hasn’t done that many in-depth interviews. We’ll learn all about his life and what he’s up to today. As usual, Stu will be taking your calls during the live broadcast beginning at 4 PM Pacific Time, with repeats at that same time the rest of the week. Don’t miss this one or your brains will fall out!

The Worst Kept Secret

August 7th, 2007

Smurfs DVD Box

The news of the Smurfs release on DVD was supposed to come out yesterday, but Warner Home Video themselves leaked it before. It was in the recently released Popeye DVD, they were handing out temporary tattoos at Comic-Con announcing it and finally, TV Shows on DVD had the above box art on August 2nd. I’ve known about this for a long time, but the company is making me sign non-disclosure agreements now, so I can’t tell you about upcoming releases ahead of time any more.

What I can tell you is the contents of this set and why the box says 19 cartoons (if you follow the TV Shows on DVD link, you can see a larger version of the art).

Season One originally aired as an hour, two eleven minute episodes and one full half-hour story. But as early as Show #3, they began repeating cartoons. Show #3 has “Vanity Fare” which was also in Show #1. It didn’t make sense to release 21 hours of Smurfs (the number of Season One episodes) with a lot of repeats in them, so they are in the order of the original hours, but without duplicates. Here is the list by disc:

DISC ONE:

1 The Smurf’s Apprentice
2 The Smurfette
3 Vanity Fare
______________________________

4 King Smurf
5 The Astrosmurf
6 Jokey’s Medicine
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7 St. Smurf and the Dragon
8 Sorcerer Smurf
______________________________

9 The Smurfs and the Howlibird

DISC TWO:

10 The Magical Meanie
11 Bewitched, Bothered and Be-Smurfed
______________________________

12 Smurf-Colored Glasses
13 Dreamy’s Nightmare
______________________________

14 Fuzzle Trouble
15 Soup A La Smurf
______________________________

16 All That Glitters Isn’t smurf
17 Romeo and Smurfette
______________________________

18 The Hundredth Smurf
19 Smurphony in ‘C’

The lines between the titles denote what would have been each original hour show, 1 - 9. No word yet on whether these will contain main and end titles. I’ll Smurf you in when I find out. (Sheesh… I can’t believe I just wrote that.)

Comic-Con 2007 = The Muppet Show

July 26th, 2007

Here I am at the Comic-Con International.  This is going to be a very short report, but with some really good pictures and a big announcement at the end.  Last night was “Preview Night”, which was a preview of the huge and unwieldy crowds that have descended on San Diego.  There were people walking around with cardboard shields with the movie logo of 300 on them.  That doesn’t begin to estimate the crowd.  Add up the figures on all those shields and you might be close.

But Wednesday was all about Master Replicas Muppet Photo Puppets for me.  First up, here is the final version of Animal, that growling drummer from the Electric Mayhem.

animal001.jpg

Animal is currently available for pre-order and while there are no firm promises, Travis of Master Replicas expects Animal to begin shipping this fall.  Here is a closer look at the detail in his face.

animal002.jpg 

Next up is the current prototype for The Great Gonzo.  The color of his fur and tuxedo are still not right.  His tux is too pink and his fur is too gray.

gonzo001.jpg

They are still having problems with Gonzo’s nose.  It was originally made with reticulated foam, but that has a very short shelf life and can become brittle and crumble with age.  They are experimenting with other material so that it looks like foam but will not deterioate so quickly.  This version has some sort of mesh over it, but the concensus at the Con was that nobody likes the way this looks.  Because of this, Travis would not offer a guess as to when Gonzo will go on pre-order.

gonzo002.jpg

The biggest treat is in the next picture…

fozzie001.jpg

Yes, it’s the very first prototype of Fozzie Bear.  He didn’t arrive until partway through the evening.  Terry Angus, the fabulously talented builder, shipped him overnight.  He was so down to the wire that he didn’t have time to make Fozzie’s hat and he had to hand paint the material for his tie.

fozzie02

For a first prototype, he’s amazingly gorgeous.  I would take him almost as he is.  Travis and I decided his eyes and nose just need to be a little higher on his face, but Muppet expert Mike Moore, who made the eyes for Animal, Gonzo and Fozzie says that it depends on what picture you use for reference.  Every Fozzie they built was different.

And now for the big surprise.  As has already been announced, Animal and Gonzo are coming out this year, with Fozzie and Miss Piggy for 2008… but Travis hinted that they are planning a third puppet for next year, too.  I am pleased that he’s letting me break the news here… the third photo puppet for 2008 is…

rizzo01.jpg

Yes, it’s Rizzo the Rat.  With two big characters, they wanted to have another one in a more affordable range and Travis’ guess is that Rizzo will be priced about the same as Kermit.

There was also talk about accesory packs for the characters, but I’ll get into that in another post.  I’m Muppeted out for now!

His Master’s Voices

July 22nd, 2007

Comic Con 2007 Logo

I’m pleased to announce that I will co-hosting the Cartoon Voices panels on both Saturday and Sunday with the omnipresent Mark Evanier. Mark has graciously asked me to assist him in grilling… er, interviewing the two fine panels of professional voice artists. Here are the current line-ups, but at least one person is likely to switch days before this is set in concrete:

Saturday, NOON - 1:15 PM / Room 6B
CARTOON VOICE ACTORS I

A demonstration of the fine art of speaking for animated characters…with NEIL ROSS (G.I. Joe), ROB PAULSEN (Pinky and the Brain), WALLY WINGERT (Invader Zim), KATHY GARVER (Spider-Man), WILL RYAN (Disney), CHRIS EDGERLY (Harvey Birdman) and JOE ALASKEY (Duck Dodgers).

Sunday, NOON - 1:15 PM / Room 6B
CARTOON VOICE ACTORS II
Another demonstration of the fine art of speaking for animated characters…with TOM KENNY (SpongeBob SquarePants), MICHAEL BELL (Rugrats), APRIL STEWART (South Park), GREGG BERGER (Transformers), and MAURICE LaMARCHE (Pinky and the Brain).

Our fine cast will also be performing a cold reading of a famous radio script as a demonstration of their talents and versatility. A “cold reading” is an industry term for a first reading. In other words, when they read the script out loud for the audience, it will be the first time they’ve even seen it. If you’re attending the Con, these are must-see panels!

Old=Mold

July 16th, 2007

Josie Pitch Drawing

Here’s an e-mail I received from Christopher Cook:

On the Josie DVD: A 37-year-old cartoon like Josie definitely wouldn’t sell well in an era where kids crave pre-packaged Disney divas like the Cheetah Girls (who look more like teen versions of the Pussycat Dolls). The Archie Show comes out on DVD in two weeks, and only the most diehard grown-ups who remember it as a kid in 1968 will bother. Today’s kids? They’re still weaning on Hannah Montana.

I agree with this to a certain extent. Where I disagree is just who the target audience is for these vintage DVDs. I don’t think they’re aimed at today’s kids. They’re totally about nostalgia. But more than that, if a parent remembers a show fondly and passes it on to their children, they might enjoy it, too. A friend of mine has introduced his son to all sorts of classic and nostalgic cartoons and his son loves them. If the parent just turns on the TV and lets them watch whatever is on the Disney Channel or Cartoon Network, then they’ll never be exposed to other stuff, but if they’re like my friend… well, everything old is new again.

You could make this argument about any of the old TV shows that are being released on DVD. Who is I Love Lucy for? Certainly not for today’s kids. B&W?? You gotta be kidding. But they sold enough of these sets to warrant putting out a giant box of the complete series. So, there’s obviously a market for classic TV shows. Is Josie and the Pussycats a classic? Certainly not in the same sense as I Love Lucy, but Warner Home Video is betting that there’s enough fans left to make releasing it worthwhile.

Big, Bigger, Biggest

July 13th, 2007

Comic Con 2007 Logo

The Comic-Con International is now less than two weeks away and four day passes are sold out. This is good. Not so much that there are no more, but that the idea of capping capacity has finally taken hold. I have been suggesting this for several years now. You can still buy a three day (Thursday, Friday and Sunday) ticket and it will include the Wednesday preview night, but even that’s almost as crowded as Saturday now. If they take my advice, next year there will be no on-site registration at all. You either register ahead of time or don’t come. Of course, if they do that and registrations start to close-out as fast as the hotels did this year, a lot of us won’t be going to Comic-Con any more.

Still, I’ll be there this year. I may be on a panel or two, but I’m not on the official schedule. When I find out, I’ll let you know so you can say hi. Just you, though. Not that other guy.

Things You Won’t Be Seeing Department

July 4th, 2007

Josie and the Pussycats DVD Boxes

Way back last month… actually it was just this past Saturday… Gord Lacey and David Lambert of the wonderful TV Shows On DVD website posted the above artwork for the upcoming Josie and the Pussycats set. (You can see a larger version of it by clicking the image). I had posted here that there was something I found in the Warners’ film vault that should be included as bonus material on the set, something that almost no one in the entire world has seen or even knew existed. They begged Warner Home Video to contact me, but it was all to no avail. I brought it up to a few of my contacts and they just shrugged and said they didn’t have much of a budget for this title.

Well, I promised David and Gord I would reveal my find when the time was right and now seems as good a time as any.

Have you ever noticed that there are a few shots in the Main Title that stand out from the rest? They are close-ups of each girl playing their instruments, and are not lifted from the body of the show like most of the Main Title. The reason they look different is because they are rotoscoped. Rotoscope is a process that was invented by Max Fleischer whereby live actors are filmed, then each frame of film is traced by an artist, turning the live actors into cartoon characters. The shots of Josie and her Pussycat pals playing their instruments are rotoscoped.

How do I know, besides just noticing the obvious differences in the look of the animation? Because I found the live action reference footage. Yes, it actually exists. I never got to run it through a Movieola or projector, but I held it in my hands and there’s no question as to what it is. What would be fascinating to find out, though, since Cheryl Ladd did the singing voice for one of the Pussycats, was that her in the live action footage?

We’ll never know, though, because TV cartoons from this period just don’t sell well enough to get the deluxe treatment. In the end, you really can’t blame Warners. It doesn’t make sense for them to spend more money putting a set together than they could possibly make on it. No matter how much we want to see something, they are still a business, after all. But that footage sure would have made a cool bonus feature.

Ding-Dong, the Witch is Dead

June 21st, 2007

Cinderella 41

I had this story yesterday, but didn’t have a chance to post it and now Jim Hill Media has beaten me to it. The basics are that Sharon Morrill, President of Disney Toon Studios, makers of direct-to-DVD “product”, has been asked to step down. Ding dong, the Wicked Witch is dead!

I’m not going to discuss the merits of the sequels, pre-quels or mid-quels, there are plenty of comments over at Jim Hill. What I want to say is that while the DVD releases made a lot of money, they cost way more than they needed to. Virtually every one of them went through a multitude of writers and directors, fired on a whim by Sharon. If they followed her directives and she hated it, they got fired. If they didn’t follow her directives, they got fired even faster. All this shutting down productions in the middle because there wasn’t a good script to begin with cost the company millions of dollars more than necessary. If anyone before Lasseter and Catmull had really known how she ran that division, she would have been out years ago. But I suppose to the accountants, the bottom line was all that mattered.

However, beyond dollars, Sharon Morrill is not a nice person. And it has nothing to do with being a tough boss or the President of a company. Whatever you thought about Eisner creatively, I’ve heard from insiders that he was easy to work for. Sharon was not.

But Karma gets us all in the end and she’ll serve out her contract in what the employees refer to as “The Dead President’s Office”. Rather than pay her off and kick her out, they’ll make her stick around “taking on new duties”, which has about the same amount of truth to it as when a disgraced government official says they’re leaving office to spend more time with their family.

All good things come to an end and fortunately, sometimes bad things end, too.

Slag-Hoopla

May 29th, 2007

Wilma lets her hair down

Cartoon conspiracy theories? Well, there’s a first time for everything. Here’s an article for you to read that appeared in about a dozen Canadian papers today. Just like me to pour cold water on it in the end.

Tally Mo’

May 29th, 2007

Shokus Internet Radio Logo

Tomorrow, Mark Evanier and myself are back on Shokus Internet Radio to talk about TV cartoons and all sorts of fun things.

I have a favor to ask. A few weeks ago, Jerry Beck and Keith Scott were on and got the highest number of listeners to date, breaking Mark’s record, which was just above the number that he and I got together. Tomorrow, whether you’re at work or at home, click over to Shokus Radio, even if you don’t have time to listen to the whole program. Just leave your browser connected and we’ll see if we can’t beat the pants off Jerry and Keith. And if you do have time to listen, I’m sure you’ll enjoy the show!

It airs at 4 PM Pacific Time, so adjust accordingly. You can click on the logo above to take you there, then just select your choice of player. One more thing, if you get bumped off when the live show starts, it’s not you, it’s a glitch in the Live 365 software that they are still working on. Just reconnect right after 4 and you’ll be all set.

Remember, any time between 4 and 6, click on over and join the fun… and get us a high rating!!