Wednesday, July 29, 2009

 Can a cartoon influence the way kids eat and drink? Beats me.

But apparently the kids’ TV networks of  America think so.  Childhood obesity is a growing problem (so to speak).  And network execs have dutifully adopted healthy eating initiatives to encourage viewers to make better food choices. 

 So take a moment to add eating and drinking to your imitatable behavior check-list. The Standards & Practices people are paying attention to what you put in your characters’ mouths, even if some parents aren’t doing the same for their husky offspring.

 Of course, it’s ironic.  The episodes we write often end up sandwiched (mmm, sandwiches) between commercials for Happy Meals, snack foods, and kids’ cereals  — part of a complete breakfast!  (As an experiment, I randomly turned on a kids’ network. The commercial in progress was for Corn Pops and the very next one was for Honeycomb.)  Yet we are called on more and more often to cut back on depictions of junk food consumption within the shows themselves.

Sometimes you can’t even get away with making fun of the issue.  In “Great Bowls of Connor,” an episode of a show I created called The Connor and Sparky Show which currently airs on Cartoon Network, Connor gets to design his own breakfast cereal.  As a parody of kid-oriented cereals already on the market, I had Connor and his friends suggesting all their favourite ingredients: raisins, mini-marshmallows, honey, cinnamon, and “a chocolate coating that turns your milk into chocolate milk so if you accidentally bring it up through your nose, it’ll smell good.”  The note came back to make the cereal healthier!  So the honey was cut and the chocolate coating was changed to strawberry coating.

I learned early on that anything that even looks like alcohol is also a no-no.  I once had a character sipping  a “fancy umbrella drink.”  A note came back to make sure it didn’t read as an alcoholic beverage.  So I changed it to sipping lemonade through a curly straw.

In the rush to jump on the healthy eating bandwagon, the occasional misstep is made.  In one show I wrote,  the dessert for a pizza-themed party was supposed to be an ice cream pizza with strawberry sauce, coconut and banana slices for toppings.  In a later draft, I discovered that “ice cream” had been changed to “cream cheese.”  It only hit me as I was thinking about this topic that cream cheese is higher in fat than and calories than the ice cream (unless it’s some yummy Haagen-Dazs.)

Mining comedy from characters who eat all the time is no longer in vogue.  When I see “loves to eat” in a series bible, I know that’ll change by the time the series goes to air. The exception is if the character likes to eat something healthy. McMeer, a character on the preschool series Zigby, loves to eat mangos.  But these days, junk food-loving characters are out of luck.  Even Cookie Monster has had to learn that “Cookies Are A Sometimes Food.”  Luckily for us, no one is monitoring our food and drink consumption. (But just in case, you may want to put duct tape over your webcam….)

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Tarofish me up, Scott!

 


Sean Scott of Tarofish Animation is quite famous for developing hit properties. He was one of the founding artists at Collideascope in Nova Scotia back in the mid 90's. Here he developed a show called "Oliver's Adventures". He was the dude who developed that studio as an animation power before moving on in the early turn of the century to greener pastures.

Sean (go check out his blog)then smashed the boarder to a new province and this is where he developed this neat little cartoon callled "Doodlez" that had great promise. This was with Cellar Door Productions in PEI; it did quite well indeed. 

Now Sean is in Montreal, Quebec, (bypassing New Brunswick and Newfoundland all together) he's going nuts I imagine. He's quite the dude and we don't keep in touch as often as I'd like.

Sean Scott is a television creative genius and is going to be quite famous I'd imagine. He knows the secret to making a great cartoon show and it's just a matter of time before one takes off for him.

Speaking of Sean, I'm currently working with him and Edward Kay (They both got Jimmy Two-Shoes on air, and boy does it not disappoint) on my adaptation of the Mr. Men with Chorion. I can't wait to work more with Sean!

Thursday, March 5, 2009

I Can Blog About my Redesigns of the Mr. Men!

In May of 2008 ago I got an email from Diana Manson of Chorion. She asked me if I would be interested in taking a stab at giving the Mr. Men and Little Misses another face lift for a new series. I was like....um.....reallllly?.....YEAH!. I took a stab at it and they really liked it! Ive been working with Chorion and Adam Hargreaves to bring it to life. 

The show's being produced by 9 Story Entertainment in Ontario, and Studio B Productions and my company. It will air on Disney Channel internationally, Treehouse in Canada, and CBBC in the UK in 2010.

 When I was in London back in 2006 I studied the shit out of these books.So to be asked to give these characters a new look has been an amazing, honorable, hard, and fun experience.

The original Men and Misses that have been streamlined through the decades so that was a tough one for me to figure out. I wanted to keep all of Roger Hargreaves' vision without changing it dramatically.

I gave them slightly different proprtions that emphasise things I always liked about the characters. An example is Mr. Bump's feet. I streamlined them and made them bigger. I thought it would look awesome in a walk cycle and be really fun to animate in general.

I began creating a demo, show bible... turnarounds, notes and drawings showing the new designs. I'd love to post some off the show bible but Ill have to check with my producers.  

 I knew I'd piss people off by making Mr. Nervous (Sorry all you UK fans but I refuse to call him Mr. Jelly) look like his current design on the current adaptation CN airs with the book version.

Im looking forward to working more with the crew on this show! It has been a great time so far for me!


Something I made last night.

  I would die to do a series starring literally every single character from Jay Ward's works. In fact, I'm already trying to develop...