Month: August 2004

  • Rikochet plancha!



    E-postcard / photo by Brian McCarty

    Sunday afternoon I had the pleasure and privelege of assisting Brian on his photo shoot of Double Ninja Ninja and Rikochet in Silverlake. Although it was a hundred degrees and the concrete was burning hot, it was fun fun fun! You can see below how it’s done. There’s a wire attached to Rikochet to hold him in place in mid-air while Double Ninja Ninja stands on the street. 


    Master toy photographer at work


    I have been hassling Jorge and Sandra for months now, to order and pick us up a Rikochet piñata from Tijuana. Tonight, a message from Sandra: “I have some good news and some bad news…”

    The good news was that the piñata is ready at last! It’s done! The bad news was that it was way too big to fit in Gabe‘s car (which is a Mini Cooper like ours) so is momentarily stuck in Tijuana…

    Sandra sent these pictures of the Rikochet piñata and we think they are hilarious.

     

     
     So Rikochet’s body proportions are taller than normal;
    he has a neck; some weird thumb action going on amongst other things; 
    and is almost bigger than Sandra!!! 

    So I said to Sandra, you know what this means, don’t you? Now I want BUENA GIRL and THE FLEA!!!!

  • New Mix! CAR ECLECTIC

    We have just uploaded four playlists to our Art of The Mix: Car Eclectic - Volumes 1, 2, 3 & 4. (the lists will keep growing…)

    Funny thing is, we’ve been playing this music at home instead of in the car because we can’t find a noise-free radio station in L.A. (using the Nomad mp3 player & Belkin FM transmitter) Must burn CDs soon …

    P.S. AOTM now lets you link to URLs of music files when submitting mixes. Which is very cool, except that if I started doing this, I will never get any work done and have no life…


    Links:

    Quote of the day (via Vagabonding)

    “Success means controlling your own time. If you can gain control over 60 percent of the time in your life, you are really successful.” –Rod Steiger

  • *UPDATE NEW Season of ¡MUCHA LUCHA!

    ML Season 3 will premiere on Kids WB Network on Sept. 11th. (hey we didn’t pick the date! ) at 7.30am L.A. time; 8.30am Eastern time. It’s also on 3.30pm weekdays on Kids WB.

    We recommend watching the first two episodes “Buena Basura” and “Shamrock ‘n Roll”. Thanks to Greg Colton and Ricky Garduno for great storyboards and dialogue. Together with new music by Chuy Flores & Mambotron, we think these opening episodes are pretty awesome.


    “A little green man came out of the mirror and told me to hurt people!”
    © 2004 WB Animation

    You can still catch Seasons 1 & 2 on Cartoon Network. The times keep changing so check out their website for the ML schedule.


    Imagen Awards 2004
    (pronounced Ee-ma-hen)

    We didn’t win the Children’s Best Animated Programming category. For the fourth consecutive year, the award went to Dora The Explorer. At first, we were all a bit down about not winning, expecting to have had a good chance this year (surely Dora couldn’t win again?), but by the end of the night, we were like – oh well.

    So Eddie didn’t get to do his acceptance speech thanking the luchadores of Mexico… But really, it has been a huge honor for ML to be nominated at all, and this is great stuff. Many thanks to all the talented artists and loyal viewers who have contributed to Mucha Lucha’s success, and to Helen Hernandez for organizing this event! (www.imagen.org)


    With Joel Kuwahara (Line producer of ML)

     
    Observation: There were two guys next to us who didn’t stay for
    the Award ceremony. They left immediately after dessert.


    The view from Table 62: George Lopez on stage making some
    cruel jokes about Cameron Diaz (who wasn’t there)

    Other celebrities: Hector Elizondo, Lorenzo Lamas, Benito Martinez, John Leguizamo (who was awesome)…

    The one celebrity moment that made our day actually took place at the WBA studio yesterday afternoon. There we were, finishing up a voice recording session for ML, and who should walk in the door but  Batman! Yes, the original Batman, Adam West! We were introduced and he shook our hands. (gush) Now, where was Joel with his camera?

     OK. Back to work. More later …

  • Eddie came home from the supermarket this evening with a look on his face like he’d seen an alien. “You’re not going to believe what’s just happened”, he said.

    Lili: What?!
    Eddie: I just saw a skunk.
    Lili: Where?!
    Eddie: In the back alley near the garage. I can’t believe it. It was a real live skunk.
    Lili: What’s a skunk doing in the back alley?
    Eddie: I don’t know, but it had a black tail with a white stripe. It was a SKUNK. And you know? It looked just like Pepe Le Pew!
    Lili: You’re kidding! A skunk? On our street?
    Eddie: Yeah, it just ran along the road the way a squirrel runs, only it wasn’t a squirrel, it wasn’t a large cat, it was a skunk!
    Lili: Why is there a skunk in our street? What was it doing? What do skunks do, anyway? What do they eat? Where do they hang out?

    At this point we both realized that we didn’t know a single thing about skunks. We don’t have these creatures in Australia. Our only point of reference is Pepe Le Pew. And even so, we still don’t know a thing about what real skunks actually do…

    So we ran out of the apartment, camera in hand, to look for the skunk. Because I wanted to see it too. But it was dark and the skunk had run off to hide, who knows where… 


    Sunset Junction street fair


    Hot Dogs


    Junc gallery: post-its; masked pillows


    So cool! – The I&I Sound System is an ice-cream truck that has
    been converted into a mobile soundsystem


    So are bottles good and cans bad?


    Saturday night: El Monte

    El Monte is in East L.A. and this FMLL lucha event was on a ranch – the Rancho El Fallaron - out in the middle of nowheresville. As we stepped out of our car in the dusty parking lot, we could hear the horses, smell the horseshit, and occasionally see a charro or two walk by, lasso in hand.

    There were so many people lining up outside (similar to our Tijuana lucha experience with Mr & Mrs Gutierrez). The line went on forever. The ranch had a ‘club’ right next to the ‘arena’, where a Mexican wedding was in full swing with very loud music.


    Ring in the middle of the charreada

    Now, imagine sitting in the stands with merry ranchero music pumping away from over the fence - a tuba going oompah oompah, while a wrestling match is taking place in front of you. Very strange! Things got even more surreal when the wrestling soundtrack became a waltz. Also imagine every so often, a train passing through your line of vision on the freeway behind the ring action. Or a helicopter hovering past, searchlight beaming down. Meanwhile it’s frreeezzing cold, the crowds are restless, and the wedding music gets progressively louder.

    Thank goodness, we found a way to move closer to the ring on the ground level -and could avoid the music and the cold. Finally, a much better view!


    Mascara Sagrada
    greets his fans; Shamu in the ring


    Super Porky! - always a crowd favorite

    The wrestling itself was so-so. Big name wrestlers but very sloooowwwww matches.

    One highlight: George Lopez was there! (And was hounded by fans wanting his autograph). George was the voice of La Evil Dentista in one of our favorite first season episodes of Mucha Lucha – ‘Tooth Or Dare’. ”I still haven’t seen the episode” says George. “I gotta get a copy from Warner Bros. Why didn’t they bring back the dentist character?”


    Lili sitting next to Liz; George Lopez in the background
    (the one on the right)

    It was also great to finally meet Duncan McLeod, whose lucha libre documentary - La Lucha, will be completed late 2004. Until now, we’d only communicated via email.

    Word from Liz: The next L.A. Lucha Va Voom is October 28th. The show will also be travelling to more cities including San Francisco, Detroit, etc.

    Eddie: So it’s Saturday night and we’re out in the middle of nowhere, with around 700 people – mainly Latino families – queuing to see the lucha.  I don’t know how FMLL promotes the event within East LA, but it obviously does a good enough job to get this amount of people to its shows. It doesn’t even bother trying to attract anyone west of downtown.

    The matches were slow, drawn out affairs.  The venue’s lack of intimacy seemed to affect the wrestlers and the crowd.  Most of the matches were played for comedy, and there was no hint of anything at stake – a real ‘family’ show.  It was great seeing the original Mascara Sagrada, but all in all, the lucha was pretty unspectacular.

    But as an experience, it was something else!

  • A day in the life…


    Eddie’s new desktop pic

    The note we received from Standards and Practices was to replace the Spanish word, pulpo, with it’s English translation: octopus. Why? Because they thought pulpo sounded like (ahem) a kid-inappropriate word …

    *UPDATE:  Amid @ Cartoon Brew has linked to us on the subject of BS&P. 

    *******************************

     Speaking of kid-inappropriate things, we have been re-watching some of those censored cartoons - eg, Coal Black and the Sebben Dwarves, Tin Pan Alley Cats, and some other titles we’d never seen before. One that really blew us away was Harman & Ising’s Swing Wedding aka Hot Frogs (1937) with frenetically animated caricatures of black jazzy musicians. The animated ‘Cab Calloway’ was AMAZING. Really really awesome.

    (Just found out that some of these cartoons are available on DVD at the Video Beat)


    My friend in Sydney, Ravi  occasionally sends me funny little stories about his work and what he’s up to. I feel compelled to share this one.

    … On Wednesday, the agency shot one of my TV commercials for NINE MSN Messenger. The script I wrote featured the NINE MSN Butterfly Man and a whole bunch of sheep.  In the ad, one of Butterfly Man’s friends can’t sleep and is counting sheep. These sheep appear in Butterfly Man’s world as real sheep. Well, that’s the basic idea of the script. Anyway, the client loved it so we had to make it.

    Now, sheep are pretty dumb. Some think they are profoundly stupid. One thing is sure – they cannot act. Imagine trying to get a sheep to look into a camera when you want it to? It’s one of the challenges we had to meet on the day.

    The way you do it is to put a sheep dog in front of the camera, because the sheep will look at the dog so it looks like they’re looking at the camera.

    So here we are on set, with sheep and sheep dogs and sheep handlers. There’s all this baaa- ing and barking and animals surging around. There’s also the crew, the stylist (the sheep had their own stylist, but that’s a long story in itself. how do you get to be sheep stylist?)

    It was so funny. There I was surrounded by all these hard-core ad types, a dozen sheep, a film crew and a man in a blue butterfly costume.

    What was I thinking.

    Just another day at the office for me..


    Coming Soon



    from Mucha Lucha‘Meet The Muertos’ (Day of the Dead episode)

    • The Imagen Awards! This will be our first time ever at a Hollywood award ceremony, with ML’s Meet the Muertos episode nominated in the Best Children’s Animated Programming category.
    • Trip to Atlanta! Is there anything else we need to know before we go?
    • Eddie’s birthday! (September seems to be the most birthday-intensive month on my calendar)
    • Kaiju Big Battel in L.A.! Buy your tickets now!

  • ML Newsflash

    As some of you might know, recently ¡Mucha Lucha! was stripped on Kids WB Network. In other words, the episodes are now showing every weekday afternoon in addition to the Saturday morning timeslot. This came through today from WB Media Research:

    Mucha Lucha M-F 3:30pm

    • ML is the #1 Kids WB! M-F strip this week with Kids and Boys 2-11/6-11/6-8/9-11/9-14.
    • Season to Date, ML ranks as the #2 M-F strip with Kids 9-11/9-14 and Boys 6-11/6-8/9-11/9-14.
    • ML builds over its Jackie Chan lead-in share with Kids 2-11/6-11/2-5/6-8/9-11 and Boys 2-11/6-11/2-5/6-8/9-11/9-14, as much as +80%.
    • ML improves over the prior 4-week time period average with Kids and Boys 2-11/6-11/6-8/9-11/9-14.
    • ML finished 2nd in its time period versus its kids cable competition with Boys 9-11/9-14, and ranks 3rd with all other key Kids and Boy demos.

    This is the best news we’ve had since the launch of Season 2!


    One Eyed Bob’s Inappropriate Toys for Children and what’s with THESE costumes ?

    Liz has sent the following info about a lucha match this Saturday:

    WHO: Mil Mascaras, Canek, Super Porky, Satanico, Emilio Charles, Misterioso, Tinieblas, Mascara Sagrada, and THE MINI’S!!!!!! Mascarita Sagrada, Tsuki, Espectrito and Guerrerito! And MORE!!!
    WHEN:  
    Saturday, August 21st.  8pm
    WHERE: Rancho El Farallon  3226 Gilman Rd. El Monte, CA 91732
    TICKETS: Probably around $15 (?)

    We might go to this after the Sunset Junction Street Fair… Who wants to come? *Edit: I should mention that this is the same lucha promotion that put on the awesome match in Compton earlier this year!

    The image above was scanned from the pages of a manga comic book (title unknown) featuring a masked wrestler… Don’t ask us what it’s about, we have no idea! Funny thing is that it is somewhat reminiscent of Eddie’s Von Trapp* Family pic.

    * Dr Von Trapp is a character from our RBN series. 

  • We had our Jive Turkey Experience pitch this morning!  Will know more later…  
    Related (recycled) Links – JTE inspiration:

    1. Movies: Hairspray (as you already know), Twist  
    2. TV: American Bandstand, Soul Train, Flintstones Episodes. 
    3. DVDs: Go Go Robics, Graffiti Rock
    4. Magazine article: The Face: Jamaican dancehall dances  (more here )
    5. Music: Internet radio programs like the Friendly Persuasion Show. And we found this song below, which we absolutely love because it’s a perfect blend of the old and the new –


    by Shiro The Goodman
    (sampler CD/ROMZ label)


    On Cartoon Brew, Amid blogs about the upcoming Pictoplasma Character Design Conference:

    A common trait that runs through a startling majority of the sample artwork posted on the conference site is the noticeable absence of personality in the designs. Too many artists today seem overly focused on discovering a graphic solution to characters, in other words the “design” aspect of the equation, while completely neglecting the “character” portion which dictates that the graphics should communicate personality and emotion. The end product is designs that succeed as iconic imagery, perfectly suitable for being printed onto T-shirts and adapted into toys, but unsuccessful as character designs that are meant to engage and entertain audiences.

    As much as we love the two Pictoplasma books (1 & 2) which in my opinion, are a wealth of iconic design inspiration, we totally agree with the comment above. Character designs that look good in plastic or on tshirts don’t necessarily do it for me on screen. So many cartoon characters on TV today look really cool because they are so “designy” but at the same time it’s hard to warm to them as living characters.

    Which is not a bad thing if you watch to be aesthetically-informed or inspired; not to be entertained or swept along into the story.

    One gets the impression that most animation artists today are more interested in flexing their ‘designer’ muscles than imagining how the character will emote or move on screen. We’ve been guilty of this too…


    Podium Boy (appeared in Pictoplasma Vol. 1)
    © 2000 Fwak! Animation

    Eddie: Amid at Cartoon Brew has really hit the nail on the head. 

    I think part of the Animation industry’s over-infatuation with iconic design stems from the trend and success of “retro” looking shows like Dexter’s Lab.  Success of course, breeds imitation.  So much so, that I find it hard to distinguish between the design style of Dexter, Fairly Oddparents, Teenage Robot, and Grim And Evil.

    As Lili has said, we’re guilty of this too, and it has been on our mind for some time.  A move back to character animation through acting – not design – is something we’re going to try and consciously achieve in our Boy Lobster cartoon.

  • Hairspray – The Stage Musical

    Just got back from seeing Hairspray, the stage musical. What absolutely gorgeous sets and tight performances from a talented bunch of actors. Being so close to the stage in the second row sure helped!

    OK, so if you ever wondered how this version differs from the John Waters movie

    • The actors and dancers all do the 60′s novelty dances, but the dances themselves are not identified by name, and have no story significance as they did in the movie. The story is focussed more on the character drama. Even the ‘Corny Collins Show’ here, was more about teens being on TV; less about them introducing new dances. The Madison Time song and dance had also been rearranged/modified so that it was clearly not the 60′s version.

    In an interview with the choreographer,

    … One thing he didn’t do was try to replicate the movie. “I had seen Hairspray when it first came out,” he says. “And when I was offered the musical, I watched the movie once–the same thing I did with The Full Monty. Then I never went back. You could fall into a real pit if you watch it too much, because in a movie, the camera tells an audience where to look. Onstage, your dance has to tell 2,500 heads where to look.”

    • No beatniks!
    • Velma Von Tussel (originally played by Debbi Harry in the movie) has a more prominent role. She is also the Producer of the ‘Corny Collins Show.’
    • Mrs Pingleton, Penny’s mother has less of a presence and isn’t as racist as the movie version.
    • Link (the heartthrob) doesn’t fall instantly in love with Tracy Turnblad as he did in the movie. He is torn between his rockstar ambitions and Tracy’s revolutionary cause.
    • And of course, all the tunes were new, which thankfully maintained a sort-of ‘retro’ sound… (though we still prefer the original 60′s tunes!)

    An observation: Here we have a show about racial intergration (with a balanced mix of black and white cast) and the audience was 99% white and mostly over 50. Eddie whispered to me - ”I don’t think most of these people have seen the movie. They’re just your regular theater people”.

    Which makes me wonder why musical theater has to be so elitist (read: expensive). Sure, it feels like a luxury compared to the movies, there are amazing sets, costumes and unbelievable dedication from the performers night after night…but … shouldn’t all good entertainment deserve mixed audiences?

    Other stuff we watched this weekend (on DVD):

    • The Warriors - Believe it or not, the first time I’ve sat through the entire film! (And Eddie’s 4th time!! He says he can watch the whole movie over and over again)
    • Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter - Very tragic Japanese ‘exploitationist’ movie involving a girl gang, and some nasty guys who hunt down and kill half-breeds.The director,Yasuharu Hasebe also directed Black Tight Killers which we couldn’t resist ordering, based on this review -

    Part spy film and part pulp novel Black Tight Killers was Nikkatsu’s answer to the “James Bond” films. The female assassin’s known as the Black Tight killers have assortment of deadly objects like blinding bubble gum, razor-sharp 7″ vinyl, exploding golf balls and exploding bra pads. This movie is more campy then serious and the beautiful cinematography makes up for the incoherent plot. Even though the Black Tight Killers isn’t as inspired as Seijun Suzuki’s films, Yasuharu Hasebe takes what he had learned from Seijun Suzuki and comes away with a style all his own.

  • I am so relieved that my busy week is over (for now). Monday is a big day for us – we are pitching Jive Turkey for the new CN Pre-school block . This weekend Eddie and I are going to chill out as much as possible. Tomorrow night we are seeing Hairspray at the Pantages Theater. We are expecting not to love it because we know the songs are different and we both feel that the original John Waters movie is perfect as it is. But hey, it’s good ‘dance’ reference and we haven’t been to a Broadway-style show in America before, so I am looking forward to a new experience.

    Eddie says: “All I want to see is The Madison. If they don’t do The Madison, I will jeer loudly and demand my money back!!!”

    I found this image below from the New York show, so,  phew! (sigh of relief)


    ¡Mucha Lucha Gigante!

    There are some big changes this Season 3 (13 x half hours), which premieres in Fall 2004. The show is being rebranded to incorporate mucho más action. Stories with badder villains and more craziness. ¡Mucha Lucha Gigante!

    This season’s new people:

    Tom Sheppard is the show’s new Story Editor.

    Chuy Flores (producer of the ML main title song) will be responsible for the music composition. We visited his studio a few months ago – Amazing. Besides the high-tech music production gear, Chuy also collects and uses antique instruments: a Wurlitzer organ, a Fender Rhodes piano, some really rare guitars, and an old-school Korg Theremin. Looking forward to some unique sounds!

    We also welcome Jason Marsden to this season, as voice of Rikochet! (He was also Eddie Munster in Munsters Today amongst other things) And Dee Bradley Baker joins the Voice cast as many different villains/characters…

    And from Australia, Evan Newby joins the production crew as Character Designer. Evan is a talented artist/animator who has worked at Fwak! on Cosmic Baby and The Fuzz.


    Random Links

     

    Chatango Mini (via davidgalbraith) - a private and disposable Flash/web-based chat which you can embed into your site. What’s cool is that there are NO downloads or installations, except an optional ‘messagecatcher’ (notifier) which sits in your Windows tray. Who wants to try it?

    Cute Things - I am a little obsessive about sharing things that I like. So I started this new blog, dedicated to images of cute toys on the internet.  Above is a new vinyl figure from Tokyo Plastic. (bought at Toy Tokyo, NYC). Next cool purchase – Tony and I are going halves in this Panda-Z mini series!

    1 Million Free & Legal music downloads wiki.

    RalphBakshi.com (via Cartoon Brew)  Very curious what bad experiences Amid has had with Ralph Bakshi… Nevertheless, we agree. The site is fantastic. We have always been huge fans of Bakshi’s work, especially the films, Heavy Traffic and Coonskin.


    by Ralph Bakshi

    More blogs/websites:

  • Eddie: This is one of my all time favorite cartoon shows!

    As a nine year old watching this from Melbourne Australia, I never really got the connection to American history, but thought it was a great cartoon, nonetheless. Add Silly Sidney, Hashimoto, and a selection of classic cartoons from the Terrytoons archives (I think this is where I first saw ‘Flebus‘), and you had one hell of a show…

    Stream the Hector Heathcote Show album at Basic Hip! (click on the album cover, not the text link)

     

    Mascara Sagrada wins rights to his name. Link to article (Spanish)

    From the FPU messageboard:

    “Mascara Sagrada has won a seven year legal battle for the rights to his name! The mess began when Sagrada left the CMLL for upstart lucha promotion TRIPLE A. Big mistake. After it became clear promoter Antonio Pena had no interest in him he tried to leave,but Pena claimed ownership of his mask and name,and even had other wrestlers using that gear.Well after seven years of legal wrangling and lost employment Sagrada can now reclaim his name and will reappear in CMLL shows at the end of August.This is a well deserved FU to Pena,whose way of doing things has hurt lucha libre more than helped it.”

    Mascara Sagrada is a famous masked wrestler in Mexico, whose costume was an inspiration for our very own Super Niña  Buena Girl   

    20,000 Leagues Under The Sea. What a shame that this Disneyland ride no longer exists! (link from robot action boy)


    This week:

    • Completed all artwork for our Jive Turkey Experience pitch bible (yay!)
    • We have become official WBA employees. (previously, we were contractors) No, nothing to celebrate! We had to become tax residents after 183 days of working in the states.
    • Yesterday we had the pleasure of meeting Juan Diego from Cineanimadores, the Chilean animation company responsible for Locomotion.com‘s El Santos web series. 
    • Eddie has started the music animatic for our Boy Lobster maintitle
    • Brian McCarty, Toy Photographer extraordinaire, is planning a photo shoot with ML figures! Very intrigued and excited!