Thursday, April 28, 2011

Animated NBC

30 Rock on NBC has created a web exclusive short cartoon series called Jack Donaghy Executive Superhero. You can learn more about it on the website here, and this is the first episode:



I always like it when Brian Williams acts silly, but over all, kind of a snooze.

This leaves me wondering why NBC keeps toying with animation. Between this and Community's recent animated tag:



Or Community's stop-motion Christmas special.



Could this means that NBC might be open to the idea of a prime time animated series? It would be nice to see a cartoon series on a network other than Fox. The Fox shows are pretty great, but cartoons in prime time on more than one channel would be awesome.

Thoughts?

CG

Friday, April 15, 2011

Voice Actor Vridays: June Foray

Chuck Jones once said, "A lot of people say June Foray is like a female Mel Blanc. I say Mel Blanc is a male June Foray." June Foray is probably the most prolific voice actor of all time with a career spanning over 65 years. At the age of 93 she still performs voices that she originated over a half a century ago. Voices like Looney Tunes' Granny and Witch Hazel, Rocky J. Squirrel and Natasha from Rocky and Bullwinkle. So a part of the legacy of animation is June Foray that he memoir is entitled Did You Grow Up with me Too?

Here is the trailer to a documentary about her:

Like with Daws and Mel Blanc, there's not much I can say about her that hasn't already been said. If you want to learn more about June, here's a really nice biography of her written for Animation World Network.

She's a brilliant voice actor and quite a pioneer in the industry I am always happy to be a part of. Here's to June Foray, this week's spotlight voice actor.

CG

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Failed Cartoon Ideas

As your Cartoon Guru, not only do I write about Cartoon History and do voice over for cartoons, I also pitch cartoon series around town. Most of them--I like to think--are pretty good. Some of them are a great big fail.

One such idea that just went nowhere was this one: Abe Lincoln Trying to See a Magic Eye Picture.



No idea why that one didn't work.

CG

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

MIPTV Thoughts

So MIPTV is going on now in Cannes. For those that don't know:


MIPTV Media Market is an event which takes place annually in Cannes, using the facilities and infrastructure which the town has developed over the years to host other important events such as the Cannes Film Festival amongst other events.


It is essentially a content market for co-producing, buying, selling, financing and distributing entertainment content. It provides the people involved in the TV, film, digital and audiovisual content, production and distribution industry a market conference and networking forum to discover future trends and trade content rights on a global level.


Full disclosure: that explanation is taken directly from Wikipedia because, quite frankly, I didn't feel like coming up with my own explanation for what it is.


Appearing at MIPTV with many other media is animation. Most of the time the shows appearing are stuff I have never heard of before. So, I present to you my:


Top Ten Favorite Animated Series at MIPTV Based on Title Only:


10) Galactik Football 3 - Great, now I have to try to find the first two seasons on Netflix.


9) Monkey Business - (Crossing fingers and closing eyes.) Please be about a monkey with an office job! Please be about a monkey with an office job!


8) The Small Giant - You mean..."the person?"


7) The ABC Monsters - The picture in the MIP Guide is of monsters literally shaped like letters of the alphabet. Little on the nose, aren't we?


6) Iconicles - What?


5) Rocket Monkeys - 'Nuff said. Sold!


4) The Adventures of Compass and Alarm Clock - Yes, it is exactly what you're thinking.


3) Justin Time - Get out.


2) Kung Fu Chicken - Nothing not to like about those three words together.


1) Animation Hotline - Uh...It can't be just me who thinks that sounds inappropriate, right?


CG

Friday, April 1, 2011

We'll Be Right Back Part 5 (Voice Actor Vridays Edition)

In all this talk of cartoon commercial spokespeople, breakfast cereal cartoon commercials, and the like, there is a certain character who (whom?), I'm sure to you, has been conspicuously left off. The character I am referring to is Cap'n Crunch. Well, the truth is I have been specifically saving the Cap'n for today so I could spotlight him as a part of the new weekly segment Voice Actor Vridays: The Great Segment with the Stupid Name. (That's the new tag line I'm using.)

Cap'n Horatio Magellan Crunch first appeared in 1963 as a breakfast cereal, and Jay Ward Productions, who you may remember as the creators of Rocky and Bullwinkle and George of the Jungle, was hired to create an animate the mascot for the cereal. From 1963 through the present Cap'n Crunch has been getting into thirty to sixty second adventures in animated commercials, whether it was fighting "the Soggies" or matching blades with the pirate Jean LaFoote, voiced by Bill Scott (voice of Bullwinkle J. Moose). Cap'n Crunch's adventures also regularly appeared in comic book adventures that were available in the cereal box.



Cap'n Crunch is a really fun and truly iconic character of cartoon advertising, but one of the things that makes him special is that he was voiced by the legendary Daws Butler, and Daws is the spotlight of today's Voice Actor Vriday: The Great Segment with a Stupid Name.

If Mel Blanc is the name that is immediately synonymous with voice acting outside of the industry, Daws Butler is that name inside the industry. Daws Butler is the voice actor's voice actor. I respect the hell out of Mel Blanc, but Daws, along with Thurl Ravenscroft and Paul Frees, was who I wanted to be like when I decided I wanted to go into this business. In seventh grade I had pictures of all three of them pinned to my wall--only seventh grader ever who did that, I imagine, but--they were who I wanted to be like.

Daws Butler was the voice of most of the characters in the Hanan-Barbera catalog: Huckleberry Hound, Snagglepuss, Yogi Bear, Jinx the Cat, Quick Draw McGraw, Wally Gator, Hokey Wolf, Elroy Jetson, Cogswell Cogs, Loopy De Loop, Peter Potamus, among many others. He also provided the voice of several characters in Jay Ward's Fractured Fairy Tales and Aesop and Son, although due to his contract with Hanna-Barbera, he received no screen credit for those roles.

In the 1980's Daws Butler began a voice acting workshop in Hollywood, CA, after many people suggested that he share his secrets of the business with young people wishing to get started in voice acting. That workshop has become legendary, and many of the top voice actors of today like Corey Burton (Captain Hook and Count Dooku), Nancy Cartwright (Bart Simpson), and Bob Bergen (Porky Pig) got their start in Daws' class.

One other thing that makes Daws pretty special is that he is universally described by those who knew him as one of the kindest people you could ever meet. I was going to write an extensive biography of Daws here in the blog, but there are many great places to learn about him. Here's a nice bio written by one of his sons, and here are several articles written by his friends.

And finally, this video was a part of the recent release of the first season of The Huckleberry Hound Show. It has a lot of great insight into Daws and his life and career by those who knew him. So here is this week's spotlight Voice Actor: The Legendary, The One and Only Daws Butler.



CG