POPULARITY
Today Mark and Veronica visit Legendary animation veteran John Fountain to discuss his work on the Fairly OddParents, My Life as a Teenage Robot and Invader Zim!Meeting Halfway is a weekly podcast featuring LSMark and Veronica as they interview creators and artists that have been both life-long and contemporary inspirations for their collective creative worlds. LS Markhttps://www.youtube.com/c/LSMarkhttps://twitter.com/LSMark_Veronicahttps://www.twitch.tv/veronicaandjellyhttps://twitter.com/veronicandjellyIntro music by: Nick OlmozProduced by Screenwave Mediahttps://screenwavemedia.comBruce McMurtrie Jr, Editorhttps://BruceMcMurtrie.comThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5677777/advertisement
Chris Johnston and Max to go back to the early aughts to explore working on EGM and the heyday of E3. CJ shares about his journey from working in the press to being a video game producer. You can download a copy of this episode's transcript here. How We Met CJ's Call to Action Humanity - Reveal Trailer Relay FM Parsec EGM Electronic Gaming Monthly (EGM) EGM Issue 59, June 1994: Interface - Letters to the Editor EGM Issue 59, June 1994: Press Start News TurboDuo 3DO EGM Issue 61, August 1994: PSX Mind-Boggling Effects Hasbro Toaster VR Console DisneyQuest VR Metroid Prime Development In Memoriam of E3 GameCube Space World 2000 Demo The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker E3 2002 Reveal EGM Issue 148, November 2001: Cel-da Debate The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess E3 2004 Reveal Crowd Reaction [Warning: Language] EGM's Top 100 Games EGM Issue 100, November 1997: The Top 10 (out of 100) Games Tetris (2023 Film) Sonic & Tails in Melee EGM Issue 153, April 2002: Sonic and Tails in Melee Upscaled Render Sonic Brawl Reveal Trailer Sega Neptune April Fool's Joke (Wayback Machine Archive) Sega Neptune Adult Swim Games Regular Show Correction: The high pitch "Turner" was, in fact, "Frederator," which you can listen to here. Robot Unicorn Attack Mafia Wars Max's Pitch for Celeste Earthblade Enhance User Experience Fortnite's Unreal Engine 5 Upgrade – Digital Foundry Lost to Time Video Game History Foundation Max's Review of The Last of Us “A Passion for Smash” – Celebrating 15 Years of Super Smash Bros. Brawl with Peter Spezia Chris "CJ" Johnston CJ's Mastodon @superpac@mastodon.social Player One Podcast Enhance Max Frequency Chapter Select Season 0 – The Last of Us Season 1 – Paper Mario Season 2 – God of War Season 3 – Banjo-Kazooie Season 4 – The Fast and the Furious Season 5 – Resident Evil Max's Twitter @MaxRoberts143
This chat features Chris Rodgers, who is a stop motion animator living and building a studio in South Korea. Over the years Rodgers has worked on projects for Frederator, The Lego Movie, and Big 5, a South Korean children's program. Tune in to Ibele and Rodgers to hear: *What opportunity made Rodgers pack up his bags in the USA and pursue stop motion in South Korea *What the South Korean stop motion industry is like *How Rodgers stays connected to US-based projects overseas ~[SPONSORED MESSAGE]~ This episode is sponsored by HUE. Makers of colorful, Plug & Play cameras for learning, work and play. Originally designed for teachers, HUE cameras can also be used for creative activities such as capturing hand-drawn pencil tests and shooting behind-the-scenes footage, time-lapse videos and stop motion animation. The cameras have flexible, posable necks, manual focus controls and they are compatible with Dragonframe, OBS, Twitch, Zoom and many other camera apps. Visit huehd.com to learn more and follow @HUEcameras on social media for news, fun and giveaways. For a limited time only, search for the HUE HD Pro camera on Amazon.com for 10% off with code 10TERRYAIP. Valid until July 19, 2022. ~~ Social Links: Follow Rodgers on Instagram: *https://www.instagram.com/rockpaperscissorspuppets/
Matt Gielen is the Co-Founder & CEO of Electric Monster, a portfolio company of digital content properties in the general entertainment and kids and family space. Matt started his career in production and audience development at Driver Digital, then served as VP of Programming & Audience Development at Frederator. In 2016, he founded Little Monster Media Co., an agency that helps brands and publishers build out their YouTube audience, which was later acquired by his latest venture Electric Monster. In this episode, Matt and I talk about the growth of creator-driven business and the recent flurry of digital media acquisitions. From consolidation among digital publishers (Vox and Group Nine, Vice and Refinery29) to creator-first media companies (Mythical Entertainment and Smosh, Moonbug and Cocomelon), M&A activity has reached record heights over the last 12 months. Matt offers some insight into Electric Monster's acquisition of React Media (formerly Fine Bros. Entertainment) and their future ambitions. Finally, we talk about the growth of YouTube Shorts, increasing the level of transparency from social platforms, and why creator funds don't pay very well. Host: James Creech LISTENER SUPPORT If you'd like to make a small monthly donation to help support future episodes, please visit https://anchor.fm/allthingsvideopodcast/support ABOUT THE SHOW All Things Video is a podcast dedicated to uncovering the past and charting the future of the online video ecosystem. Listen to interviews with founders, executives, and thought leaders from the world's leading media companies and engage in thought-provoking debates about the issues shaping the next generation of entertainment. From the short-form content revolution to the fragmentation of video viewership in an always-on world, All Things Video reveals the key trends and insights from the world of digital media. Follow All Things Video on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn for new episodes and updates! ABOUT THE HOST James Creech is an entrepreneur focused on technology, online video, and digital media. He currently serves as SVP, Influencer Strategy at Brandwatch, the world's leading digital consumer intelligence company.
287: The Taxonomy Of A YouTube Video With Matt Gielen From Electric Monster Media This week we are joined by Matt Gielen from Electric Monster Media. Matt is well known in the YouTube space as someone who understands the YouTube backend and can really express how you can use all of the data we have available. About Matt Matthew Gielen is one of the world's leading YouTube strategists with deep experience driving growth and expansion across digital entertainment channels. He is credited with being instrumental in achieving massive digital success for globally recognized properties such as Nickelodeon, Nick Jr., Fandango's Movieclips, Frederator, and Driver Digital. In 2021, Matt co-founded Electric Monster Media, a next-generation digital media company that invests in and acquires brand-friendly digital video channels to scale and build their audiences, turning them into world-class media operations. Electric Monster recognizes the potential in channels and works with the creators to maximize viewership, growth, and profit, helping them achieve a level of success that was previously unattainable without Electric Monster's proprietary, data-driven growth, and optimization techniques. Go here if you want to submit your YouTube Channel to be a potential guest on the podcast. Support the show on Patreon here for day-to-day interaction with myself and the community on discord. Connect With Matt Here: Electric Monster Media /// Twitter TubeBuddy – A tool that makes your YouTube Life EASIER and Helps grow your channel. CLICK HERE for a FREE 30 DAY TRIAL. Links Discussed In This Episode Fiverr – Hire the right people for the jobs you need to make your YouTube life and workflow easier! Bluehost – If you need a website use this link to get a Free Domain Name and a great deal on hosting
Neste episódio, Paulo Martini e Celbi Pegoraro falam sobre: >> [02:07] A sul-coreana Plask, que converte filmes live-action em animações, recebe investimento milionário; >> [13:45] Reportagem da Rede Record demoniza Death Note e outros animes com o objetivo de “proteger” as crianças; >> [40:22] Genius Brands compra produtoras de animação Frederator e Mainframe Studios; >> [49:47] Destaques do evento Fórum de Animação; >> [1:41:18] e as DICAS CULTURAIS: >> Painel FAZ SENTIDO FAZER ANIME NO BRASIL? | Assista no YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzcY5FYZqjc >> Livro COPRODUÇÃO DE CINEMA COM A FRANÇA: MERCADO E INTERNACIONALIZAÇÃO, de Belisa Figueiró | Compre físico ou digital na Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Yi7zu5 --- Apoie o AnimaSom, contribuindo mensalmente com a produção de novos episódios: catarse.me/AnimaSom. Obrigado!
How Howie Schwartz's teaching of conversation domination helped change Brian's business forever. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9jIMJdeHwk Transcription Omnipresent content strategy. Hi I'm Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live. This is a picture of Howie Schwartz, which I will get to in just a moment. Let me just kind of bring you up to speed if you haven't been watching or listening to the past couple episodes. This is the third in a series on how I discovered this concept that I like to call omnipresence and the omnipresent content strategy. Sometimes I refer to it as the ubiquitous content strategy, or universal content strategy. The whole idea is how can you be everywhere at once? How can you be in all quarters of the internet and beyond when it comes to your ideal customers? So I have to apologize, my throats a little tweaked today, as it was last night, but hopefully you'll bear with me. So what I've came to discover, and I talked about this briefly over the past few videos, this was back in 2007, that I tripped upon Search Engine Optimization. And the whole idea of Internet Marketing kind of came out of nowhere. I got bit by the bug, you know, this was pretty early on in the game. That not as early as some people, some of the classic people started in the late 90s. But in terms of a lot of the people who are active right now, getting started back then I got to see a whole lot of action and got to experience it, at least from the spectator into things. So the original time, I kind of accidentally found how to direct traffic via Google. And by putting out a lot of content on a regular basis in a lot of different places, and using keywords and so forth to attract search engine results. Then I came across and as I talked about last time, I came across a interview with Fred Fred Seibert of Frederator, and how he was able to create this huge Podcast Network and be able to get all this massive attention by doing very similar to me, but doing it on a much grander scale. I knew I was going in the right direction, but this third piece that I stumbled upon is this guy, Howie Schwartz. Howie Schwartz at the time, was one of these internet marketing stars. He was preaching the gospel of Search Engine Optimization and beyond this concept that he talked about conversation domination, how do you dominate any given conversation online. And you may have heard Russell Brunson talk about this and how he was also inspired, in the early days by Howie Schwartz. This was a really brilliant concept, because he not only use search engine optimization, but found a way to take any form of free content, which in those days, there were a lot of different types of free content available, because everyone was trying to, to grab hold, it was the the great land grab of the internet. Everyone was trying to stake their claim. There were a whole lot of offerings out there for free, memberships of free, basically, a million different places where you could post free content that wasn't just considered social media at the time was everywhere. There was this whole movement at that time called web 2.0, where it was more interaction and everything that kind of led to where we are today. But it started then and there were so much ability to put yourself everywhere at the same time. And the way that Google was playing off of it just made it better and better. Google wasn't the only player back then, we still had Yahoo and a couple of the other search engines were still relatively viable, you still get a lot of traction off of them. I got to see this one of these large webinars how we used to put on these huge webinars to get people signed up into his courses. And in the webinar, he just give it all away. I mean, he showed you exactly what he was doing. So I'd be recording these things, everything right off the screen, doing everything I could to save this stuff.
Brian talks about the impact Fred Seibert had on him, in-terms of content marketing, when Fred was running Frederator Studios back in 2007. Podcast interview with Fred - https://podcast.venturevoice.com/episodes/vv-show-43-fred-seibert-of-frederator-studios-and-next-new-networks-CLYs4bV1 Checkout Fred's new venture FredFilms - https://www.fredfilms.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ubo3_xRhSTw Transcription Ubiquitous content strategy. Hi I'm Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live. We're gonna be talking about content marketing, and how to have a strategy that's ubiquitous, nice big word there. It means everywhere, right? It's about being everywhere. And just so much everywhere that no one even questions that that's kind of why I like the term ubiquitous because it's kind of like, it's just, you don't question it, it's everywhere, right? I have to apologize for my voice. I don't know, I've got something I probably have COVID or something. I don't mean to make light of it. But it's just funny how all this, you know, all these diseases that we get every year now has this, this shadow of COVID over it. So I don't think it's COVID. It's just a sore throat, but it all comes with the territory. I guess we won't get too far into that. Let's talk about content strategy and how to be ubiquitous. And I want to talk about this guy, or this logo, shall I say, that was all about Fredrater. This goes back. 14 years ago, I think it was 14 years ago, I'm going by what I just saw on an old podcast episode that I found because it was a podcast episode that had a unique way of completely changing my view of content marketing forever. And started at a time when I would never have known the term content marketing. In fact, I hardly knew the term search engine optimization at that point. But a piece of this interview is later on in the interview, I haven't gone back and re-listen to it because I recognized it. So immediately after starting to listen to it, I said, this is it. This is the interview that I remember changing my life. It was with this podcast Venture Voice, I've got a link in the description. So you can go check that out. If you're at a place where you can't see the link, go to BrianJPombo.com, and check out this episode. You'll be able to find the link to this specific podcast that's still out there, at least here in 2021, and it's worth listening to. Not that every prediction that happened in it came true, really the piece that he brings up about how he was able to well let me give you some background, Fred Seibert is who this interview was with if you're not familiar with Fred Seibert, he is a cable TV icon. Yeah, he started doing a lot of animation and bumpers for Nickelodeon, and MTV, some of the most famous bumpers that they had kind of advertising their networks, in the early days of the late 80s, 90s. He been responsible for many classic animation shows on television. And a lot of them started out on this podcast love, the more recent ones in the last 20 years or so started out on this podcast, which is called Frederator. If you're familiar with Frederator, Frederator was a podcast that was showing up and coming animators, and they're short clips of their animation. And then the ones that caught on ended up becoming something or took the animators to another level which he's been a huge promoter of that industry for quite a while. What he was able to do very early on in podcasting land. And this was 2007 is when I heard it, this is when this podcast originally came out. He's discussing how they were able to use the blogging function of podcasts because every podcast starts in a blog in a sense. Because they're all based on being on the background of having RSS, which is called Really Simple Syndication, and then that goes out to all the podcast aggregators. At that time, the main one was iTunes, but now you've got a million of them.
The LoCOS Alana, Steph and Keets are back after a short break and they rant, rave and ramble about animation gaming and tech. Rise of the TMNT, Star Trek Discovery, Star Trek Lower Decks, Food Wars, Castlevania, Vampire Hunter D, Powerhouse Animation, Blood of Zeus, Frederator, Last of Us 2, Destiny 2, Watch Dogs, Cyborgs, Cyberpunk, #RageBurn, #clapsmycheeks, Mass Effect, No Activity, CBS, My Dad the Boubty Hunter, N7 Day, Bioware, Assassin's Creed, Valhalla, Origins, Odyssey, Oblivion, Fallout, Nintendo, Red Dead Redemption, PS5, Series X, Xbox, Playstation, Pokemon GO!, Baraka, iPhone 12 and more! Thanks for listening! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thelocos/message
In this very special edition of the Mad Hustle podcast, Butch talks to ALBIE HECHT & FRED SEIBERT - two of the execs who were instrumental in helping bring 'The Fairly Oddparents' to Nickelodeon! Watch the video interview here: https://youtu.be/jV7if818RDw Each played a major role in Butch's career and helped him get his projects off the ground. So sit back and learn from two successful, seasoned execs as they tell you exactly what Hollywood players look for when choosing the right project. Fred used to run Hanna Barbera and now has a company called 'FREDERATOR'. Albie used to run Nickelodeon, has produced an Oscar-nominated documentary, and now works with 'Pocketwatch' entertainment. These guys KNOW what they're talking about. Get more info at https://MadHustleBook.com or at https://www.butchartman.com
Saturday Mourning Cartoons host Dave Trumbore is joined by special guest and comicbook.com writer Evan Valentine to talk about all things 'Castlevania' Season 3. We get heavy into spoiler territory in this one, so make sure you're all caught up on the series so far before listening in!
This episode of the Animation Industry Podcast features Jonni Phillips, an independent filmmaker, animator, and cartoonist. She shares the nitty-gritty details of how she creates her absurdly wonderful, and absolutely unique mixed-media animation style. You will also learn: *What CalArts’ Experimental Animation Program is like *How she developed Rachel and Her Grandfather Control the Island with Frederator Studios *How she made Wasteland and The Final Exit of the Disciples of Ascensia ~[Sponsored Message]~ This episode is sponsored by Bloop Animation, which is an animation learning platform packed with premium online video courses for aspiring animation filmmakers. They have courses for all major animation programs like Maya, Animate CC, Toon Boom, Blender, TVPaint, and many others, as well as some non-software courses like a storyboarding course, Animation foundations course, and even one about making graphic novels, which covers absolutely everything you need to know from start to finish. The courses are all in video-form, so there’s no deadlines or application process, you simply pick a course and start learning in seconds. They even offer a free ebook titled “Making an animated short”, which covers their entire process, step-by-step, of how they made one of their films, from coming up with the idea, to storyboarding, animation and all the way to exporting the film. You can get that book for free at www.bloopanimation.com/animationindustry. You can check out their complete course library at www.bloopanimation.com/courses. *Free ebook on making a short film: www.bloopanimation.com/animationindustry *Bloop Animation’s course library: www.bloopanimation.com/courses ~~ More about Jonni Phillips: Jonni Phillips is an independent filmmaker, animator, and cartoonist. She is known for her original pilot with Frederator studios called Rachel and Her Grandfather Control the Island, as well as her feature length anthology series Wasteland, which includes such film pieces as The Earth is Flat, Goodbye Forever Party, and The Final Exit of the Disciples of Ascensia. Jonni is a graduate of the CalArts Experimental Animation Program. Jonni’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/jonniphillips Jonni’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jonniphillips/ Jonni’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/justkiddenanim8ion Jonni’s Website: https://www.jonniphillips.com/ Rachel and Her Grandfather Control the Island Pilot: https://youtu.be/hFufqL0yKbM
Kelsey Calaitges, development executive at Frederator Studios (Adventure Time, The Fairly Odd Parents) and writer on GO! Cartoons Bravest Warriors shares wisdom about pitching and writing for character-driven animation.
Este el el tercero de tres mini episodios sobre tres mini series: Over the Garden Wall, Infinity Train y Bee and Puppycat. En este capitulo: Bee & Puppycat, un universo adorable, gracioso y por momentos incomprensible producido por Frederator studios. Nos acompaña en la charla Mili Morsella y como siempre Agustín Ibarlucía y Lucía De Stefano, pueden unirse a la conversación en Instagram @charlasanimadas y seguirnos en Spotify, Google podcasts o desde donde nos escuchen. La música es de https://filmmusic.io "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ¡Eso es todo amigos!
Fred Seibert is the Chief Creative Officer of WOW! Unlimited Media, a Canadian animation and media holding company. Fred began his career in radio and music production before transitioning to television as MTV’s first Creative Director. He later co-founded a media branding agency and then served as President of Hanna-Barbera Cartoons before it was acquired by Time Warner. Fred was the Founder & CEO of Next New Networks, one of the first multi-channel networks which was acquired by YouTube in 2011, after which he founded Frederator, which he’s run for the past 23 years. In this episode, we discuss media’s impact on pop culture over the last few decades. Fred marvels at the impact that the previously unknown artist Lil Nas X’s has had on the music industry with his record-breaking hit “Old Town Road,” which initially gained traction on TikTok and other social platforms. We also debate the effectiveness of Netflix’s programming strategy and examine why newer SVOD entrants all seek to copy the Netflix model. Finally, Fred predicts a resurgence in specialty programming to serve niche audiences and explains why animation can’t be easily commoditized in the same way as music and television. Host: James Creech LISTENER SUPPORT If you’d like to make a small monthly donation to help support future episodes, please visit https://anchor.fm/all-things-video/support ABOUT THE SHOW All Things Video is a podcast dedicated to uncovering the past and charting the future of the online video ecosystem. Listen to interviews with founders, executives, and thought leaders from the world’s leading media companies and engage in thought-provoking debates about the issues shaping the next generation of entertainment. From the short-form content revolution to the fragmentation of video viewership in an always-on world, All Things Video reveals the key trends and insights from the world of digital media. Follow All Things Video on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn for new episodes and updates! ABOUT THE HOST James Creech is an entrepreneur focused on technology, online video, and digital media. He is the Co-Founder & CEO of Paladin, the essential influencer marketing platform for media companies, agencies, and brands. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode of the Animation Industry Podcast features Elyse Castro, creator of The Summoning on Cartoon Hangover, on how she pitched her show idea to Frederator. You’ll also learn: *How ridiculously simple Elyse’s pitch was *Everything you need to put together your own pitch (and all the stuff you don’t actually need to do) *The different types of tension that will make the story better Two years ago I saw a post on Reddit titled, “My friend showed me her comic strip for feedback before she entered it in a competition. It won, and today "The Summoning" came out on Cartoon Hangover.” The post had racked up nearly a thousand comments and the video itself was well over a million views. So I watched it and like everyone else, immediately fell in love with the short’s clever cat witch, her cat sidekick, and their poo-eating bunny nemesis. This was well before I began my own journey into animation and to me at that time it seemed impossible that someone had written a comic and somehow gotten it made into a complete show - and a ridiculously good one at that! So, here I am today, talking with Elyse Castro from Australia, the one who wrote The Summoning, and her journey on what it was like turning it into a show and what’s next for her. Follow Elyse on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elysecastro/?hl=en Watch The Summoning on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElzEYgQW8f0 See Elyse’s original pitch on the Scribd: https://www.scribd.com/document/364072012/The-Summoning-Pitch-Board Learn more about this podcast at terryibele.com/animation-industry-podcast/
Ben and Christian’s cheesy transitions abound as they share Ben’s conversation with amazing character designer, Joel Zamudio! Joel discusses his early artistic growth at OCSA, his transition from video games to character design for TV animation, and the discovery of his true passion in storytelling. Joel gives incredible advice about where to start in designing your own characters, as well as pitching shows to professional networks like Frederator!
We're back and bringing all the energy we can muster! Is Star Wars really lasting the Jedi? What will we call them now? Brandon regales us with tales from Tamriel in Elder Scrolls, Rem bores us with Archeology tales from World of Warcraft. Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2 gets a PERFECT SCREEN TEST! Josh Gad finally quits harassing Daisy Ridley for information about Star Wars. He gets his friends to do it, instead (including Chris Pratt and J. J. Abrams)! Rick and Morty Trailer for season 3 "rolls" out for our viewing pleasure. Nintendo's Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild will have a higher-than-usual rating due to ditching the milk and bringing the booze. Netflix's next animated series (along with Frederator, who owns the title) reboots the Castlevania franchise by bringing Warren Ellis on to write the first season. Kong: Skull Island to feature other Toho monster properties in some way as indicated by the . The Batman loses Affleck as director, but (as of this writing) Matt Reeves has officially signed on to direct the project...for now (insert sinister voicover). Will DC and Warner Brothers ever be able to catch up to the juggernaut that is Marvel?! Do they stand a snowball's chance in Hell?! Oh, bt dubs, David F. Sandberg of Lights Out is in talks to be the director of Shazam, with Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson set to play Black Adam over Captain Marvel/Shazam. The Han Solo solo solo movie solo appears to have begun production with a shiny new cast photo! [su_box title="Answer this Important Question!" style="soft" box_color="#330000" title_color="#FFF5EB" radius="0"][poll id="3"][/su_box] If you do not see the poll for "Which Tabletop Roleplaying Game are you interested in reading a review for?", please click here to answer! There's some Big Trouble in Little China! Interested in writing geek-centric articles? Got a fever to let your inner writer out? Email us with an article to be published for thousands of readers to see! SMASH ALL THOSE LIKES AND SHARES AND SUBSCRIBES FOREVER! They help us stay alive one more day! Literally, there are larger ogres over us. They're ruthless and terrifying. We cry tears of blood! CALL or TEXT us so we can play/read your question on air @ !! (Intro uses the "" track by Kevin Macleod (). Licensed under . Outtro: , licensed under .)
Matt Gielen, founder of Little Monster Media Co and former Director of Audience Development at Frederator, joins the podcast to share is research and insights about how the YouTube algorithm works. Matt explains some of the factors that YouTube's algorithm takes into account when suggesting content to users, and we discuss the implications this filtering might have on public opinion and political campaigning during elections. Other topics touched upon are YouTube monetization, digital advertising, the importance of being authentic on YouTube to build an audience, and the future of live video streaming on social media like Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
WE ARE BACK! It's January which means only one thing - NEW YEAR'S NICKTOONS! This is our third year doing New Year's NickToons and we're getting into some interesting territory. Kicking off 2017 is Oh Yeah! Cartoons which was a variety show that acted as a spring board for cartoons like the Fairly OddParents, Chalk Zone, and My Life as a Teenage Robot. All good things and was the begin of Frederator Studio that has launched so many other great cartoons (Bee and PuppyCat, Bravest Warriors, and Adventure Time). Will Dave start his own variety show? Will Sean animate a version of Dave and his cat and pitch it to Frederator? (answers Yes and Absolutely) All of this and more on this week's episode of the Saturday Mourning Cartoons podcast. This episode is sponsored by "2017!" Yes, the year 2017. Will it be better than 2016? Who knows. 2017 - "only time will tell!" If you are digging our show, then please leave us a rating on iTunes, Stitcher, and Google Play and like us on facebook. Thanks in advance. You are the best! https://www.facebook.com/SaturdayMourningCartoons/
To call Fred Seibert "a producer" is like calling Steve Hillenburg "a guy who drew a sponge." A visionary force in the early days of Nickelodeon, the former president of Hanna-Barbera, and the current big cheese behind Frederator, Fred has produced cartoon classics such as The FairlyOddparents, Adventure Time, Fanboy and Chum Chum, and Bee And Puppy Cat, to name a few. To us, he's a legendary animation entrepreneur, even though Fred calls himself a professional fan.
Support this podcast on Patreon and get exclusive and early content! FORUM EPISODE! Don't know if this is going to be an ongoing thing but in honor of the BRAND NEW RubberOnion Forum going up on the BRAND NEW website we decided to go through the topics posted there and chat about them. Join the community and enjoy the show! Please Rate & Review us on iTunes Topics & Timestamps (6:41) How you doin? (21:01) Introducing... the RubberOnion Forum! (26:00) Incredibles 2 date change (32:16) Trolls directors on "happiness" (39:59) Moonbot layoffs (45:04) Frederator sells to Rainmaker Studios (59:56) "Freelance Isn't Free" Act passes in NYC (1:07:27) Back to the Forum Check out more of your hosts Stephen Brooks @RubberOnion Rob Yulfo @RobYulfo Order Stephen's tutorial book
This week we introduce Tooned Up, channel Frederator where they share 107 facts about Beauty and the Beast. Their channel can be found here. Thanks for letting us entertain that space between your ears. Have an idea, question, comment, or want to be the next guest on the show? Simply email us at mousecapadespodcast@gmail.com or text us 407-674-0414.
Matt Gielen is the Founder of Little Monster, a digital consultancy that helps brands and media companies grow online audiences and promote video content. As the former VP of Programming & Audience Development at Frederator Networks, Matt led content strategy and audience growth initiatives for the animation MCN’s O&O channels and creator network. Prior to Frederator, Matt produced and self-distributed a feature film with his brother and was an early employee at Driver Digital. In this episode, Matt draws on his vast online video experience to share audience development insights and strategies. We explain how to mimic tactics of top creators in producing and optimizing video content, the importance of watchtime as the “ultimate currency” among viewers and video platforms, and how view velocity impacts lifetime performance and search ranking on YouTube. Hosts: James Creech and Luke Wang ABOUT THE SHOW All Things Video is a podcast dedicated to uncovering the past and charting the future of the online... --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Even with Stephen still on the road the podcasts don't stop... not with tablets, mobile hotspots, and coffee shops! This week had simultaneously the greatest rumor & the biggest, immediate letdown of that rumor. But with that, there's good news about Spectacular Spider-Man finally coming to Blu-ray, Greg McCleod's new animated short "365" and confirmation that Miyazaki really is retiring. Listen to the greatness! CLICK HERE to go to the full blog post & leave a comment! Annotations: (12:57) LEGO sequel coming out May 26th 2017 (20:35) Space Jam 2 discussion (30:33) Sneak Peek for "Mr Peabody & Sherman" on Netflix shows fruits Dreamworks/Netflix deal (36:19) Spectacular Spider-Man complete series coming to bluray (43:51) Frederator joining with Simons Cat creator Simon Tofield (51:30) Interview with Greg McLeod on his short "365" (1:00:33) Interview with Miyazaki confirms retirement (1:08:44) Andreas Deja shares more animation history with the background of the great "hiss folded arms" gag from The Jungle Book Check out more of your hosts: Stephen Brooks (@RubberOnion) Rob Yulfo (@RobYulfo) Pat Ryan (@TheBadPatRyan) and please Rate/Review us on iTunes