Another day, Another cancellation This time, it’s Netflix’s new animated series, Inside Job. The original show is about a shadow government and the dysfunctional team that runs it, committing the world’s conspiracies. The series focuses on Reagan Ridley, an anti-social tech genius who has to put up with the B.S. that goes on at Cognito Inc. The creator of the series is Shion Takeuchi. The showrunner and executive producer is known for her work on the popular Disney Channel series Gravity Falls. Gravity Falls creator Alex Hirsch and Netflix’s BoJack Horseman director Mike Hollingsworth also signed the onboard as executive
Netflix Cancels Adult Animated Series Inside Job...
Netflix Cancels Adult Animated Series Inside Job...
- 1/19/2023
- by Jeffrey Bowie Jr.
- TVovermind.com
"Inside Job" , the comedic, 'conspiracy theory' animated TV series, created by Shion Takeuchi and directed by Mike Hollingsworth, starring Lizzy Caplan, Adam Scott, Christian Slater, Clark Duke, Tisha Campbell, Andy Daly, Chris Diamantopoulos, John Dimaggio, Bobby Lee and Brett Gelman, has been canceled after one season on Netflix:
"...'Inside Job', the workplace comedy set in a world where many conspiracy theories are real, is centered on shadow government organization 'Cognito, Inc.', which attempts to control the world and keep the conspiracies secret.
"A team is led by a tech genius and her new partner as they work in the organization alongside reptilian shape-shifters...
"... a human–dolphin hybrid, and a sapient mushroom from hollow Earth..."
Click the images to enlarge...
"...'Inside Job', the workplace comedy set in a world where many conspiracy theories are real, is centered on shadow government organization 'Cognito, Inc.', which attempts to control the world and keep the conspiracies secret.
"A team is led by a tech genius and her new partner as they work in the organization alongside reptilian shape-shifters...
"... a human–dolphin hybrid, and a sapient mushroom from hollow Earth..."
Click the images to enlarge...
- 1/9/2023
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Take a look at more new footage from "Inside Job" , the comedic, 'conspiracy theory' animated TV series, created by Shion Takeuchi and directed by Mike Hollingsworth, starring Lizzy Caplan, Adam Scott, Christian Slater, Clark Duke, Tisha Campbell, Andy Daly, Chris Diamantopoulos, John Dimaggio, Bobby Lee and Brett Gelman, streaming Part 2 November 18, 2022 on Netflix:
"...'Inside Job', the workplace comedy set in a world where many conspiracy theories are real, is centered on shadow government organization 'Cognito, Inc.', which attempts to control the world and keep the conspiracies secret.
"A team is led by a tech genius and her new partner as they work in the organization alongside reptilian shape-shifters...
"... a human–dolphin hybrid, and a sapient mushroom from hollow Earth..."
Click the images to enlarge...
"...'Inside Job', the workplace comedy set in a world where many conspiracy theories are real, is centered on shadow government organization 'Cognito, Inc.', which attempts to control the world and keep the conspiracies secret.
"A team is led by a tech genius and her new partner as they work in the organization alongside reptilian shape-shifters...
"... a human–dolphin hybrid, and a sapient mushroom from hollow Earth..."
Click the images to enlarge...
- 11/9/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
"Inside Job" , the comedic, 'conspiracy theory' animated science fiction TV series created by Shion Takeuchi and directed by Mike Hollingsworth, stars Lizzy Caplan, Adam Scott, Christian Slater, Clark Duke, Tisha Campbell, Andy Daly, Chris Diamantopoulos, John Dimaggio, Bobby Lee and Brett Gelman, streaming Part 2 November 18, 2022 on Netflix:
"...'Inside Job', the workplace comedy set in a world where many conspiracy theories are real, is centered on shadow government organization 'Cognito, Inc.', which attempts to control the world and keep the conspiracies secret.
"A team is led by a tech genius and her new partner as they work in the organization alongside reptilian shape-shifters...
"... a human–dolphin hybrid, and a sapient mushroom from hollow Earth..."
Click the images to enlarge...
"...'Inside Job', the workplace comedy set in a world where many conspiracy theories are real, is centered on shadow government organization 'Cognito, Inc.', which attempts to control the world and keep the conspiracies secret.
"A team is led by a tech genius and her new partner as they work in the organization alongside reptilian shape-shifters...
"... a human–dolphin hybrid, and a sapient mushroom from hollow Earth..."
Click the images to enlarge...
- 10/26/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
For years, Mike Hollingsworth has found creative ways to inject jokes into animated comedies. Working as the supervising director on “BoJack Horseman,” as well as “Tuca & Bertie,” “Inside Job,” and more, Hollingsworth fills frame after frame with visual humor — from cutaway punchlines and background puns, to silent callbacks and quips written on T-shirts, chyrons, and more.
Now, he’s applying his impressive skillset to a stone-cold classic of live-action television: “The Golden Girls.” In “Golden Girls 3033,” a pilot made to elicit a series order, Hollingsworth reimagines Susan Harris’ beloved sitcom with animation, relying on the original scripts and audio as a jumping off point before shaping fresh episodes for a story set more than 1,000 years in the future. Blanche (Rue McClanahan), Dorothy (Bea Arthur), Rose (Betty White), and Sophia (Estelle Getty) all still share a house in Miami — but it’s the year 3033, they’ve discovered the Fountain of Youth,...
Now, he’s applying his impressive skillset to a stone-cold classic of live-action television: “The Golden Girls.” In “Golden Girls 3033,” a pilot made to elicit a series order, Hollingsworth reimagines Susan Harris’ beloved sitcom with animation, relying on the original scripts and audio as a jumping off point before shaping fresh episodes for a story set more than 1,000 years in the future. Blanche (Rue McClanahan), Dorothy (Bea Arthur), Rose (Betty White), and Sophia (Estelle Getty) all still share a house in Miami — but it’s the year 3033, they’ve discovered the Fountain of Youth,...
- 7/8/2022
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
Before Netflix launched a gaming platform, they experimented with interactive specials such as “Black Mirror: Bandersnatch” and “The Boss Baby: Get That Baby!” But its new interactive gaming special, “Cat Burglar,” offers a new wrinkle: a nostalgic Tex Avery–inspired cartoon complete with a full orchestra, which plays like an extended Looney Tunes short.
“It’s about an hour and a half, which we treated as basically a feature-length Tex Avery cartoon,” said director and co-creator Mike Hollingsworth, a producer on “BoJack Horseman.” The result is just like what you’d find in a “Tom and Jerry” or a Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner cartoon. It follows a cat named Rowdy (James Adomian), who tries to steal a priceless piece of art from a museum while attempting to evade a security guard dog named Peanut (Alan Lee).
Each playthrough is the length of a classic theatrical cartoon short,...
“It’s about an hour and a half, which we treated as basically a feature-length Tex Avery cartoon,” said director and co-creator Mike Hollingsworth, a producer on “BoJack Horseman.” The result is just like what you’d find in a “Tom and Jerry” or a Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner cartoon. It follows a cat named Rowdy (James Adomian), who tries to steal a priceless piece of art from a museum while attempting to evade a security guard dog named Peanut (Alan Lee).
Each playthrough is the length of a classic theatrical cartoon short,...
- 2/25/2022
- by Rafael Motamayor
- Indiewire
Knowing that Netflix’s “Cat Burglar” was created by Charlie Brooker of “Black Mirror,” and that the “Black Mirror” take on a choose-your-own-adventure episode (2018’s “Bandersnatch“) represents one of that show’s biggest horrors, I kept waiting for “Cat Burglar” (out today on Netflix) to take some terrible turn of existential dread. But after playing through several scenarios, the opposite proved true. From Brooker, “Black Mirror” producer Annabel Jones and supervising director Mike Hollingsworth (“BoJack Horseman”),
Following in the footsteps of other interactive Netflix titles like “Bandersnatch” and the surprisingly successful “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” movie, “Cat Burglar” lets viewers steer the story by making choices onscreen along the way. In this way, the plot also acts as a mission: get from point A to point B without making a choice that ends in such a disaster that you get punted back to the very beginning. In “Bandersnatch” and “Kimmy Schmidt,...
Following in the footsteps of other interactive Netflix titles like “Bandersnatch” and the surprisingly successful “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” movie, “Cat Burglar” lets viewers steer the story by making choices onscreen along the way. In this way, the plot also acts as a mission: get from point A to point B without making a choice that ends in such a disaster that you get punted back to the very beginning. In “Bandersnatch” and “Kimmy Schmidt,...
- 2/22/2022
- by Caroline Framke
- Variety Film + TV
Peacock has shared the first look at its new upcoming comedy series “Killing It,” streaming this April.
Created by “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” producers Dan Goor and Luke Del Tredici, “Killing It” stars Craig Robinson as Craig, a man who competes in a state-sponsored python hunt in his quest to achieve the American Dream. The series co-stars Stephanie Nogueras as Craig’s ex-wife Camille, Jet Miller as his pre-teen daughter Vanessa and Rell Battle as his younger brother Isaiah. Claudia O’Doherty, Scott Macarthur and Wyatt Walter round out the cast.
“We love all the ambitious, challenging, thematically-rich series that populate the current peak-tv landscape,” said Goor in a statement. “We also love jokes. So, we tried to make a show that could deliver both. We wanted ‘Killing It’ to explore America’s quasi-religious obsession with entrepreneurship and wealth, and we also wanted it to be funny. Really, really funny. Plus, we wanted it to have big snakes.
Created by “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” producers Dan Goor and Luke Del Tredici, “Killing It” stars Craig Robinson as Craig, a man who competes in a state-sponsored python hunt in his quest to achieve the American Dream. The series co-stars Stephanie Nogueras as Craig’s ex-wife Camille, Jet Miller as his pre-teen daughter Vanessa and Rell Battle as his younger brother Isaiah. Claudia O’Doherty, Scott Macarthur and Wyatt Walter round out the cast.
“We love all the ambitious, challenging, thematically-rich series that populate the current peak-tv landscape,” said Goor in a statement. “We also love jokes. So, we tried to make a show that could deliver both. We wanted ‘Killing It’ to explore America’s quasi-religious obsession with entrepreneurship and wealth, and we also wanted it to be funny. Really, really funny. Plus, we wanted it to have big snakes.
- 2/2/2022
- by Wilson Chapman and Sasha Urban
- Variety Film + TV
U.S. production, finance and management firm The Cartel has appointed Apa’s former head of motion picture literary Ryan Saul as manager/producer and has promoted Bradford Bricken to partner.
The Cartel’s co-ceo Stan Spry said Saul had a “penchant for discovering young talent,” and added “his ability to nurture that talent is something we pride ourselves in.”
Saul began his career as an executive assistant at the Walt Disney Company and went on to become head of motion picture literary at Apa. Most recently, he was a motion picture literary agent at Paradigm Talent Agency.
According to a statement, “He has garnered the reputation of being able to develop clients from unknown writers or young short film directors to become some of the leading creatives in Hollywood, working on some of the biggest studio films in production.”
His clients included Tim Reckart, who is directing “High in the Clouds” for Netflix,...
The Cartel’s co-ceo Stan Spry said Saul had a “penchant for discovering young talent,” and added “his ability to nurture that talent is something we pride ourselves in.”
Saul began his career as an executive assistant at the Walt Disney Company and went on to become head of motion picture literary at Apa. Most recently, he was a motion picture literary agent at Paradigm Talent Agency.
According to a statement, “He has garnered the reputation of being able to develop clients from unknown writers or young short film directors to become some of the leading creatives in Hollywood, working on some of the biggest studio films in production.”
His clients included Tim Reckart, who is directing “High in the Clouds” for Netflix,...
- 6/22/2020
- by Leo Barraclough
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: The Cartel, the production, finance and management company behind AMC’s Creepshow, has tapped Paradigm’s Ryan Saul as a manager/producer and promoted Bradford Bricken to partner.
Saul joins The Cartel after only a year at Paradigm. Previously he was at Apa, where he was co-head of the agency’s motion picture literary department, and served as an agent at Metropolitan Talent and Jim Preminger Agency.
Saul’s clients have over the years included The Maze Runner director Wes Ball, Oscar-nominated animation director Tim Reckart (High In The Clouds), and Fantastic Four director Josh Trank.
Bricken has been a manager at The Cartel since 2014. He recently served as an executive producer on Netflix’s Twelve Forever alongside The Cartel’s founders and CEOs Stan Spry and Jeff Holland.
Clients include Mike Hollingsworth (Bojack Horseman), playwright and screenwriter Qui Nguyen (Vietgone), and Glenn Clements (The Late Late Show With James Corden...
Saul joins The Cartel after only a year at Paradigm. Previously he was at Apa, where he was co-head of the agency’s motion picture literary department, and served as an agent at Metropolitan Talent and Jim Preminger Agency.
Saul’s clients have over the years included The Maze Runner director Wes Ball, Oscar-nominated animation director Tim Reckart (High In The Clouds), and Fantastic Four director Josh Trank.
Bricken has been a manager at The Cartel since 2014. He recently served as an executive producer on Netflix’s Twelve Forever alongside The Cartel’s founders and CEOs Stan Spry and Jeff Holland.
Clients include Mike Hollingsworth (Bojack Horseman), playwright and screenwriter Qui Nguyen (Vietgone), and Glenn Clements (The Late Late Show With James Corden...
- 6/22/2020
- by Jake Kanter
- Deadline Film + TV
After five years of hilarious highs and devastating lows, “BoJack Horseman” has finally completed its run on Netflix. As Todd once said, “Hooray…question mark?” It’s been an amazing experience to watch these animated characters that we have come to love and care about. To celebrate the wrapping of this amazing program, we have updated our previous list of the 40 greatest episodes, ranked worst to best, to include the stand outs from the final season. While that did mean having to let go of episodes like “Prickly-Muffin” and “Yesterdayland,” it made room for new great ones, including “The New Client” and “The View From Halfway Down.” Warning: Spoilers ahead for all of season six.
The offbeat show takes place in a world where humans coexist with anthropomorphic animals. The titular character (Will Arnett) is a washed up sitcom actor from the 1990s who, while seemingly having everything he could want,...
The offbeat show takes place in a world where humans coexist with anthropomorphic animals. The titular character (Will Arnett) is a washed up sitcom actor from the 1990s who, while seemingly having everything he could want,...
- 2/24/2020
- by Charles Bright and Chris Beachum
- Gold Derby
After five years of hilarious highs and devastating lows, “BoJack Horseman” has finally completed its run on Netflix. As Todd once said, “Hooray…question mark?” It’s been an amazing experience to watch these animated characters that we have come to love and care about. To celebrate the wrapping of this amazing program, we have updated our previous list of the 40 greatest episodes, ranked worst to best, to include the stand outs from the final season. While that did mean having to let go of episodes like “Prickly-Muffin” and “Yesterdayland,” it made room for new great ones, including “The New Client” and “The View From Halfway Down.” Warning: Spoilers ahead for all of season six.
The offbeat show takes place in a world where humans coexist with anthropomorphic animals. The titular character (Will Arnett) is a washed up sitcom actor from the 1990s who, while seemingly having everything he could want,...
The offbeat show takes place in a world where humans coexist with anthropomorphic animals. The titular character (Will Arnett) is a washed up sitcom actor from the 1990s who, while seemingly having everything he could want,...
- 2/23/2020
- by Charles Bright and Chris Beachum
- Gold Derby
Hooray! “BoJack Horseman” finally received its first Emmy nomination this year for Best Animated Program. It’s been a longtime coming for this Netflix series after being overlooked for the previous four seasons. To celebrate this great achievement, we invite you to think back on the great moments from this show that wonderfully skewers Hollywood and enjoy this ranking for the 40 greatest episodes of “BoJack Horseman,” ranked worst to best.
The offbeat show takes place in a world where humans coexist with anthropomorphic animals. The titular character (Will Arnett) is a washed up sitcom actor from the 1990s who, while seemingly having everything he could want, is still profoundly unhappy and is constantly trying to turn that around. His agent, Princess Carolyn (Amy Sedaris), is a cat who constantly puts the needs of others before her own and is also BoJack’s on-again off-again lover. He begins to work on...
The offbeat show takes place in a world where humans coexist with anthropomorphic animals. The titular character (Will Arnett) is a washed up sitcom actor from the 1990s who, while seemingly having everything he could want, is still profoundly unhappy and is constantly trying to turn that around. His agent, Princess Carolyn (Amy Sedaris), is a cat who constantly puts the needs of others before her own and is also BoJack’s on-again off-again lover. He begins to work on...
- 8/28/2019
- by Charles Bright
- Gold Derby
Lisa Hanawalt likes butts, and lying about it would never even cross her mind. The production designer on “BoJack Horseman” and creator of the new Netflix original series “Tuca & Bertie” displays the derrière every chance she gets. There are paintings, animated gifs, other author’s book covers, drawings within her own books, and she even asks listeners of her podcast, “Baby Geniuses” (co-hosted by screenwriter Emily Heller), to send in pictures of their butts — you know, so long as they’re comfortable with it.
“I’m literally drawing a butt right now as we talk on the phone,” Hanawalt said during an interview with IndieWire.
So it should come as no surprise that her first television series opens with a toucan in green short-shorts flipping down into frame butt-first, before reshaping a floating purple bubble into a big ol’ booty — which she promptly and joyfully slaps.
This is Tuca,...
“I’m literally drawing a butt right now as we talk on the phone,” Hanawalt said during an interview with IndieWire.
So it should come as no surprise that her first television series opens with a toucan in green short-shorts flipping down into frame butt-first, before reshaping a floating purple bubble into a big ol’ booty — which she promptly and joyfully slaps.
This is Tuca,...
- 5/6/2019
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
Bright, encouraging, and outrageous, watching “Tuca & Bertie” can feel like watching a particularly excellent Saturday morning cartoon. Two neighboring bird women — voiced by Tiffany Haddish and Ali Wong — help each other through awkward crushes and intimidating work duties, all while laughing, exploring, and supporting one another. Vivid colors fill the frame, and wacky animated features fly across the screen. Bertie, an anxious yet highly organized songbird with dreams of being a professional baker, might yank a graph out of thin air explaining the difference between jam and jelly. Tuca, an outgoing toucan and amiable agent of chaos, likes to make up new words that the series emboldens with specialized fonts and sound effects.
And yet, creator Lisa Hanawalt blends this imaginative spirit with stark, often intimidating, reality. Bertie tackles sexual harassment at work in the second episode. Tuca is an alcoholic coping with abandonment issues. More internal obstacles to...
And yet, creator Lisa Hanawalt blends this imaginative spirit with stark, often intimidating, reality. Bertie tackles sexual harassment at work in the second episode. Tuca is an alcoholic coping with abandonment issues. More internal obstacles to...
- 5/2/2019
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
Netflix hosted a raucous Emmys Fyc screening and panel for critically-beloved animated series “BoJack Horseman” on April 22 and while the panel itself was as colorful and irreverent as the show, with stars Aaron Paul and Paul F. Tompkins, as well as supervising director Mike Hollingsworth, production designer Lisa Hanawalt, and creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg, it wasn’t until after the event that the mood grew more contemplative.
Currently in production on its sixth season, “BoJack Horseman,” about a depressive, alcoholic horseman struggling to make his way in a lightly-fictionalized version of Hollywood inhabited by humans and humanoid animals alike, is beginning to draw attention within the industry itself, with Will Arnett’s win for voicing BoJack and the show’s win for Best General Audience Animated Television at the 46th Annual Annie Awards in February.
“I didn’t think we would ever crack through at the Annies,” Bob-Waksberg said in a...
Currently in production on its sixth season, “BoJack Horseman,” about a depressive, alcoholic horseman struggling to make his way in a lightly-fictionalized version of Hollywood inhabited by humans and humanoid animals alike, is beginning to draw attention within the industry itself, with Will Arnett’s win for voicing BoJack and the show’s win for Best General Audience Animated Television at the 46th Annual Annie Awards in February.
“I didn’t think we would ever crack through at the Annies,” Bob-Waksberg said in a...
- 4/24/2019
- by Libby Hill
- Indiewire
PaleyFest will kick off its 12th annual event this September, and it means we will be getting to see more from some of the biggest new series, as well as the hottest returning ones.
The line-up was unveiled by The Paley Center for Media on Thursday, and you can see the full line-up below.
September 6
Netflix’s Atypical and BoJack Horseman (7 pm)
Atypical: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Keir Gilchrist, Michael Rapaport, Brigette Lundy Paine and EPs Robia Rashid and Mary Rohlich
BoJack Horseman: Aaron Paul, Alison Brie, Paul F. Tompkins, creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg, production designer Lisa Hanawalt and supervising director Mike Hollingsworth
September 7
Hulu’s I Love You, America with Sarah Silverman, Castle Rock and The First (7 pm)
I Love You, America: Sarah Silverman
Castle Rock: Creator Sam Shaw
September 8
ABC’s The Kids Are Alright, The Rookie and A Million Little Things (1:30 pm)
The Kids Are Alright: Michael Cudlitz,...
The line-up was unveiled by The Paley Center for Media on Thursday, and you can see the full line-up below.
September 6
Netflix’s Atypical and BoJack Horseman (7 pm)
Atypical: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Keir Gilchrist, Michael Rapaport, Brigette Lundy Paine and EPs Robia Rashid and Mary Rohlich
BoJack Horseman: Aaron Paul, Alison Brie, Paul F. Tompkins, creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg, production designer Lisa Hanawalt and supervising director Mike Hollingsworth
September 7
Hulu’s I Love You, America with Sarah Silverman, Castle Rock and The First (7 pm)
I Love You, America: Sarah Silverman
Castle Rock: Creator Sam Shaw
September 8
ABC’s The Kids Are Alright, The Rookie and A Million Little Things (1:30 pm)
The Kids Are Alright: Michael Cudlitz,...
- 7/24/2018
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
ABC’s Rookie cop, The CW’s Charmed sisters and Fox’s Last Man Standing will be among the characters highlighted at this fall’s PaleyFest events.
The Paley Center for Media on Tuesday announced the lineup for its annual Fall TV Previews series, which will include panels and screenings for both new and returning shows.
Other freshman fare that will appear at PaleyFest includes ABC’s A Million Little Things, Hulu’s Castle Rock and Lifetime’s You.
The 12th annual event will take place Sept. 6-16 at the Paley Center’s Beverly Hills location. Tickets go on sale...
The Paley Center for Media on Tuesday announced the lineup for its annual Fall TV Previews series, which will include panels and screenings for both new and returning shows.
Other freshman fare that will appear at PaleyFest includes ABC’s A Million Little Things, Hulu’s Castle Rock and Lifetime’s You.
The 12th annual event will take place Sept. 6-16 at the Paley Center’s Beverly Hills location. Tickets go on sale...
- 7/24/2018
- TVLine.com
We are mere months away from Fall which can only mean one thing: it’s PaleyFest time! The Paley Center for Media unveiled the lineup for its 12th annual PaleyFest Fall TV Previews. The festival takes place Sept. 6-16 at the Paley Center’s Beverly Hills location.
The ten-day fest celebrates shows returning to the forthcoming Fall 2018 television season as well as giving audiences the first look at some of the most anticipated new shows. The fest will include premiere screenings and cast & creator discussions from ABC, CBS, The CW, Epix, Fox, History, Hulu, Lifetime, NBC, Netflix, and Telemundo.
The event kicks off on Sept. 6 with Netflix’s Atypical and BoJack Horseman and concludes Sept. 16 with the team from Telemundo’s Nicky Jam: El Ganador. Other shows heading to the fest include Castle Rock, I Love you, America with Sarah Silverman, Last Man Standing, The Neighborhood, The Kids Are Alright and more.
The ten-day fest celebrates shows returning to the forthcoming Fall 2018 television season as well as giving audiences the first look at some of the most anticipated new shows. The fest will include premiere screenings and cast & creator discussions from ABC, CBS, The CW, Epix, Fox, History, Hulu, Lifetime, NBC, Netflix, and Telemundo.
The event kicks off on Sept. 6 with Netflix’s Atypical and BoJack Horseman and concludes Sept. 16 with the team from Telemundo’s Nicky Jam: El Ganador. Other shows heading to the fest include Castle Rock, I Love you, America with Sarah Silverman, Last Man Standing, The Neighborhood, The Kids Are Alright and more.
- 7/24/2018
- by Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
Vincent Adultman isn’t the only voice Alison Brie handles on “BoJack Horseman.” He’s not even her primary role on the Neflix series (that would be Diane Nguyen). But the character who’s either one awkward looking man or three very coordinated children is so convincingly portrayed by Brie, she can’t shake him when creating new voices.
“I feel like the problem with doing Vincent Adultman — which came very naturally to me, and I have a lot of fun doing it — is that when I try to find voices for other characters, you’re always like, ‘I hear Vincent Adultman. It’s too nasally,'” Brie said at an Fyc event for the series Tuesday night. “When I was doing drunk Diane in an episode, you were like, ‘You’re veering into Vincent Adultman, so that’s a problem.'”
On the show, BoJack repeatedly says the businessman...
“I feel like the problem with doing Vincent Adultman — which came very naturally to me, and I have a lot of fun doing it — is that when I try to find voices for other characters, you’re always like, ‘I hear Vincent Adultman. It’s too nasally,'” Brie said at an Fyc event for the series Tuesday night. “When I was doing drunk Diane in an episode, you were like, ‘You’re veering into Vincent Adultman, so that’s a problem.'”
On the show, BoJack repeatedly says the businessman...
- 5/25/2018
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
BoJack Horseman, one of the very best shows on television, returned for a wonderful — and, somehow, darker than ever — third season on Friday, and Netflix ordered a fourth season later that day. I'll have an episode-by-episode breakdown later this week, but I'm first pleased to bring you this long conversation with BoJack creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg. (Note: We did this a week and a half ago, prior to the renewal announcement, so his last answer refers to the show's fate being up in the air, even as he talks about plans for what he wants to do next with it.) Originally, I had intended to only ask questions about the season's remarkable fourth installment — one of the best episodes of TV I've seen all year — a largely dialogue-free installment set underwater, where BoJack's attempt to promote Secretariat at a film festival on the ocean floor goes awry. But then I realized...
- 7/24/2016
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Hitfix
Lady Colin Campbell reportedly quit 'I'm A Celebrity...Get Me Out Of Here!' because she was being bullied. It was revealed the 66-year-old star had left the jungle on ''medical grounds'' earlier today (02.12.15), but her agent Mike Hollingsworth has now revealed he thinks she quit because of the way she was being treated by some of the other celebrities. He told ITV's 'This Morning': ''The official statement is that she's left because of a medical condition. I know that she suffered a fall in the jungle camp and because of that, I think viewers will have seen, she's been using a special...
- 12/2/2015
- Virgin Media - TV
Smosh, the banner by which BFFs Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla have been entertaining online video audiences and Pokemon enthusiasts since YouTube’s inception, has amassed over 1.3 billion views and over 4.5 million subscribers on the world’s largest video sharing site in the past six years. That’s one heck of a fan base. Hecox, Padilla, Smosh-owner Alloy Digital, Smosh President and Alloy Digital Evp Barry Blumberg, and the world’s largest video sharing site believe that fan base wants to watch cartoons in addition to the familiar erratic comedy and user-driven reality stylings of two talented young twentysomethings. Shut Up! Cartoons is Smosh’s soon-to-debut animated YouTube channel, which is one of the 96-or-so that make up the first round of the YouTube Originals Initiative. It was conceived of by Blumberg, who, before joining the Smosh team back in 2006, was responsible for the development and production of notable...
- 4/16/2012
- by Joshua Cohen
- Tubefilter.com
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