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Archive for August, 2009

TheWB.com and Johnson & Johnson Have a Winner in “The Lake” (Jack Myers Media Business Report)

Posted by Generate Studios on August 26th 2009 in Generate Press

Published: August 25, 2009 at 04:37 PM GMT
Last Updated: August 26, 2009 at 04:37 PM GMT

Check out the original article HERE.

By Ed Martin


TheWB.com’s latest original series, a teen drama titled The Lake, is hardly groundbreaking as scripted entertainment, but it is a very effective centerpiece in a grand platform for advertisers. At a time when traditional and experimental media are colliding and business models are in perilous play that makes it a win for all involved.

The basic story foundation here — a group of pretty white kids suffering through their own teeny-something dramas — is vintage WB, recalling more than one series from that late and much-lamented broadcast network. The young and beautiful are the children of four families that spend their summers in a glorious lakeside community, the perfect place to wallow in the kind of problems other folk only dream of dwelling on, especially during this economy.

For the kids it’s all about lust, longing, coping with change and finding new friends. Oh, and skin care. The Lake has a single sponsor: Johnson & Johnson’s Clean & Clear skin-care line for tweens and teens. These products could not be promoted in a better environment. Eye-catching banner and box ads for Clean & Clear appear above and below TheWB’s player, each inviting the viewer to click on it and download a coupon. A breezy fifteen-second spot for the product line appears at the start of and midway through each episode. The spot isn’t at all annoying except when viewed over and over again, as is the digital way.

Yes, a couple of the female characters are actually shown using Clean & Clear products during a couple of scenes, but the integration interruptus is extremely brief. It in fact feels organic, to use a tired phrase.

The real impetus that should drive girls (and maybe a few boys) from player to banner to coupon to store isn’t the content of the ads or the placement of the products. It’s the cumulative effect of watching several teenagers with perfect skin over and over and over again. (There isn’t a zit to be seen.) Want to look as good as one of them? Click on the banner above.

This is not to imply that The Lake is just some kind of extended advertisement or high-grade infomercial. It can stand alone as a solid if lightweight show. But, as presented on this platform, it is one-half of a perfect marriage of program and product presented in a way that viewers may very well respond to.

As for the production itself, the tale of The Lake is told in twelve segments custom made for the YouTube generation and ranging in length from approximately 7-12 minutes. Even without the recaps and brief credits that open each episode that adds up to approximately 90 minutes, the length of a typical made-for-broadcast or basic cable movie (which The Lake could be, in that it spans an entire summer and leaves only one significant plot thread unresolved at the end). Overall it is a remarkable achievement: It looks just as good as many broadcast movies and better than many basic cable flicks, yet was produced for a fraction of the cost. (Credit for that goes to the entire production team, especially director Jason Priestley.) At a press conference for this show during the recent Television Critics Association tour, executive producer Jordan Levin (the former Chief Executive Officer of The WB network and now the co-founder and CEO of the multi-media studio Generate) indicated that the budget for The Lake was way below half the cost of a single episode of an hour long broadcast drama series.

Interestingly, even though it is largely about teens that are hot for each other, The Lake is pretty tame when compared to broadcast or basic cable programming. In fact, there is more skin, sex and sex talk in the dramas on ABC Family than there is here. Throughout all twelve episodes there is very little “naughty” language, no sex to speak of and a one-time nudity tease that reveals nothing at all. (Early in the series the teens swim naked. The girls toss their tops and the boys bare their bottoms but it all happens off screen or underwater.) Tellingly, there are several scenes in which underage kids are shown drinking. How strange that alcohol consumption is okay but full moons are off limits.

“We discussed [content issues] pretty openly with [TheWB.com] and we tried to maintain fairly traditional broadcast standards because we recognize that we are catering to, in large cases, a younger audience and we have a sponsor attached and we want to be responsible to that sponsor,” Levin told the TCA. “So we may have erred in some cases, being more conservative than many networks that cater to generally younger audiences.”

Indeed, that conservative approach might keep The Lake from building buzz and becoming a breakout hit, however that may be defined online. Given what the target audience for this program is already watching on basic cable and the Internet it would seem that, going forward, producers and advertisers alike are going to have to step up and add some adult elements to programs and platforms alike. Still, if The Lake works for Johnson & Johnson that will be a good thing. I’d like to see a second batch of episodes. (Would we call it a sophomore season or a sequel? Since it will run forever online, does it matter?) Meantime, I’d like to see what kinds of Internet programming other big-name producers and directors can deliver with the support of appropriate advertisers. TheWB.com has fashioned a terrific digital template on which others can build exciting models of their own.

Social Media Revolution – YouTube

Posted by Generate Studios on August 21st 2009 in Generate Blog

Is social media a fad? Or is it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution? Welcome to the World of Socialnomics!   Check this out:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIFYPQjYhv8

The Lake’ Premieres On TheWB, Jason Priestley Talks Web (Tubefilter.tv)

Posted by Generate Studios on August 12th 2009 in Generate Press

Check out this article, featuring a Q&A with “The Lake” Director Jason Priestley on Tubefilter.tv HERE

Check out the first 4 episodes of “The Lake” at:
TheWB.com: 
http://www.thewb.com/shows/the-lake
Hulu: 
http://www.hulu.com/search?query=The+Lake
iTunes: 
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewTVShow?id=324347622

TheWB.com, Jason Priestley plunge into ‘The Lake’

Posted by Generate Studios on August 11th 2009 in Generate Press

New web series comes from writers Marcie Ulin and Meredith Lavender and producer Jordan Levin

Published on Monday, Aug 10, 2009 By Daniel Fienberg
  • TheWB.com, Jason Priestley plunge into 'The Lake'

Samantha Cope as Alexis, Erica Dasher as Madison, Nick Thurston as Luke and Drew Van Acker as Ryan on TheWB’s ‘The Lake’
Credit: Warner Bros. Television Entertainment/Dominique Borno

In roughly a month, The CW’s primetime lineup will return and viewers will, once again, by inundated by countless stories of slender, beautiful people looking for love. Until that time, though, TheWB.com hopes audiences might be willing to take a dip in “The Lake.”

The new web-series premieres on Monday, Aug. 10 with the launch of four episodes of roughly 10 minutes apiece. An additional four episodes will premiere on Aug. 17, with the story concluding on Aug. 24. 

Written by Marcie Ulin and Meredith Lavender, produced by Jordan Levin and directed by Jason Priestley, “The Lake” is set in the fictional Lake Eleanor and focuses on a group of teens (and some of their parents) experiencing the usual teen dramas — romance, popularity, family troubles — over the course of a single summer.

“I actually grew up in Chicago and grew up summering on Lake Geneva, Wisconsin and Lake Elizabeth, Wisconsin,” Lavender told reporters at a Television Critics Association press tour panel last week. “And Jordan also grew up summering in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. So there’s a lot in this that pulled from my own experiences, going off to a lake and spending time in the summer with people that you may or may not see during the rest of the year, or you may keep in contact with, but there was a special bond and friendship that formed with those people when you were at the lake in the summertime.”

Added Ulin, “Jordan and Peter Aronson brought up the idea and said, ‘Would you guys be interested in doing a show about kids who summer at a lake together?’ And we jumped at the chance because we both grew up on ‘Dawson’s’ and ‘Felicity’ and all those stories, and we loved them so much that the chance to create a show about kids going through this transitional period and that time in your life, the 12 weeks of summer, it’s an eternity and you can do so much. It’s so exciting and invigorating. But then, to also tell stories about the adults who are dealing with teenagers going through this transitional phase, that was fun.”

Although “The Lake” will have the running time of a feature film once all of the segments are available, Priestley and the production team shot the whole thing over 12 days, working between Big Bear and Los Angeles. Given that frantic pace (and a budget well below that of an episode of a network TV drama), it’s no wonder that certain corners had to be cut.

“[P]eople didn’t quite have to bring their own lunches, but we definitely worked with a much smaller crew than is generally used when shooting television,” Priestley explained. “You know, obviously we shot with two cameras all the time, so you can save a lot there just in paying people. But we were streamlined all the way from the top on down. It was an incredibly streamlined production. You know, we could load up the entire production into two little tiny vans and get wherever we needed to be. So it was very lean and mean, because we had to be.”

Although reporters peppered Priestley with the usual questions about “Beverly Hills, 90210″ and whether it was the teen soap aspect of “The Lake” that drew him, Priestley insisted that nostalgia wasn’t really on his mind.

“I try not to spend too much time looking in the rearview mirror. I try to keep moving forward,” Priestley said. “And I challenged myself by taking on this project, and working with this new medium was part of that. I think that the Internet and viewing things on the Internet is going to be part of the entertainment landscape. I don’t think it’s going to become all of the entertainment landscape, but I think it’s going to be part of it. So for those of us who make scripted content need to be able to do it, whether it’s for television, whether it’s for feature films or whether it’s for the Internet, which is going to be part of our landscape. So I think that taking on this project was a great challenge for all of us, but especially for me because I really had to learn about the limitations of the medium.”

Of course, given the cast of mostly unknowns — Samantha Cope, Devin Crittenden, Erica Dasher, Heather Ann Davis, Robb Derringer, Meredith Dilg, Elisa Donovan, Mim Drew, Amy Stewart, Nick Thurston, Mark Totty and Drew Van Acker topline — Priestley’s name and involvement are being heavily touted in promotion for “The Lake.”

“I think you look for anything to break through and cut through the clutter,” Levin acknowledged. “There is no doubt that it helps… [I]t helps to get some hooks, it helps raise some curiosity about it. But at the end of the day, I don’t think that this show’s success is going to become dependent upon it, but hopefully it becomes a magnet for certain people. And also that it extends that there’s some credibility there. You look at the people involved and the effort that we all made and that this isn’t a hobby. This is something that we really felt pretty passionate about and wanted to do. I mean, when we called Jason, it was one of those classic, ‘Hey, have we got a deal for you. There is no pay and you work your ass off; it’s on the Internet and no one may ever see it. Do you want in?’ ‘Yeah!’”

As for viewer involvement, TheWB.com is offering the series, plus a variety of ancillary and complimentary content, allowing viewers to experience as much or as little of “The Lake” as they desire.

“If you just want to watch the show, you can just watch the show,” Ulin noted. “If you are interested in the music they listen to or the text messages they sent back and forth or what’s gone on in their lives before and kind of after the show is over, you can engage in that as well. So it’s kind of choose your own level of involvement rather than choose your own adventure sort of thing.”

The first four episodes of “The Lake” are now available on TheWB.com.

Generate’s New Web Series “The Lake,” directed by Jason Priestley, Premieres Today on TheWB.com

Posted by Generate Studios on August 10th 2009 in Generate Blog

Check out the first 4 episodes of Generate’s new web series “The Lake,” directed by Jason Priestley.  If you liked the old WB shows, you’ll love this!

Click below to check it out:
TheWB.com:
http://www.thewb.com/shows/the-lake
Hulu: http://www.hulu.com/search?query=The+Lake
iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewTVShow?id=324347622

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http://www.twitter.com/generate

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Patrick Duffy & ‘A Crab’ Watch American Idol (Huffington Post)

Posted by Generate Studios on August 5th 2009 in Generate Blog


Patrick Duffy And The Crab

As some of you may remember, the last time they were together things got a little blue. The Crab claimed he, Courtney Cox and the wardrobe lady got it on at the first season wrap party for “Friends” in 1994. The discussion grew in odd ways from there and we’re pretty sure that had the video not cut off, the two would’ve ended up making out.

This episode is a little more contentious. The Crab disagrees with Patrick when he says he could be the next American idol. Shel tells Duffy he’s too old and not a very good singer, reminding us of the time the Crab dared Patrick to eat a dime and he did it. They obviously have a very deep and layered relationship that forces their insecurities and competitive sides to get the better of them on occasion, especially when the Crab feels the need to dominate Duffy. We think Dr. Phil would have a lot to say about the way they interact.

CHECK OUT THE EPISODE HERE

Article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/05/patrick-duffy-and-a-crab_n_251833.html

It’s On with Alexa Chung featuring Generate client Christian Finnegan

Posted by Generate Studios on August 4th 2009 in Generate Blog

 

7.28.09 - Alexa Chung and Christian Finnegan talk gut-wrenching celeb breakups, juicy Jonas lyrics, Madonna’s less-than-flattering recent pics and Kelly Clarkson and Beyonce’s ‘same-song’ mishap.

 

CHECK IT OUT HERE! 


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