Saturday, September 15, 2007

Kizzy Shoemaker


Age ............... 10
Gender .......... Female
Before Fall: .... Student
After Fall: ....... ???


5th grader in accelerated classes. Daughter of Russell and Janelle Shoemaker. Older and wiser than her years imply. Her dreams may prove to be very important to Russell's quest.

Episode 29: A Quiet Place


A surreal encounter before Russ is to be burned alive before The Fall, before everything got overwhelming, Russ would go to a quiet place ... a lakeside park, or the best place, home ... this was different, he was home, but he did not know how he got there ... what do you want from me, why are you doing this ... it was an accident, I did not mean to ... what was an accident, tell me .... Russ was not sure if he was alive or dead ... there was a weird dream logic to everything, but this was unlike any dream he ever had ... Russ sees his wife, smells the coffee ... I've been waiting for you Russ, is this really happening, nobody knows for sure ... Kizzy had that nightmare again, the one when you go to work and never come home ... Russ explained that he was trying to get home, but three thousand miles ... it's a long way, even longer when people are hunting you ... Russ sees his daughter, she doesn't understand, she's just a child ... Russ wants to be a better father, a better husband ... I forgive you Russ, you are doing the best you can, you need to rest ... I told her there was no time, told her I would walk faster ... no more stops, just straight home, take your time, take your time Russ ... his wife is holding the Ferrel Boys hand and floating up into the ceiling ... there are some that need you more than us ... then he found himself back at the NY hotel, just before The Fall ... 5:16am one minute before The Fall ... a crazy thought crossed his mind, that he had dreamed the whole thing ... a calm came over Russ

AfterWorld

If you like Sci Fi stuff. theres a series on youtube, myspace tv ( myspace tv is more ahead with one ep a day m-f) and budtv.com ( the furthest ahead but asks for alot of weird stuff to register). Supposedly its been done on the sci fi channel but its being slowly released on the web now. Art style reminds me of silent hill one cut scenes.

as posted on KIMO-Therapy blog

Can MySpaceTV Attract The Views To Lure Ad Dollars?

TO DELIVER ON ITS PROMISE of highly engaging, professionally produced programming, MySpace has signed Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick, the creators of "My So-Called Life" and "thirtysomething," to produce a new series--exclusively, at first--for MySpaceTV.

The Emmy-winning producers have agreed to create 36 eight-minute episodes of a series titled "quarterlife," which will debut Nov. 11 on MySpaceTV.com, and focuses on six creative 20-somethings with tendencies toward highly revealing video blogging.

The deal represents an ongoing effort by MySpace--still the most popular social networking site online--to attract more ad dollars with sponsor-friendly programming.

"What MySpace has to deal with right now is a ton of inventory that advertisers don't find very useful," said JupiterResearch analyst Emily Riley in reference to the site's sea of member pages.

To foster the sort of inventory that any brand would love to sponsor, MySpace this summer launched MySpaceTV as a platform for longer-form and professionally produced content. Shortly after, it released the first episodes of "Afterworld," an original Web series produced by Santa Monica-based Electric Farm Entertainment.

Also, just this week, MySpace reached a deal to carry content from My Damn Channel, the digital production studio just launched by former MTV and CBS Radio executive Rob Barnett. My Damn Channel is getting its own branded channel on MySpace and MySpaceTV, featuring original work from comedians like Andy Milonakis and Harry Shearer, filmmaker David Wain and music producer Don Was.

Yet, MySpace appears to be fighting an uphill battle in its effort to change the way consumers use its site. According to Jupiter, while about a third of all Web users seek out social sites, only 2.8% of that third go to view professionally produced videos.

"The experience is still largely about communication," said Riley.

Indeed, despite a $3 million budget, Afterworld has yet to surpass 500,000 views on MySpace. That stands in stark contrast to the more than 8 million views of "Prom Queen," which is produced by former Walt Disney head Michael Eisner's Tornante Co.

Still, online video remains a hot business. Three out of every four U.S. Web users viewed online clips in July, according to comScore, while they averaged three hours of viewing during the month.

Including YouTube streams, Google dominated the field with 2.5 billion in July, followed by Yahoo with 390 million streams, and MySpace parent Fox Interactive Media with 298 million streams that month.

MySpace is not unwise to be using its platform as an entertainment hub, added Riley, as its highly connected community is fertile ground for a show's popularity to spread like wildfire.

"If they do find the right content for their audience, it would probably spread very quickly."

Gavin O'Malley can be reached at gavin@mediapost.com

as posted on MediaPost

Friday, September 14, 2007

Epsidode 29: missing ...

... Episode 29 has not made it onto the website yet, the journal has been updated but is one location behind still, it would be nice if the episodes could be put on the site each day, and the journal was updated to correspond with the episode, but oh well we shall just have to wait ... from watching the episode on Foxtel last night ... I can say that Russ seems to be in some sort of dream state, he visits his wife, she tells him his daughter has been having a dream about him going to work and not coming home, he then finds himself back at the hotel in New York just before The Fall, he starts to wonder if this is not some sort of dream ...

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Ferrel Boy


Age ............... 9
Gender .......... Male
Before Fall: .... Unknown
After Fall: ....... Unknown


A mysterious boy that appears before Russell several times on his journey. A figment of Shoemakers imagination... or a real boy?

Episode 28: Looking Glass


Russ undergoes a mind-altering experience in the cave didn't have much time left, the next fireball was in less than 10 minutes ... he knew that if he did not get that boy out, they would both be fried ... I'm sorry it's all my fault, he had to stop running away ... everything started going screwy, the past and the present were all tangled up ... Russ was seeing the tribe take cover from some cataclysm, thousands of years ago ... possibly an earlier Fall ... the tribe believed the Serpent Mound would transport them, to another planet ... transportation of their souls to the Afterworld ... Russ figures time had run out and that the fireball had gone off, Russ appears to be falling ... his body was tingling and hot, but at least he was still alive ... or was he

Episode 27: Subterranean


A ferrel boy leads Russ on a chase beneath the Serpent Mound Everybody wants salvation, deliverance from our suffering ... some survivors believe that God or aliens were actually watching over us ... question was could we really expect them to save us ... no one new the child, no one was willing to take responsibility for the child ... Jeff and Russ venture into the cave, less than twenty minutes before the next fireball ... Draco theory? the area was carbon dated to around 5000 years, same as Stonehenge and the Great Giza Pyramid ... all three structures shared similar astronomical alignments ... this place ain't safe Russ ... was it a coincidence, or were all three structures somehow connected ... maybe even built for the same reason, sorry man but I'm going back ... something kept Russ going deeper into that cave, he had a feeling that the boy would lead him to some great revelation

Episode 26: 47 Minutes


Russ journeys to the Serpent Mound in Southern Ohio Where were you when it happened, they were both asleep, Jeff was with his secretary ... Jeff liked this new world better, liked the freedom ... no idiot boss, no nagging wife, no taxes ... Jeff was travelling with someone else but she did not make it thru one of the toll gates popping up on the Freeways ... the snake mound and the pilgrims, like an outdoor rage ... fireballs that went off every 47 minutes, with a very high electromagnetic discharge, that made you feel high for the next few minutes ... sacrifice your possessions to the fireball cave, Jeff was happy to give up his possessions but Russ, after escaping Eden, was wary of religious cults ... Russ figured he would just move on in the morning, you were in a hotel, asleep, you dont know what happened, I do ... the boy ran off into the cave, another fireball was due soon!

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

... on the Forums

Wrao, Bolt Vanderhuge, Join Date: May 2004
Location: "The Golden State. I'm a proud resident, and when I'm old and gray, I will still represent"

...Recently, while I was on youtube watching people fall down and/or get hit in the groin by an assortment of objects, I stumbled up a curiosity.

a 130 episode sci-fi miniseries called Afterworld. Apparently it has been airing on Sci-fi channel, but I don't really watch TV, so I was unaware of that. Beyond that, the primary distribution seems to be via youtube. The series views like a graphic novel. Rendered cgi stills, brought to life by occasional drops of animation, Ken Burns zooms and other such effects.

It tells a narrative of this fellow named Russel who wakes up one day to find that New York city is completely devoid of human life, and all electronic devices have stopped working.

I watched the first 5 episodes before it began to strike me as some sort of Christian fundamentalist propaganda, which made the next few episodes that much more difficult to stay interested in. But, in later episodes, the story did begin to become more multifaceted than that, although biblical overtones still linger in each episode. So far only 18 episodes have been released, but they are releasing a new episode every day until the entire 130 have been released. Each episode is maybe 3 minutes long, so the entire series is just over 6 hours in length.

I don't know if it can keep my interest, but I thought I'd share nonetheless, since it is a curious piece of media, and end-of-the-world science fiction is always fun.

as posted on AppleNova Forum

Jeff Kettleman


Age ............... 41
Gender .......... Male
Before Fall: .... Insurance
After Fall: ....... Hedonist


A salesman who lived most of his life on the road. To him. The Fall is a blessing that affords him the life he wants. Will Jeff ever rise above his selfish instincts to redeem his behavious?

Episode 25: The First Horseman


On the road again, Russ discovers he's being followed Russ realizes that he was unprepared for his journey, if he had known what the trip demanded of him, let's just say his ignorance was a virtue ... it took skill and wits to survive, Russ thought he did not have these ... he was losing confidence that he would make it home, he decided to change his image ... the first horseman appears ... he figured that if he looked like a survivor, others would not mess with him ... he tries on various clothing, but unfortunately the latest outdoor clothing won't save your life, the first horseman makes his appearance ... an assassin, an arrow, a friend? ... Russ makes it up to the roof, the first horseman follows ... circumstances beyond your control, show your strengths and reveal your weaknesses ... the horseman falls into the hole in the roof, Russ tries to save him ... they will send the others, the horseman falls ... Russ was not much of a shopper, but on that trip he found something, that he did not want to admit, a friend, a traveling companion ... he went south with Jeff, to throw off the horsemen, for a cosmic event

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

website catching up ...

... I've been assured by several sources that the problems with the website are being attended to, Epsidoes 25, 26 and 27 are now up and playing, I will add these to my blog as soon as I have the time ...

and in case you missed the comment on the last post ...


Dear SCI FI viewers,


We apologise if you have experienced any problems with viewing recent Afterworld episodes on scifitv.com.au. We have recently noticed that there has been issues with the server because of the amount of traffic to the Afterworld site. At present we are working to improve the speed of the downloads to ensure an episode is available every weekday for you to view.

Please note that a new episode is available every weekday at 7pm on www.scifitv.com.au/afterworld/ and we do not upload Afterworld episodes on the weekend.

Once again we apologise for the inconvenience and we are working to ensure your Afterworld experience is not interrupted and is running on time.

Please continue to write on the word-wall posting your feedback to ensure the Afterworld experience is shared within the SCI FI community and beyond!

Enjoy the Show!
The SCI FI Team

Episode 26: still to come ...

Episode 25 is still not playable on the website, and Episode 26 has not even made an appearance, this really is getting beyond a joke, if Afterworld want to gain fans downunder they need to sort this issue out, yes it is Sony and SciFi Australia's problem but who is going to fix it, meanwhile the fan base downunder is shrinking ...

Monday, September 10, 2007

Brave New World

The end of the world is a grand subject for online auteurs. Web videos —like the shorts on YouTube — are at once futuristic and crude.

It's no wonder, then, that a brave-new-world entity called MySpace TV has made tracks in online television with Afterworld, a $3 million conspiracy story that begins when a chumpy Seattle ad executive, in New York on business, wakes up to find that all but 1 per cent of the nation's population has vaporized. Gone, too, is all AC-powered technology. No cellphones. No BlackBerrys. No Internet.

The cause of the Afterworld calamity seems to be atomic, as a Japanese sage tells the hypersquare ad guy, Russell Shoemaker, that the phenomena in burnt-out New York remind him of Hiroshima.

Shoemaker will spend the balance of the 130-episode series on a vision quest, crossing the country using bootlegged transportation, in an effort to find his wife and child, dead or alive, in Seattle.

Shoemaker is represented in stiff graphics set against marbled backdrops that combine animation and live-action. In a tough-guy voice-over, he is not shy with gumshoe phrasing and clichés.

"Fourteen days later, the city was like a cemetery. Kind of place you didn't want to be at night. Felt like I was trapped in one of those nightmares you can't wake up from."

The production company for Afterworld is made up of television veterans based in Santa Monica, Calif. Maybe writing for a lantern-jawed character who wakes up in a crepuscular Manhattan brought out the Dashiell Hammett in the team.

In any case, this throwback talk serves to make the new medium accessible to viewers unfamiliar with video games and MySpace, an older audience still navigating the transition from CSI or even detective novels to online sci-fi.

"I'd watched enough TV to know that even the smallest clues were important," Shoemaker tells the audience, helpfully, as he finds some footprints in his destroyed hotel. "Nice to have my fascination with mysteries finally pay off."

When this mannered speech breaks — like a fever — what fills its place is sometimes no less comical. Some of Shoemaker's advertiser-friendly narration is way too contempo-casual for what ought to be an existential walkabout on a par with Camus, or at least

"Battlestar Galactica." As Shoemaker surveys the grimmest urban landscape imaginable, believing the world has come to an end, he muses: "I'd never had a problem with depression before, but I knew people who did. And there were things I could take to help."

At another point, he contemplates his strengths, trying to determine whether he's up to the task of surviving alone, crossing the scorched and ruined country.

He remembers that he was good at "spitballing" in advertising meetings and determines that his odds are decent.

In spite of infelicitous writing, Afterworld cruises along.

Each episode lasts two or three minutes and runs free of credit sequences or advertising if you watch on the generally well-oiled afterworld.tv, although on My Space, ads, including the banner type, constantly vie for attention.

What's best about it is the way it looks: charcoal, hazy, painterly, like nothing on television. To say the animation is rudimentary is an overstatement.

Often, when Shoemaker is shown moving from, say, the bottom of an escalator to the top, we see only two still images, faintly interlaced with tracers, as if the action were witnessed in a sleepy, almost drugged, blink.

This is not Disney animation. It's more like a strange series of digitally manipulated photographs. Afterworld is a comic book. It has a far-fetched story, frankly clichéd speech, a solitary hero, Marvel-style foreshortening and images that hardly move.

as posted on TeleExpress

Two-minute warning


A web and mobile sci-fi series is heralding the multi-platform era, reports Peter Vincent.
The hype surrounding Afterworld, an animated sci-fi series produced specifically for mobiles and the internet, is that it is another signpost to the death of "appointment" TV viewing.

Afterworld tells the story of Russell Shoemaker, a thirtysomething adman who wakes up in a New York hotel to find that 99 per cent of the population has vanished. The show follows him dealing with loneliness, trying to find out what happened to his family and struggling to survive. But what's really different about it is that each episode is between two and three minutes long - primarily because that's all you can easily download to a mobile (and presumably because that's about all you can handle watching on a handset).

"I think TV and traditional forms of entertainment are turning into dinosaurs," says Adam Sigel, a producer and writer on Afterworld.

"People want content when they want it; it's a whole new paradigm. Appointment TV viewing is over.

"Hundreds of thousands of people only use their TVs to watch movies when they want. They live on the internet and they are constantly in transit, so they want content on their mobiles. If Hollywood doesn't start to deliver to their audience in the way they want to access it, they will end up in the same boat as the music industry.

"The technology has been created, people love using it and it's waiting to be filled. A show like Afterworld does not assume the audience is sitting there watching at the same time as everyone else. Whoever fills this technology best will do very very well."

Afterworld is the brainchild of Electric Farm Entertainment's Brent Friedman (a writer on Dark Skies, Mortal Kombat 2) and Emmy-nominated producer Stan Rogow (Lizzie McGuire). The show premiered on YouTube in March and, when it had been watched 500,000 times, Sony Pictures International swooped, snapping up the international television, mobile, internet and gaming rights. It then halted the show's run so it could negotiate dozens of global deals.

Sony relaunched Afterworld last month in several countries and the Australian re-release showed the enormous scope of convergent content. The first of 130 episodes "premiered" on the Sci Fi channel on Foxtel, BigPond TV on Telstra's Next G network and on the internet, at myspace.com/scifitv. A new episode will air nightly at 7.30pm, with a half-hour compilation every second Wednesday. But Afterworld can be watched at any time on mobiles and the internet. Serious sci-fi buffs can check extra content that won't appear anywhere else, such as journal entries, wallpapers and podcasts, from http://www.scifitv.com.au. Sony is also developing a game based on the show, with a release planned for March.

as posted on TheAge

Sunday, September 9, 2007

Episode 25: The First Horseman

On the road again, Russ discovers he's being followed unfortunately this episode is loading but not playing on the website ...

Episode 24: Mr Shoemaker goes to Ohio


Getting sicker, Russ makes a plea for peace several days had passed since Russ was bitten, he was feeling worse by the minute ... people willing to die over something, don't just give medicine away ... the closest hospital was 20 miles away, Russ knew that he would be hard pressed just to make it out of town ... but that's not why he turned back, this time he convinced himself that it was his problem ... STOP what the hell is wrong with you people, it dosn't matter who built this town, all that matters is who is going to rebuild it ... because that is all our responsibility now, putting the world back together, one town at a time ... the world has changed and we have to change with it ... like it or not we all have something in common now, we are all victims of the past, and we have to let go ... the rifles were put down, he got his medicine, and patched the town, they admitted they were wrong ... Russ faith in humanity had been restored again ... the horesman in the distance

Intermission: Our Forums are very Basic


I'm sure fans would agree that the standard of the our Forums for Afterworld are very poor ... you cannot view or change your profile, no signatures or avatars, users appear to be online all the time, you cannot change your password, in fact all you can do is view the posts, start new threads and edit your previous posts, you can't tell how many users exist or interact with them in any way, no personal messaging, compared to the standard of the US WordWall, again I don't understand why the different countries are being split into separate websites, it only seems to limit the fan base, come on Afterworld/Sony lift your game, the website has constant issues, we still can't view Episode 25 and it seems to be updated irregularly ... if you want to keep your fan base, you need to keep us fed, or is it that technology is the problem, I think not!

Episode 23: Messenger


The origin of the Aurora factions are revealed Russ was sent to deliver a message to the Tourist's, at least that's what he thought ... the message told them that Mark was dead, it's OK he is not a native, The Tourists were half a dozen strong like the Natives, but they had lost their leader Mark ... Russ needed medicine, the underlying tension was brought to the surface by The Fall, the Natives snatched up all the food, and the medicine was actually worth stockpiling ... every week an exchange was made, fresh food for medicine ... trade broke down, and a boy paid the price, one dose of medication would of saved his life ... the basketball was the message, an eye for an eye ... but the Tourist's were declaring war

Episode 22: In Short Supply


Russ is taken prisoner by survivors holed up in a mega-store no matter how many times he saw it, death reminded him of his own mortality ... hand up, I don't want to hurt you ... bulk stores and consumerism, why buy one toothbrush when you can get 10 for the price of 6 ... truth is Russ was partially to blame, the public was programmed to consume by advertising ... by people like Russ, and now scarcity drove some people to turn this mega barn into a stronghold ... enough to feed a small army, not just can goods, they had a dry ice system to keep food, well beyond Delondre's ice system ... had he not just witnessed an killing he would of been more impressed ... they called themselves the Town Council, born bred and raised in Aurora for generations ... blue collar to the bone, they assumed that Russ was with Mark, the one that had been shot ... your a stinking Tourist, he tried to explain that he did not know Mark, and that he was just looking for medicine ... but medicine was in short supply, they offered food and shelter for the night, under supervision ... he was brought news, that the Town Council would lead him to medicine, if he helped them, sounded like a fair plan, she did not mean to kill Mark, you have to tell them that ... if Russ wanted medicine, he had to deliver a package for the Town Council, across town to the Tourists ... he new he was walking into trouble, but he could hardly walk, he did not have much choice

Episode 21: Aurora


Seeking medicine, Russ finds a suburb on the brink of war Luther and Russ start to travel together, it made sense, safety in numbers ... but I convinced Luther that they should split up, catching Russ was JD's number one priority, to regain the Polaroid ... Hope you find what you are looking for, Russ wanted a lighter load, he did not want to be responsible for someone else, did not need others problems ... he stayed out of sight, put on blinders and focused on his goal ... he was still living off the dregs of civilization, but he started to enjoy a certain freedom ... catching up with reading, no deadlines or distractions, Russ was finally catching up, he was a simulating, but he still had hard lessons to learn, like never leaving food uncovered ... The Fall didn't seem to have any effect on animals, but with so few people around, they become bolder ... Russ is bitten by the raccoon, he had never had rabis before, did not know if his wound was infected ... Russ could not risk it, he need help, unfortunately the first place he came to was a ghost town ... if you thought health care was bad before the fall, imagine when all the medicine ran out ... in Aurora someone had cornered the market in bandages and medication known to man ... he gets caught up in someone else's problems, witness a man being shot going over a fence