From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Channel 101 |
 |
| Launched |
2002 |
| Slogan |
The unavoidable future of entertainment |
| Formerly called |
Super Midnight Movie Show |
| Website |
channel101.com |
Channel 101 is a non-profit[1] short
film festival (usually monthly) in Los Angeles, which also has a sister
festival in NYC, Channel 101: NY. Channel 101 is a creation
of Dan Harmon and Rob Schrab in which
participants submit a short film in the format of a pilot
under five minutes in length. The event is structured such that a
panel of previously successful submitters choose what pilots are
shown, and a live audience decides which pilots continue as a
series for the next screening in much the same way TV programs are
rated and managed. According to the Channel 101 website, “Channel
101 is a chance to sit in the worn-out chair of the fat network
exec, drunk on the blood of lowly artists whose right to exist is
given in exchange for their ability to nourish...You run the
network. You pick the programming.”[2]
Concept
Roughly once a month, a screening for Channel 101 occurs at the
Cinespace theater in Los
Angeles, with (usually) ten shorts being screened. At the
screening, the audience votes on which pilots they would like to
see return. The top five shows are entered into the “prime time”
slots on the Channel 101 website, and get to make a follow-up
episode for the next screening. This process continues with new
“episodes” being shown at each screening until one fails to make
the top five, at which point the series is “cancelled.” Some
successful shows also can choose to be voluntarily be cancelled by
running over five minutes, (The first to do so being Time Belt), disqualifying
the show from continuing and leaving one last un-voted episode.
Shows that fail to make the prime time spot are known as “failed
pilots.” An added benefit of having a prime time series is that
prime time directors are part of the panel that decides which five
new pilots will be shown alongside the five established shows from
the previous screening. Shows that fail to make the screenings are
known as “rejected pilots.” Each calendar year of the festival is
referred to as a “season,” comprising of 10 screenings, due to
there being no December screening, plus month break “to allow the
creators to rest” between spring/summer and the November screening,
which is the yearly awards show (The Incredibly Prestigious
Achievement Award or “Channy,” so named as a parody of Emmy).
Other rules have been tried out, most notably the “Chauncey”
(named after director Chris Chauncey, the first to invoke the
rule), wherein a director could overrule the voting panel and force
their pilot to be screened, but the audience had the option of
stopping the film at any time. Introduced in October 2003, it was
done away with in November 2005 due to the popularity of the
festival making it difficult for the honor system to be viable.[3] Only
one Chauncey ever made prime time (Dick Richards: Private
Dick).
History
The idea for Channel 101 began in 2001, when Schrab invited
several friends over for a screening of Jaws 4, but challenged
them to bring a short film predicting what would happen in the
movie.[4] In
2002, three more short film challenges were issued, but the group
of viewers outgrew Schrab’s living room. Instead, the screening was
moved to the backroom of an LA nightclub. Additionally, friends of
friends of the filmmakers were beginning to ask what this
“festival” was called and how they could enter. In 2003, Schrab and
Harmon named their creation the Super Midnight Movie Show and
decided on a monthly screening and a five minute format. However,
they quickly realized that once the show started growing, it would
only be a matter of time before a large number of low-quality
submissions were entered, and filmmakers would need to be turned
away for time constraints. They decided to adopt a TV network-like
ratings model where the audience votes on which films they like,
and popular filmmakers were allowed to screen more films
accordingly. In 2004, a pilot for a reality show about Channel 101
and its filmmakers was shopped to FX Networks, but was
eventually passed on. [3] A sketch comedy show
based on the format of Channel 101 and executive-produced by Harmon
and Schrab aired on VH1. [4] The show was
called Acceptable.TV and it began airing 23
March 2007.
The success of Channel 101 has inspired a similar film festival
in New York,
Channel 101:NY.
Notable
shows
- Classroom (TV series)—Longest-running prime
time show (13 episodes total); parody of after-school specials
- Chad Vader—A popular video series
that was created for Channel 101, but was cancelled after only two
episodes. The creators, Matt Sloan and Aaron Yonda, went on to
continue the series, and it became an extremely popular series on
youtube where it was "featured" multiple times.
- The
'Bu—Second-longest-running prime time show (11
episodes); also known for being filmed with new casts and crew for
the last three episodes. The show was created by The Lonely
Island.
- Computerman (TV
series)—Starring Jack Black as a
cross-breed of a man’s DNA and his
home computer.
- Brently and Mrs. Gould-Starring Brently
Heilbron and his 85 year old sidekick, Mrs. Gould (played by
Jean Farber).
- Call Me Cobra—Starring Drew Carey, a show about a man who is
mistaken for a professional killer, but takes the job for the
money.
- House of Cosbys—About a man
who clones Bill Cosby several times over.
- Laser Fart—Long-running series starring Dan
Harmon, noted for guest-starring Jack Black.
- Time
Belt—Previously held the record for longest-running
prime-time show; the show was an homage to Quantum Leap and
guest-starred Paget Brewster. The show was created by
Chris
Tallman.
- Kicked in the
Nuts!—Starring Family Guy writer/co-star Mike Henry (television writer/producer). A
Candid
Camera parody that consists of an orange-haired man
kicking men in the testicles, later to their delight when he
tells them that they are on TV. Made reference to on the Family
Guy episode “The
Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire.”
- Yacht Rock—Credited for launching
a revival of “smooth music” in popular culture.
- Channel 101: The Musical—Fully orchestrated
Broadway style musical featuring Sarah Silverman and Happy Days' Donny
Most.
- Most Extraordinary Space
Investigations—Starring Dan Harmon, Sevan Najarian, Justin
Roiland and Sarah Silverman. Noted for intentional
mistakes, and purposely performing notable errors.
- Twigger's Holiday—Colorful Musical about a kid
growing up. Starring Rob
Schrab.
- Shitbuster—Holds the record for most
downloaded failed pilot. A revived short series starring Chris
Romano as the original Shitbuster ran for 3 episodes.
- The Jogger—Cancelled pilot about a jogger
solving problems, it garned praise for the choreography and was
later featured in Entertainment Weekly. The
show later had its rights picked up by a production
company. [5]
- The Wright Stuff—Starring Ethan Phillips as
President Teddy Roosevelt. Created by Ford
Austin & Scott Ingalls. Became the highest budgeted Channel 101
series at $5000 per episode.
- I Love Vaginas—The creators, at age 14, were
the youngest ever to make it to the Channel 101 screening.
- The Serious Businessman—This show’s challenge
to its rejection by the voting panel created the "Chauncey"
system.
- Sockbaby—Zero-budget martial arts
from Doug
TenNapel, the creator of Earthworm Jim.
- Cautionary Tales of Swords—Trip Fisk (Michael
Ashe) tries warning the world of the dangers of sword ownership,
and later, decides to fight the problem himself. Created by Drew
Hancock.
- Return to Supermans—A send-up of Turkish
versions of American cinema (such as Turkish Star
Wars). Created by Aaron Moles. Featured on G4's Attack of the Show
- Ultraforce—3 episode sci-fi action
spectacular created by Jeremy Carter and Matt Gourley of the Superego
Podcast. It featured Derek Mears, Jeff Davis and Chris Tallman.
- Planet
Unicorn - Fictional stories revolve around three
talking unicorns - Feathers, Cadillac and Tom Cruise - who were
created by an 8 year-old gay boy named Shannon.
- Ikea Heights - A melodrama shot entirely in
the Burbank California Ikea Store without the store knowing. Featured in the LA
Times.
Notable
personalities
- Jack Black: Computerman, Time Belt, Laser
Fart, Exposure, Water and Power
- Drew Carey:
Call Me Cobra, Yacht Rock
- Sarah Chalke:
The 'Bu
- Jeff Davis: Laser Fart, House
of Cosbys, Ultraforce
- Flavor Flav:
Six Months to Live
- Kato Kaelin:
Call Me Cobra
- Jason Lee: Yacht
Rock
- Bob Odenkirk:
Your Magic Touched Me: Nights
- Sarah
Silverman: MESI, Channel 101: The
Musical
- David
Faustino: Skateboardpunks, The Amazing
Christopher
- Ethan
Phillips: The Wright Stuff
- The
Lonely Island: The 'Bu, ITV Countdown
- Jimmy Kimmel:
MESI
- Paget
Brewster: Time Belt
- Chris
Tallman: Time Belt, The Wright Stuff,
Ultraforce
- Donny Most: Channel 101: The
Musical
- Derek Mears:
Nightstalkers, Ultraforce, My Rockstar,
Vengeance
- Chevy Chase:
Water and Power
- Joel McHale:
Water and Power
- John Oliver:
Water and Power
- Paul F.
Tompkins: Sunday Detective Film Theater
- Sandeep
Parikh: Raptor, Blood Oath of Three Men and a
Baby.
- Felicia Day:
Blood Oath of Three Men and a Baby.
- Brian Posehn:
Call Me Cobra
- Steve Agee:
Yacht Rock, Making Mistakes, Wade and Eric
sold a Movie
- Fred Stoller:
Groove Fighters, 2 Girls 1 Cup The Show,
Tales From Railroad Times
- Tim
Heidecker: House of Cosbys, Documentary: The
Series, My 2 Fathers
- Eric
Wareheim: My 2 Fathers
- Aziz Ansari:
Water and Power
See also
References
External
links