Making a whole series and going to pitch it to them! If they don’t accept that’s fine and I’ll just post it on RU-vid since I’m growing an audience. Definitely recommend making short form versions of your show to source an audience so it’s easier to prove the validity in your writing 😋
This is my dream. I wanna be an executive producer of a cartoon. Im going to college in 2yrs but don’t know what major I should go for..I have an amazing idea and even wanna work on the pitch Bible in the next year or so. But I seriously don’t know the steps to take to get a team and make a cartoon
Recommendations: A screenwriting degree could help you make your TV pilot for the show so you can have something written down for a pitch for other producers to see
im trying to make a pilot for my show and i dont know if i will ever make it cause theres only going to be 2 voice acters me and my brother while i animate so idk how it will go 😅
2:43 - 3:00 "Where do all the animators sit ?" This is the most depressing thing about the North American television animation industry: if you want to actually ANIMATE you're mostly out of luck. Almost all animation production work gets shipped out to cheap labor sweatshops overseas. (with rare exceptions). In most animated shows the animation of the show is the least interesting and least creative aspect of the show. And everyone in the industry just assumes this is normal and it's all fine, this is "just the way things are". (which as a sort of gaslighting is understood as: "and it's always been that way and there's no way to change it." Most young artists working in the TV animation industry have never known any other way.) --- 3:21- 3:23 : _"a vast majority of animation production since the 1960's has been outsourced"_ That's not true. In the 1960's , aside from a few smaller studios like Jay Ward Productions sending work to Mexico, animated shows made for American television networks were made in the U.S.A. Most runaway production (off-shoring) started in the late 1970's , but didn't really take off until the 1980's. There were strikes by the animation union over this issue in 1979 (temporary victory for the union) and again in 1982. In the 1982 strike the union lost. After 1982 is when off-shoring really started in a big way. Before the early- to -mid 1980's animation was done in-house at large TV animation studios like Hanna-Barbera , Filmation, Depatie-Freleng. Filmation hung on the longest , producing all their animation in-house until the studio shut down production in 1987 .
Like, what's the best app to animate, how do I make frames more uniform and less wobbly, where do I get good microphones and voice changers, and is it even possible to do it myself?????? 😐
@@skamosthedestroyerofworlds It's possible to do it by yourself, you'll just have to either compromise on animation quality or each episode will take years to create. Making the frames more uniform and less wobbly will depend on your skills as an artist. HyperX SoloCast is also a pretty good budget microphone.
My Animatied TV Show will be about me and my sister having adventures with our friends,family and everything the series will be on Nickelodeon Summer 2023 (Hopefully)
I swear I have this awesome idea for a tv show and I really want it to become a reality because I’ve been making drawing of the characters everywhere I can and I think it could be big, but I don’t know how to execute it. And I’m 13, so I have no idea how to go about any of this. Perhaps I’ll remember this when I’m older.