Premiere, Commentary, Updates

Alright, let's write a fucking blog update here. I know, you guys are just fucking drowning in them, but I thought "What the hell, I'll pile on another one." Check out the premiere episode of Arby 'n' the Chief's eighth season below, if you haven't already.

Premiere: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuoJf2wn_vk

And recently uploaded is the director's commentary for the episode, over three hours of my fucking voice. Try not to smash your head off the fucking ceiling with all your leaping for joy.

Commentary (Part One): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e9LDhjXDfpE

Commentary (Part Two): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdP2MQWuA_E

Oh boy. It's taking a lot longer to crank these out than I said earlier, isn't it? I sure look great right now. Particularly since I've started Patreon -- I know a bunch of people think I'm fucking Scrooge McDuck over here diving head first into a big bath of the pledges I'm pulling in each month and sitting on my ass.

The premiere's nearly the length of a feature fim and the next episode's looking to be at least forty minutes. I stew over every word of these monster scripts. Often I rewrite the whole fucking thing. I've been happy with the writing I've been producing, but I need that time to stew and make it as good as I can.

Haven't heard many complaints about the premiere except for the run-time length. Look, guys -- I was a mad dog on a leash with Machinima at least in terms of video length, and now the leash is gone. That might not be a good thing. The best I can do is go with what feels right to me. You wanna know what completely unrestricted Arby 'n' the Chief content looks like? This is it. I'm not saying I won't get better with tightening up my scripts -- I hope I do -- but for now I like what I'm putting out. Either you like it or you don't. All I know is if I do my best at producing content I'd like to watch, my fans will be along for the ride. If you don't like the show, please don't pledge to me. Remember as well that pledges can be lowered or revoked at any time, and I encourage backers to do so if they feel the waits between episodes are too long. Let's face it, they are too long -- but this is the nature of a program with a one-man crew. A single point of effort and failure in every phase of the filmmaking process. On a real show and not some half-assed bullshit like this I'd be a part of a team, probably just writing. Once a script got handed off I'd already be working on the next one, the rest of the team would turn the script into a film. Sometimes I wish that were the case. I wish there were somebody I could trust unquestioningly with the scripts I write to produce and cut the footage to look exactly the way I want it, but I don't think that person exists. The show's too personal. The show is me, essentially. Arbiter and Chief are just the two halves of my brain constantly at war. An essential part of the show I think is that it has a unique voice, mine, whether I'm right or wrong. A voice just doesn't come out through audio either -- the voice of a show comes from the ideas embedded in the script, the rhythm of dialogue, the use of swearing, the framing of the shots, the way they're cut and what all those imply. Ever wonder why Arby 'n' the Chief in LA didn't quite land? Wasn't the team on their end's fault, either. It wasn't their show. This sounds arrogant as shit, but there's subtle nuances to the way I shoot the gameplay and live action to imply small details or emphasize certain emotional beats. The person to blame would be the executive who decided on it being made, but I'm not here to point fingers.

Where the fuck was I?

Episode two's coming along nicely. The process has been admittedly slow, but very smooth. Cranking the premiere out taught and re-taught me a few lessons. I've managed to avoid many headaches. People always ask me for a release date, but I hate giving one because I'm always so ridiculously fucking off the mark. I'll say it'll come out in January and it won't come out until December the year after. The reason I tend to avoid announcing release dates is because I hope you'll just kinda forget about the show a little bit, let me do my thing, and when I'm finished an episode and it's uploaded it's a nice surprise for everybody.

So, where am I at on the episode exactly? I felt the script needed a lot of fleshing out, but it's done. It's actually fifty pages long now, so the episode might end up being in fact that many minutes long rather than just forty. The general rule of thumb with scripts is that one page equates to one minute of running time -- at least with film, usually not animation, which is much quicker paced. Mine's half animation, but because I tend to hold on shots for so fucking long like an asshole, the one page, one minute rule tends to prove true in my case.

So, the script's finalized. After that I re-typed all the dialogue phonetically in my emulated version of Windows XP. About five or six hundred individual lines of dialogue. I know people hate me sometimes for writing too much dialogue, but trust me -- in that moment I just mentioned, nobody fucking hates me more than me. I then recorded all those lines into a master audio file. Then I cut all of those lines individually, with in and out points, and saved them as individual files. Then I imported all those dialogue line files into Premiere and laid them all out in separate sequences, arranging them in order of utterance in the story. Then I placed five or six hundred individual title slates one at a time by hand over every line of dialogue -- these are the leads' green and purple subtitles which have become an essential visual element of the show now. Then I double-clicked every one of those subtitle slates and re-typed all the dialogue again for people to read. Then I linked each of the subtitles with its corresponding audio file one at a time following a quality assurance pass to make sure everything was written correctly. Takes some time, but things get shifted around a lot on the timeline when I work, and sometimes when I click and drag either the dialogue or subtitle clips, it won't drag the other corresponding thing and I get fucked over later on, just when I think everything's going great.

After spending so much time writing the scripts and listening to the dialogue, thinking in my head about how it's paced, it becomes much easier for me to visualize exactly how I want to shoot it, so I'll usually shoot towards the end. This morning I woke up, got breakfast, wrote, worked on the script for episode three (which is already fully outlined and semi-completed, I'm getting faster), went home, shot and edited the first scene of the episode, spent about five hours on that, and now I'm out grabbing a coffee writing this and working on the script for episode three again.

You have any idea how fucking tedious all that voice editing shit is? Takes fucking days, and the dialogue's only one aspect of the audio -- the overall sound design and leveling is a whole other fucking thing. I don't do the dialogue first because I enjoy it, I do it because it's such a big fucking pain in the ass and I prefer to have it completely out of the way by the time I'm cutting footage so I can actually enjoy piecing the episode together. Because I have to usually keep my ears tuned into the work, I'm usually working in silence throughout all that shit, too. It's fucking boring. I count the seconds for the little windows of work throughout which I don't need to have my hearing ready so I can throw on a podcast in the background. I'm usually listening to The Biggest Problem in the Universe or Bill Burr's Monday Morning Podcast, they keep me in good spirits.

To reiterate, all the ugly work on episode two is done, and now I'm just smoothly shooting and cutting one scene after another. Again, I don't want to give you a date until I'm entirely confident in that date -- but it's not far away. I'll likely be putting another few hours in when I get back to the house tonight.

Nobody's sent me any messages for the past few days saying I'm a piece of shit for raking in and sitting on everyone's Patreon money, so thank you for that. It's hard enough trying to stay in a good mood every fucking day without getting messages like that, it actually hurts and ironically just ends up slowing down the production process because it puts me in a bad fucking mood. The happier I am the faster these episodes will come out, that's a fact -- and I'm as dedicated to it as I ever have been.

I'm fully aware how slow the episodes are moving right now in terms of story, but keep in mind this first eight episode arc of the season is like its own little movie with three acts and a climax. The first episodes are all set-up. Come episode six, seven and eight, shit's gonna fly off the rails. I'm trying to make all acts of the season like that -- stretches of story that stand on their own.

Alright, fuck it -- that's it for now, I think I've written enough. Thanks so much everybody for your continued support and donations, you're all really saving my ass and I'm trying to deliver the best quality product to you in return, one that'll hopefully stand the test of time.

If you have anything you'd like to share with me, feel free to e-mail me. Just click on the little letter icon below my profile picture. Try to keep it nice, I've been on a productive role recently. Even if I don't reply, I read everything. I've been replying to e-mails quite a lot lately though, as I've been getting them drastically less frequently. I read all the YouTube comments too, I'd just rather keep my audience engagement limited to a small number of channels like my e-mails and Twitter. Please keep the video comments coming if you liked or disliked something.

Cheers!

VIDEO: Arby 'n' the Chief - Season 8, Episode 01: "Fatal Exception" Updated Cut

Click the window below to play an updated cut of season eight's premiere, with a second of black removed from between two sequences near the end of the video.

Some people thought I was kidding about re-uploading over such a small detail. The black was obviously unintentional -- a tiny gap missed in the length of the feature length Adobe Premiere sequence during the quality assurance phase of production preceding the final render.

People said they didn't even notice the black and that I shouldn't have bothered re-uploading. Tough fucking titties, I noticed it. It's precisely because it's trivial that I re-uploaded. I worked hard on this, I'm not gonna let something stupid permanently taint the only record of its existence on the web, that's stupid.

Thank you all for your comments, e-mails and additional pledges since the release of the premiere, the reaction has been exciting. Feels like old times. Not the view figures I used to have, but whatever. I like making the show. If I was out simply for the attention of as many eyeballs as possible, I'd murder a child in public or worse, work at BuzzFeed.

My belief is this -- the world's an exciting place right now with the rapid development of technology, networking capabilities and access to information. If I make the show good enough, people will find it, the quality will be recognized and the show will find a bigger audience eventaully.

I also don't have a clue how to market myself. I never have. My mind tends to naturally reject the business and marketing ends of media creation and distribution. I recognize that they've had to exist in order for media to exist, but they're not areas I feel comfortable in at all.

The idea of advertising myself as somebody who's a big deal makes me cringe, because I've never had a very high opinion of myself. I'd much rather have my work and fans speak for me.

So, I'm very much relying on word of mouth to help this season find an audience. If you hated the premiere, go ahead and dislike it, perhaps send me a death threat. If you liked it, please try to share it in some form.

Consider throwing in a pledge via Patreion if you haven't already, accessible through my site's support page. Even if it's just a buck, that would be wonderful, seriously. A patron account on Patreon is easy to create.

The support and patience from the fans thus far has been incredible and I can't thank my backers enough for keeping me afloat.

The unfortunate fact remains that the amount of pledges I currently have isn't quite enough to sustain me, and I mention it because it means being distracted from the required full-time work on the show to seek additional funds, such as exhausting production assistant gigs.

If a thousand of my followers who aren't currently backing me on Patreon suddenly decided to contribute a dollar I'd be set and I wouldn't have to worry about making ends meet anymore. It also means other backers currently donating shockingly large amounts can reduce their pledges without feeling like they're making a dent in my living.

Sorry for the lack of updates recently, I admit I've been taking it easy since cutting and putting the premiere out, that edit was pretty much non-stop as soon as the script was done and exhausting, excluding the several sixteen-hour back-to-back days spent rendering sequences, assuring quality and making adjustments.

Feeling good again, and episode two is underway.

I wrote earlier on Twitter that my next upload would be a second trailer for the season, but we'll see. Cutting a decent trailer together's a bit harder than I'd anticipated. It requires re-typing a lot of the toys' subtitles to make the video seem like a contemporary trailer with lots of overlapping cuts in dialogue and video.

I hate writing subtitles, it's annoying as shit. In fact, just about everything between early development and late post-production of each episode of this show is and always has been brutally tedious.

I might just call of or postpone the trailer to focus getting more episodes out for now, but I think I do need a video that sells the intensity and humor of the premiere in a few minutes to help with growing the show's audience.

Over an hour's just too long for most people on YouTube. Nowadays it seems over one minute is enough to put people to sleep.

I know I've yet to put out a commentary track for the premiere episode, which is listed as one of my Patreon backer rewards. I'm thinking of recording it over Twitch -- people can ask me whatever they want about the episode as I play it over my stream and watch it, mentioning things I think are interesting in between questions.

Anybody will be able to tune in to watch the stream on Twitch, but I'd make access to a later upload of the same stream available only to backers on Patreon pledging the required amount.

Might sound stupid, but I should be following these reward rules, right? Doesn't feel good suddenly changing up the rules after people have started pledging -- assuming backers take the rewards and their requisites seriously, which probably isn't the case and I'm over-analyzing as usual.

More posts will come. Thanks again for all your support, keep the comments and pledges coming if you can, and please share if you want the show to succeed.

Thank you!

Cheers,

Jon

Arby 'n' the Chief - Season 8, Episode 01: "Fatal Exception"

Click the window below to play the episode.

After forfeiting their lives to fiery oblivion, two action figures of the Halo series of games' principal characters the Arbiter and Master Chief having inexplicably come to life in 2008 find themselves in a parody of Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey -- a cargo ship traversing deep space, somehow taking place on the multiplayer stages of Bungie and 343 Industries' Halo: Reach for the Xbox 360. Chief, believing himself to be the ship's artificially intelligent robot PAL-9001 n a mission to discover the purpose of life, awakens the Arbiter, who suffers from amnesia and disturbing images of past tragedies.

Premiere Details

Hey, guys.

The premiere won't be released today, I'm sorry -- I just need another day or two with it and it'll be done, that's it. It's almost there, honestly.

I tried to make the date, and I really thought I would. I've been crunching since announcing the tentative date of today about a week ago, editing in my bedroom all hours like a troll, rarely leaving, not talking to anyone, stopping to sleep only when I'm on the verge of passing out. I feel frazzled.

Here's the deal -- I did get a shit-load of work done. the premiere really is on the verge of completion and I feel it's coming together very nicely. Despite my efforts this past week, at this point I still need to grab a few shots, record some vocal performances from myself and others and await the submission of some outsourced performance audio which I probably won't receive from my talent until later today.

I was going to grab the local performance recordings and shots I'm missing today with some help from my roommates, but everybody at my place is currently getting geared up for a Halloween party tonight, pre-drinking. The fun's starting earlier than I thought it would.

The hope was to have Halloween be my "polish and upload" day and then attempt to enjoy myself at the party later that night, and I'm sorry to have missed the mark.

What I'd like to do is relax, go to this party, grab what I'm missing for the premiere the next day, cut and render everything and release the episode on the 2nd, perhaps even late at night on the 1st.

I want to set up a live stream in unison with the episode upload, too. People can wait for the upload completion with me, watch the premiere, ask me whatever and let me know what they thought of it while I play MGS:V or something, which I haven't touched in ages since beating the first chapter.

I'm uncertain of the overall length of the premiere as it's currently broken up into chunks among separate sequences and project files, but I estimate around an hour. It ain't short. I think it's the longest episode of the show I've ever made other than perhaps Endgame, but that was pretty naff.

I've been tempted to cut another trailer for you guys, but I don't feel I can show you much more content without spoiling things and diminishing the effect of watching the full premiere. Plus it's just piling on more work for myself when I could be powering through to put the full episode out.

I'm not asking for another week here, just a day or two. Please try not to hate me until the premiere's released. If you found the previous seasons of the show riveting at all, I can confidently say this premiere will blow your socks off.

Stay tuned, and thank you as always for your wonderful support.

Cheers,

Jon

Babby's first SquareSpace

A bit bare-bones, but looks alright, right? Clean, little social media connectivity icons in the corner -- it's almost like my career isn't a complete joke.

I'll add more to the site soon, just started building it today. Quite pleased with SquareSpace so far.