Fan Art: An Explosion of Creativitycelebrates the die-hardest Adventure Time fans in the best way possible as part of the PBS Off Book documentary series. Kornhaber Brown’s producer/director Eric Brown was nice enough to ask me (thanks to fellow interviewee Brad O’Farrell) into his film on the fan art phenomenon, and he’s obviously likes everything you’ve all done with AT, so we (you) get a lot of attention in the piece. It’s a hoot, enjoy.
I was heartbroken to hear that Buzz Potamkin, one of my earliest animation and production mentors, died of pancreatic cancer on April 22. My thoughts are with his widow Rosie.
Details on Buzz’s animation career are at Cartoon Brew and Animation Magazine, but I thought I’d share a few of my great experiences. It’s fair to say that I wouldn’t have the animation career I have today without his tutoring, support and depth of knowledge and wisdom.
Buzz and I met in late 1980 through my once-in-a-lifetime media guide Dale Pon. At that time, my creative partner Alan Goodman and I were trying to figure out how we should present the look and feel of a not-yet-named cable music channel. Dale had already intro’d us to Colossal Pictures in San Francisco, soon to be one of our early animation partners, but when he mentioned Buzz’s company Perpetual Motion (soon he spun off as Buzzco) we remembered them as one of the few animation reels that had made a quality impression out of the hundreds we’d reviewed. Buzz quickly won our trust and, in his inimitable way, guided two neophytes through a grueling 24 hour editing session on his studio’s execution (directed by Candy Kugel and produced by David Sameth) of my one and only creative idea for the MTV launch, where a 1969 Buzz Aldrin is facing, not an American flag, but the MTV flag in 1981. The piece went on to be played more than 75,000 times and became an icon that helped define our careers ever after. Buzzco went on to make a number of animated MTV IDs for us, and that was even before Dale conceived the ’I Want My MTV! advertising campaign for Alan and me a couple of years later. Buzz produced them all with director Tommy Schlamme, and then the peak of the campaign with Candy again.
It was during those days that Buzz and I first started talking cartoons. He shared stories with me about the characters who ran the business and his point of view about what made the business work and what made it flop. He gave me lessons in the small and the large in everything from production to real estate management, and why the animation business was stalling; we continually improvised what we thought could happen if things were looked at a little differently. We talked creative, media, philosophy, art, politics, you name it. We eventually realized we had even more to talk about and we kept doing it for 15 years.
Alan and I formed a partnership with Buzz for a few years after we left MTV in 1983 (it was his encouragement that gave us the courage to quit our amazing jobs when we were itching for more entrepreneurial challenge) and we even made a few shows together. But, Buzz was itching too, and he soon decamped to Hollywood to form Southern Star to make cartoon series for the broadcast networks. We kept in touch and several years later I’d improbably moved out for the cartoon biz myself to run the legendary Hanna-Barbera studio.
Bruno Bozzetto’s Help! from Hanna-Barbera’s What A Cartoon! Executive Producer: Buzz Potamkin
My first call and my first hire was Buzz Potamkin.
Buzz was instrumental in helping figure out how to launch the first of our shorts incubators, What A Cartoon! in 1994. He’d given me plenty of insight about the theatrical shorts of the mid-20th century and when he came on as my head of production we plotted the program together and he cajoled a number of legendary filmmakers like Ralph Bakshi and Bruno Bozzetto to give this crazy idea some gravitas.
Buzz Potamkin was a unique soul. He was the kindest man you could imagine, always ready with help and inspiration. He admired creative people of all kinds, especially artists, and he could smell out smarts in anyone in a room. He had a curmudgeonly crust, but with a quick smile and wit, and always a twinkle in his eye.
I owe Buzz a lot. Many people do. He’ll be missed.
In a shameless attempt to curry pageviews, our friends at Animation Magazine have started a contest to pick the best ad in their 25th Anniversary issue. And since Frederator ran an ad, I guess we’re going to have to play along and ask you to please vote for our ad. I couldn’t swear to you it’s the best one, but it’s the best one of ours.
The release gives me a great excuse to highlight a couple of projects I worked on with the good Doctor involved with in the late 1980s. The chance to work with one of the rhythm & blues greats was really a career highlight. In both cases Mac’s participation because one of his record producers was Ed Levine, a colleague at my ad agency Fred/Alan in New York.
My favorite was probably the set of animated IDs we did for an obscure television station in St. Cloud, Minnesota in 1988. TV Heaven was a local version of what Fred/Alan had done with Nick-at-Nite on a national basis, where we made an overnight hit station from an obscure UHF transmitter in the sticks. Mac came into the recording studio planning on recording one track for us, and ended up improvising six melodies on the spot during our scheduled time. I don’t remember the writer for this one, but I think I like it the most:
“Some people go from dollars to donuts, but I’ll take pennies from heaven. TV Heaven 41.”
The animations you see here were done after the style of the legendary Fred Mogubgub, and directed by Fred in New York, Marv Newland and International Rocketship in Vancouver, and Marc Karzen in New York.
Ed probably thought about Mac for TV Heaven because he’d already had a big hit when he asked Dr. John to play the annual Fred/Alan holiday party the previous December (invitation above). We took over a belly dancing club on a second floor on 8th Avenue in New York, and for one night transformed it into a soul food juke joint. With Dr. John presiding, natch. The whole story’s here.
Pendleton Ward:
In the beginning, Fred Seibert of Frederator, he kept telling me that the workload is more than you can ever imagine. Like, there’s no possible way that you can prepare yourself for the amount of stress and work that you’re going to have. And I was like, “No, I can do it, I can do it. I’m sure I can figure it out.” But he just kept saying, “You have no idea what it’s going to be like.” [Laughs.] And I didn’t. I had no idea it would be so intense, especially in the beginning. It’s cooled off now that we’ve found a rhythm, but in the beginning it was so rough. I wanted to cry and vomit every day and there were a lot of sleepless nights. Is that advice? I don’t know. [Laughs.]
I know Eric just posted this interview over at Adventure Time Art, but since this is advice I give to every first time show runner I thought it might be worth doing as a pull quote.
Writer and animation artist Mike de Seve came by Frederator/NY last week to introduce us to some of the projects he’s developing. We’re looking forward to hearing and seeing more about them, maybe there’ll be something for Cartoon Hangover. Thanks Mike.