Need questions for the cast/crew of "Drawn Together: The Movie"

undertow

New member
Was just about to go to bed when I found out I secured an interview with the cast and crew of the movie. I have no idea who exactly I will be speaking to, but I'm willing to ask any questions submitted here to them. If you have any, please post them by 8am on Thursday. My interview is that afternoon.
 
I've got one!

This question is directed toward no one in particular, it could be directed at any of the seven voice actors, the creators, the producers, directors, writers, whatever...

My question is: "We all know that Drawn Together was the first ever animated reality series. However, do you know there is another animated reality series called Total Drama Island on Cartoon Network? And if you know about it, have you seen it, and what are your thoughts on it?"

Okay, that was more than one question, but still.
 
"How did you feel when Comedy Central cancelled the series? Wasn't it getting extremely high ratings?

"Is there a chance of DT continuing after the movie, whether it's on DVD or a new season"?

"How well have the DVD sales of the season sets been?"

If Dave Jeser and Matt Silverstein are there, you could ask them if there will be a second season of DJ & the Fro.
 
- How come Toot was made unattractive and annoying? That's the exact opposite of Betty Boop.

- Do you still feel the same way about Flash cartoons now that they're becoming more popular on TV?

- What was the point of Foxxy kissing Clara if Clara was going to continue having her opinions on race?

- Was the Hot Tub kiss an attempt at hooking the audience just in case the rest of the Pilot didn't do so well?

Edit: I forgot that this was about the movie but I'll just keep my questions there anyway. :D
 
I think the point of Toot's character was she was intentionally unattractive and it was supposed to show how in the 30's people's standards of "sexy" were vastly different compared to the "sexy" look of today.

Another question, "Will there be more movies if this one is successful"?
 
I didn't get to ask everyone's questions, so sorry about that. I interviewed the show's creators, Matt Silverstein and Dave Jesser, and holy crap did that thing just move so fast. They were just hilarious. I'm going to have to see about just being able to post up the full audio because something would be lost in the transcription.

Also, DJ and the Fro is canceled.
 
Shame you already got to talk to Dave and Matt (I mean, I'm happy you did!) cuz I wanted you to asked them:

"Do you think there should be a romantic relationship between Toot and Wooldoor or rather have Wooldoor secretly in love with Toot?"

It's also a shame DJ and The Fro got cancelled. I like that show.
 
Is it possible you could post the interview in text, my computer's audio is being quite uncooperative. Strange DJ and the Fro was canceled, from what I heard it got decent ratings.
 
Drawn Together's popularity is nowhere near the popularity South Park had when the movie was released. Yes, Drawn Together was the second highest rated series on the channel after SP, and it was the number one show watched by kids in college when it was on, but it isn't the household name South Park was. A theatrical movie would not be as profitable as a DTV feature.
 
South Park was at the height of its popularity back in 1999 when SP:BLU was released, and that still only managed to just gel over its production budget in box office receipts. If you want a true animated TV-to-Big Screen success story, look at the (first) Rugrats and Simpsons movies.

Anyways, press release.

A bit disappointed to hear the release date was pushed back to March 2010. The plot seems to imply that Comedy Central will never run it, not even on the secret stash at 1 AM, so we probably won't be able to see it until then. (providing it doesn't leak to the net beforehand of course, which is more than likely to happen)

I am glad they kept the title "The Drawn Together Movie: The Movie". And wouldn't they have been kicked out of the house if they were cancelled? Maybe they all chipped in with dirty money to buy the house? Lord knows how many perverse and obscene ways they could get it. :p...
 
South Park was at the height of its popularity back in 1999 when SP:BLU was released, and that still only managed to just gel over its production budget in box office receipts. If you want a true animated TV-to-Big Screen success story, look at the (first) Rugrats and Simpsons movies.QUOTE]


Well, the South Park movie's production budget was $21 million, it grossed $52 million domestically and $81 million worldwide, take into account inflation and its domestic gross would be somewhere around $70-80 million nowadays. Pretty successful for an R-rated animated musical. :p
 
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