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	<title>MEDIA ROOTS – Reporting From Outside Party Lines &#187; TV</title>
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		<title>MR Original — Network Awesome Interview</title>
		<link>http://mediaroots.org/mr-original-network-interview/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Apr 2012 17:39:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[abby]]></dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[MEDIA ROOTS &#8212; Jason Forrest&#8216;s name used to be synonymous with the electronic music genre breakcore and with expert remixing and plunderphonics under his own name as well as the alias, &#8220;Donna Summer&#8221; (possibly to confuse unsuspecting Donna Summer fans in record stores). &#160;For the last decade, Forrest has run his own record label &#8216;Cock Rock Disco.&#8217; &#160;He now resides &#8230; <a class="readm" href="http://mediaroots.org/mr-original-network-interview/">Read More</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><br /><br /><img style="float: right;" src="http://mediaroots.org/wp-content/uploads/images/Music%20And%20Art/Network-Awesome-Screengrab2.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="615" />MEDIA ROOTS</strong> &mdash; <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Forrest">Jason Forrest</a>&#8216;s name used to be synonymous with the electronic music genre <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakcore">breakcore</a></em> and with expert remixing and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plunderphonics">plunderphonics</a> under his own name as well as the alias, &#8220;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Forrest">Donna Summer</a>&#8221; (possibly to confuse unsuspecting <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Summer">Donna Summer</a></em> fans in record stores). &nbsp;For the last decade, Forrest has run his own record label &#8216;<a href="http://www.cockrockdisco.com/">Cock Rock Disco</a>.&#8217; &nbsp;He now resides in Germany and has founded, and now maintains, with the help of many volunteer workers, the net&#8217;s best curated internet video repository, <a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome</a>.&nbsp;</p>
<p>***<br /><em></em><br /><strong>Media Roots:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;What is <a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome</a>?&#8221;&nbsp;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;<a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome</a> is a website that broadcasts six video programs a day. &nbsp;These programs can be collections of music based on a theme, or whole movies, or documentaries, or anything else. &nbsp;All the shows then go into an archive that&#8217;s organized by theme, type, style, etcetera. &nbsp;Or, in other words, we&#8217;re like a TV station, but online, free, and damn good.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR</strong>: &nbsp;&#8220;I heard of you in the form of &#8216;Donna Summer&#8217; when I first visited New York. &nbsp;I asked the store clerk at Kim&#8217;s Video if they carried any really good local electronic music and she handed me a copy of your CD&mdash;&#8221;This Needs To Be Your Style.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest: &nbsp;</strong>&#8220;Wow! &nbsp;That&#8217;s so cool to hear! &nbsp;I don&#8217;t think I ever really got any love from those guys before, so that feels nice!&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR: &nbsp;</strong>&#8220;Since then you&#8217;ve been running a record label, Cock Rock Disco, and continuing with your own musical projects.</p>
<p>&#8220;Most recently, I have been seeing a lot about Network Awesome and watching it myself, without realizing it was ran by none other than Jason Forrest.</p>
<p>&#8220;How did Network Awesome start? &nbsp;Was it a gradual build or was there a lot of pre-planning involved?&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;I started thinking about what was to become <a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome</a> back in the summer of 2010. &nbsp;After doing a lot of research on both broadcast TV Networks and also investigating a lot of online video sites (especially what works and what doesn&#8217;t work), I reached out to a friend, Greg Sadetsky, to develop the idea. &nbsp;Then, in a mad flurry, we built the basic version of the site in about five weeks and launched it on January 1st, 2011. &nbsp;For the first few months we were both doing a lot of other stuff, but around May of last year we started to really focus on the site. &nbsp;And since then it&#8217;s been one exciting thing after another!&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR: &nbsp;</strong>&#8220;At first glance <a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/collection-aphex-twin/">Network Awesome</a> seems like a really sophisticated Youtube playlist; what makes it different than a playlist?&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;It&#8217;s more like a library filled with books and each book is made of lists. &nbsp;We currently have over 4,200 shows that extend in pretty much all areas of culture and entertainment.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR</strong>: &nbsp;&#8220;Was your history as a crate-digger/sample-sleuth valuable for scouring the internet for obscure content?&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest: </strong>&nbsp;&#8220;Great question, it actually didn&#8217;t dawn on me until a few months into the project that Network Awesome acts very much in the same way that my previous music did. &nbsp;But while we do play a lot of lesser-known media, I know that it is not our agenda at Network Awesome to be obscure.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR</strong>: &nbsp;&#8220;You have great video categories like &#8216;jazz drumming&#8217; and <a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/collection-the-dana-carvey-show/">even entire playlists for mostly unheard of sketch comedy shows like &#8216;The Dana Carvey Show</a>.&#8217; &nbsp;Were these your ideas originally?&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest: &nbsp;</strong>&#8220;Some were, like the <a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/live-music-show-amazing-drummers/">Awesome Drummers show</a>. &nbsp;But <a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/collection-kurt-cobain-is-dead/">Network Awesome</a> actually has something like 148 volunteers who work on the site. &nbsp;So, there&#8217;s so many ideas flying around that I can&#8217;t claim them all! &nbsp;Haha!&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR</strong>: &nbsp;&#8220;You just answered one of my next questions. &nbsp;I imagine if you would do it yourself it would be a full-time job to find constant content. &nbsp;Any obstacles when having that much content coming in?&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;<a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/collection-jim-henson-experiments/">Network Awesome</a> is getting to the point where we have so much great content that it&#8217;s become a problem to organize and present it efficiently to the viewer. &nbsp;We just made a major design update, which has made the site so much better to stumble upon great stuff, but it&#8217;s possible to improve still.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR: </strong>&nbsp;&#8220;With the introduction of high end consumer multimedia, Blueray and other media players and Apple TV that have access to Netflix, <a href="http://www.vudu.com/">Vudu</a>, Amazon, do you think there is a place for <a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/live-music-show-goblin/">Network Awesome</a> in this arena? &nbsp;A lot of these players come with Youtube built in, but the navigation to different videos is cumbersome.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;&#8216;<em>Cumbersome</em>&#8216; &#8211; haha! I think of Youtube as an unbelievable public database, and while their search functions are very good, it&#8217;s not an enjoyable experience. &nbsp;I think Network Awesome can be both compatible and competition to the sites you mentioned. &nbsp;And, if we continue to grow at this rate, we&#8217;ll also become a force for a better quality of content as well.&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>MR: &nbsp;</strong>&#8220;By <em>cumbersome</em>, I was referring to the way wireless network-capable TVs and DVD players now commonly&nbsp;have a Youtube feature that requires a numerical remote control to search through it.&nbsp;</p>
<p>&#8220;It feels &#8216;half-hearted&#8217; because it&#8217;s far easier to just search for a video on your computer with a alphabetical keyboard. &nbsp;If someone just simply had a &#8216;<a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/live-music-show-80s-one-hit-wonders/">Network Awesome</a>&#8216; button on this interface it would make the experience 100 times more enjoyable.&nbsp;<img style="float: right;" src="http://mediaroots.org/wp-content/uploads/images/Music%20And%20Art/jasonforrest.jpg" alt="" width="314" height="314" />&nbsp;<br /><br />&#8220;Do you ever ponder the idea that <a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome</a> is such a good concept, a big company may base a commercial product off of it?&#8221;</p>
<p><span><span><span><strong>Jason Forrest:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;That&#8217;s what we&#8217;re actively working towards, but we also have the belief that it&#8217;s possible to make a profitable company that also supports interesting content. &nbsp;I think the idea that advertisers are only interested in the broadest definition of the mass market is not really true anymore. &nbsp;We&#8217;re already starting to produce original content in collaboration with sponsors, so we feel there&#8217;s a lot of potential there!&#8221;</span></span></span></p>
<p><strong>MR:</strong>&nbsp; &#8220;<a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome</a> caused me to have a paradigm shift where I first saw the ideal use of &nbsp;&#8216;on demand&#8217; content; in the right hands, it can be an extremely powerful cultural tool. &nbsp;Do you agree that Network Awesome, even though it doesn&#8217;t host new mainstream reality TV episodes (why would it), is one of the best curated and most complete <a href="http://networkawesome.com/tag/vintage-computer-graphics/">&#8216;niche&#8217; streaming video</a> databases on the entire internet?<br /><br /> If you are too humble about the word &#8216;best,&#8217; how would you describe it yourself?&#8221;<br /><br /><strong>Jason Forrest: &nbsp;</strong>&#8220;It&#8217;s funny; even though I started <a href="http://networkawesome.com/show/live-music-show-boredoms/">N</a><a href="http://networkawesome.com/">etwork Awesome</a>, I don&#8217;t see it as an extension of my ego. &nbsp;So, I&#8217;m happy to tell people how great we are! &nbsp;Haha! &nbsp;If you take a look at the quality of what we show every day &#8211; and you compare it to the absolutely horrible state of much of broadcast TV and the many sites that focus exclusively on viral videos, then you might say we&#8217;re the best thing on the internet. &nbsp;I mean, I like it. &nbsp;Haha.&#8221;</p>
<p>Go to <a href="http://networkawesome.com/">Network Awesome and check out the six new programs they curate daily.<br /><br /></a><em>Interview Conducted By Robbie Martin of Media Roots</em></p>
<p>***<br /><br /><em>Photo of Jason Forrest from Network Awesome</em></p><div class="fcbk_share"><div class="fcbk_like"><fb:like href="http://mediaroots.org/mr-original-network-interview/" layout="button_count" width="450" show_faces="false" share="false"></fb:like></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MR Original –  The Genius Behind Breaking Bad</title>
		<link>http://mediaroots.org/mr-original-the-genius-behind-breaking-bad/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Apr 2012 01:15:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[abby]]></dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[While you wait for Breaking Bad to come back on the air, you try to fill the &#8216;TV-show void&#8217; with things like Enlightened, The Walking Dead, Californication, or even Dexter (this is one I&#8217;m embarrassed to say I did). &#160;In modern TV show canon, Breaking Bad is unparalleled in its caliber of acting, characters, and writing. &#160;Dare we say it, &#8230; <a class="readm" href="http://mediaroots.org/mr-original-the-genius-behind-breaking-bad/">Read More</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p><img style="float: right;" src="http://mediaroots.org/wp-content/uploads/images/VinceGilligan(1).jpg" alt="" width="236" height="236" />While you wait for <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_Bad">Breaking Bad</a></em> to come back on the air, you try to fill the &lsquo;<em>TV-show void</em>&rsquo; with things like <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlightened_%28TV_series%29">Enlightened</a></em>, <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_Dead_%28TV_series%29">The Walking Dead</a></em>, <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Californication_%28TV_series%29">Californication</a></em>, or even <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dexter_%28TV_series%29">Dexter</a></em> (this is one I&#8217;m embarrassed to say I did). &nbsp;In modern TV show canon, <em>Breaking Bad</em> is unparalleled in its caliber of acting, characters, and writing. &nbsp;Dare we say it, perhaps the greatest TV show ever (besides <em>The Wire</em>)? &nbsp;The genius behind <em>Breaking Bad </em>is <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince_Gilligan">Vince Gilligan</a>. &nbsp;Vince grew up in Richmond, Virginia, bringing his southern charm to the medium. &nbsp;He tells dark tales that remind one of the Coen brothers (<em>Fargo</em>, <em>No Country for Old Men</em>) and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Dante">Joe Dante</a> (<em>Gremlins</em>, <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Burbs">The &lsquo;Burbs</a></em>), effortlessly mixing together comedy, horror, and thriller while not seeming like a trite mixture of the three. &nbsp;</p>
<p>A perfect example of these sensibilities is when in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Breaking_Bad_episodes">Episode</a> 2 of <em>Breaking Bad</em>, Jesse and Walt have to dispose of a body. &nbsp;Walt suggests using acid that eats through flesh and bone but not a particular kind of plastic barrel, he sends Jesse to the store, but Jesse gives up after a cursory search for said barrel. While in the midst of a meth bender, Jesse decides to use the upstairs aluminum bathtub instead; and you can probably guess the rest. &nbsp;Before <em>Breaking Bad</em>, Vince Gilligan was responsible for some of the more strange, gory, and borderline-funny episodes of <em>The X-Files</em>, which if you look closely contain some of the kernels that would later be used as the groundwork for <em>Bad</em>.<br /> <br /><strong>Vince Gilligan&#8217;s <em>X-Files</em> Work</strong><br /><br /> <strong>Pusher</strong><br /> Season 3&rsquo;s &ldquo;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pusher_%28The_X-Files%29">Pusher</a>&rdquo; pitted Mulder and Scully against a &lsquo;<em>mentalist&rsquo;</em> who could convince another person to commit suicide simply by whispering in his ear. &nbsp;This killer is tracked down via a classified advertisement he places in a mercenary magazine offering his services.&nbsp; Gilligan showed his affinity here for the expert criminal mastermind &lsquo;hiding in plain sight,&rsquo; much like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gus_Fring">Gus</a> in <em>Breaking Bad</em>. &nbsp;One notable scene involves a SWAT team going after the Pusher, only to find one SWAT member returning covered in gasoline and holding a lighter, mumbling incomprehensibly before setting himself ablaze.<br /> <br /><strong>Leonard Betts</strong><br /> Even before &lsquo;<em>Bad</em> you can see that Gilligan was interested in pushing the censorship boundaries. Season 4&rsquo;s &lsquo;Leonard Betts&rsquo; that singlehandedly pushed the limits of what you could show on network television. &nbsp;The episode opens up with a pair of paramedics on an ambulance helping a man who&rsquo;s dying of an unknown illness (Leonard knows simply by touching the man that he has cancer). &nbsp;The ambulance crashes in a high speed collision. &nbsp;At the scene of the accident you see Leonard&rsquo;s severed head lying on the street. &nbsp;Later you find out that he can &lsquo;grow&rsquo; another head (which they show you with no cut away) because you see he is part Lizard, oh and eats cancer to survive.<br /><br /><iframe style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/QQC6Yu6Syhg" width="304" height="250"></iframe><br /> <br /><strong>Bad Blood</strong><br /> &ldquo;Bad Blood&rdquo; from Season 5 (where Vince Gilligan and the show itself really hit it&rsquo;s stride), follows the team to a remote trailer park in the south where a vampire is drugging people unconscious and sucking their blood. &nbsp;The episode starts with Mulder using a piece of a broken wooden chair to kill what appears to be a child; Mulder in fervor thinks he just killed a vampire.&nbsp; He pulls out of the kids mouth a pair of fake sharpened vampire teeth and exclaims, &lsquo;Oh, &#8230; Shiii&rsquo; interrupted by the X-files theme.&nbsp; Again, the <em>hiding in plain sight</em> theme is present with vampires sleeping in coffins inside their RVs.&nbsp; Could this scenario have been inspired by Vince&rsquo;s affinity for the trailer park meth underworld?<br /><br /><iframe style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/4jWEszkq9qc" width="304" height="250"></iframe><br /> <br /><strong>Folie A Deux </strong><br /> Using the background of a cold call in center for an employee going postal, but not because he&rsquo;s depressed, but because his boss is a insect hybrid who creates human zombies out of his own employees by injecting them through the neck with poison fangs.&nbsp; In the episode, Mulder finds the clue &lsquo;hiding in the light&rsquo; linking back to an old case about a shape-shifter who appears normal until seen in the dark. We don&rsquo;t want to be redundant, but Vince seems to really like this theme.</p>
<p><br /><strong>Hungry</strong><br /> Alan Moore likes to deconstruct and flip upside-down super-hero tropes with Watchmen, where super heroes are portrayed as flawed destructive human beings. &nbsp;Vince takes the X-files trope of &lsquo;monster of the week&rsquo; and shows us the inverse effect. &nbsp;What if you were a cannibal mutant working at a shitty fast food restaurant but were also a nice guy? &nbsp;The entire episode revolves around the monster this time instead of Mulder and Scully.<br /> <br /> <strong>Other Notable Gilligan Episodes</strong><br /> &ldquo;Field Trip,&rdquo; Season 6<br /> &ldquo;Dreamland,&rdquo; Season 6<br /><br /><iframe style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/LX1nscAWG_A" width="304" height="250"></iframe><br /> <br /><strong>Vince Gilligan&#8217;s Film Work</strong><br /><br /> Vince Gilligan has also taken a stab at full length movies, not just writing scripts, but also directing his own material.&nbsp; His first film was <em>Wilder Napalm</em> that he wrote, but not directed&mdash;a very uneven first theatrical film attempt starring Dennis Quaid about two life-long best friends with supernatural powers to manifest fire. &nbsp;Mixing a love triangle romantic comedy with some really dark and strange subject matter, the movie never quite coheres. &nbsp;Some parts work, like the idea of portraying grown men who have god-like powers in shitty jobs like a circus clown. &nbsp;<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1UUyL1k4qk">The full movie is viewable on YouTube.</a><br /><br /><iframe style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/G1UUyL1k4qk" width="304" height="250"></iframe><br /> <br /> <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Fries_%28film%29">Home Fries</a></em>, the first film Gilligan directed. &nbsp;The marketing for this film was completely wrong, giving the impression it was a throw-away romantic comedy when, in fact, it was a movie about a very dysfunctional family whose matriarchal mother, through passive-aggressive behavior and coercion, gets her two grown military sons to commit murder for her.&nbsp; In the opening scene Luke Wilson plays opposite Jake Busey who chases down a man leaving a fast food drive-thru with an attack helicopter.&nbsp; They fire at him when he tries to surrender.&nbsp; They just wanted to &lsquo;<em>scare him</em>&rsquo; by using blanks, but the man has a heart attack.</p>
<p>It turns out this man was their stepfather who was caught cheating by their mother.</p>
<p>The mother won&rsquo;t let it end there, however, and sends her boys out on a scouting mission to find out who the woman is.&nbsp; Luke Wilson&rsquo;s character quickly discovers it&rsquo;s a totally innocent fast-food employee played by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drew_Barrymore">Drew Barrymore</a>.&nbsp; The rest of the movie involves him trying to misdirect Busey&rsquo;s character into getting closer to assassinating her. &nbsp;It has its flaws but the plot and acting is top tier and there aren&#8217;t very many if any movies like it.&nbsp; <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_O%27Hara">Catherine O&rsquo;Hara</a> as the psychotic mother should have garnered an Oscar nomination. &nbsp;<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1ugD6PwytQ"><em>Home Fries</em> may be viewed in it&rsquo;s entirety on YouTube</a>.<br /><br /><iframe style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/W1ugD6PwytQ" width="304" height="250"></iframe><br /> <br /> <em>Hancock</em>, a more recent film starring <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Will_Smith">Will Smith</a> as a drunk, abusive, and destructive super hero was by all accounts a misfire.&nbsp; Directed not by Gilligan, but by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Berg">Peter Berg</a> (who can&rsquo;t direct his way out of a paper bag) and based on a script by Gilligan.&nbsp; Some decent ideas thrown into the mix but has a third act, which completely ruins the entire film.<br /> <br /> So, while you have your Gilligan withdrawals try some of those in the meantime (and <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0319213/filmoseries#tt0106179">go here</a> if you need even more). &nbsp;After all <em>Breaking Bad&rsquo;s </em>5<sup>th</sup> will be its final season.&nbsp; In many interviews, Gilligan has said that his goal from the very beginning was to turn &lsquo;Mr Chips into Scarface,&rsquo; in reference to Walt. &nbsp;If you have watched <em>Breaking Bad</em> up until its most recent conclusion, and you are familiar with Scarface, short of trying his own product and shooting a family member dead, Walt has pretty much surpassed Scarface.&nbsp; I, for one, am excited to see where this man&rsquo;s mind takes us next; maybe somebody will see his value as a filmmaker, similar to how studios plucked&nbsp;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JJ_Abrams">J.J. Abrams</a>&nbsp;from TV. &nbsp;Let&rsquo;s hope, for his next project, he&rsquo;s not as prescient as he was in <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lone_Gunmen">The Lone Gunman</a></em> pilot.<br /><br /><em>Written by Robbie Martin</em></p>
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