CloudKid at the Daytime Creative Arts Emmys

Last Friday, CloudKid founder, Dave Schlafman, and Co-Exec. Producer Evan Sussman attended the Daytime Emmys in Los Angeles.  CloudKid was nominated in the “New Approaches in Children’s Media” for the production of Fizzy’s Lunch Lab – PBS Kids’ first web series.  While CloudKid didn’t take home the bling, the night featured the brightest and best in Children’s and Daytime Television (mostly Soap Stars) – a bizarre, yet interesting affair.  A big congrats to the winner in our category – PBS’s The Electric Company, who cleaned house with 5 Emmys. It was especially nice to connect with the amazing PBS  Team and Producers who were collectively nominated for a whopping 41 Emmys. Good times all around.

CloudKid in Scott Kirsner’s Innovation Economy

Screen capture of Fizzy and MixieWe got a mention today on Scott Kirsner’s blog, Innovation Economy, about the Lunch Lab Emmy nomination. Scott’s blog tells “the most interesting stories about what’s new in New England — and those stories can originate from a tiny start-up firm in someone’s basement, an academic lab, or a giant publicly-traded company.”

Dave Schlafman and Evan Sussman of the Watertown-based digital animation studio CloudKid are in Los Angeles today to attend an Emmy Awards ceremony. It isn’t the big prime-time Emmy Awards, but rather the “37th Annual Daytime Creative Arts and Entertainment Emmy Awards,” which honor “the craft behind the many shows that grace the Daytime genre,” according to the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, which puts on the ceremony.

Read full post: 1. Form company, 2. Land project, 3. Get Emmy nomination

Media Tide Changing?

This spring CloudKid went to the PBS Kids Producer’s Summit in Washington DC.  It was an amazing two days of workshops, speakers, and presentations about the children’s media landscape.  One of the highlights was keynote speaker Vikki Rideout from the Kaiser Family Foundation.   Rideout headed the landmark Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year Olds study that was released earlier this year.  One of the most interesting findings was:

For the first time over the course of the study, the amount of time spent watching regularly-scheduled TV declined, by 25 minutes a day (from 2004 to 2009).  But the many new ways to watch TV–on the Internet, cell phones, and iPods–actually led to an increase in total TV consumption from 3:51 to 4:29 per day, including :24 of online viewing, :16 on iPods and other MP3 players, and :15 on cell phones.  All told, 59% (2:39) of young people’s TV-viewing consists of live TV on a TV set, and 41% (1:50) is time-shifted, DVDs, online, or mobile.

41% (and growing) is a significant number that networks and investors should be aware of.  Children’s networks and publishers need to start looking at the web (and cloud) as a legitimate medium for new content – not to just reinforce their current IP.  PBS Kids funded two web-only projects in 2009 and they funded four (two new ones) this year.  I commend them for taking the initial risk.  It’s a start.

Until production and promotion budgets for web projects increase, we going to be swimming in a sea of sub-par web content.  If networks, studios, and publishers have the guts to spend a little more money to develop fantastic web-only properties, things could change. Until that happens, kids will be forced to watch shortened clips of TV shows over and over again on the web.

CloudKid in the Watertown Tab

CloudKid was mentioned in an article today in the Watertown Tab.

CloudKid Studios is easy to miss.

The five-man animation company, headed by Watertown artist Dave Schlafman, rents space above law offices at 134 Main St., right in the center of town. But CloudKid keeps a low profile.

“No one really knows we’re here,” said Schlafman, a Bradford Road resident who moved to Watertown three years ago. “We’re a small team, and we don’t need a lot of space.”

But with an Emmy nomination and a host of exciting new projects coming up, the children’s media company is going to have a hard time staying out of the limelight.

CloudKid’s main production — PBS’ Web-only series “Fizzy’s Lunch Lab” — just wrapped up production on its maiden season. The Internet shorts, created in 2007, landed the group a daytime Emmy nomination for new approaches in children’s programming.

Read the full article here.

CloudKid Nominated for a Daytime Emmy!

We were recently notified that Fizzy’s Lunch Lab was nominated for a 2010 Daytime Emmy Award for the “New Approaches in Children’s Media” category.  We are still in shock – coolest thing ever. It was a year to the day that PBS green-lit season one, so it was an amazing first birthday for Fizzy and co.

A huge thank you goes out to all the writers, actors, artists, animators, PhDs, etc who helped us make an awesome web series. Hopefully more good to come as we were recently green-lit for a season 2. Great news all around.  CloudKid will be co-producing Season 2 with Boston-based post production house, Hero-for-Hire.