Thanks for the deep dive into pitching animated shows. It was really insightful and informative!
Question for you: Is it possible to pitch an animated show as a writer instead or an artist? I don't have much artistic talent so I've always assumed that I'd never be able to make a pitch to an animation studio. #QA
this was super helpful! i've been really curious about the pitching process and i'm glad you made a super long article detailing every step haha. good luck on future pitches!
how hard is it fo find a job in the animation industry? You seems to struggle at the moment to find a job but you worked in animation before and even got a succesfull 4 season long cartoon (and i hope one day for infinity train to get the 8 seasons it deserves) but with all of that it seems hard to find a job in the animation industry, is it hard because you want to pitch and create a new show or is it hard for any position in the animation industry , even if you are a successfull creator with an agent and a manager?
thanks for this very interesting and informative explication about the whole show pitching thing! I learned a lot! My question is , as someone from outside the United States (i'm from france) I was wondering it's possible from someone outside the US to succesfully pitch a show to an american studio? (I know that some animators and storyboarder of many shows are french but i've never seen a show creator from anywhere outside the US)
Thank you! I really needed to know about the Pitching Process, there seems to be a lot that I still don't know about that happens in the Hollywood/Entertainment Industry. Reading this was really interesting! :)
Thanks for the deep dive into pitching animated shows. It was really insightful and informative!
Question for you: Is it possible to pitch an animated show as a writer instead or an artist? I don't have much artistic talent so I've always assumed that I'd never be able to make a pitch to an animation studio. #QA
this was super helpful! i've been really curious about the pitching process and i'm glad you made a super long article detailing every step haha. good luck on future pitches!
What was the logline for Infinity Train? Did each season get it's own logline?
how hard is it fo find a job in the animation industry? You seems to struggle at the moment to find a job but you worked in animation before and even got a succesfull 4 season long cartoon (and i hope one day for infinity train to get the 8 seasons it deserves) but with all of that it seems hard to find a job in the animation industry, is it hard because you want to pitch and create a new show or is it hard for any position in the animation industry , even if you are a successfull creator with an agent and a manager?
This was supremely informative, thank you.
Thank you for providing such an in-depth pitch process. It's always fascinating to learn what goes into making an animated show.
I'm curious if they're any careers in animation for people who enjoy research, non-creative writing, and/or history. #QA
thanks for this very interesting and informative explication about the whole show pitching thing! I learned a lot! My question is , as someone from outside the United States (i'm from france) I was wondering it's possible from someone outside the US to succesfully pitch a show to an american studio? (I know that some animators and storyboarder of many shows are french but i've never seen a show creator from anywhere outside the US)
Thank you! I really needed to know about the Pitching Process, there seems to be a lot that I still don't know about that happens in the Hollywood/Entertainment Industry. Reading this was really interesting! :)