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The Animation Guild Oral Histories
Steven Hulett
24 episodes
2 months ago
We strive to interview a broad cross-section of people in the cartoon industry, folks working on the theatrical and/or television side who have made big contributions to the art form.
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Visual Arts
Arts
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All content for The Animation Guild Oral Histories is the property of Steven Hulett and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
We strive to interview a broad cross-section of people in the cartoon industry, folks working on the theatrical and/or television side who have made big contributions to the art form.
Show more...
Visual Arts
Arts
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Features/v4/5f/88/96/5f8896e9-9be5-529a-af14-cc807367568a/mza_1382744875394257421.png/600x600bb.jpg
Editing TV Cartoons - Part I
The Animation Guild Oral Histories
10 years ago
Editing TV Cartoons - Part I
Robert Birchard, speaking at Cinecon. TAG Interview with Bob BirchardFind all TAG Interviews on the TAG website at this link Roberts S. Birchard has been an editor of television cartoons for almost forty years. In the early eighties, he broke into the animation business at a studio called Hanna-Barbera, and soon moved on to DIC Animation (where he found the hectic schedules and tight deadlines to be an interesting challenge). Bob was the supervisor of DIC's editorial department, but seven-day workweeks eventually wore him down a bit, and he jumped to a small, embryonic outfit named Walt Disney Television Animation. ... In its early days (which would be the middle of the 1980s) Disney TVA was a small, tight-knit organization getting its feet wet with The Gummi Bears and Duck Tales as it navigated a new world of television syndication. As Mr. Birchard describes it, small-screen cartoons were a product that the Disney Company wanted to get right, and a lot of time and money was spent delivering a quality product.
The Animation Guild Oral Histories
We strive to interview a broad cross-section of people in the cartoon industry, folks working on the theatrical and/or television side who have made big contributions to the art form.