#miki Brewster
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"Can't go back"
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Started getting into Steven universe again not long ago, here’s me trying to mimic the style of some boarders
Note; The expressions were really good at the end of Mr. Universe, after and shortly before the van crashing, but I can’t tell if those expressions were done by Nicole Rodrigues’ revisions or Rebecca sugar
#steven universe future#steven universe#doodle#my art#Jeff liu#miki Brewster#joe johnson#etienne guignard#amish kumar#Rebecca sugar#nicole rodriguez#sketches#rebecca/Nicole board was inspired by maximum capacity
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TMNT 2012 | Storyboard by Miki Brewster
more production posts | gdrive
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looking at some su movie storyboards again... oouughwagghhgh...
(im pretty sure these boards are by miki brewster, and godd the way she draws her fuckin gets me everytimeeee)
#maybe someday when i have more brain i will talk more abt this scene#but rn im just hhghhgghhhg (affectionate)#spinel#su#su posting
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“Adventure Time: Distant Lands - Obsidian” SPECIAL BONUS
Marceline in a black hair cutting cape waiting for pb to cut her hair.
Directed by Miki Brewster. Art directed by Sandra Lee. Written and storyboarded by Hanna K. Nystrom, Jack Pendarvis, Anna Syvertsson, Iggy Craig, Adam Muto, Kate Tsang. Additional cast & crew information.
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I also still follow a ton of the storyboard artists on here. I remember one (I think their name was Miki Brewster??) would post illustrations before new episodes and the one they did for Requiem fucked severely. They’d also post storyboards awhile after the episode they worked on came out. Very neat
I’m seeing mutuals reblog that storyboards post not EVER knowing about the 2012 storyboards and GOD I remember back in like 2014-2018 when they’d show storyboards at NYCC for season previews.
I remember the bebop and rocksteady one so vividly bc I JUST got in the fandom and I was like “who’re these sluts”
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Poses for dialogue I did on Miki Brewster’s storyboards.
FYI: Miki is an absolute treat to work with. She’s a force on boards and I really just get to ride the wave when I work with them. Thank you, Miki!
#steven universe#stevenuniverse#steven universe movie#storyboard#hilary florido#hilaryflorido#Miki Brewster#cn#cartoonnetwork#mikibrewster
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I redrew a sketch of Spinel by Miki Brewster, a storyboard artist from Steven Universe, and I’m very, very proud of it
(Here’s the original)
#the emerald sword art#steven universe redraw#steven universe fanart#steven universe spinel#steven universe#miki brewster#the crewniverse#steven universe the movie
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Episode Review: ‘BMO’ (Distant Lands, Ep. 1)
Airdate: June 25, 2020
Story by: Anthony Burch, Adam Muto, Hanna K. Nyström, Jack Pendarvis, and Kate Tsang
Storyboarded by: Hanna K Nyström, Iggy Craig, Laura Knetzger, Anna Syvertsson, & Adam Muto
Directed by: Miki Brewster (supervising), Sandra Lee (art)
I just watched a new episode of Adventure Time...
That, dear readers, is a sentence that—after the airing of “Come Along with Me”—I never thought I’d get to write again! And believe me, it feels great to be proved wrong in this instance.
In October of last year, we were all treated to the news that four new Adventure Time specials—collectively identified as Distant Lands—would be airing in the next year or so. For months, the Adventure Time fandom has waited with bated breath for these specials to drop. Would these episodes be good? Would they live up to the series that came before? Would they undo the emotional satisfaction of the Adventure Time finale? These were the questions. And now, the first special—entitled “BMO”—is here. Does it live up to expectations, proving that Adventure Time always bounces back? Or is it toast-bread for sure? Read on to hear my thoughts!
Beginning in media res, "BMO" opens with the titular character on its way to Mars to terraform Mars. After running into an errant service droid named Olive, BMO is transported to a fantastical space station known as the "Drift." It is here that BMO becomes acquainted with a humanoid rabbit named Y5, and together, the two help reveal the insidious plotting of the station's capitalist overlord, Hugo, and his henchman Mr. M (who, it must be noted, is almost certainly Finn’s father, Martin, up to one of his many schemes). After much mayhem, hilarity, and poignancy, the special ends with BMO traveling back to Earth and meeting up with Finn and Jake for the first time—revealing that this entire special was a prequel to the main series, explaining how BMO first met up with his good friends in Ooo.
The first thing I'd like to comment on is the fact that many of the show's former crew members returned to work on this special. In addition to Adam Muto (Adventure Time's hard-working executive producer), this special saw the return of: storyboard artists Hanna K Nyström, Laura Knetzger, and Anna Syvertsson; storyline writer Jack Pendarvis; character designers Andy Ristaino and Benjamin Anders; art director Sandra Lee; and composer Tim Kiefer. I was actually quite surprised (and delighted!) that so many of the show's old guard returned to help out. And while this special also saw several new creative voices helping out (including folks like former OK KO! storyboard artist Iggy Craig, former Steven Universe board artist Miki Brewster, and writer Kate Tsang), the overall product was recognizably Adventure Time. I must admit, this was my biggest worry going into Distant Lands; without folks like Tom Herpich, Kent Osborne, or Cole Sanchez, would this feel like the show I know and love? I’m happy to say that the answer is yes!
BMO really is in fine form in this episode—from their singing the "Potatoes (More Exciting Than Tomatoes)" ditty in space all the way to their hitching a ride to Earth on a space lard. (Indeed, the sheer number of humorous remarks the little robot gets makes me think that many of the shows writers were saving up goofy one-liners following the show’s cancellation, just in case.) I’m quite pleased with how the episode handled the character, and, in truth, somewhat relieved. Initially, I was worried whether the character would be able to coherently anchor an hour long special, given BMO’s unpredictable and somewhat unreliable nature (see: “Ketchup”). Would 45 minutes of BMO’s seemingly boundless goofiness work? Thankfully, the other characters in this special do an excellent job counterpoising the lovable robot’s more, shall we say, unorthodox personality features (Y5 perhaps said it best when she noted that BMO tends to “expend energy for no apparent purpose”). The end result feels remarkably balanced, with BMO’s chaotic, goofball energy complimenting the very real plight of the Drift’s residents.
Speaking of other characters, Y5 served as a workable straight man, whose half-heartedly pragmatic personality contrasts nicely with BMO’s boundless and wacky optimism. I must give the writers and producers credit: it was extremely risky for them to feature a brand new character as one of the main players (rather than one of the show’s many beloved side characters), but for the most part, they stuck the landing. I think much of this success is due to Y5’s voice actress, Glory Curda, whose performance really breathes live into the character, giving her an earnest believability. That said, the fast-paced nature of this special precluded me from developing the strongest emotional connection to the character, and as such, Y5′s “my parents don’t appreciate me” subplot did not resonate with me as strongly as, say, “It Came from the Nightosphere” did. (But then again, not every character can be Marceline!)
Strictly in terms of story structure, "BMO" is not exactly groundbreaking, and the special follows the standard "buddy movie" formula fairly closely (You know, the structure that goes: "Two individuals from different walks of life are forced to work together. Despite a rocky start, they begin to function as a team. Alas, they are split up, but reunite just in the nick of time to save the world"). But unlike Grace Z. Li of Vulture, who wrote that the special plays out "expectedly" and as such "is simply unimaginative in its structure," I cannot say that the standard plot structure torpedoes "BMO"—it simply gives the special a solid story frame that supports the characters while also providing an opportunity for the show to drop some timely social commentary.
Adventure Time has never been one to shy away from such commentary, but I do not know if it has ever been more overt than in “BMO.” As Alexander Sowa of CBR puts it, Hugo—the alien-human overlord of the Drift—is a “futurist reminiscent of Steve Jobs or Elon Musk” who long ago used a spaceship to escape Earth during the final days of the Mushroom War. After “biohacking” his DNA with the genetic material of the grey aliens who flit around the Oooniverse’s infinite cosmos, Hugo and his ilk founded an Amazon-esque empire in the Drift, inculcating its inhabitants with a love for rampant commercialism. As a villain, Hugo really is the wombo combo: a selfish capitalist hell-bent on stealing riches, colonizing new lands, exploiting conquered peoples, and then leaving when the situation looks bleak. It is not hard to see Hugo and his followers as stand-ins for the leaders of today, who refuse to acknowledge the reality of thinks like climate change or income inequality—problems that, if left unchecked, will lead to cataclysmic societal collapse. It is a bleak topic for Adventure Time to meditate on, but at least the episode ends on a positive note, with BMO's actions proving that with the right leader(s) and enough people working together, otherwise powerless individuals can topple oppressive regimes and begin to right the wrongs that have been made by the bourgeoisie (if you’ll allow me to invoke the ol’ Marxist term). Now, "BMO" admits that such reformation is one that will require many sacrifices, but nevertheless, the special does emphatically assert that it is possible. And in the hellscape that is 2020, this is a message of hope that so many need to hear.
In addition to social depth, there's quite a bit of existential nuance to this episode, too. Perhaps the most striking scene in the entire special is the scene wherein BMO is torn apart and—for all intents and purposes—dies. It is a chilling scene made all the more haunting by the return of BMO's rainbow personae (last seen in season seven's "The More You Moe, the Moe You Know"), who urge BMO to accept death ("Now your job is to be dead") and recognize that the robot has failed in its mission to be a true hero. (As pointed out to me on Reddit, the scene stylistically echoes an eerie bit of dialogue from Portal 2, wherein GLaDOS tells you: “I have a sort of black-box quick-save feature: In the event of a catastrophic failure, the last two minutes of my life are preserved for analysis. I was ... forced ... to relive you killing me. Again and again. Forever." Talk about horrific!) Thankfully—in the spirit of the hero's journey—BMO bounces back from the brink of oblivion, proving that even in the bleakest of moments, all of us can be heroes.
Or something like that.
All in all, “BMO” was an enjoyable romp that dropped us back into a magical world we all love. While I wouldn’t say that the special was mind-blowing, it succeeded in its mission of telling a new story in a new place, while focusing on a character whom Adventure Time fans care deeply about.
Here’s looking to “Obsidian!”
Mushroom War Evidence: When it comes to the Mushroom War mythos, this episode was full of a lot of little details. CGO’s monologue reveals that, indeed, Earth was ravage by numerous nuclear weapons; what is more, it seems that some sort of doomsday weapon vaporized part of the Earth, leaving that gaping scar in the planet that has for so long fascinated the show’s mythology-junkies. It is also explicitly state that Hugo and his ilk were humans who fled Earth during the Mushroom War to escape certain destruction.
Final Grade:
Also, while I have your attention: Book update! As some of you might already know, over the last year and a half, I’ve been working on a book all about the history and production of Adventure Time! It’s been an absolute blast, and I’ve been lucky enough to talk to quite a few of the folks who worked on the show (including people like Tom Herpich, Jack Pendarvis, Pat McHale, and Rebecca Sugar). I’m in the final stages of type-setting, and should hopefully have the book ready to go within the next few weeks. Here’s a sneak peek of cover (please ignore the faint InDesign lines; they won’t be in the finished product):
Originally, I was going to publish this work through McFarland and Company, but then Cartoon Network got all pissy (long story short: I reached out to Rebecca Sugar and Adam Muto, got in contact with both of ‘em, and asked some questions about Bubbline. Rebecca responded and and confirmed that Bubbline was intended to be canon when she boarded “What Was Missing” but structural homophobia prevented it from being explicitly declared as such. This revelation made CN PR reeeeeaaally uncomfortable and they threatened to sic the lawyers), so I’m now going to be publishing through the University of Kansas Libraries. The good news is that the work will be free to download, and easily accessible! Yay! That said, if you want a hard copy of the book, I’ll post details about that in a bit. Anyway, keep your eyes peeled!
#adventure time#atimers#distant lands#adventure time distant lands#bmo#hanna k. nyström#iggy craig#laura knetzger#anna syvertsson#adam muto#miki brewster#sandra lee
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Starward Lovers
I have been slacking off so much with my reviews that I was thinking about changing this blog's name. Well, to be honest I wasn't slacking off, I was being kicked in the face by adulthood, jobs, deadlines, etc. When I was 15 I used to say I couldn't wait to grow up and be an adult and have adult responsibilities, what was I thinking? Anyways.
A couple of days ago I had the pleasure of reading Starward Lovers, a great lesbian webcomic.
Our protagonist, Jen, is a university student who doesn't know what she wants to do with her life. She has always been moved by the desire of pleasing the people around her, which ended up burning her out to the extent that she threw all of her future plans out the window. The only thing she looks forward to is going to her uni's café, where a mysterious and beautiful woman (who once paid for Jen's order) goes every day. Jen always thinks about trying to initiate a conversation with her, but never dares. Finally, after an incident that will make her discover the woman's true identity, she will join a galactic team of fighters to save the galaxy from the Dark Queen.
The plot sounds very typical, but the execution was refreshing; mainly thanks to the protagonist, Jen. She's normally the type of character that I would dislike to read about (very insecure, weak-willed, indecisive, easily manipulable) but she is very, very reactive - her character growth was really great and felt very organic. I also liked the rest of the team, all composed by lesbian women in roles we rarely see them occupying in the media - from the nerdy brains to the boisterous brawl, along with the wild rockstar and the mysterious, aloof teammate that isolates herself from the rest of the group. It is a fun, action-packed story full of lesbians with amazing hairdos, which is always great.
The villain was interesting (the themes that she represented were perfect for Jen’s character development) and even if the resolution was quick, it blended very nicely with the romantic part of the plot.
I also loved the art style; it was semi-cartoon-like and was very well defined, dynamic, energetic and easy to understand. The protagonist was a gnc woman and the author didn’t tone down this fact at all, nor did she try to make her look sexy in order to make her more palatable (which happens far too often) or made her change her gnc ways. The other women had diverse skin tones/facial and bodily features, which was very nice as well.
I recommend this story if you enjoy lesbian webcomics that are short, action-packed, with an unexpected twist but with a sweet ending. I don’t recommend it if you’re looking for an epic, slow-burn romance kind of deal.
SPOILERS ahead:
One of the things I did dislike was how quick Jen changed her love interest; I felt like Jen just jumped from liking Red to liking Rocker in such a short span of time that it did feel unbelievable/made Jen seem to be in love with the idea of love instead of with Rocker, but that’s my only complain. Well, that and not showing Jen and Rocker sharing a big damn kiss and having a date at the end.
#lesbian comics#good lesbian rep#lesbian books#wlw books#starward lovers#miki brewster#sci-fi#happy ending#lesbian love interest#cast full of lesbians#multiple love interests
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I really dont think spinel has any sort of "default" height, stretching is so natural for her that I dont think she has one particular state
Sure, she ended up staying the same height for thousands of years because she was standing still, but honestly thats even more reason for her to throw that out the window
Honestly, i think her height could show more how shes feeling and how she wants to be perceived
Like
At the start of the movie she wants to be perceived as intimidating, so she makes herself taller. At the end, when shes ready to start a new happier life, shes much shorter
Its not 100% because shes changing size constantly, both because of her powers and because this is steven universe and no one has a consistent height, but I still think its an interesting contrast
(Of course it also depends on the storyboarder and all. Miki brewster tends to draw her taller and Nicole Rodriguez tends to draw her shorter. Even when it comes to spinel's hair)
I think that its not something she ever actually thinks about, its just natural for her. She might make herself taller or shorter depending on who shes talking to, as well.
If she has any sort of "default height" it would probably be either around the same as steven or slightly shorter. But nothing is really exact
Ive had this joke for a while that she did once had a default height, but she forgot kdkfbf
#trying to look at character heights in STEVEN UNIVERSE sure is a task#idc im doing it#and with her specifically its interesting cause it ties back with her emotions#anyway spinel posting on ur dash woooo#spinel#su#steven universe#su posting
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“Adventure Time: Distant Lands - Obsidian” SPECIAL
Marceline slapping pb and sleeping with a red shirt and one white sock
Directed by Miki Brewster. Art directed by Sandra Lee. Written and storyboarded by Hanna K. Nystrom, Jack Pendarvis, Anna Syvertsson, Iggy Craig, Adam Muto, Kate Tsang. Additional cast & crew information.
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Steven Universe Podcast: Fan Celebration
This is an outline of the Steven Universe Podcast regarding “Fan Celebration”: an issue of the podcast in which voice actors and storyboarders answer fan questions. No volume number or episode number was given for this one. The official description:
It's a celebration of the fandom! Zach Callison (voice of Steven), Deedee Magno Hall (voice of Pearl), Michaela Dietz (voice of Amethyst), Matthew Moy (voice of Lars), and Storyboard Artists Miki Brewster and Lamar Abrams tackle everything from gem weapon of choice to creating their own storylines to favorite scenes and hardest ones to voice and create to memorable studio moments and best-loved characters!
This is a long podcast with a long summary, so as usual I will give you a bulleted list of highlights, followed by a detailed summary.
Highlights:
Miki Brewster’s favorite characters to board are Amethyst & Ruby. Character reactions are inspired by what she thinks a fan would want to see, and designs she loves are overgrown old Gem stuff on Earth. In the SU world, her weapon would be a greatsword.
Matthew Moy would have related to Pearl or Lars most as a child. His hardest thing to VA for has been Lars’s switch to being a confident space captain. He feels connection to characters he plays is vital. His memorable moment with the Crew was finally meeting Estelle after about four years of doing the show. A line that sums up his character would be just groaning about what Steven has gotten him into. His favorite episodes to be part of were probably “Lars of the Stars” and “The Good Lars.”
Lamar Abrams would have related most to Sapphire as a child. His hardest thing to VA for was the energetic stylings of Zooman Wy-Six. Lamar leans on direction to properly play characters and doesn’t necessarily need to relate to them. His memorable moment with the Crew was improvising a chant to egg Sour Cream on in “Lars and the Cool Kids.” A line that sums up his character (Buck) is “That’s nasty. I don’t like nasty stuff.” His favorite episode to be part of was maybe “Shirt Club.”
Deedee Magno Hall thinks the thing her character would never say would involve enthusiastically ordering food. If she was in the SU world, her weapon would be an antibacterial spritzer. The most fun part of her job is the people she works with. The hardest scenes for her involve when Pearl screams. Deedee’s favorite thing to record is “all the songs.” If she could write an episode, she would have it be musical and involve a tour of the SU world on a flying carpet. she thinks jewelry in the SU world would be an alternate way to protect your friends and keep them close.
Michaela Dietz thinks the thing her character would never say would be a sincere “I love you” (though she would SHOW it), or maybe saying she’d had enough food. If she was in the SU world, her weapon would be a cannon that shoots “the bits.” The most fun part of her job is the people she works with. The hardest scenes for her involve talking during a song. She says she sometimes has to burp on cue and has trouble doing it. Michaela’s top episode to record for may have been “The Question.” If she could write an episode, she would have the Crystal Gems writing a cartoon. In answering what food Amethyst would NOT like, she thinks it’d be anything with nutritional value or superfoods. And she thinks jewelry in the SU world would be like being able to carry your friends around.
Zach Callison thinks the thing his character would never say would be about loving his mom (his feelings for her are weird, and he doesn’t know her), or that Steven would never insult a restaurant’s cooking and send it back. If he was in the SU world, his weapon would be a gun blade. The most fun part of his job is the people he works with. The hardest scenes for him were doing all the Stevens in “Steven and the Stevens.” A funny VA moment for him was when he and Grace Rolek had to stuff huge marshmallows in their mouths for a full-mouth line. Zach’s top episodes to be part of were big turning point episodes like “Jailbreak” and “Mr. Greg.” He thinks the biggest difference when recording for a video game is the increase in effort noises and being trusted to know their characters more. If he could write an episode, he’d have Peridot and Steven hunting down a mob boss in a gritty episode where they’d fuse into a tiny Fusion at the end. He thinks jewelry in the SU world would be like keeping Gems as pets and would horrify Homeworld.
The detailed summary is below!
[Archive of Steven Universe Podcast Summaries]
Miki Brewster is first up; Miki is the storyboarder who wrote and boarded on the episodes "The Question" and "Reunited" (among other episodes). She answers these questions:
Q: Who's your favorite character to storyboard?
A: Ruby or Amethyst. She just thinks Amethyst is cute and Ruby is excitable and fun, and her square head is fun and easy to draw.
Q: How do you come up with how characters will respond to situations?
A: What would a fan really want to see this character do? If you're a fan, you could watch a whole show just for a character, so reactions should be about what makes that character unique and worth watching.
Q: What kind of motifs in music or design are most interesting to you?
A: Gem architecture on Earth, like overgrown temples and crashed ships.
Q: If you were in the SU world, what would your Gem weapon be?
A: A greatsword. They're cool and you can hit hard with them.
Matthew Moy and Lamar Abrams are the next guests.
Q: Which character would you have resonated with most as a child?
A: Matthew would have resonated with Pearl (because she worries so much) or Lars. Lamar would have resonated with Sapphire (because she's quiet and introspective the way he was--he would have identified with her diplomacy, and she's trying to make people understand).
Q: What has been the hardest scene to do voice acting for?
A: Matthew feels it was when Lars became the space captain. It's a big switch, being confident, such a contrast to his teen angst from before. Lamar said he has an easy time voicing Buck, so his most difficult was voicing Wy-Six (he can't remember if it was Jay-Ten or Wy-Six, he always gets those two mixed up). It's so energetic and exuberant and he says it was tiring to do for a whole session. He can't believe other people have to voice characters who yell and scream.
Q: How much do you feel for your characters, how do you relate to them?
A: Matthew feels like acting requires it; connection is vital. Lamar thinks it's just about getting across the right feeling even if you can't personally relate. Rebecca helps with the direction. He suggests he might sometimes be told to make Buck "more disinterested," and Matthew wants to know if he's ever actually gotten that direction. He thinks maybe, or at least he's sometimes told to try stuff in a higher or lower tone.
Q: What kind of antics do the voice actors get up to? Any funny or memorable times recording?
A: Matthew remembers meeting Estelle finally like four years into the job. During the pilot he recorded with 80% of the cast but not her, and he finally got to meet her and introduced himself awkwardly, and she's like "Hey Lars, nice to finally meet you." Lamar suggests maybe it was almost like what Garnet herself would do in that situation, and Matthew enthusiastically agrees, suggesting "Oh my gosh we're all the same." Lamar remembers finally meeting her after a while too, and he met her outside the studio when she was probably going to get something to eat. He saw her with her glasses on and thought she looked cool but later realized that was probably Estelle. Lamar remembers one time he was voicing Buck with Brian Posehn (Sour Cream) and Reagan Gomez (Jenny) and they had to do a little chant egging Sour Cream on while other characters would be talking over it, and he thought that was fun. (The improvised chant he describes is the one at the end of "Lars and the Cool Kids.") They love the "side walla that nobody hears." Lamar always hopes someone notices those things.
Q: If you could sum up your character in one quote or moment what would it be?
A: After McKenzie jokes that Matthew should say "bingo bongo" or she'll be disappointed, Matthew says that doesn't really sum up Lars 'cause he's a complicated fellow. He just makes a reluctant/frustrated grunt and says "that sums up Lars." He adds, "Ugghhh, Steven!" That's Lars's inner monologue all the time: "Steven, what did you get me into?" Lamar remembers writing one of the first Buck episodes in "Lars and the Cool Kids" when Buck is reacting to Jenny's story about doggy-do. "That's nasty. I don't like nasty stuff." Lamar loves how he doesn't exclaim or get into a lot of emotion: it's just "that's nasty, nope."
Q: What would you say has been your top favorite episode to be a part of?
A: Matthew loved "Lars of the Stars," and "the baking episode" ("The Good Lars"), the whole Wanted arc was really cool. Lamar isn't sure--he guesses he loved in "Shirt Club" when Buck is being a jerk about Steven's art, "this is bad and it's funny," and then when Steven gets back at him shooting his "vote for my dad" art out of the t-shirt cannons and some people are laughing at Buck's art, he sheds a single tear. Lamar loves that, "wow he DOES have emotions." He also really liked that it was a bonding episode with his dad and an episode about being better friends with Steven.
The next group is Deedee Magno Hall, Michaela Dietz, and Zach Callison.
Q: What is something that you think your favorite SU character would never say?
A: Deedee says, "Can I get a double double with cheese, please?" (They all laugh.) Michaela says she thinks Amethyst would never sincerely say "I love you." Deedee objects, but Michaela says she would show it but not say it, and wonders if she made the others sad by saying that. Zach says he has a dark one: that Steven would never express feelings of love toward his mom, because he doesn't really know her like that. Deedee says she feels like she's gonna cry. Zach says they've literally never met and she's causes tons of problems in his life. McKenzie was not prepared for answers like this because she expected them to be more like Deedee's funny one, so Michaela jumps on that and says Amethyst would never say "no thank you, I've had enough." And on the subject of food, Zach says Steven would never say "THIS FOOD IS TERRIBLE! TAKE IT BACK!" (He says it in Steven's voice.) He'd never do that in a restaurant. Michaela thinks he'd just silently eat it and think something positive about what he could imagine the bad food tastes like. Zach begins to chant "Chew . . . swallow" in Steven's voice.
Q: If you were in the SU world, what would your Gem weapon be?
A: Zach says maybe an anime style gun blade. Like a musket. Michaela says probably a cannon that shoots out "the bits." Deedee says anti-bacterial spritzer. They agree that it fights germs. Michaela agrees that that is SO in character.
Q: What is the most fun part of your job?
A: Zach says "This right here." They all say it's great to see friends, and Michaela adds, "AND seeing Zach and Deedee. Just kidding, they ARE my friends." Deedee says she's getting so many wrinkles from smiling due to being around these guys.
Q: What was the hardest scene to voice act for?
A: Deedee doesn't like when she has to scream, because it's hard on her voice. Michaela has a hard time with speaking during a song, because she slips into like a weird Broadway projection and has to remind herself that that's not Amethyst. Zach adds that the timing on that is really difficult. For Zach, he says it took a lot of time to do all the many Stevens in "Steven and the Stevens," and there was lots of screaming.
Q: Do you remember any particularly funny moments from when you were recording?
A: Zach immediately answers "No. None. Zero." Michaela agrees and says there is no laughing and it's a very serious show. Deedee bursts in with disagreement and reassurance that they are joking and there's SO much laughter. Deedee says efforts are the most fun. Zach loved when Robert was looping one of Deedee's "???" reactions into the booth. Zach loved when he had to use jumbo marshmallows for him and Grace to put in their mouths to make full-mouth noises. Michaela chimes in that sometimes she has to burp on cue and that's hard for her. Zach can burp on cue and offers to do it for Michaela, and demonstrates.
Q: What would you say has been your top favorite episode to be a part of?
A: Zach says "Mr. Greg" and "Jailbreak"--any episode that was a huge turning point like that. Deedee loves "Mr. Greg" too. Zach loves Deedee's performance of "It's Over, Isn't It," and Deedee responds "No, YOUR section was great," and they just keep saying "No you're great, no YOU'RE great." Michaela's was probably the "Ruby Rider one" ("The Question"). She loved the engagement at the end. Zach chimes in to say the wedding episode ("Reunited") was great too, and the song was very difficult, but the others loved hearing him sing "Let's Only Think About Love." That song is almost four minutes long! Deedee loves ALL the songs.
Q: How is recording for a video game different from recording for the show?
A: They agree it's SO different; Zach says it's partly that they have a different crew recording them, with a different voice director. Michaela feels they depend on them to know their characters more in the video game recordings. Zach agrees they trust them more, while on the show the boarders and crew know as much and more than the voice actors. Zach says on video games they have to make a lot more effort noises and weird command prompts, so many details. Michaela agrees about the efforts, and Deedee is sad that they're not in the room together. Michaela adds, "so we cry the whole time, it's crazy."
Q: If you could write your own episode, what would it be about and what would your character be doing?
A: Zach immediately says DO NOT LET ME DO THIS. Michaela says she would write an episode about the Crystal Gems writing a cartoon episode about themselves. Pearl would say "and then I would say a joke! I'd be the comic relief!" Zach thinks they'd have to look at the camera and break the fourth walls. Deedee says she'd love an episode where the whole thing is a song, even more so than "Mr. Greg." It'd have to have a flying carpet scene where they can see the whole SU world, through music. Zach says he'd want a gritty detective show with Steven and Peridot taking on a mob boss, with them talking in deeper voices, Peridot going "those clods are gonna get what's coming to them!" And he'd want them to fuse at the end because he really wants the Steven/Peridot Fusion. Michaela prompts him to "say the theory," and Zach says he just wants that Fusion to be half the size instead of double the size. For shorty squad rep. There's so much utility to a tiny Fusion!
Q: Is there any food Amethyst DOESN'T like?
A: Michaela says: Anything with nutritional value? Superfoods? Anything that lacks textural integrity--she thinks Amethyst would not have much fun with baby food or applesauce, she just loves to chew and have something to do.
Q: How would Gems react to the concept of jewelry?
A: Michaela thinks it'd be like Baby Bjorns, they'd be carrying their friend around, like Amethyst could run around with friends on her wrist. Zach feels like it'd be too much like keeping Gems as pets, and Homeworld would be horrified by our civilization enslaving their people. Jewelry is totally how come Homeworld is mad at us! Deedee says when they're poofed jewelry could be a way to keep them close and safe. Zach worries the jewelry casing would break when the Gem came back. Deedee worries they'd fall through a hole in a pocket. Zach suggests if someone complimented your necklace you could be like "thanks these are my cousins!" Michaela suggests Bismuth would have a "Bedazzled fanny pack." Deedee says "maybe a Pearl Pouch."
There's no information about a next podcast episode.
[Archive of Steven Universe Podcast Summaries]
#steven universe#steven universe podcast#long post#mckenzie atwood#miki brewster#lamar abrams#matthew moy#michaela dietz#deedee magno hall#zach callison#myblog
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Rebecca Sugar, Miki Brewster, and Lamar Abrams will be the storyboard artists part of the Steven Universe subreddit AMA!!
#steven universe#battle of heart and mind#change your mind#rebecca sugar#miki brewster#lamar abrams#crewniverse#pp stuff#news
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Video
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Adventure Time: Distant Lands - BMO main title
storyboarded by Miki Brewster
animation studio - Encyclopedia Pictura
cinematographer - Sean Hellfritsch
art director - Isaiah Saxon
modeler - Jordan Speer
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Adventure Time: Distant Lands - logo
storyboarded by Miki Brewster
animation by Delfina Pérez Adán
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BMO premieres Thursday, June 25th 2020 only on HBO Max
#Adventure Time#Adventure Time: Distant Lands#BMO#video#intro#Miki Brewster#Encyclopedia Pictura#Sean Hellfritsch#Isaiah Saxon#Jordan Speer#Delfina Pérez Adán
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