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anderswolleck

Hewlett Harbor, Long Island, New York

Member Since 2003

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Seth Green And Matthew Senreich

Feb 22, 2005
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I hope a lot of you watched Robot Chicken when it premiered last Sunday. Robot Chicken is going to be the show that breaks Adult Swim to the mainstream. I loved the short sketches such as the Scarecrow getting knifed in the OZ sketch and also the longer sketches like the one where Optimus Prime gets colon cancer.

After the first Austin Powers we all knew that Seth Green was going to be a major creative force in Hollywood. But while he has gotten the chance to improvise in big budget movies like The Italian Job and Without a Paddle we have never seen him do something as the main creative force. But now hes teamed up with a former editor of ToyFare magazine, Matthew Senreich, to write, direct, produce and lend his voice to Robot Chicken.

New episodes of Robot Chicken will air every Sunday at 11:30 pm on Cartoon Networks Adult Swim.

Check out the official website for Robot Chicken


Daniel Robert Epstein: I thought the first episode was fantastic and Im not just blowing smoke up your asses.

Seth Green: There is already plenty of smoke up there. Ive already had to open my mouth up real wide just to let some of the pressure out.

DRE: Have you guys heard of SuicideGirls before?

SG: Yeah I knew a girl that was involved with it for a while.

DRE: So Matt when are we expecting the cease and desist order from [Wizard Magazine Publisher] Gareb Shamus [because of Twisted ToyFare Theatre]?

Matthew Senreich: [laughs] We are really amicable and I talk to those guys pretty much every day. They knew about it when we were doing it for Sonys website.

DRE: Was Twisted ToyFare Theatre an inspiration for Robot Chicken at all?

MS: Its kind of the reverse. Seth was going to go on Late Night with Conan OBrien and he wanted to create an action/adventure piece with his toy and Conan OBriens toy doing something stupid.

SG: I wanted to do stop motion shorts in lieu of an interview.

MS: Seth was a fan of Twisted ToyFare Theatre so he called me up and asked if me and a couple of other writers wanted to do it with him. As we were producing that first one Sonys website Screenblast picked it up and wanted to do a few more.

DRE: Seth I know that you get to improvise in a lot of the movies you work on but have you written screenplays that havent gotten produced?

SG: Yeah I had a movie in development at Disney for two years which was a complete waste of time. It was just a miserable experience which kind of shied me away from producing. But then Matt and I were just planning to do this as an independent self financed project. We got the opportunity to produce it for the Sony site then the opportunity came up to do it for TV. It wasnt something that we actively sought out but instead it just happened.

DRE: The show must be a ton of work.

SG: It is. Matt and I are in the office from 7 am to almost 10 pm every night. Were just here all the time because we oversee every aspect of production. Were doing the job, which is exhausting, but its also incredibly satisfying. Its been incredibly rewarding to literally pull something out of nothing and have it get on TV.

DRE: Seth youre also a big movie star on top of all this. Is it taking time away from that or are you splitting time up?

SG: Splitting it up isnt a very good idea. I actually did a movie in the middle of our production and had to do all the work via remote patching whether it was by email or FedEx. It was a dumb thing to do because the pace is too exhausting to keep up. When I finished that I promised myself I wouldnt do that again. Im not going to be working on anything else while were doing this.

DRE: I read that you are going to be doing 20 fifteen minute shows, is that true?

MS: Yes.

SG: Yeah were wrapping up the filming of the 16th and were recording for episodes 18 to 20 now.

DRE: Thats a huge amount of episodes especially for Adult Swim.

MS: Weve been working on this for a while. We started writing back in July 2004 and we started production in September.

DRE: I thought the whole show was going to be one note jokes but you have some pretty complex stuff in there sometimes.

SG: One of things we try to do is give each episode three tent poles. The goal is to have three or four sketches that are a bit longer like one to four minutes long.

MS: We have one eight minute sketch coming up later on.

SG: Its going to play as two parter over one episode.

MS: We realized that the one to two minute sketches play out the best. Its in and out then were on to the next thing.

DRE: How do you two split up the duties?

MS: We split them up a little bit but pretty much Seth, me and [head writers] Douglas Goldstein and Tom Root pretty much cover all the aspects. Everything from directing shots, calling agents to sitting with the editors.

SG: Its too much work for any one of us to do by ourselves so we really have to work as a cohesive team.

DRE: The press release was kind of vague about how you two met, Green and Senreich met through their mutual love of toys and action figures. Did you meet at some convention?

SG: It was a furry convention.

MS: [laughs] When I was at Wizard I saw that Seth was a big action figure collector. So I called up his publicist and she said he would get back to me. A few minutes later Seth called and we just hit it off.

SG: An editorial director from Wizard called me and I ended up writing three or four articles. But Matt ultimately wooed with a Love Boats Boat's Isaac and a Black Hole Bob both on the card in mint condition. Thats how we fell in love.

DRE: Will we see a sketch that has a Scott Evil figure versus an Oz from Buffy figure?

SG: One of the real tricks of the show is that you have authentic dispensable parodies to make some sort of social commentary with. We really dont randomly have anything in there.

MS: To give an idea. Tom and Dougs action figures will probably appear tons more than Seths.

DRE: The Transformers toys you used dont look like real Transformers toys.

SG: A lot of the stuff we have made or modified. For stuff to be animated you have to break it and wire it so it can move in ways they werent meant to. Sometimes we have to concede that the figure has limited poseability because it plays into the silliness.

MS: We have a puppet department of about seven people that do nothing but wire armatures of bodies that we could put heads and arms onto.

SG: Well also custom sculpt the likeness of someone like Former Secretary of Education Rod Page.

DRE: Dana Plato spent all of her money on drugs and Seth you spent it on toys.

SG: I really dont spend a lot of money on them.

DRE: On the Jimmy Kimmel show you said you had one that cost $1700.

SG: The book price on that toy is $1700 but I didnt pay that. That would be crazy. If you have $1700 to literally throw out the window, dont spend it on a toy just throw it out the window. It would be easier to say that you threw it out the window rather than say you spent it on a Greatest American Hero box set.

DRE: Seth, is this your chance to finally boss around [Family Guy creator] Seth MacFarlane?

SG: [laughs] Hes great. Youre talking about one of the most brilliant and talented guys of our generation. I love the opportunity to work with him on Family Guy let alone having him come in and screw around on our show.

DRE: How many new Family Guy episodes have you recorded so far?

SG: I think were halfway through the fourth season and we got a pickup for the fifth so were really excited about it.

DRE: Is the evil monkey in the closet back?

SG: Yeah weve recorded two gags with him already.

DRE: After you finish these 20 episodes of Robot Chicken do you hope to do more or even a feature film?

SG: I dont know. Well cross that bridge when we come to it because first we want to get it out there and see how it does. I dont think any of us would turn down the opportunity to do a second season but wed have to modify the way its done. Its an intense production so we have to figure out how to take breaks.

DRE: What kinds of Standards and Practices issues are you bumping into?

SG: It hasnt been too bad. Its mostly related to sex and violence.

DRE: Have you done a major sex scene between two figures yet?

MS: We have a great porn scene with popsicle sticks.

SG: Yeah its a reenactment of Debbie Does Dallas. We also have something in either episode 13 or 14 thats an example of scrambled porn.

DRE: Are you going to have recurring characters?

SG: Weve done varying versions of the bloopers sketch three times over 20 episodes. Thats probably the only thing thats really repeated.

MS: There are a few characters youll see over and over again.

SG: The character may not exactly be germane to the sketch but we just like seeing different puppets show up again.

DRE: I heard that the name Robot Chicken came from some Chinese food menu.

SG: Yeah we used to get takeout from this Chinese restaurant when we were writing the show so we used to order the Robot Chicken.

DRE: What dish is the Robot Chicken?

SG: Its like a sweet and sour garlic chicken.

DRE: Youve got a lot of voices guest starring like Seth Macfarlane and then of course Abraham Benrubi.

SG: Weve had great success with voices. We also had Ryan Seacrest, Mark Hamill, Burt Reynolds and Dom DeLuise. We just had Phyllis Diller in also.

DRE: Do they know exactly what they are doing in there?

SG: No one gets made fun behind their back.

DRE: How awesome was it getting Kurtwood Smith in there?

SG: Kurtwood killed! He came on for The 70s Show sketch then he also did one that was the further adventures of Walt Disneys head.

MS: He played a Lemming in a nature show parody.

DRE: I saw a picture of a set with the Diff'rent Strokes characters. Will the real Conrad Bain do a voice?

SG: He does as a puppet but since it was just three words we didnt approach him. In a lot of cases, like when we did a Corey Feldman puppet, it is just a couple lines of dialogue so we wont go to the real people.

DRE: Matt, are you are still at the magazine?

MS: Unfortunately I had to leave the magazine because it was too much work. But I just wrote a pilot for FOX. Its a one hour drama thats kind of like if The X-Files was run by the church.

DRE: Seth, have you heard much about an Italian Job sequel yet?

SG: There is nothing official yet. I heard there was a draft of the script that Paramount liked and it went [Italian Job director] Gary Gray. That was the last thing I heard.

by Daniel Robert Epstein

SG Username: AndersWolleck



VIEW 16 of 16 COMMENTS
kayla_:
thank god for the tivo!
i tivo robot chicken and it is awesome smile
Mar 2, 2005
uramu:
Add this to a growing list of reasons my TV's tuned to CN from 11:00 til when I crash every night. biggrin

Psilon bloopers .... LOL!
Mar 2, 2005

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