Tag: community TV

  • BRISBANE BABY! 31 Questions on 31 Digital

    We’re finally coming to Brisbane’s 31 Digital (actually channel 44)!

    Catch Season 3 of the quiz show all the cool kids are ignoring: Sundays and Tuesdays 9.30PM from this Sunday, 21 September 2014.

    I promised the good people at the TV station you’d watch it. Don’t make me a liar and a felon.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Commit to Community TV

  • 31 Questions Episode VIII: The Wisdom of Friends

    By the way, hope you’re enjoying these sequel title gags. Got a bit tricky to find titles after 7…

    Anyway… 31 Questions! We’re done!

    And the ratings are IN. We broke all previous records this season with the Channel 31 Ratings Machine indicating 46,000 people in Melbourne & Geelong tuned in to our 4th episode on June 28. Beats the hell out of our previous best of 37,800 for our Season 2 finale last year. These days with all the competition from the plethora of digital channels, YouTube, PacMan and hula hoops, that some damn good figures.

    I assume.

    Personally, I reckon the best episodes of Season 3 are 1, 6 and the finale. And what a way to go out. Highlights of Ep 8 include the contractually required “Sophie’s Choice” segment, in which contestants Aaron and Naomi sing for points; Sophie and Anthony’s all-French exchange and one very special cameo.

    If you missed the season finale when it aired on C31 Melbourne & Geelong on July 26, or you haven’t watched it on YouTube yet, look away now as I ruin the surprise.

    A wonderful moment and by far the biggest round of applause we ever received of all the episodes.

    31 Questions: the little game show that could, has come a long way since that first pilot 4 years ago. So many people have helped make the show possible. A nice way to illustrate is to take a look at the crew photos, starting with our 2nd pilot shoot in 2011.

    Also note, I’m holding a pot plant above Simon Eastwood’s head:

    Season 1, 2012:

    Season 2, 2013:

    Season 3, 2014:

    Just by these 4 photos, you can also see how the whole thing has evolved: The set, logo, lighting, the number of people involved and just the general level of organisation too.

    Funnily enough, I didn’t begin with the crew photo from our 1st pilot because our level of organisation in those early days was not sufficient to organise a group photo.

    This is the closest I’ve got from our disastrous first shoot in 2010:

    Side note, get a load of the Question Mk #1 jacket:

    I believe that was a rush job the night before… Where was I?

    So my point is literally hundreds of hands and thousands of fingers have worked on 31 Questions. 99 per cent of them for no money. And it’s the little touches you don’t even think about that bring out the best in a big project like this. People solved problems and did things on this show I don’t even know about. You could even say we got this far thanks to “the wisdom of friends”.

    I probably wouldn’t, but I mean you COULD say that, if you wanted.

    Any way you look at it, it was teamwork made this show. It wasn’t perfect, but we had far more hits than misses. It’s just about the best community television can be.

    And I’m damn proud to put my name on it.

    Hope you enjoyed watching.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green

  • 31 Questions Episode 7: The New Blood

    Time flies, aye? Seems like only yesterday I was posting about Episode 6…

    On the penultimate episode of 31 Questions Season 3, contestants Travis & Pia receive questions via the Question Cannon and distribute answers accordingly. How many questions can YOU answer?

    This week’s special segments include: “Urban Myths” & “Wrong Number”. Produced by RMITV Student Television for C31 Melbourne & Geelong. Originally broadcast 19 July 2014.

    Oh and speaking of community TV, this new Australian Federal Government doesn’t think much of it. It kinda needs your help. To save it a little. So get on the Commit to Community TV Facebook Page and sign the petition.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green

    PS. Final episode airs TONIGHT 8.30 on C31 Melbourne & Geelong (Channel 44). And there might just be a special cameo by a certain somebody…

  • 31 Questions & Mad As Hell: Two Season Threes

    I’ve just come out the other side of the busiest 3 months of my life. Hence the void of blog.

    So let me fill you in (not sexually)…

    Season 3 of Shaun Micallef’s Mad As Hell wrapped up a couple of weeks ago. I thoroughly enjoyed my time writing for the show and it was an incredible experience to work with some very talented people, the best of the best, and who until now I’d only known as some names in the credits of TV shows I used to watch when I was 16-years-old.

    Several of my scripts made it to air. “Bum Tree” was my favourite. That was my first desk piece and sitting in the studio audience watching that unfold was, and I don’t use this word very often, awesome.

    I also feel I’m a better writer than I was three months ago. Previously I’ve tended to avoid topical comedy due to the usual very long gap between recording and broadcasting  whatever it is that I’m creating. But working on Mad As Hell put some of my RMIT journalism skills to practical use, and more than anything taught me to respect “the joke”.

    Every script needs jokes. That seems obvious, but often I can write what I think is a joke, only to look at it a little more closely after lunch and realise that it’s not actually a joke at all. Comedy scripts need jokes. Only the jokes in a script make an audience laugh. And after all, that’s the whole purpose of comedy. So my personal bar is now set a little higher.

    In addition to writing for the show, I also fulfilled another childhood dream and appeared in a sketch. See if you can spot me in the closing song on the season finale. And by the way, I couldn’t have chosen a better song (and I can assure you, it wasn’t me!)…

    Meanwhile, while all that “madness” was going on, I was also making my own show. You know that other show I do? I’m sure I’ve mentioned it here before… Anyway, it’s called “31 Questions”. And Season 3 of THAT show wrapped up production last week too.

    Jeeze, 3 seasons? Who’d have thought, aye? AYE!?!

    It’s gone from an idea for a pilot in mid-2010, which was approved, then rejected, then cancelled, to a 6-month battle with RMITV to make a second pilot, which was finally approved, then to waiting around for 9 months while some managerial politics played out, after which we were finally given the green light for a season in 2012.

    The goal of the first season was to make a game show that was funny. For no money. I didn’t spent much time worrying about the technical aspects of the show, so long as they fulfilled the bare basic practical requirements. I wanted things to be as simple as possible. Need a scoreboard? A whiteboard will do. It works.

    When I look back at Season 1 now, it looks like a skeleton. Hey, don’t get me wrong. Skeletons are funny. They have a certain boney charm. But it is what it is: community television. With all the splendor of a person with no skin.

    Then we met Hugh Johnson. He told us we should make a second season, work on the “game” side of the show, develop our “characters” and tailor the comedy around the boundaries of “the game show”. So we did. Again, for no money. And season 2 in 2013 was a step in the right direction. We applied many lessons from the first season. The DMG, Anthony and Sophie characters were more refined. More thought was put into the questions and selecting the contestants. We shot more material than we needed so we could edit out the stuff that didn’t work so well.

    But with a more complex production, combined with less time in the studio, we got caught out too many times with lighting and audio issues, and running out of time and having to make do with a rushed job. It was good. But it wasn’t good enough. Imagine a skeleton with some rotting flesh hanging off it. Funny? Yes. Entertaining? Sure. But would the other TV stations invite it to their swanky skin parties? I doubt it.

    So we went back to Hugh. He told us we needed to make a third season. And REALLY do it right. He even offered to be series producer. This was the big one. No holding back. Season 3 would be about making sure every single aspect of this program was the absolute BEST it can be.

    And by Jove, I think we’ve done it. A skeleton with a system of mighty organs, with flesh and clothes and everything.

    It takes a team of people to make a television show. But it takes a GREAT team of skeletons with functioning digestive and respiratory systems to make a GREAT television show. And 31 Questions Season 3 had, without a doubt, the best symbiont skeleton people crew we’ve ever had. And probably the best in Australian community television.

    There are some real stars in that photo and I reckon I’ll still be working with quite a few of them many years from now.

    It was also incredible to have Joe Murray on board as the senior director. He directed “The Late Show” on the ABC back in the early 90s, among a plethora of other shows. The wisdom and experience he brought to Season 3 has been a godsend and it was a real honour to work with him.

    So we’re now well into post-production. Expect 31 Questions to return to your screens of varying sizes sometime in June. I’ll get back to you when I have specific dates and times and cities.

    I am completely biased, of course, but we’ve got 8 GREAT episodes coming up. There’s something like 15 new segments, plus the old favourites, interesting trivia and fun facts, cool contestants, a swathe of gags and a few more surprises. It’s not just a great “community” television show. It’s a great television show.

    We haven’t even finished editing yet, but we’ve already had one glowing review. Prolific comedy blogger Katherine Phelps was in the studio audience for our Season 3 finale. Read her thoughts here.

    But aside from basking in the laughter and the applause, maybe the most satisfying moment came the other week when 31 Questions was labelled “a flagship show” in an official email from RMITV – the same organisation that said in February 2011 that 31 Questions was “not viable for RMITV”.

    So what have I learned from all this?

    1. A mistake is only a bad thing if you don’t learn from it.
    2. Consistent competence leads to greatness, and
    3. People are attracted to success.

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Next stop Adelaide, I think.

  • 31 Questions Season 3 is made by YOU!

    The 31 Questions Season 3 Crowdfunding Campaign is over! Well actually, it was over 7PM last night. I would have posted about this sooner but I only just got up. Was out pretty late last night (Racked up a huge bar tab! Just over 3 grand, from memory…). And thanks to our 69 crowdfunders across 7 countries and a favourable exchange rate, we raised an astonishing AUD$3,262!

    Special thanks are in order for the following fabulous Indiegogo individuals:

    Julian Jones (Melbourne, VIC)
    Kimberley Seeto (Bankstown, NSW)
    Nick Gates (Cambridge, UK)
    Ellen McCutchan (Mitcham, VIC)
    John Whitaker (Brunswick, VIC)
    Luke Fincher (Brisbane, QLD)
    Daniel Braid (Melbourne, VIC)
    James Sablinskis (Wantirna, VIC)
    Ryan Vickers (Newmarket, ON, Canada)
    Ben Hayes (Warrenville, IL, USA)
    Aaron Hayes (Warrenville, IL, USA)
    Blazenka Brysha (Mount Eliza, VIC)
    Sean Campbell (Doonside, NSW)
    Elliott Klein (Elwood, VIC)
    Robert Newbury (Stawell, VIC)
    Rhys Barnard (Davoren Park, SA)
    Hugh Macdonald (Cheltenham, VIC)
    Pam “Drunk Mum” McCutchan
    David Dower (North Perth, WA)
    Tony Lee (Glen Waverley, VIC)
    Matthew J. Smith (Somerton Park, SA)
    Daniel Picton (Hemel Hempstead, UK)
    Matt Meiklejohn (Miranda, NSW)
    Alison Richards (Melton South, VIC)
    Sam Hodkin (Manchester, UK)
    Emma Raverty (Beaumaris, VIC)
    Michael Doyle (Darley, VIC)
    Mark Humphries (Crows Nest, NSW)
    Rachel Delaney (New Plymouth, New Zealand)
    Jessica May (Donvale, VIC)
    Jason Hatcher (Kensington, VIC)
    John Surace (Somerville, VIC)
    Ruth Richards (Hoppers Crossing, VIC)
    Anne-Marie Manolas (Murrumbeena VIC)
    Patrick Bosher (Mitcham, VIC)
    Kate McKenzie (Parkdale, VIC)
    Faye Pettinella (Wantirna, VIC)
    Scott Bryant (Brisbane, QLD)
    Gerard Kotlowy (South Brighton, SA)
    Ross Purdy (Mooroolbark VIC)
    James Gormley (Melbourne, VIC)
    Andrew Sullivan (Halifax, UK)
    Kellie Elson (Grange, SA)
    Zarya Volya (Brunswick, VIC)
    Chris Legg (Joondalup, WA)
    Samantha Moline (Mount Lawley, WA)
    Adrien Buso (Besançon, France)
    Casey O’Brien (South Yarra, VIC)
    The Ultimo Bachelor Pad (Ultimo, NSW)
    Karen Dennerley (Docklands, VIC)
    Kristen Rogers (Hazelwood Park, SA)
    Zoe Dekker (Croydon, NSW)
    Justin Dalaya (Port Adelaide, SA)
    @TravisButler (Hurstbridge, VIC)
    Shane Dunlop (Brunswick, VIC)
    Josh Mahoney (Melbourne, VIC)
    Rudi Martin (Chermside West, QLD)
    The Swedish 31 Questions Fan Club (Lund, Sweden)
    Max Pfitzner (Warrandyte South, VIC)
    Stephen Coote (Queanbeyan West, NSW)
    Paul Mavroudis (Altona North, VIC)
    Craig Faulkner (Semaphore Park, SA)
    Hayden Faulkner (Semaphore Park, SA)
    Sky Ingledew (Reservoir, VIC), and
    Daniel Guglielmin (Ottoway, SA)

    And specials thanks also to anyone who made an anonymous donation, shared the link, liked a status, subscribed on YouTube, sent a tweet or did some other intangible task that’s assisting us in making 31 Questions. I couldn’t make this TV game show without you.

    Here’s the final arrangement of the 31 Questions Season 3 Crowdfunder Map. Welcome to the club, France, Sweden and New Zealand:


    View 31 Questions Season 3 Crowdfunders in a larger map

    69 donations from 7 countries. Incredible.

    Just for a comparison, we raised US$1,846 on our last campaign, which was something like AUD$1,700 (exchange rate wasn’t on our side). And this is where our 72 Season TWO crowdfunders were:


    View 31 Questions Crowdfunders in a larger map

    It really is The People’s Game Show. Having said that, there are people in Africa, South America and Asia too. Probably. You certainly wouldn’t know if by looking at these maps.

    Okay! Now we got the cash…

    LET’S MAKE THIS FREAKING TV GAME SHOW!

    Kind regards,
    David M. Green
    Kids, don’t smoke.