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- Hello everybody,
thank you for coming.
Can we give one more round of applause
for all the filmmakers and great actors for RTX.
(audience applauding)
So we're gonna answer some questions now
and I'm going to introduce the people on this panel.
I'm Jack Davis, the CEO and co-founder of Crypt TV.
This is--
Does anyone know who this is?
- [audience member] Dead Meat.
- Oh, it's Dead Meat?
Oh shit, we got the wrong person here.
This is James Dead Meat Janisse.
Coming to the stage, perfectly fashionably late,
Annie Northman who's actually a Crypt fan
and that's why we wanted to have her here.
Maybe our biggest fan, our first fan,
we're very lucky to have her.
And Kate Krantz, Chief Content Officer of Crtypt TV.
- Oh yeah.
- And maybe looks like one more person's
gonna join the panel.
Oh oh.
Uh oh.
(laughing)
Hey, buddy.
It's pretty unsettling.
I guess that's the point though.
So thank you so much everyone for coming.
Yeah, get your pics in.
He'll get here.
Since we have such a great audience here,
and I appreciate everyone waking up early,
I wanna make this as much QandA as possible
so you guys can ask James any questions,
or Annie, or Kate, or myself.
But real quickly I'll start with you, James.
You are such a talent.
So much of your work is done in analysis
and you do opposite at Kill Counts in the podcasting.
How did it feel to shift gears and go back to
I know some of your roots in acting.
- Yeah, it was weird 'cause for the you know
past year I've just had total control
over all my creative projects
with everything on Dead Meat and the Kill Count
and everything else so
especially that hosting is very different than acting.
Hosting is just being myself
and goofin' around about movies,
and to show up on set and for them to be like,
"No, you're like a heartless psychopath."
I'll try, yeah alright.
- How did the blood fountain bath feel?
- Oh my God, dude.
So that was the last day of shooting on Look-See season two.
It was an overnight shoot
and it was in Griffith Park in Los Angeles,
like a large wildernessy park
and that was around five in the morning that we did that,
'cause it was obviously the last thing we had to do
'cause I would be covered in blood and so you know,
we're fighting to get it in before like dawn
and it was just, there was viscera in that fake blood.
There was like fake,
I think it was like pantyhose filled
with weird chunks of things
and on hit me in the mouth and it tasted weird.
And then I had to drive home covered in blood.
It was a weird experience.
- It's just so awesome that James thinks the blood is fake,
so cool.
(laughing)
So, Annie.
- Yes.
- Well as the Crypt fan up here
as our, maybe out biggest fan,
what's your immediate reaction to Look-See season two?
- It was really awesome, I really liked it.
- Well that's good.
So when did you discover Crypts?
Are you a big Rooster Teeth fan and in general
how much of your entertainment do you watch
on YouTube and companies like Crypt versus TV or film?
- Well at first I discovered Crypt on Facebook actually.
It was like a video.
It was a vampire video.
I was like watching that one
and I was just watching it thinking like,
"Oh my God, this is really cool."
And so after that I was just like
clicking through the videos,
and scrolling and scrolling,
and after that I was just hooked.
- Can you also show off this awesome vest you've made.
I'm sure everyone here appreciates it.
This I the coolest thing I've ever--
You can describe it to Kate.
(laughing)
- It is all by me.
Everything made by me, sewn by me.
(audience applauding)
- You know, obviously you have someone like James up here
who's so talented in Crypt in that community spirit
and the YouTube spirit.
We love people who make things themselves,
so very cool.
So, Kate, what do you think the biggest parts
of Look-See season two are?
Is there anything maybe you want to not explain,
but talk about that went into making this season
and where you see it going from here?
- Yeah, so I mean I hope you guys liked it.
We make it for you guys.
(audience applauding)
But our process, I don't know if you guys recognize
how much control you guys have over what we make at Crypt.
So we release the first season, you guys liked this guy,
which we like him too.
And we saw that you guys wanted a lot more understanding
of like how long has he been around, his backstory.
So that's why we went back in time to show you
that this guy's been around for a while.
- Of course it forms our understanding
of who we should be working with
to see what the fans respond.
So I wanna ask you James,
how do you incorporate your incredible,
very engaged community's feedback into your work
and how do you think they will feel
about seeing you in a new role?
And as it comes to being a creator, having a vision,
how do you also incorporate other people's feedback.
- Oh yeah, well there's kind of like a give and take
because a lot of people want me to do a lot of things
and if I did them all, I would just implode
from everything that they want.
And so it's definitely like just trying to balance
what I want to do, what I think would be best
for the channel and my own creative endeavors,
and then what people want too.
Because for instance like with the Kill Count
a lot of people are like do Infinity War Kill Count.
I'm like it's not really my thing, sorry.
Sorry if you're out there
and you just want me to do Infinity Wars.
It's just I feel like that's not being true to myself
'cause I wanna incorporate what people want to see
and what people want me to do
while never feeling like I'm like selling out.
And that's why it's so fun with Crypt TV
is because Alex, all your team members hit me up in an email
and I actually missed the email until months later
and then I checked it out and I was like,
"Oh, this is--"
'Cause I've gotten emails from like mobile games
and people who want me to plug their stuff and I'm like,
it just doesn't feel right.
It's not something I actually believe in.
But when I checked out Crypt's stuff
specifically Look-See especially, I was like,
"Oh, this is something I can really get behind."
And like when I talk about it I can be sincere about it
because I actually really do like it.
- It's so interesting to hear that.
Annie, how important is it to you as a fan
that the channels you follow stay organic in what they do?
And what would you say Crypt does well
and actually I'd even wanna hear when we stray away,
you feel like the community doesn't like?
- Well it also kind of depends on the person
'cause some people may like the really scary stuff
and other people may like the really silly stuff.
Like me, I like it all.
I'm not that picky.
It can be silly, it could be funny, it--
- [Jack] The best type of fan.
(laughing)
I wish everyone was you.
- I'm not that picky, I love everything about it.
- Interesting.
And Kate, when it comes to the filmmakers you work with,
does anyone here an aspiring filmmaker
or wants to act, or direct, or write?
Okay, a few hands.
Put those hands up.
What would you say our process is
and what would you say, having worked in film before,
what opportunities does this platform give,
and how can people best take advantage of that?
- I mean, I'm a little biased
but I think that we are good about
abiding by best idea wins.
And if you have talent, you have passion
about what you're doing,
we will always love to work with you.
Like that's exciting to us more than anything.
It's not about the resume, it's about the vision
and we like cultivating fresh talent.
And we saw Landon off of a couple YouTube videos,
some of which were like his a cappella videos,
if you wanna deep dive into some of those, good time.
But he has a real point of view and perspective
so we were able to work with him
in a way that was digital-friendly.
He understands that the fan comes first
and that's something that we always hammer.
It's all about the fan.
And we can always create something new,
and fresh, and original if we abide by that.
- James, what's the most difficult part
of being a obviously self-supported?
You're making your own stuff,
your audience is what's getting you your Google checks.
What's the most difficult part of that though?
What are the things that you think people don't see
that goes into this you know, amazing work you do
but I'm sure feels like a labor of love sometimes.
- Yeah, it's the amount of work that goes into it.
And I try to show that, I try to show behind the curtain.
That's why I do editing live streams on my channel
to show people the work that goes into a video
because it seems like sometimes people think that
the video takes as long as it takes to watch it, to make it.
And they're like, "Why are you spending all this time
on a 15 minute video?"
And it can be up to like 40 hours for one of those videos,
and I'll do an editing live stream
and it'll be an eight hour stretch of editing
and people will be like amazed by it.
And I'm like, that's not even the whole thing, man.
That was just today's work.
So I really like, that's kind of
one of my missions on YouTube is to show people
the work that goes into being a YouTuber.
I think that a lot of people think
that it's just this really easy job to fall into,
and it's the dream job, I'll never complain about having it
because I love what I do and I love
that I get to do it, I'm very fortunate.
But I don't want people to think that it's a simple thing.
I want people to know the reality behind it,
that it's constant work and especially
relying on other people, it's very unstable.
And can be scary sometimes.
- And when it comes to relying on other people,
what do you think, do you feel like the movies
that you're actually covering, those studios, support you?
Do you get more support, because I always look at it
is you're giving them amazing, free promotion.
- Yeah.
I would love it if they felt the same way.
I hear that a lot from fans that they like
didn't know about movies that I've covered,
or they've had written them off previously
but after seeing my videos on them
went out and bought them and supported them.
I always try to reTweet those Tweets
just to show that that's happening.
Yeah, it'd be cool to get a little bit
more support from the studios.
And I think I'm starting to,
now with the growth that I've experienced,
I think I'm starting to
open those channels of communication.
- Yeah?
Well we'd love to help with that.
- Well, thank you.
- Annie, what percentage, I'm just curious,
what percentage would you say
are you watching TV, and your favorite TV shows,
and favorite movies, versus your favorite YouTube channels,
your favorite YouTube content?
- Let's see.
I would have to say, it's kind of like 50/50.
Because I do spend a lot of time online
watching Crypt TV videos and other videos as well,
and occasionally I'll be watching
like a scary movie on TV, if something--
- And when you're watching YouTube,
are you just going intentionally to see what's new
on your favorite channels,
or just spending hours once you're there,
or how would you say you watch?
- Sometimes I would just browse through a certain channel,
just check out different videos, see what I like.
And other times I would just go
to like my favorite channels, just like type in something
like "best scary horror short" and just like follow through.
- And just go, and go, and go.
Well I wanna make sure we have lots,
and lots of time for QandA
and that every single maybe even person can ask a question.
So who wants to ask a question first?
Right there.
I think you can go to the mic there if you want.
Or you can maybe just--
- [Kate] That's a long journey.
- Yeah.
This is your personal journey.
(laughing)
- [James] We're not all staring at you,
don't worry, man.
(laughing)
- Don't mess up now.
- [Audience Member] Let's hope I don't,
okay yeah that's not too loud.
Last time I nearly burst an eardrum trying to talk.
So have you considered partnering with Netflix
with The Look-See and all that?
- Just like James wants his movie studios to see that,
we would love Netflix to hear that question.
But no, to answer that question seriously
we would work with a bigger partner, someone like Netflix,
if we felt like that was the best way
to tell more of the Look-See story.
We're very excited to release these four to the public,
I think people are gonna love them.
One thing I love about YouTube
is you can go and re-watch, and re-watch, and re-watch.
So there's a lot of hidden things in there
that maybe some people picked up on
and wanna ask, or maybe you missed.
So once we release these four episodes
we'll see how the reaction is
but obviously we love this show, we love this character.
All Crypt monsters exist in the same universe
so we're excited to reveal how this character
interacts with our other monsters.
But we would do that, but only if it's right for that IP.
Only if after these next four episodes,
or a future season, or a season three
we decide this is the next best step.
In the front.
- [Audience member] Hi, so I have two questions.
Firstly, what gave you the idea for The Look-See?
Did you like take an idea off of Slender Man,
or was it just your own childhood nightmare?
- [Jack] Kate.
- That's a good question.
So all of the characters in the Crypt multiverse
are connected, like Jack said.
What we try to do is come up with
a motivation for each character
that fits into something that's universal
for a lot of people, right?
So this dude's all about emotional baggage.
And the lesson being like you carry that with you
it's starts to change you into something
you don't even recognize.
It's not good for you, you just gotta let it go.
This is a really extreme example of that
but that's how that came about.
So we ideated just the concept of it
and we sat down with Landon and the design came together,
and then the story actually came from that.
- [Jack] Annie, as a fan how much are you interested
in the deeper emotional story
versus just enjoying the videos,
or what's the balance and how much
are you actually reading through other people's comments
for theories when you're watching a Crypt character?
- Well as a fan, me, I really do love
like the deep psychological stuff
and like the emotional stuff 'cause it's like more
realistic to me and that's what makes horror like really,
makes me wanna enjoy it a whole lot more.
What was the other question?
- That was perfect, that was it.
Who wants to go next for a question?
- [Audience member] Do any monsters have like weaknesses?
- [Jack] Any monsters have weaknesses?
- They do, that's such a good question.
You'll notice in a lot of Crypt shorts,
without telling you all of the secrets,
a lot of our characters are connected
to what we call the Totem.
So the watch in this is a totem
and it kind of navigates with the monster in our world.
So for some characters, you can use the totem
like in The Birch just to summon the character,
and then she acts on her own free will
even though she has her own moral compass.
But others like the Look-See,
you'll come to see in future episodes that they actually,
he needs a human proxy in order to navigate in our world.
And it's very closely tied to the person
that has possession of the watch.
- Hmm.
Back there.
- [Audience member] First off I wanted to say
I'm a huge fan, specifically of The Look-See.
It's out of everything that I've watched on Crypt TV
it's gotta be my big, favorite--
- [Jack] Well just tell 'im thank you.
He's right up here.
- [Audience member] Well thank you.
(laughing)
One thing, what was it?
I forgot the question.
- [Jack] I get 19 minutes, don't worry.
- [Audience member] How exactly does all
this play on each other, really?
Like all the monsters with each other
and all that kind of stuff.
And specifically whenever you're writing an episode
for The Look-See, what inspires the character
or rather the human who is being attacked
or hunted by the Look-See.
- That's a really great question, so--
- [Jack] Yeah, don't give away too much.
- We have a, we gotta keep some of this under lock and key,
but there's about like a hundred page document
that we have at Crypt that's 100% private
that is kind of our guiding light
and the genesis story of our entire multiverse.
So that's what we refer to when we're coming up
with new characters.
When it comes to the human characters
that we're tying to the monster
I think it's really important
that we don't have people in our stories
that are just for fodder.
I think it's really important that we reinforce
that human beings have agency
and that there's always good at your core
and you have an opportunity to change
and I think that that shapes our world view
so we wanna be positive with how we present that.
Now obviously there's a rainbow of personality types
in this universe and some people are bad people
and we wanna show those.
We also wanna show people who are good inside
but have trouble making the right decision sometimes.
So it's a lot, we want everyone to feel
like they have a mirror when they're watching our content.
Maybe not in one particular piece,
but across all of our 800 individual pieces of IP
that we've created so far.
There's something for you that we hope
helps you navigate your life in this world
contextualized in the Crypt multiverse.
- [Jack] James, maybe you wanna share for everyone
what it was like to work with,
'cause everyone knows you as a great talent
from obviously probably the podcast or Dead Meat,
what it was like off a director
and how an actor, that relationship is so important?
And then what it's like as an actor
playing off the other actors in your scene
and how important that dynamic is?
- Yeah, so working with Landon was great,
the writer/director.
Like I said, I went to film school and he just reminded me
of people who I went to film school with
in the best kind of way.
Just having that vision, and energy,
and drive to get it done.
So he was great because he was just,
I think one of the most important things
that a director can do that maybe
you don't think of as a director's job
is to just keep everyone on set motivated and happy
and he always had a smile, he was always willing
to himself do the extra work that needed to get done.
I mean for some of the shots he was crawling around
in the loft of the barn and getting all dirty
just like trying to get the shot right.
So when you see that,
when you see the director of the project doing that
it just inspires you to do everything you can.
And as far as like reacting with the other actors,
a lot of my scenes were with Mr. Look-See there
and it's not hard to act against that because you know,
four in the morning, in the woods in Griffith Park
and he's like stepping out from under
or from behind a tree, I don't really have to act that much.
I'm like, "Oh geez, alright."
So that's a lot of fun.
Also getting blood dumped on me, there's no acting there.
- Don't trust us, don't trust us.
Who wants to ask the next question?
Right there, hand went up first.
There's a mic right there if you want to.
- [Audience member] Hi.
Okay so, I really like Look-See
but I have noticed that it's extremely similar
to Slender Man in a sense psychologically, physically.
And it's obvious that it's stemmed from Slender Man
in a sense that it's inspired from Slender Man.
And would you say that the Look-See
would ever hae been created if Slender Man
hadn't skyrocketed in popularity?
- Speaking on behalf of Crypt,
I can't speak on behalf of Landon
who's our filmmaker is obviously not here today,
100%.
You know I think there's always gonna be similarities
between monsters in the emotional anchoring of them
and how people feel, but we obviously feel
like our characters are very distinct.
I think, of course, it's a completely fair question.
That's why it's up to us as we grow,
not just the Look-See,
but grow all of our monsters and characters
to keep giving them distinct storylines,
distinct characters within those new episodes.
So I think that it's something
you will see from the Look-See
as more and more episodes come.
Like I said, we wanna release this season first
and see how people react before we decide what comes next.
But I think for Look-See,
as well as every character in the Crypt multiverse,
they have specific reasons for being.
Specific storylines that we think
make them unique from anything else.
Back right.
- [Audience member] Hello, okay
I wanted to ask, I've noticed that throughout
the show of Look-See, you have your actors
being silent and all, just using
their acting muscles for everything.
So I wanted to ask what made you decide to do that.
- A few things.
I think first of all we've noticed that our viewers
they're really smart and we don't have to
spell everything single thing out for them.
I think we can give them the framework of the story
and it's almost like when you don't have every piece
your imagination runs wild, and that's when it can eek
into your own nightmares after you've seen it.
The other part is, we've a huge international fan base
and not everyone is an English speaker
and sitting and reading it in subtitles is an option
but ultimately it's gonna detract
from the intended experience.
So we want everyone, no matter where you are in the world,
to be able to come into the Look-See universe
and have a similar shared experience.
- [Jack] Annie, as a fan, do you enjoy the no dialogue?
In these now eight Look-See episodes?
- Oh yeah.
I'm all for it, I love it.
- James, I actually think it's harder to act
when you don't have lines of dialogue
because then it becomes--
So how is that for you on set?
- Yeah, my job is to talk a lot.
You know, my scripts for my videos
are like 4,000 to 5,000 words that I spit out really fast
and so it was difficult for me to not say anything on set
and to just try to emote with my face.
Especially since the character I was playing,
the description was emotionless.
So I was like, okay uh this is a challenge
but it was a lot of fun
and as a person who has done filmmaking
and was on set for this experience I've also gotta say
I don't think it was a cause or a reason to have no dialogue
but a nice little byproduct of that
is it's way easier to shoot when
you don't have to worry about recording sound
because recording sound is a separate thing
in the filmmaking process
that you have to like merge after the fact.
But even just as simple as
oh while you're shooting the video
it's like you can say things like,
alright Look-See lean down, lean down, okay stop.
Okay good.
And you can say that while the camera's rolling
and it doesn't matter 'cause there's no sounds
so that was nice.
- Yeah well you did a great job with it.
- Oh, thank you.
- Right there.
- [Audience member] I just wanted to know
how big is your team growing
if you guys still upload videos like every few days?
- Crypt has an 18 person team in the office.
But obviously our team extends way beyond just 18 people.
We get to work with talented people like James.
You know just because our directors, or our production crew,
or all the people who are doing lighting
and gaffing aren't on set,
I mean aren't on like full time Crypt employees
we still consider them part of our team.
So we have 18 people full time.
We have so many other people helping, and chipping in,
and get to work with great people like Poised
who's sitting here in the second row, and James.
We consider them part of our team.
And of course the only reason we have a company
is because of all the people who watch,
and the fans, and the community.
So that's probably the most important part
of the whole team.
- [Audience member] So you mentioned that there's this totem
and like things like the Birch can be summoned.
Does that mean there's like a monster realm
and do we get to see it at some point?
- You guys are very smart people.
(laughing)
You are going to see pieces of our multiverse.
I can't give away too much right now but
we've had our writer who kind of
works on this with us always
sitting down with like a theoretical physicist
to actually write this.
It's pretty intense.
But you know I think that the,
what I can tell you is that there's multiple layers
to the evolution of these monsters.
Look-See is obviously not a human,
this is a full blown monster.
But there's actually a tier of both above
and in between Look-See and human,
and you're gonna see a lot of those characters
start to populate in Sunny Family Cult
which we have premiering this fall too.
You are gonna see for the first time
human beings interacting with monsters
from multiple other shows
and have like real, tangible crossovers start to happen.
So we're gonna answer a lot
of those questions with new shows
and you're probably gonna have
50 more questions after you see them
and we'll do our best to keep up with it.
- And you just must spend your entire day
in the comments section debating those questions.
Next question, speaking of questions.
Back, way back right.
You'll go next, way back right.
This guy just got the mic.
- [Audience member] Kind of a two-part question.
How do you keep it light on the set for the little girl?
I mean, do you like tell her,
does Look-See tell her jokes just to keep the mood light?
And then also are there any like kid-sized monsters coming?
- That's a great question.
For the little girl, you know we work with kids a lot
and we make sure that they're in the make up room
and they see the monster getting ready,
and they talk to the actor before,
and they know like--
- [Jack] And then we bring in a new monster
to really fuck with them.
(laughing)
- We have had incidents where you know
even when we're shooting the stuff gets really scary,
which is our intent, and both adults and children
need like a moment every once in a while,
depending on the intensity level.
So we try and be really respectful of that.
Kid-sized monsters, yes.
We have a few that already exist in the universe.
We have more that are coming.
Kids are scary, so we're definitely--
(laughing)
We're definitely gonna have more.
- [Jack] Annie, as a media lover,
do you watch YouTube videos,
I'm guessing you watch YouTube videos primarily alone
'cause that where most people watch YouTube videos,
and how is that different, watching alone something scary
versus maybe going to a theater
where you're with a bunch of other people?
- Well me, I prefer actually watching
a lot of scary things alone
'cause it kinda brings you more to like the scary setting
'cause I love a whole dark room, just the TV or whatever,
just a dark room, scary movie, silence.
Just the whole ambience it just makes it even more better.
- [Jack] Create your own ambience.
- [Audience member] I was just wantin' to know
what inspires these monsters
like as far as their relationships?
Like for Look-See, what inspired
the emotional baggage connection,
or protector of women, or whatever?
- There's a very simple answer
but it's truly talking to you guys.
You guys commenting and sending us messages
and telling us about your life and what you're going through
and why this genre is important to you
and how it helps you navigate through certain situations.
100% that's what guides us.
We don't pick things that we feel are trendy.
We want things that we feel like can apply
and make these characters lasting and iconic
and have them serve a purpose that you can grow up with
and it also be engaging and interesting.
So you guys who are talking to us and sending us messages,
we watch every single fan video that you make,
we read every single comment across the company.
It's not just like the data team
you know going through them and trying to use it,
it's the development team and everyone on content
who's making sure that we're taking into account
what matters to you.
- And just to add to that I would say
it's scary and monsters I think give a permission structure
to talk about deeper issues.
You know, sometimes comedy can do that.
Sometimes super hero movies can do that.
And monsters and scary can do that.
So we just want to talk about relevant,
emotionally anchoring stories
and monsters is just the way we do that.
We have five more minutes, so if you have a question.
Have you asked a question yet?
Nope, well then you're up.
- [Audience member] You kinda covered it with that last bit.
My question was gonna be, I found you guys
through analysis channels like Night Mind,
and Conflicts and so on.
How much of those, how much of that content
do you guys go out to go look for
and see what do people think
or like, hey can't believe they missed this thing.
Can't wait for someone to figure it out.
Little things like that, how much of--
- It's a complete partnership, you know.
I think it's kind of what James said in,
this guy is so honest with who he wants to work with.
Maybe I'll let you take a little bit of it.
But from the Crypt's side I know
we don't want to just go work
with the biggest numbers YouTuber
or maybe someone who doesn't fit our brand.
If we're gonna be honest
about telling emotionally anchoring stories
we want to collaborate and work with people
who are both A: excited about our mission,
B: are doing it because they are interested
in helping us and sharing with us
the ability to tell these stories,
and I forgot what C was,
so I'm gonna pass that to you James.
- Maybe C was stuff that partners
who like you audience is related to.
- Partners who like--
That's exactly correct.
- Yeah.
I mean when I did the collaboration,
the first collaboration video with Crypt,
not to toot my own horn, but I think you guys
got like 17,000 subscribers in a day.
And it was cool to feel like I had sent people over,
that many people over, but it wouldn't have happened
if it weren't for your products
because I could just you know
I could make a video collaborating
with anyone on the internet
and people aren't going to necessarily
follow through on that unless
they really like the thing that I'm showing them.
So I think that was the biggest indication
that this partnership was a great idea.
- That's a great point.
And that point is of course that
we only wanna work with people,
and I think they only wanna work with us
if as they say, one plus one equals three.
That combining our forces make everyone bigger
than you could have ever expected.
And that's gonna only come if there's true affinity
for the content on both channels.
- Synergy.
- Synergy.
- Yeah.
- Business.
He hasn't asked a question yet
so I wanna give him a chance.
- [Audience member] When you made the first episode
of Look-See, did you know what you were gonna do
for the rest of the series,
or did that sort of come afterwards?
- So we develop with an in-house roadmap
that plugs into the universe that's existing
so we kinda of have the guardrails already set,
but we wait to color that in until we talk to the audience
and we see what they're really excited about.
But we try and tailor it so each one
will get more and more specific and narrow.
Like after this new season releases
we have pretty clear idea of the direction
we want wanna go story wise.
But we'll wait to color out the exact characters
until we see who our audience is really excited about.
- [Jack] Who has not--
Raise your hand if you have not asked a question yet.
(laughing)
Then this gentleman right here.
And then I got you next, buddy.
- [Audience member] Hi.
So I just wanted to ask how did you guys come up
with the look for the Look-See?
'Cause I feel like, especially in this age
it's hard to come up with something original.
So how did you come up with like the look,
how he acts, how he walks, all of that?
- So you know, I wish Landon was here
to answer some more specifics for you on that,
but I think on our side what was important to us
is that it represent visually his action.
So when he's physically taking a piece of you
and he's consuming a piece of you
that's why he's different pieces of flesh.
These are different individuals that he is made up of.
He's the sum of their parts.
And then in terms of the hands, we care a lot about,
for some reason in a lot of our content
hands are so important to us in the visual
and how we see them creeping around,
so we wanted them to feel elongated.
But it was also critical for us
this isn't like a creature, this is from behind
if he's standing somewhere, his silhouette,
he looks almost human which is really disturbing to us too.
I think that those were kind of
the starting off points for the conversation.
And then once we sketched out that first episode story wise,
the pieces just kind of came together.
- [Audience member] How long about--
to create like make-up wise?
- It varied from the first season to the second
because the second season we did some finessing
for the actual mask.
But it's usually a few hours
to get him totally up and running, good to go.
And then there's touch-ups that happen throughout the day.
- Thank you so much everyone for coming out.
- Thank you.
(audience applauding)
- Let's give one last big hand.
Up here we have, up here between these three folks
we have everyone that really represents Crypt.
Which is the amazing talent we get to collaborate with.
An amazing person in his community, James.
Everyone clap for 'im.
(applauding)
Obviously we have an amazing content team,
directors, actors, writers, and Kate leads them all,
so huge, huge applause for Kate.
(applauding)
And then I saved the best for last because Annie
we appreciate your longtime Crypt loyalty and support.
- Oh, you're welcome.
- And fans are number one for us.
It's the only reason we get to do this every day.
If we get to continue to do this
that'll be the only reason why
so our community and our fans come first
so thank you for joining us.
- You're welcome.
Thanks for having me.
(applauding)
- Thank you everybody.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
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