Greg Weisman

Young Justice returns & wins an Emmy

It’s been a while in the coming, but new episodes of Young Justice are returning to Cartoon Network’s schedules as of Friday, September 16th. World’s Finest report that the first new episode will be “Targets” which features Red Arrow’s continued encounters with the League of Shadows. The first new YJ episode is being shown back-to-back with a new episode of Batman The Brave and the Bold. The block starts at 6pm and Young Justice starts at 6.30pm (check your local guide for confirmed listings). Additionally, TV Shows on DVD are reporting that the second volume of the Young Justice DVD series will be available a month later on October 25th. The DVD will feature “Schooled”, “Infiltrator”, “Denial” and “Downtime”.

Congratulations are in order for Young Justice character designer Phil Bourassa who according to YJ co-producers Brandon Vietti and Greg Weisman has won an Emmy for his work on the series. Vietti, in complementing Bourassa, said:

Maybe I’m a little partial, but I think Phil has raised the bar for design in action/adventure animation in the US.

In tangentially related news, DC have released a series of trailers and TV commercials to spotlight the new 52. This makes me wonder (warning: unproven conspiracy theory) if YJ and BBATB were held back to synchronise them with the launch of the publicity for the New 52. This is the 30-second ad:

Not too bad visually, but I’m not a fan of the music.

Young Justice at SDCC

The Young Justice panel at SDCC was on Sundayz but there has been very little online buzz about it as far as I can tell. This may be because YJ isn’t currently airing and Cartoon Network haven’t yet begun their promotional push for its return in the Fall. There was a poster shown around at the Con promoting the return, but I haven’t been able to find a high-resolution copy of it yet.

In attendance at Comic-Con were the producers Brandon Vietti and Greg Weisman, Miss Martian voice talent Danica McKellar, and lead character designer Phil Bourassa.

About the only write up of the actual YJ panel I’ve found is by YJ Blogger of the Young Justice blog. Her write up is great and shows that a lot of enthusiastic fans were there for the panel. However, she also confirms that the producers didn’t reveal any spoilers and really just talked about their vision for the show.

The WB.com was there with a short report for Youtube:

Buzz Focus interviewed McKellar at the signing and she revealed some of the details of working with Nolan North’s Superboy:

When I asked her if she record her lines for the movie by herself or with her fellow cast members she said in person, especially with Nolan North. “He and I almost always record together,” McKellar said. “And it’s good too because we’ve (our characters) got this romance going on and I can tell you that there’s going to be a kiss. In fact, the kiss is real. They had us kiss in the booth, which is very rare. In voiceover, they always have usually asked to kiss (the top of) our hand [demonstrates].

But they said, ‘it doesn’t quite sound right.’ At the time I was eight months pregnant so I was like, [drawing with her hand how big her stomach was] “Well, sure!” but Nolan felt all weird about it. “Are you okay with this? This feels wrong.” Yes I’m okay, I’m an actress, I’ve done this before.’ It’s a sweet kiss but still a very real kiss in the booth.

You can find photographs of their signing at Seat24F and on the @danicamckellar’s twitter stream (below):

DC Women Kick Ass posted that Velro-Chick had found a set of playing cards that were being distributed at the con showing character designs of upcoming characters including the Joker, Queen Bee, Zatanna, and a range of villains. Perhaps most intriguing is the inclusion of the Milestone character Rocket on the cards.

The panel included a showing of “Targets”, the next episode which was briefly leaked online by Cartoon Network’s own website. World’s Finest has a couple of clips from Targets as does Toon Zone.

Young Justice Season 1 & 2 progress

Young Justice co-producer Greg Weisman has updated his S8 Ask Greg feed with details of the current status of the show. He addresses several myths and shoots down some fan rumours/theories.

One thing he does stress is that the show is a co-production between himself and Brandon Vietti. It seems Vietti’s name often gets left off of articles. I think I may be guilty of this myself at times (Sorry Mr Vietti), it’s probably because Weisman makes more noise via  his Ask Greg column and the comic book.

There is also an update on the episodes:

Season One

In brief: episode 10-15 are finished and episode 16 is undergoing its final review. As to when they’ll return to air:

So why aren’t we airing new episodes now? That’s a fair question that I don’t have an answer for. After all, we have six unaired episodes in the can, with four more on the verge of completion. It’s a Cartoon Network decision. [...] My best guess – and that’s all it is – is that CN will air new episodes – starting with 110 (“Targets”) – in September.

Season Two

Season Two of Young Justice was commission a little while ago and is subtitled “Invasion”. We’ve had few details of its plot, but it would seem that work is progression apace. The progress on the scripts is

  • Episodes 201-202 (i.e. Season Two, Episodes one and two) – Are fully recorded and are in storyboard. (201 was written by me. 202 by Nicole Dubuc.)
  • Episode 203, written by Kevin Hopps, is almost fully recorded. We have one actor left to pick up, who has been out of town. It is also in storyboard.
  • Episode 204, written by me, will record this week. It is also in storyboard.
  • Episode 205 – Brandon Vietti, has turned in his draft of the script. I have to read and edit it.
  • Episode 206 – The outline, written by Peter David and edited by me, went out Monday for notes, which are due tomorrow.
  • Episode 207 – Kevin Hopps turned in his outline, which I need to read and edit.
  • Episode 208 – I’m writing this one. I’ll start the outline, after I’ve edited the outline to 207.
  • Episode 209 – Jon Weisman turned in his outline, which I need to read and edit.
  • Episode 210 – Kevin Hopps is working on his outline.

Great to see that Peter David’s association carries over to the second season. They haven’t officially been given the word on episodes past 210, but his bosses have nevertheless told him to prepare work for episodes 211-220 of Season 2. It will begin airing in 2012 as part of the new DC Nation cartoon block.

Young Justice statistics

Producer Greg Weisman has posted some interesting statistics from the first season of Young Justice. All 26 episodes of the first season are written and have had their dialogue recorded. They are now in an array of states ranging from aired (episode 1-7) to being storyboarded (episodes 25-26).He also noted that:

In Season One, we have 179 named characters from the DC Universe. That’s an average of 6.9 characters introduced per episode, though of course some introduce more and some less.

We used 66 actors total. That’s 2.7 characters per actor, though that’s a particularly meaningless number, as some characters don’t speak or only grunt. Also many actors only performed a single role, while others performed considerably more than 2.7. The record holder (with 11 roles under his belt) is Kevin Michael Richardson with 11, beating out Jeff Glenn Bennett by one.

Much more is contained with Weisman’s original post.

Weisman addresses YJ gender issue

There is a fantastic Gargoyles website where Greg Weisman – the producer of Gargoyles and now Young Justice - answers questions. As of late the correspondence has included a large number of Young Justice questions and responses.

The Gender Issue

The longest response has been to the criticism that “Independence Day” only featured male characters. In his response Greg describes the reasons – storytelling and comics tradition – that led to this appearance.

You asked why there were no female Leaguers until the end. But where would they have fit? There are no female Leaguers with traditional first generation sidekicks. So Batman, Green Arrow, Aquaman and Flash could not be replaced by Wonder Woman, Black Canary or Hawkwoman. That leaves the four Leaguers introduced at the Hall of Justice. I needed Martian Manhunter to be there to set up Miss Martian. I needed Red Tornado there to set up his interest in the teens. I needed Superman there to set up Superboy. That leaves only Zatara. He was certainly replaceable. But then I would have had to hire another voice actress to read ONE LINE. I couldn’t afford to do that. We have budgets. (And you’ll notice that Red Tornado never speaks in the episode. Couldn’t afford giving him a line either. None of which had anything to do with gender.)

He also describes why it shouldn’t be taken as an indicator of the show moving forward:

Yes, the pilot was very boy-centric, but that’s not the rubric for the series. Personally, I love writing female characters, and if you’re at all familiar with my past work, you’ll know I have a history of doing them justice. (At least, I think so.) Gargoyles, for example, is FULL of strong female characters, including Elisa, Demona, Angela, Fox, etc. WITCH was nearly ALL female leads. Even Spider-Man had a strong female supporting cast, in my opinion at least.

All of Weisman’s reassurances are very reasonable and aren’t to far from our own speculations.

DC Women Kick Ass, the blog that raised this issue in the first place, comments that Weisman’s answer makes him a “Silver Age fanboy like [Geoff] Johns”. However, they do accept his reassurances that this isn’t the start of a pattern. They conclude  “I also hope the Silver Age nostalgia that made the pilot a boy-centric show is left in the past, where it belongs.” Which begs the question – if DC don’t have Silver Age nostalgia what do they have left?

Other Details

Other more minor details include:

  • Black Canary is 24 years old. Her mother, the original Black Canary, wasn’t active during WWII for timing reasons and wasn’t born until 1943.
  • The names of the Cadmus creatures are “G-Gnomes (the tiny psychic guys), G-Trolls (the huge strong brutes), G-Elves (the clawed warriors), G-Dwarves (the tentacled worker drones), G-Sprites (the electricity generating creatures) and one G-Goblin (Dubbilex) with telekinetic powers (and secret psychic powers).”
  • Aqualad’s backpack/weapons: “They are called Water-Bearers, and he does need them to do his thing. It’s a combination of Atlantean science and sorcery. His mystic tattoos power the water-bearers which use water stored in his backpack or from some other source to create water weapons and/or manipulate water.”

I found the “Created By” section of the Young Justice credits interesting. Justice League only listed the creators for Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman (plus Jack Kirby for some of the New Gods stuff). Young Justice now adds Joe Samachson as the creator of the Martian Manhunter. I don’t know what prompted the change, but it seems odd to include such a relatively minor character ahead of the creators of the Flash and Green Lantern. Then again maybe it’s because this credits are so simple.

Young Justice’s target audience

Greg Weisman and Brandon Vietti have been interviewed by Comic Book Movie about the the upcoming Young Justice cartoon. They commented on the target audience for the show,

I think, from an economic standpoint, we have to hit boys 6 – 14 for Cartoon Network to sell their ad space or whatever, so if you think of it as a bull’s eye with concentric circles, that’s the bull’s eye we have to hit – but I’m not satisfied with that and I don’t think Brandon is either. A, we want boys and girls, so there’s a lot of great relationship stuff in this, there’s humor in this show – I mean, it’s a serious show, but there’s a lot of humor in it, there’s a lot of eye candy for little kids. I think little kids could enjoy this show, and some stuff will go over their heads, but they won’t know it’s going over their heads. There are a lot of explosions and guys in costumes, big villains and big events that are eye candy for the youngest audience, but there’s a lot of sophisticated stories for a teen audience, a college age audience, an old fart audience like me – and I certainly think any fan of DC comics in general is going to find a lot of great stuff from the 75 year history of DC comics to enjoy in the show.

They also revealed that Nolan North would be providing the voice for both Superman and Superboy as one is the clone of the other.

New Weisman/Vietti YJ interview at CBR

CBR have an interview with Greg Weisman and Brandon Vietti, producers of the up-coming Young Justice cartoon. Some of the new stuff they discuss is the sequence for the origin of the new Aqualad…

One new character the producers developed for the show is the new Aqualad, who also recently debuted in the DC Universe proper. “Phil Bourassa, who is our lead character designer on the show, did the original design for Aqualad and Brandon and I basically created him; Geoff [Johns]came in and really liked the character and we talked about him a lot,” Vietti recalled. Those discussions eventually led to Johns introducing the character in his “Brightest Day” series – although slightly altered from his cartoon counterpart.

…and how the show will be episodic (separate, self-contained episodes), but with strong continuity and arcs.

Video interview with Greg Weisman

Comic Book News interviewed Young Justice producer at SDCC 2010 about his various animation projects including the new YJ show.

Cliff Notes:

  • Weisman was brought into WB Animation after the second season of his Spiderman cartoon at Marvel.
  • At the suggestion of Sam Register (their boss) Weisman and Brandon Vietti (his co-producer) took a look at DC’s younger characters and had to set up a clear path between Justice League Unlimited (“so iconic, so great”) and Teen Titans.
  • They put together a list of 50-60 teenage heroes from the DCU and filtered them to come up with a diverse group that fitted the themes of the series.
  • That theme, repeated from the panel, is “Secrets and Lies”.
  • They looked at Peter David’s original Young Justice, the original 60s Teen Titans, and Geoff Johns stuff.
  • Weisman knows his DC parallel Earths.
  • This is a “young” DCU so they’re dealing with the first generation of sidekicks (Dick Grayson, Wally West, Garth), but characters like Superboy and Miss Martian can be slotted into any generation.
  • “The show is a huge canvas and we have a lot of characters.” They start with four characters in the beginning (one who doesn’t join the team), the others are slowly added through the first 6 episodes. A seventh regular joins half-way through the season, and an 8th joins at the end of the season.
  • They’ve planned for a second season, but that hasn’t been green lit yet.
  • Characters mentioned: Captain Atom, Batman, Red Tornado, Black Canary, Superman, Martian Manhunter, Aquaman, Flash, Green Arrow, Captain Marvel, Zatara, Wonder Woman, Captain Atom, Hawkman, Hawkwoman, two Green Lanterns (Hal and John).
  • Greg wrote Captain Atom with Cary Bates for years and is itching to give him a bigger role in the show (he’s a member of the Justice League).
  • Zatara – not Zatanna – was mentioned as being part of the League. Could his daughter show up as a teenager?
  • The question of Wonder Woman and Wonder Girl was brought up. It seemed that it was a case of them being allowed to use Wonder Woman, but not Wonder Girl. Greg mentions legal reasons. This could possibly related to licensing – historically DC characters in movie production have been ring fenced from other projects, e.g. Smallville was restricted in their use of Lois Lane during the time that Superman Returns was being developed/distributed). Updated: Greg clarified on his Ask Greg column that they were prohibited from using Wonder Girl while the show was being developed, but that restriction has now been lifted.
  • The Young Justice comic book won’t “be a little kiddie book”. It will have the same tone as the cartoon and will exist within the same continuity. No crossovers are planned with the main DC Earth.
  • There were superheroes in the 1940s on Earth-16.
  • The voice director on Young Justice is Jamie Thomason who worked with Weisman on Gargoyles and Spectacular Spiderman.

SDCC Panels: Young Justice transcript

DC Comics has uploaded podcasts of all of its San Diego panels to its website. That includes the WB Animation: Batman: Brave and the Bold Panel (MP3) which includes a few minutes of Young Justice intro by producers Greg Weisman and Brandon Vietti. It starts around the 24 minute mark if you want to jump straight to it, but the rest of the panel is quite fun and it’s only 32 minutes long. The rest of the hour-long slot was spent watching a new episode of Batman: The Brave and the Bold, which unfortunately, isn’t included on the podcast.

The panel was moderated by Sam Register, the Executive Vice-President for Creative Affairs at Warner Brothers Animation. He introduced the Young Justice segment by describing how it came about.

We were working on Batman when I got to the studio a couple of years ago and we had one show in production. We had to put other shows into development and somebody at Marvel messed up in my opinion because they let Greg Weisman [supervising producer of The Spectacular Spiderman] go. So I went hunting after Greg Weisman immediately. And at the same time Brandon Vietti, who has been working on many great shows, was directing on Under The Red Hood [the latest DCU direct-to-DVD feature]. I got these guys together. Now… they look alike, they think alike… and what came from this pairing was Young Justice.

Now guys, this is decidedly a different take on the other show [i.e. the comedy of Brave and the Bold which had just been discussed]. So what we wanted to do is, this show will be premiering this November, I think, on Cartoon Network. And what we wanted to do today, because you are fans of DC and Animation DC, we wanted to give you guys the oppurtunity to share for the first time some animation from what the Young Justice series will look like.

Greg Weisman and Brandon Vietti then take over the microphone, but its hard to tell which one is which. I think Vietti may be the one with the slightly deeper voice. Sorry if I’ve got them back to front.

Vietti: We’ve been working on this show for about a year now. It’s all about secrets and lies and we’re going to share a few secrets with you right now.

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