Wonderpants was shown smiling and standing on an upright girder with the blue tracks supported by beams coming from his pants. But then, the train came back up and drove upward on blue colored tracks.
#Wow wow wubbzy slow motion tv
The TV kept showing the broken tracks while the 'superhero defeated' music was playing. "Captain Wonderpants!!" Daizy too yelled in shock. "Nooo!!" Wubbzy screamed in shock with his hands on his face. He and the train fell off the tracks offscreen, leaving the passengers screaming. He kept pushing harder and harder as he got close to the end while the music got more and more dramatic. Wonderpants and the train got closer and closer to the end of the broken tracks. "C'mon, Captain Wonderpants!" Wubbzy exclaimed. The captain's face kept straining and straining. The train wasn't slowing down fast enough, making the passengers inside panic and scream. On the TV, Captain Wonderpants, a light blue human hero with a red 'W' mask over his eyes, blue gloves and shoes, a white shirt with a 'W' on it and most importantly, his special red utility pants with a rectangle of 30 squares on the front, colored in different shades of blue, with two speedometers next to them was flying with jets from his pants coming out of the sides while using his super strength to try to stop the "World's Heaviest Iron Train" from falling off the broken tracks that lead to a deep pit below. In a tree-shaped house a young, yellow, playful gerbil kid with a long and bendy tail named 'Wubbzy' was watching television with his friend, Daizy, a young and cute girly-girl, on the couch and they both looked nervous. Round blue birds were flying over Wuzzleburg, a kooky town with kooky animals being inhabited by kooky people. Basic details are told for those who aren't familiar with the franchise. This will be the first of probably quarterly emails I send.~ The Train Trip to Toy Universe ~ By SuKanzooīased off the pre-school cartoon "Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!", originated by Bob Boyle Sign up below to get the article before it's published on the internet. If you've read this far, you might be interested in an article I'm writing (with Jeff's permission of course) about the anatomy of this Kickstarter from a funding perspective, traffic sources, marketing outreach, and other useful information.
#Wow wow wubbzy slow motion full
We had held a preview event and captured video of people seeing it for the first time, which was full of wondrous faces (see gallery below), but it took away from the intimacy. Whatever didn't serve the magic had to go. Along the same lines, we also left out any sort of technical explanations of the strobing, or the panel controls/modes, out of the main video. So we shot a separate interview-style video of Jeff surrounded by plants and equipment and put that elsewhere on the Kickstarter page. It's almost expected that a Kickstarter video has a bit of speaking from the creator of the project ("Hi I'm so and so, and I need your help" etc), and we quickly decided that it would pull the viewer out of the experience. If you're interested specifically in the effects gear used for recording the Rhodes, there's an entry about the Strymon BigSky on my blog. It's the sound of the actual space of the video. Since the sound is a recording of the room, rather than direct, there are also touches of chairs creaking, an occasional breath, and is really quite magical. The music in the video is an edit of two layers of her playing, with shimmery sounds placed to accentuate some key emotional moments (like the plant with water drops). And hey, while we're at it, why not record the room, maybe something beautiful will happen. Since there is often a good amount of dead time for actors on a video shoot, I decided to run the Rhodes through an amplifier so she could play it between takes. Jeff invited Hannah to be in the video, and she plays the Rhodes piano and sings beautifully ( Instagram here). So we borrowed a Rhodes from a friend, and set it up in our studio along with a plant and table lamp to suggest an airy living room.