Down East - All posts tagged 'webseries'
Thursday, April 4, 2013

Don't call it a comeback: The Outs returns

It was a sad day last November when Adam Goldman's web series The Outs posted what was then believed to be its last episode.


A still from Adam Goldman's The Outs.

Thankfully, through some kind of belated holiday miracle, The Outs has come back for one more episode, this time with a Hannukah special. I hope this is only the beginning of more.


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Thursday, November 22, 2012

Web series The Outs is on the outs

It is said that all good things must come to an end.

In the case of Adam Goldman's web series, The Outs, all good things end serenely and with dignity.

Not all web series are good. In fact, most of them are rather terrible. But when one comes around that defies the stigma of being "just a web series," it's worth celebrating.

Unfortunately, the final episode of The Outs was just released. No more well-written characters and funny scenarios. No more inappropriate sex.

At least, not until Goldman decides on his next project.

We'll be waiting.

The Outs: Significant Others from The Outs on Vimeo.

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Thursday, August 2, 2012

Popping Culture: On the Outs

When the first few web series started appearing online, certain individuals heralded it as a new way of creating television without the TV.

The problem was that not very much of what was available was very good. Sure, there were exceptions, but most of them were based in comedy (Jack in a Box) or sheer ridiculousness (Epic Meal Time).

But there were very few dramatic series, as drama tends to need a bigger screen for it to fill. Its viewers need to take in all that is on the screen, to let them in to the world of the characters. Tone is not conveyed in the same way as comedic timing, and we, the viewers, were left with paltry options. Unlike television, which has only as many channels as you can order, online entertainment can be anything from porn to kittens with cheeseburgers, all of it available in whatever sized portion you want. Making entertainment for the web is a hard thing to do, as it's only good as long as it doesn't keep you from clicking elsewhere. We tend to like short, bite-sized bits of online fun, hence why most videos are under 10 (if not five) minutes, a formula that the guys at Funny or Die figured out pretty quickly.

Somehow, Adam Goldman's The Outs has appeared to have broken out of that ideology of short, snappy stories. This continuing dramatic series -- recently funded by a stellar Kickstarter campaign -- follows the lives of a small group of queer 20-somethings as they try to navigate themselves through their own lives. Not an easy task, let alone in a city that permits all sorts of diversions and divertissements

The first episode has the feel of a short film, hooking you in quickly and efficiently. The characters are a little precious at first (the self-hating gay guy, the bitter and ridiculously acerbic gay who wears cardigans and has bad dates, the annoying girlfriend), but the viewers quickly fill in the gaps as to who and what these characters are: imperfect, wanting and redeemable. That's what makes good television, no matter what kind of screen you're watching it on. Check it out.

 


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