Los Angeles Web Series Festival

Last updated
Los Angeles Web Series Festival
Lawebfestlogo.jpg
Festival Logo
CountryUnited States
First awarded2010
Website http://www.lawebfest.com/

The Los Angeles Web Series Festival, more commonly known as the LA Web Fest, is a web series festival based in Los Angeles, California. It was founded in 2009 by Michael Okwudili Ajakwe Jr and was one of the first web series-based events; Filmmaker Magazine called it "the granddaddy of all webfests." [1] The event has attracted controversy for its policies. [2] [3]

Contents

Background

The festival had its first official event in 2010. [4] [5] The venue has changed several times since its inception, with the 2015 festival being held at the Hilton Universal City Hotel in Universal City. [6]

When asked about the importance of web series as a creative medium by Carolyn Handler Miller for her book Digital Storytelling: A Creator's Guide to Interactive Entertainment, founder Michael Ajakwe, Jr. said:

Before, filmmaking was a rich man's game. And if you couldn't afford to make a film, a great voice might be lost ... Web series offer freedom.

Since the festival's inaugural presentation in 2010, it has helped produce web series-based festivals in several major cities around the world, including in Marseille [7] (Marseille Web Fest), Melbourne [8] (Melbourne Web Fest), Rio [9] (Rio Web Fest) and Seoul [10] (Seoul Web Fest).

Controversy

In 2015, after other LA-based web series festivals scheduled their events around the same time (including the HollyWeb Festival and Indie Series Awards), Ajakwe came under fire for enforcing an 'exclusivity clause' stating that all entrants "must withdraw their shows from HollyWeb Fest and their award consideration at the ISAs, or be disqualified from LA WebFest." [3]

The clause has since been the subject of controversy and derision in the web series community, with many calling it "anticompetitive" and "unreasonable." [11] Ajakwe spoke to Snobby Robot about the issue, claiming it stems from earlier conflicts in 2012 when the Hollywood Web Series Festival planned their festival on the same weekend as the LA Web Fest. [2]

The Daily Dot also published a story about the controversy, writing: "The battle lines are drawn in the emerging web fest world, as the venerable LA Web Fest has drawn an exclusivity line in the sand for its 2015 entrants." [3]

Award categories

See also

Related Research Articles

Jason Keng-Kwin Chan is a Malaysian actor best known for his role as Cameron Watanabe, the Green Samurai Ranger, as well as his clone, Cyber Cam, in Power Rangers: Ninja Storm.

Young Man Kang is a Korean filmmaker based in Los Angeles, California, United States. Kang directed and produced The Last Eve (2005), Soap Girl (2002), Cupid's Mistake (2001) and Kimchi Warrior (2009). He is the director and founder of Seoul Webfest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jon Lindstrom</span> American actor

Jon Robert Lindstrom is an American actor, writer, director, producer, and musician. He is well known for his roles of Kevin Collins and Ryan Chamberlain on the ABC Daytime soap opera General Hospital and its spin-off Port Charles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emmett Skilton</span> New Zealand actor

Emmett Skilton is a New Zealand actor and director.

<i>The Hunted</i> (web series) American TV series or program

The Hunted is an American action comedy web series created by Robert Chapin. The show follows a group of people who have been bitten by vampires but have not yet been turned, and their attempts to prove the existence of vampires through the web series. The show has been described as a sword-slinging, vampire-slaying cross between the American TV shows Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Cops. Episodes have been filmed by amateur and professional filmmakers throughout the United States and overseas.

Clutch is a Canadian crime/thriller web series created by Jonathan Robbins. It premiered on Vimeo in May 2011, but has since found a home on other broadcast sites such as Koldcast TV, Blip and JTS.TV. The webisodes are also available via DVD and special, purchasable USB keys.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Indie Series Awards</span>

The Indie Series Awards is an annual event hosted by We Love Soaps, based in Los Angeles, California, honoring the best in independently produced, scripted entertainment created for the Internet. The ceremony was founded by Roger Newcomb in 2010. In 2013, after the 4th Indie Soap Awards ceremony, the awards were rebranded as the Indie Series Awards.

Kate Conway is a Canadian actress and producer. She is best known as the star of the web series Out With Dad.

Will Conlon is a Canadian actor, best known for his role on Out With Dad.

Wendy Glazier is an English-speaking Canadian actress. She is mainly known in the world of web series as Theresa LeMay, one of the main roles in the many-times-awarded LGBT web series Out With Dad.

Chop Socky Boom is a comedy web series created by Darlene Sellers and Heath Ward and filmed in Seattle, Washington. The series is broadcast on the internet and premiered on May 1, 2012. Season one includes eight episodes, with season two currently under development. Chop Socky Boom follows the adventures of misfit indie film actors cast in the fictional kung fu film, “Final Zodiac Warrior.” CSB focuses on main character Khanh and her friends, Scottie, Paige, Daisy and Max, as they audition for a poorly run chop socky series created by Trick, an Ed Wood like Director with his own unique vision.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vancouver Web Series Festival</span> Award

The Vancouver Web Series Festival, also known as the Vancouver Web Fest, is a web series festival based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is known as the first ever Canadian festival dedicated solely to entertainment and programming created exclusively for the Internet.

The Amazing Gayl Pile is a Canadian web series created by Morgan Waters and Brooks Gray, which follows one man's misguided quest to conquer the world of home shopping, and become king of the TV pitchman game. First created in 2014, the show stars Morgan Waters, Brooks Gray, Inessa Frantowski, Andy King, Leo Scherman, Daniel Stolfi and Natasha Bromfield. The series has received numerous awards and has screened at festivals around the world; in 2017, it won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Directing and Best Original Program or Series produced for Digital Media - Fiction. Also in 2017, the series broke the record for most nominations at the Indie Series Awards in Los Angeles.

Starting From…Now! is an Australian television drama series which began airing on SBS2 on 7 March 2016. Created by writer, director, producer, Julie Kalceff, it began as an online series for the first three seasons from 2014 before Seasons 4 and 5 were picked up for television. The series has over 42 million views and has been watched in 230 countries. Each season consists of six 10-minute episodes.

My Roommate's an Escort is a Canadian comedy web series created, written by, and starring Katie Uhlmann and Trish Rainone. All 11 episodes of the first season are directed by Uhlmann, and the series premiered on YouTube on April 3, 2017. Rainone plays a non-confrontational, small-town girl living in Toronto who suspects her new roommate Kesha, played by Uhlmann, is a call girl.

Running with Violet is a Canadian comedy-drama web series created by and starring Rebecca Davey and Marie-Claire Marcotte. The series premiered on a dedicated YouTube channel on February 13, 2017. As of January 2020, Running with Violet had generated over 1.5 million views on YouTube.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Ajakwe Jr.</span> American dramatist

Michael Okwudili Ajakwe Jr. was an American television, theatrical, and film writer and producer. The creator of the world's first web series festival and the founder of LAWEBFEST. Prior to the year of his death, Beauty and the Baller, a nine-episode comedy series that he created, produced, and directed outside of the studio system, was licensed to Viacom, which premiered on Centric TV in 2017.

How to Buy a Baby is a Canadian comedy web series, which premiered in November 2017 on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's web platform and on YouTube. Created by Wendy Litner and based on her own experiences having to pursue fertility treatment to conceive a pregnancy, the series stars Meghan Heffern and Marc Bendavid as Jane and Charlie, a couple going through the fertility treatment process.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Melbourne WebFest</span> Australian web series festival

The Melbourne WebFest is an international web series festival based in Melbourne, Australia. It was the first of its kind in the country. It focuses on web series from around the world, with individual recognitions for genres including fantasy and science fiction, nonfiction, drama, comedy, and suspense. Panels on the pitching, production and marketing of web series also take place at the festival.

Holly Melissa Shervey, is a television and film actress and writer. She is an Australian-born New Zealander.

References

  1. "The Essential Guide to Webfests | Filmmaker Magazine". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  2. 1 2 "LA WebFest Strikes Back Against Competition. Creators Caught In Crossfire". Snobby Robot. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  3. 1 2 3 "LA Webfest flexes its muscle to beat down the competition". The Daily Dot. 11 February 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  4. "Marco Sparmberg". Haexagon Concepts. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  5. Miller, Carolyn Handler (2014-06-27). Digital Storytelling: A Creator's Guide to Interactive Entertainment. CRC Press. ISBN   9781135044459.
  6. "Web Series Festival & Awards Guide". Snobby Robot. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  7. "Partners". Marseille Web Fest. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  8. "PARTNERS". Melbourne WebFest. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  9. "Rio WebFest". www.riowebfest.net. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  10. "KWebfest: KO WEBFEST 2015 OFFICIAL SELECTIONS". kowebfest.blogspot.ca. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  11. "LA WebFest Strikes Back Against Competition. Creators Caught In Crossfire". Snobby Robot. Retrieved 2015-12-21.