JPod (TV series)

Last updated

jPod
JPod intertitle.png
Genre Comedy drama
Created by
Based on jPod
by Douglas Coupland
Starring
Theme music composer Bonobo
Opening theme"Flutter"
Country of originCanada
No. of episodes13 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • J.B. Sugar
  • Larry Sugar
Production locations Vancouver, British Columbia
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time45 minutes
Production companies
  • I'm Feeling Lucky Productions
  • No Equal Entertainment
Release
Original network CBC Television
Original releaseJanuary 8 (2008-01-08) 
April 4, 2008 (2008-04-04)

jPod is a Canadian comedy-drama television series based on Douglas Coupland's 2006 novel of the same name. [1] It premiered on CBC Television on January 8, 2008. Starting with the fifth episode, the show began airing Fridays at 9:00.

Contents

On March 7, 2008, it was announced that the CBC had cancelled the show due to low ratings. [2] All of the remaining episodes—apart from episode 11, which was skyped and made available online—were broadcast.

The show's opening title theme is "Flutter" by Bonobo. Produced by I’m Feeling Lucky Productions for the CBC, jPod was created by Coupland and Michael MacLennan. Coupland also co-wrote many of the sole season's episodes.


Plot

jPod chronicles the often shocking lives of Ethan Jarlewski and four of his co-workers at Neotronic Arts as they confront "Chinese gangs, boneheaded bosses, sexual swinging, British royalty and gore-laced video games." [3] The pod was created by a Y2K glitch, which caused workers with surnames beginning with the letter J to be assigned desks together in the company's basement. jPod is made up of Ethan, Bree, Cancer Cowboy and John Doe, plus the new hire, Kaitlin.

As the series begins, jPod is assigned a new boss, Steve, who begins demanding changes to the video game jPod is working on. The team struggles to cope with the changes, which they view as detrimental, through tactics that are familiar to them: doing as little work as possible and goofing around.

Ethan also has family problems. While both his parents, Jim and Carol, appear to be normal middle class suburbanites, they harbor secrets. Carol runs a marijuana grow-op in her basement to fund her retirement. When she kills a dealer in apparent self-defense, she calls in Ethan to help her hide the body. Jim, a failing actor, has extra-marital affairs and enlists Ethan's help to keep his latest one a secret. Jim befriends Kam Fong, a Chinese mobster who appreciates him for his championships in ballroom dancing competitions. When Jim's girlfriend becomes a problem for him, he asks Kam Fong to kidnap her.

Ethan quickly falls for Kaitlin, but several things come between them, including the problems and antics in the office and the Jarlewski family, as well as the imposition of their own exes.

Steve falls in love with Carol and attempts to win her heart, despite her disinterest. Jim becomes jealous and has Kam Fong kidnap Steve. In jPod, Steve is replaced as manager by Alistair, an insane but genius designer, who makes life miserable for the jPodders.

At a party at the Jarlewski house, John Doe and Bree begin a romance.

When at the same party Ethan discovers that Jim was involved in Steve's disappearance, Kam Fong explains that Steve has been impressed into factory slavery in China. Ethan and Cowboy go to China to rescue Steve. When they arrive they discover that Steve has been forcibly addicted to heroin as a means of control. Ethan and Cowboy bring Steve back to Vancouver. There he resumes his position as jPod manager after Alistair blows himself up in a failed terrorist attack on Neotronic Arts.

Steve builds a hug machine.

When his addiction creates friction with the jPodders and his ex-wife and son, the jPodders warn Steve that he must either quit heroin or become a high functioning addict. He fails and eventually gets fired.

After discovering Jim's infidelity, Carol leaves home and moves to a lesbian commune run by John Doe's mother on the Sunshine Coast. As she leaves, she accidentally hits Steve with her car. She drives away unaware. Jim finds Steve's body and asks Ethan to help dispose of it, fearing that he had killed him while drunk. When the two determine that Carol had killed Steve, they swear to never tell her. They bury Steve's body and send a forged letter to Steve's son to explain his disappearance.

Neotronic Arts promotes Kaitlin to Steve's position just as her relationship with Ethan seems about to start. Due to a strict company policy they cannot begin the relationship after all.

A freak computer glitch reorganizes the desk assignments at Neotronic Arts, and the company president tells jPod they are being disbanded. The five jPodders must seek new positions within the company. Bree, Kaitlin, and John Doe find places in departments that they judge are more suited to their talents and personalities, but before long each one realizes they miss jPod. Meanwhile Ethan plans to leave for the San Francisco branch, and Cowboy secretly befriends an artificial intelligence that has spontaneously assembled itself from Neotronic Arts code. He tries to use this friendship to get a position as head of Neotronic Arts' artificial intelligence division. The AI asks him to connect it to the hug machine for a demonstration.

Throughout the series the team creates short gore sequences to demonstrate the video games they work on, though a finalized product is never released. In the season finale, they assemble a video farewell to jPod using all the gory material they created.

They hack the video into the company president's board meeting presentation and shock the administration of Neotronic Arts. They expect to be fired for this, but they all agree it was worth it. While John Doe, Cowboy, and Bree head off to play a last game of Defendoids, Ethan finally expresses his feelings for Kaitlin and they share a passionate kiss. When Ethan steps away to retrieve a present for Kaitlin, Kaitlin tries out the hug machine. The artificial intelligence begins to crush Kaitlin, seeing her as a rival for Ethan's affections. Ethan pulls her from the hug machine, but not before she falls into a coma.

The series ends with several cliffhangers unresolved.

Main cast and characters

Cancellation

On March 7, 2008, CBC Television announced the cancellation of jPod. [4] After earning high praise from some critics but little viewership, CBC moved the program to Friday nights beginning with the fifth episode. This may have further brought down its ratings. "jPod has been in trouble since February, when CBC moved it from mid-week to Friday night, when viewers are difficult to attract." [4]

DVD release

On September 9, 2008, Morningstar Entertainment released a region-free DVD set in Canada containing all 13 episodes of jPod, with bonus features including deleted and alternate scenes, including segments from the unaired pilot, a gag reel, animations and interstitials. [5]

A pressing error forced playback to skip to the next episode partway through Episode 8, The Last Shot. Morningstar soon offered a disc replacement program to those with an affected set.

Digital distribution

In Canada, jPod was available to stream on demand on the CBC's website. This was a first for scripted television on the network, which previously had dabbled with online distribution of news programming. jPod was seen as an early step in the CBC's digital distribution plans, which included releasing programs via BitTorrent. [6]

jPod was also made available to stream on demand with the relaunch of The WB in the summer of 2008 at TheWB.com. [7] Intellectual property restrictions prevented those without American IP addresses from viewing the series on The WB.

The show was syndicated on local CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox stations in the US.[ citation needed ]

The show was also released on iTunes. [8] There was originally a file error on iTunes which caused Episode 8: The Last Shot to play in lieu of Episode 9: Fine China. iTunes subsequently corrected the file contents and released an update to customers who purchased the series.

In the UK, the full series of jPod was available on Netflix UK and the Virgin On Demand service in both SD and HD to XL subscribers only, as well as offering the first four episodes on the Virgin Central channel in June 2009. [9]

Soundtrack

Episode 1: I Love Turtles

Episode 2: A Fine Bro-Mance

Episode 3: Emo-tion Capture

Episode 4: Feed The Need

Episode 5: Crappy Birthday to You

Episode 6: The Hero's Journey

Episode 7: SpriteQuest

Episode 8: The Last Shot

Episode 9: Fine China

Episode 10: The Betty and Veronica Syndrome

Episode 11: Senseless Prom Death

Episode 12: Steve Leaves

Episode 13: Colony Collapse Disorder

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References

  1. Andrews, Marke (January 4, 2008). "jPod - CBC wants you to see the show, read the blogs, play the game". The Vancouver Sun .
  2. "Just cancelled: CBC's jPod". The Vancouver Sun. March 7, 2008. Archived from the original on September 30, 2009. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  3. MacDonald, Gayle (November 24, 2008). "CBC wants more women". Globe & Mail. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  4. 1 2 "CBC renews The Border, cuts jPod, MVP". CBC News. March 7, 2008. Archived from the original on March 9, 2008.
  5. Lambert, David (February 8, 2008). "jPod - Canadian Series Comes to DVD This September: Date, Cost, Package Art!". TV Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on February 21, 2010. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  6. "jCBC to BitTorrent Canada's Next Great Prime Minister". CBC.ca. March 19, 2008. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  7. "Warner Bros. Television Group Launches TheWB.com". Warner Brothers. April 28, 2008. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  8. "'jPod at the iTunes Store"
  9. Donaghy, James (June 2, 2009). "jPod - another cancelled cult show". guardian.co.uk. Retrieved March 4, 2010.