Scott Zakarin

Scott Zakarin

Scott Zakarin is an American writer, film producer and new media entertainment pioneer.

Contents

Career

In 1995, while directing commercials and early interactive television tests for the Fattal & Collins advertising agency, Zakarin became fascinated by the Internet. He spent time in chat rooms and quickly recognized an untapped entertainment platform. In response, he created The Spot, the first interactive entertainment web series that combined online diary entries, photos, video, and groundbreaking interactive techniques to create a new storytelling format, Zakarin convinced his employer to back his novel idea, and the site premiered early in June 1995, running through the early summer of 1997. Zakarin was the writer, director, and producer for The Spot, which was the first winner of Infoseek’s very "Cool Site of the Year" – which became known as the Webby – for 1995.

The business model which Zakarin and his team developed for The Spot influenced the Internet dot-com boom that followed. Although it attracted revenue by blue chip sponsors such as K-Swiss and Toyota, the Internet’s bandwidth lagged behind Zakarin’s innovations, and many of the expectations of those involved in the early days of online entertainment proved to be premature. Zakarin and his creative team left the site about 10 months after its launch due to creative differences. The company which took control of The Spot, American Cybercast, spun off from Fattal & Collins into a separate entity and attracted millions in venture capital, but eventually failed to turn the sizable audience Zakarin and his team built for the series into a reliable advertising revenue stream. American Cybercast went bankrupt at the beginning of 1997, and The Spot site was purchased by others who attempted to operate it on a reduced budget. Eventually, The Spot itself folded, its last original episode going on line at midnight on July 1, 1997.

Zakarin had long since separated himself from any creative involvement with The Spot, although he did attempt to purchase the rights to it at the time of American Cybercast's closure. An attempt at revival of The Spot in 2004–2005 under the owners who did acquire the site's intellectual property seven years earlier also failed. That left the site dormant and offline once again.

Zakarin's later projects under his new company, Lightspeed Media, included a site called GrapeJam.com ‐ the first interactive sit.com that featured live improvisational activities and stream radio broadcasts. In 1997 GrapeJam.com was nominated for the Webby for best comedy web site, People Magazine called Zakarin "King of the sit.com", and he was featured in the book Digital Babylon by John Geirland and Eva Sonesh-Kedar.[1] The following year, the Hollywood Reporter included Zakarin on its annual list "35 under 35".

The corporate offices of Lightspeed Media were in a two-story house in Culver City, California, not far from the Sony Pictures movie studio. Many media pioneers such as television programmer Brandon Tartikoff and Spider-Man creator Stan Lee visited the house to become involved in creating original web content. It was Tartikoff who convinced Zakarin to let America Online (AOL) purchase Lightspeed Media. Zakarin built and launched Entertainment Asylum for AOL's Greenhouse Networks – an interactive celebrity site with live broadcasts. After the death of Tartikoff, who has acted as Zakarin’s mentor and champion at AOL, the company closed down Entertainment Asylum.

Zakarin then turned back to more traditional media in producing, directing, and representing movies for a company he co-founded called Creative Light Media, which operated from 1998 until 2006, distributing and producing independent films, some of which Zakarin wrote, produced, and directed. It also produced several critically well received documentaries for theatrical, video and cable release including Mind Meld, featuring William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy discussing their Star Trek characters and experiences, and Comic Book: The Movie starring Mark Hamill and featuring cameo appearances by Hugh Hefner, Kevin Smith, Matt Groening, and other pop culture icons and innovators. Comic Book: The Movie won Variety's 2004 DVD Exclusive Award in the Best Live Action category. Creative Light Media also compiled, and distributed for video and cable, a collection of classic Sid Caesar comedy programs from material originally produced and broadcast for NBC-TV's Your Show of Shows in the 1950s. In 2006, Zakarin created and executive produced for the E! Entertainment Network Kill Reality, a reality TV series featuring reality all-stars as they lived together while filming the horror movie, The Scorned.

In the latter part of 2006 Zakarin returned to his new media roots with a new company he cofounded named Iron Sink Media, creating movies and Internet shows for the Internet, with projects including Soup of the Day, The NoHo, HiHo and WeHo Girls, The VanNuys Guys and Shatnervision, which was awarded Best Original Reality Web Series at the first annual Streamy Awards in 2008.

Creative Light Media received considerable press notice for its online series, Roommates (2007–2008), the first original series produced with MySpace. Additionally, Zakarin is a writer, director and producer for Upstairs Girls/Downstairs Guys (August 2008 – present), an episodic web video comedy series which as of April 2010 has collected over 75 million views on YouTube, as cited by TubeMogul.

Awards and honors

  • 2008: Streamy Awards – Best Original Reality Web Series – Shatnervision – winner
  • 2004: Variety, DVD Exclusive Award, Best Live Action –Comic Book: The Movie – winner
  • 1997: Webby Awards, Best Comedy Website – Grapejam.com – nominated
  • 1995: Cool Site of the Year (the Webby) – The Spot" – winner

Notes

  1. ^ Geirland, John and Sonesh-Keder, Eva. Digital Babylon: How the Geeks, the Suits, and the Ponytails Fought to Bring Hollywood to the Internet. Arcade Publishing, 1999. ISBN 1559704837


External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Creating Rem Lezar — Tagline: Every child has a Rem Lezar. Directed by Scott Zakarin Produced by …   Wikipedia

  • The Spot — For other uses of the term spot, see Spot (disambiguation page). The Spot, or thespot.com, was the first episodic fiction website, and pioneered the underwriting of bandwidth and production costs by offering paid advertising banners on the web… …   Wikipedia

  • QuantumLink Serial — The QuantumLink Serial by Tracy Reed on AOL (1988–89) was the first episodic online story. The series was also known as the PC Link Serial and the AppleLink Serial before all three services were unified when Quantum changed its name to AOL.… …   Wikipedia

  • Soup of the Day — is the loosely scripted 2006 internet phenomenon that told the story of one man who is dating three women at the same time. Each of the 19 episodes of the story was its own 4 6 minute self contained viral video. The entire series used to be… …   Wikipedia

  • Creature Unknown — Infobox Film name = Creature Unknown director = Michael Burnett producer = Michael Burnett, Eric Mittleman, Scott Zakarin. writer = Eric Mittleman, Scott Zakarin. starring = Kristin Herold Chase Masterson Chris Hoffman Maggie Grace Cory Hardrict… …   Wikipedia

  • Brandon Tartikoff — Infobox Person name = Brandon Tartikoff caption = birth date = birth date|1949|1|13| birth place = Freeport, New York death date = death date and age|1997|8|27|1949|1|13| death place = Los Angeles, California spouse = Lilly Tartikoff Brandon… …   Wikipedia

  • Rob Cesternino — Survivor contestant name = Rob Cesternino birthdate = birth date and age|1978|10|20 location = Wantagh, New York season = finish =3rd (The Amazon) 15th (All Stars) tribe = colorbox|#3366FF Tambaqui colorbox|yellow Jaburu colorbox|red Jacaré… …   Wikipedia

  • Webisode — A webisode is an episode of a television show that airs initially as an Internet download or stream as opposed to first airing on broadcast or cable television. The word itself is a portmanteau formed by the words web and episode .A webisode is… …   Wikipedia

  • Webisodio — Un webisodio es un breve episodio que se transmite inicialmente como una descarga de Internet en lugar de salir al aire en la primera emisión de televisión por cable. El formato puede ser utilizado como una vista previa, una promoción, como parte …   Wikipedia Español

  • Brandon Tartikoff — Brandon Tartikoff, né le 13 janvier 1949 à Freeport, État de New York, et mort le 27 août 1997 à Los Angeles, Californie, est un producteur de télévision, connu pour avoir travaillé sur le prime time de NBC à la programmation… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”