Adult Swim, sometimes rendered [adult swim] based on its logo, is the name for an adult-oriented television programming network. It shares channel space with Cartoon Network in the United States, featuring absurdist and often ribald comedy in contrast to the tamer daytime Cartoon Network. It also shows some Japanese anime, generally with minimal editing for content.
Ownership | |
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Owner | Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner) |
Background
Adult Swim, then a spinoff of Cartoon Network, premiered on September 2, 2001 with Home Movies being its first program aired. On March 28, 2005, Atlanta-based Turner Broadcasting, who runs the channel, split Adult Swim from Cartoon Network so that Nielsen Media Research could treat it as a separate channel for ratings purposes.[1]
Originally a Sunday-only block that also re-ran on Thursdays, Adult Swim now airs:
- Mondays-Thursdays at 10:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, with an encore at 2:00 a.m. and an older show at 5:30 a.m.
- Saturdays at 11:00 p.m., with an encore at 2:00 a.m. and an hour of older shows at 5:00 a.m. Shows on Saturdays are often action oriented.
- Sundays at 10:00 p.m., with an encore at 2:00 a.m. Shows on Sundays are often comedy oriented.
Beginning on July 6, 2007, Adult Swim will gain a Friday night block which will air from 11:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. Upon this change, the rest of the weeknight blocks will soon lose their 10:30 p.m. time slot. The weekend blocks, however, will remain unchanged.[2]
Some Adult Swim programming may also be viewed online via the Adult Swim Fix on adultswimfix.com.
The block, programmed by Williams Street Studios, the same group that created Toonami and Miguzi, plays American animated series and shorts geared towards adults, and a wide variety of Japanese anime series, OVAs, and movies. Promotions for Adult Swim have been targeted towards the college age group, which constitutes the majority of their viewers. According to a September 1, 2004 article in Promo magazine, representatives travel to 30 universities across the U.S. to promote the Adult Swim lineup, including handing out posters for students’ dorm rooms.
Ad campaign bomb scare
Turner Broadcasting issued an apology for an ad campaign that caused a series of bomb scares throughout Boston on January 31, 2007. A statement emailed to the Boston Globe from Turner Broadcasting said: “The ‘packages’ in question are magnetic lights that pose no danger. They are part of an outdoor marketing campaign in 10 cities in support of Adult Swim’s animated television show Aqua Teen Hunger Force. They had been in place for two to three weeks in Boston, New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle, Portland, Austin, San Francisco, and Philadelphia. Parent company Turner Broadcasting is in contact with local and federal law enforcement on the exact locations of the billboards. ‘We regret that they were mistakenly thought to pose any danger.’ The statement was shown several times during the programming block and posted on their website.”
On January 31, Boston and Massachusetts State Police were dispatched to various places in Boston after reports of suspicious packages were called in. No other law enforcement personnel in any other city was called with regard to the advertisements in the other cities.
On February 1, 2007, Boston authorities arrested two men involved with the scare. Peter Berdovsky, 27, a freelance video artist from Arlington, Massachusetts, and Sean Stevens, 28, were facing charges of placing a hoax device in a way that results in panic, as well as one count of disorderly conduct, according to CNN.
On February 5, Turner Broadcasting and marketer Interference Inc. announced that they will pay two million dollars in amends, one million to the city of Boston, and one million in goodwill funds.[3] Four days later, on February 9, the CEO of Cartoon Network, Jim Samples, resigned.[4]
Partnership with Midway Games
Adult Swim partnered with Midway Games in 2005 to begin development on video games based on 5 of their series. These include Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Space Ghost Coast to Coast, The Brak Show, Harvey Birdman and Sealab 2021. The game based on Aqua Teen Hunger Force has been announced and has been confirmed for the Playstation 2 console. The game has been titled Aqua Teen Hunger Force Zombie Ninja Pro-Am. There has also been a video game based on Harvey Birdman announced by Midway and has been confirmed for the Playstation 2 and Playstation Portable (PSP) console. As of 2007, Harvey Birdman will now be developed by Capcom.
Stylistic history
Originally, all of the bumpers shown in between shows featured footage of senior citizens swimming in public pools eating, exercising, and doing other pool-related activities, with a lifeguard shouting the words “all kids out of the pool” through a megaphone. The logo at that time was the words “adult swim” in red and a black circle with a yellow penumbra. The shows were announced by a computer generated voice on Saturdays. When the Saturday night block started in 2002, it originally featured clips from the various anime programs displayed on the block.
The original theme music for Adult Swim was a Mambo Gallego remix done by D-Code, originally played by the famous Latin jazz musician Tito Puente.
On January 12, 2003, the senior citizens were replaced by animated safety manuals featuring Adult Swim characters.
The current bump cards debuted on May 25, 2003 and feature black intertitle “cards” with white text on them, which discuss everything from news about the programming, to personal staff opinions on unrelated subjects. Fans get involved too as they have been asked to design their own cards and to submit questions for answering. In addition, the bumpers for the action shows are simply pictures of Japan and a carnival-esque side show style.
Adult Swim Video
AdultSwim.com launched Friday Night Fix on Friday, September 16, 2005, as a way for Adult Swim fans to view programming on the one day of the week that the programming block does not currently air (the airtime currently being occupied by a rebroadcast of Cartoon Network’s Fridays programming block), and was originally available only on Fridays during the hours that Adult Swim normally aired on weeknights. On March 27, 2006, Adult Swim changed Friday Night Fix into the Adult Swim Fix. Adult Swim Fix runs every hour of every day, with content ranging from older and current shows to premiere episodes of new shows from both the Comedy and Action blocks, updated every Friday at 6 p.m. Eastern Time. With the exception of anime premieres, which are removed 6 hours later (at 12 a.m. Saturday EST), every show is available until the next Friday update.
April Fools
Adult Swim is notorious for its April Fools pranks (this only applies in the United States).
- In 2004, every show that aired during the actual April 1 was shown with crudely drawn graffiti (mustaches, goatees, and glasses) on the characters’ faces and other objects.
- In 2005, the unfinished pilot of Squidbillies and a mustache-filled episode of Perfect Hair Forever were shown unannounced.
- In 2006, the lineup was changed, unannounced, to include retro shows such as Chuck Norris’ Karate Kommandos while regular shows such as Fullmetal Alchemist and Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GiG were inter-cut with fart sounds.
- In 2007:
- At midnight (Eastern time) on April 1, Adult Swim replaced its regular Saturday night anime block with episodes of Perfect Hair Forever, pre-empting the scheduled premiere episodes of Bleach, Blood+, and Eureka 7. Unlike previous April Fool’s pranks where the fart sounds and mustache drawing had occurred with new episodes, Perfect Hair Forever was also aired for the entirety of the repeat block, also replacing the shows missed during the first airing. The first episode to air was the premiere of the show’s second season with episode 7; they then broadcast the first season in reverse order and in the style of old VHS fansubs, including VHS static and Engrish white subtitles, reminiscent of Hong Kong produced subtitles. The subtitles frequently had little to do with the actual dialogue; episode 3 in particular had subtitles that corresponded to the Aqua Teen Hunger Force episode “Revenge of the Mooninites.” Several scenes throughout the show were also uncensored. At each commercial break they also showed a “fanservice moment” which featured fanservice scenes from various other shows, most notably FLCL.
- In the weeks prior to April Fool’s Day, the long-term programming schedule featured on Adultswim.com was altered to show the film Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters slated to premiere on April 1, twelve days before the film's announced theatrical release date of April 13, 2007; on-air promos for the film's televised premiere followed, including its own TV content rating (of TV-MA-LV). As viewers discovered that various sources for television listings failed to mention the movie on that date, it was assumed that the promised premiere of the Aqua Teen film was the first volley in 2007’s April Fools events. The advertising was both a prank and truth: though the movie was shown as promised, the bulk of it was shown in an almost imperceptible picture in picture box (roughly less than 1% of the total image in area) without sound (Adult Swim had instead decided to broadcast the audio on the Spanish language setting), in the bottom-left corner of the screen, while Adult Swim’s standard lineup aired full-screen and with normal audio. Monsters and Aqua Teen characters occasionally appeared on screen to point out where to watch it. Only the first few minutes of the movie were shown in full-screen quality, though most of that footage had already been released as preview material.
List of Adult Swim programs
Music
Adult Swim has been known to have a partnership with independent music label Stones Throw Records. Many of Adult Swim’s bumpers and packaging have used music from artists such as Madlib, Oh No, and J Dilla. In 2006, both Stones Throw and Adult Swim created a co-production album entitled Chrome Children.
The network was also part of an earlier studio LP with DANGERDOOM, a musical collaboration between music producer Danger Mouse and rapper MF DOOM, entitled The Mouse and the Mask.
In February 2007, Adult Swim and Definitive Jux joined up to release a free, online EP entitled Definitive Swim.
In May of the same year, Adult Swim featured a similarly-styled release called Warm & Scratchy, focusing this time on indie rock bands from varying labels and sub-genres.
Video on demand
In mid-2004, Adult Swim launched a video on demand channel on various cable TV providers. The comedy section features several episodes from various Adult Swim original series, while the action section shows only anime series and movies licensed by Bandai Entertainment, some of which have never been broadcast on Adult Swim or CN. The anime series s-CRY-ed initially premiered on demand before debuting on the regular block in May 2005.
Select series, including Aqua Teen Hunger Force and The Venture Brothers, are also available for purchase on iTunes. Furthermore, as of November 22, 2006 some Adult Swim shows can be bought and accessed from the Xbox Live Video Marketplace.
The video on demand section as well offers many videos, and is updated almost daily.
TV content ratings
The start of each hour of Adult Swim programming is easily identified by the “Parental Advisory: Mature Content” logo (which resembles the warning seen on explicit CDs) followed by a warning that the shows contain material that may not be appropriate for viewers under the age of 17. The age “limit” was 14 until June 2006. Originally, there was no warning, but as the programming became more popular, a message was put up to alert parents. It stated that the appropriate age for viewers was 18 and older. It then went on to say that the viewer could expect intense violence, sexual situations, coarse language, and suggestive dialogue (similar to the one still used in Australia and New Zealand.) When Adult Swim changed to its current format, the description was dropped to shorten the message. Soon after, the warning logo was added and the age was changed to 14. For a while, the spots ran such that the first spot, the "Inappropriate for under 14" warning, runs for the first hour or two - until midnight (and for an equal period starting at 2)- and the "Inappropriate for under 17" warning is run for all shows whose first airtime is after midnight (and then again at 3:30-4:00). In addition, on Adult Swim’s first night on September 2, 2001, the “TV-14” bug was left on the screen for the entire duration of the block, excluding commercials and promos. On May 7, 2007, Adult Swim shortened the warning to "Adult Swim may contain mature material some viewers might not find suitable" and dropped the “Parental Advisory” screen.
To date, Adult Swim has deemed episodes of three shows to contain levels of violence and graphic content necessitating their own disclaimer, above and beyond the disclaimer used for the block which states, “Just in case that last disclaimer wasn’t enough, this episode contains extreme violence. We would rather run this than cut the violence from the episode because we are American Cowboys.” This disclaimer appears before episode 10 of Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, “Jungle Cruise”, and episode 51 of Fullmetal Alchemist, “Laws and Promises”.[5]
Starting with the October 21, 2006 broadcast of episode 26 (“Morning Glory”) of Eureka Seven, the “American Cowboys” disclaimer appears before the 1:00 a.m. show; after Eureka Seven finished, the disclaimer carried over to Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG, which did not previously carry the disclaimer.
A disclaimer also shows before every episode of Blood+; unlike the “American Cowboys” white-on-black, this disclaimer has a yellow-and-red bomb visual to accompany the text.
Podcast
Adult Swim offered a video podcast on Apple’s iTunes from March 21, 2006, to September 19 2006. The podcasts featured behind the scenes segments of shows, as well as exclusive content (such as an interview with Saved by the Bell’s Dennis Haskins and a look at Brendon Small and Tommy Blacha’s Metalocalypse). During its run, the podcast reached number two in iTunes’ ranking of most downloaded podcasts. [1]
Website and Forum
Adult Swim maintains Adultswim.com with news about new shows, clips, and games.
Adult Swim has an active message board at its official Web site. Williams Street Studios staff frequents the board to answer viewer questions and address comments about Adult Swim programming. Additionally, posts made by fans in certain threads may also be aired during the block.
Adult Swim UK also has a forum via adultswim.co.uk, where viewers can post feedback and opinions on upcoming and new shows.
Adult Swim worldwide
This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2007) |
Australia and New Zealand
- In Australia and New Zealand, Adult Swim airs Monday to Saturday from 10:30 p.m.
- Monday to Thursday (10:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.) features an hour of anime, which is then repeated in the second hour. Starting in July 2007, this two-hour time block will be rebranded as part of an agreement with Madman Entertainment.
- Series currently or recently shown on the weekday block include InuYasha, Fullmetal Alchemist, Gundam SEED and Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex. Bleach and Eureka Seven have been confirmed to join the lineup in July 2007.
- Friday and Saturday (10:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.) features 90 minutes of comedy, which is then repeated from midnight.
- Shows that are a part of the Australia’s Adult Swim comedy block are Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Sealab 2021, The Brak Show, Tom Goes to the Mayor, Space Ghost Coast to Coast & The Venture Bros.. Mission Hill and Home Movies have aired on Adult Swim in the past.
- Before an improvement in the local Cartoon Network feed on June 1, 2006, Adult Swim, just like other programs on Cartoon Network, was pushed back (in New Zealand only) two hours from the time advertised due to time zone differences, which meant that Adult Swim started at 12:30 a.m.
- Adult Swim Australia also airs notices from their noticeboard on Comedy nights. They have a tendency to only air certain notices during certain shows.
- The Adventures of Super Oil and High-Octane can be seen intermittently during breaks. They have access to five episodes (namely “Bowlinger vs Bowlinger,” “Tube Panic,” “Climber’s High,” “My True Blue Car,” and “Bottle Trouble”) which they repeat each week, sometimes playing an episode more than once on a certain night. On occasion, they have been aired on an Anime night.
- The Boondocks, another popular Adult Swim show, currently airs in Australia on The Comedy Channel on Fridays at 9:00 p.m., not on Adult Swim or Cartoon Network. Comedy Channel does not air in New Zealand.
- In 2006, New Zealand FTA channel C4 aired Aqua Teen Hunger Force and Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law on Wednesday nights at 9:30 p.m. Aqua Teen Hunger Force could also be seen on weeknights at 7:00 p.m.
- In 2005, Australian FTA channel SBS broadcast Harvey Birdman.
United Kingdom
- The UK network Bravo airs an Adult Swim block nightly, generally from midnight each night. The UK’s Bravo channel is owned by Virgin Media Television, although in other parts of the world Adult Swim is a block on Time Warner-owned Cartoon Network. Shows that are a part of the UK’s Adult Swim block are Robot Chicken, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Sealab 2021, The Brak Show, Tom Goes to the Mayor, Space Ghost Coast to Coast & The Venture Bros., Metalocalypse, [6] Non-Williams Street shows on the block include Stripperella and Kid Notorious. The first "action" series will be the anime Afro Samurai it will air on May 4th 2007 along side a new UK animated show Modern Toss[2].
- In addition to this, an online service, AdultSwim.co.uk, offers 24-hour access to full episodes of various Adult Swim shows including (besides what is already available on Bravo, bar Space Ghost Coast to Coast and non-Williams Street shows) Squidbillies, Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, Tom Goes to the Mayor, Minoriteam, Stroker and Hoop, Moral Orel, 12 Oz. Mouse Perfect Hair Forever Metalocalypse, and Frisky Dingo. A year-long subscription to this service costs £9.99. There are also a number of episodes offered free of charge which are refreshed on a weekly basis. Unlike Adult Swim on Bravo UK the website service is owned by Time Warner.
- Previously, the only Adult Swim action show airing in the UK was Fullmetal Alchemist on Rapture TV on Tuesdays. Before that, Wolf’s Rain aired every Thursday but was replaced with Mezzo DSA. There are no content edits for any show aired on Rapture. Since the Fullmetal Alchemist end-of-series, it has been replaced with Excel Saga.
Latin America
In Latin America, Adult Swim airs every Friday, Saturday and Sunday in Spanish and Portuguese (for Brazilian viewers). However, unlike Adult Swim USA, anime is not a part of the lineup, being broadcasted on the Toonami block in a Monday-Thursday basis. Nevertheless, there remains much fan pressure to bring anime to Adult Swim in the region (pressure that is mocked constantly in Adult Swim’s bumpers).
- 20th Century Fox-produced shows, such as Futurama, Family Guy, and American Dad!, are not seen on Adult Swim, but instead aired on FOX Latin America in a similarly themed block called No Molestar! (Do Not Disturb! in English, Não Perturbe! in Portuguese), which is seen nightly, except Saturdays.
- In Chile, VTR, Chile’s largest cable system, decided to censor Adult Swim from transmission, and doesn’t show it at all, instead replacing it with a relatively short recording of “children’s” cartoon episodes which repeats over and over. For some time, users could pay an extra fee to be able to watch the transmission along with VTR’s “premium” channels. This situation was not well-received by users, who even started a petition (at http://www.queremosadultswim.tk/ ).
- The shows aired on the block airs shows like Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Harvey Birdman, The Oblongs, The Venture Bros., Sealab 2021, Baby Blues, Mission Hill, Undergrads, Robot Chicken, Home Movies and others. The block is seen nightly through 11:00 p.m. EST.
Canada
- While they do not use the Adult Swim branding, TELETOON’s English-language service in Canada has a teen/adult oriented block called the Detour that airs very similar programming every night. Adult Swim programs that are airing currently on the Detour include 12 oz. Mouse, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Family Guy, Futurama, Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, Robot Chicken, Squidbillies, Stroker and Hoop, The Boondocks, The Venture Bros., Home Movies, Tom Goes to the Mayor, and Space Ghost Coast to Coast.
- The French version of The Detour block on the Francophone TÉLÉTOON channel, though similar in content, currently has no Adult Swim programs on its schedule, nor do they have anime programming.
- Amp'd Mobile Canada has an Adult Swim channel which features clips from their shows. [3]
The Philippines
- The Philippines is the only country in Asia that airs Adult Swim.
- Adult Swim airs on weekdays between 10:30 to 11:30 p.m. and 10:30 to 11:00 p.m. on weekends. In the past, Adult Swim in the Philippine feeds were during late weekend nights and showed only CN-made cartoons such as Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Sealab 2021, Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law and The Brak Show. Gundam Seed was later inserted into the Adult Swim block but has now been removed.
South Africa
- Adult Swim airs from 23:00 to 01:00 on a channel named Go.
- The programming includes Robot Chicken, The Brak Show, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Sealab 2021, The Venture Bros, Stroker and Hoop, Harvey Birdman Attorney At Law.
Spain
- Adult Swim block airs on TNT Spain.
Russia
- Adult Swim airs from approx. 23:30 everyday on the newly (re)launched 2x2 channel. It is somewhat rebranded into similar logo of "[эдалт свим]", a simple transliteration, èdalt svim.
- The channel's coverage comprises parts of Moscow, Moscow Oblast and St. Petersburg[7].
- The programming includes 12 oz. Mouse, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Robot Chicken, Sealab 2021, The Brak Show, The Oblongs, The Venture Bros, [8].
Notes
- ^ Adult Swim/CN Split Cements Strategy. ICv2. March 3, 2005.
- ^ Becker, Anne. Adult Swim Adds Seventh Night, Broadcasting & Cable, April 26, 2007. Accessed April 26, 2007.
- ^ Turner, contractor to pay $2M in Boston bomb scare. CNN.com. Retrieved April 29, 2007.
- ^ Ryan, Andrew. Cartoon Network head resigns after Boston bomb scares. boston.com News. Retrieved April 29, 2007.
- ^ Episode 51 of Fullmetal Alchemist was originally untitled when broadcast in Japan; however, Funimation, the distributor of the English dub in the United States, gave it the name “Laws and Promises” for the U.S. broadcast.
- ^ Adult Swim Show Profiles. Bravo (UK). Retrieved July 19 2006.
- ^ http://www.profmedia.ru/actives/2x2/
- ^ http://www.2x2tv.ru/programm/
External links
Official Sites
- AdultSwim.com—Official website
- AdultSwim.co.uk—Official UK Adult Swim website
- BRAVO.co.uk—Adult Swim—Official website of the UK Adult Swim
- AdultSwimLA.com—Official website of Adult Swim Latin America
Unofficial Sites
- Adult Swim Headquarters—Unofficial Adult Swim information and news website
- ASF—Adult Swim promo and intro archive
- BumpWorthy.com—Adult Swim’s commercial bumps, including some from the pre-“card” era.
- Adultswimdvd.com.au—Australian Adult Swim DVD site by Madman Entertainment