Los Angeles Times

A new channel for episodic TV

Festivals a boon for creators seeking to upend outdated ideas of who makes shows.

- By Manuel Betancourt

These days, you can watch television anywhere. On your TV, your tablet, your laptop, your phone. Even, at least in prepandemi­c times, at a movie theater.

Recent editions of the world’s preeminent film festivals have showcased a wealth of small-screen programmin­g on the big screen. South by Southwest, whose (virtual) 2021 edition started Tuesday, has hosted worldpremi­ere events for such buzzy series as “Dear White People,” “Search Party,” “Mr. Robot” and “Ramy.” The Tribeca Film Festival, which has for years hosted screenings and talks with TV creators — including the world premieres of “Chernobyl,” “The Boys” and “Genius” — began its own TV offshoot, the Tribeca TV Festival, starting with screenings of “Queen Sugar,” “Better Things” and “At Home With Amy Sedaris.”

In recent years, attendees at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival have been able to catch episodes of “Black Mirror,” “Transparen­t,” “The Deuce” and “Mrs. Fletcher,” while Sundance-goers have been able to boast a peek at titles like “I Love Dick,” “Finding

Neverland” and “State of the Union” in between film screenings at Park City, Utah.

As conversati­ons rage on about the blurring of lines between film and TV, there’s no denying that events designed to champion and celebrate cinema in recent years have warmly opened their doors to those working in episodic storytelli­ng.

But beyond the presence of high-profile titles, the rise of TV at film festivals reflects the changing face of independen­t television developmen­t, from the boom of digital web series in the early 2010s to the current marketplac­e, which is liable to be shaped by the streaming wars for a decade to come.

The initial decision to include TV shows in the SXSW lineup was both an obvious and an organic one, said Janet Pierson, the Austin, Texasbased festival’s director of film. Early events with the likes of Lena Dunham (in 2012 with “Girls”) and Carlton Cuse (in 2013 with “Bates Motel”) led the way for the Episodic program launched in 2014. TIFF would follow suit in 2015 and Sundance in 2016, while the Tribeca TV Festival arrived in fall 2017.

Just as independen­t filmmakers were grappling with a changing theatrical model that favored big-budget blockbuste­rs and cable executives were hailing Peak TV, Pierson and her peers saw a chance to embrace the bold work being done on the small screen, at times by the very people whose films they used to program (Dunham’s “Tiny Furniture,” for instance, had wowed SXSW audiences in 2010).

“After a couple of years, we just realized there was so much content being made, and made by filmmakers whose work we’ve seen or were aware of or were interested in, that we said, ‘Let’s try it and let’s see how it works,’ ” Pierson said. As with the rest of the festival, she noted, the focus remains on visionary work — the kind that often gets hailed as “cinematic” despite premiering on a network or a streaming service you can watch on your phone.

That’s exactly how Christina Lee, showrunner of the upcoming HBO Max series “Made for Love,” talks about her show’s compatibil­ity with a venue like SXSW, which is premiering her pilot episode. “We just appreciate that they’re including television,” she said. “Because, you know, I think that we are, as creatives, approachin­g TV differentl­y and really looking at the artistry of it. And so to be seen that way as well through these festivals is a real honor.”

One need look no further than the addition of television prizes at the 2021 Film Independen­t Spirit Awards to see pioneering TV projects as both an extension and a byproduct of the indie film world. This year’s inaugural nominee TV roster boasts shows that bowed at various festivals around the world, including Amazon’s “Small Axe” anthology series (three episodes of which screened at New York Film Festival 2020), National Geographic’s docuseries “City So Real” (Sundance 2020), Showtime’s “Work in Progress” (Sundance 2019), HBO’s “We Are Who We Are” (San Sebastian Film Festival 2020, Cannes Directors’ Fortnight 2020) and Netflix’s “Unorthodox” (Séries Mania 2020).

But while those glitzy, network-stamped premieres at lauded fests tell a story of prestige TV being seen alongside the work of renowned auteurs from around the globe, there’s another aspect of festivals’ embrace of episodic storytelli­ng.

At a time when the success of shows like “Insecure,” “High Maintenanc­e,” “Broad City,” “Drunk History” and “Workaholic­s” was ushering in a new generation of storytelle­rs who’d cut their teeth in the digital video space, these festival showcases led the way for pilot competitio­ns, which have become a way for indie creators (often from underrepre­sented groups) to find platforms to connect with audiences, critics, collaborat­ors and executives.

‘GENTEFIED’S’ START

That was definitely the case for Marvin Lemus and Linda Yvette Chávez. In 2015, while working on branded video content and eager to be taken seriously, the pair began working on a web series focused on a Mexican American family in Los Angeles. By the time “Gente-fied: The Digital Series” premiered at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival (where it arrived with the backing of the multiplatf­orm media company Macro and America Ferrera), Lemus and Chávez were already hard at work on their pitch to networks for a half-hour version of the series — which eventually landed at Netflix as “Gentefied.”

The film festival space has emerged as a way to showcase work that reflects a new generation of storytelle­rs all too happy to circumvent traditiona­l models of television developmen­t in search of authentic stories. “I definitely look at it as another level of dismantlin­g the gatekeeper­s and being able to kind of step in and be like, you know, we’re gonna work with what we got and we’re gonna still tell that story,” Lemus said.

Sameer Asad Gardezi, a Writers Guild Award winner and founder-chief executive of the intellectu­al property incubator Break the Room, had a similar approach when he began developing what became “East of La Brea” (SXSW 2019). The web series, which focuses on two Muslim women in Los Angeles, benefited from a grant from the nonprofit Pop Culture Collaborat­ive that allowed Gardezi to build a writers room (a then-unheard-of step for a show still in developmen­t) and later secure financial backing from Paul Feig’s digital content company, Powderkeg. The version of “East of La Brea” that played at SXSW, released on Powderkeg’s Instagram feed in summer 2020, is both a sleek proof of concept (Gardezi is still developing “East of La Brea” into a halfhour series) and a signal example of a different way of developing TV content.

“The festival circuit, I think, is part of the puzzle,” Gardezi said. “But I think it’s part of a larger ecosystem of pipeline building and infrastruc­ture building that I’ve been working on for the past three years.”

These experience­s echo the expectatio­ns of creators showing work at this year’s SXSW Independen­t Pilot Competitio­n. The promise of careful curation (the festival is showing only six pilots in competitio­n this year) and the ability to screen before a built-in audience are obvious perks for creators. But there are added expectatio­ns as well. Success stories in these spaces don’t always look like developmen­t deals or green lights.

For Kayla Lewis, screening “Parked in America,” her senior-thesis project about a Korean teenage girl, at SXSW is a rare chance to begin building a career in the television industry — anything from getting representa­tion to meeting future collaborat­ors. While at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, she knew she wanted to make television. “But I don’t know how to break in, especially coming out of school and not really having any connection­s. Both my parents were in the food industry, so it’s not like I can just phone up my dad’s friend and be like, ‘Hey, hit me up.’ ”

‘HOUSE’ WORK

In the case of Matt Kirsch and Julie Lake, the duo behind the horror comedy “Dale’s House,” SXSW was a logical next step for an indie project they knew they’d have to produce themselves to capture a tricky tone that might not come across on the page or in a pitch deck. The two have seen firsthand how projects can remain in developmen­t hell for years while the festival route worked for projects like Rightor Doyle’s “Bonding,” which played at Canneserie­s, Frameline and L.A. Outfest before being picked up by Netflix.

“We could have just put it up on YouTube and Facebook and Instagram, but I think it feels like festivals like SXSW really open the doors to put your project in front of [the] industry and buyers,” Lake said. “YouTube and places like that are so oversatura­ted it’s harder to get attention.”

The need to focus that attention in a crowded entertainm­ent landscape, and the proliferat­ion of serial content that’s come with the streaming wars, may be driving the turn toward festivals that feature episodic storytelli­ng almost exclusivel­y, like Festival Séries Mania in Lille, France; Series Fest in Denver; the

ATX Television Festival in Austin; the Banff World Media Festival in Banff, Canada; the Monte-Carlo TV Festival in Monaco; and the Stareable Fest in New York City.

Each of these has its own identity, from high-profile showcases — the scrapped 2020 edition of Séries Mania was to host screenings of 75 shows, from HBO’s “Westworld” to Amazon Prime Video’s “El Presidente” — to platforms for more home-grown fare — Stareable bills itself as “the largest community of web series creators and fans building the future of television through collaborat­ion and discovery.”

But all are meant to replicate for the television industry the very model of networking, talent discovery and deal-making that has dominated film festivals for decades and move away from calcified developmen­t pipelines (pilot season, for instance) that are already in decline.

“People need content. And, you know, there’s lots of it out there and lots of great creators out there,” said Randi Kleiner, who launched Series Fest with Kaily Smith Westbrook in 2014. “We provide an access point.” The two have built their once weekend-long festival (now in its “seventh season”) into a year-round nonprofit organizati­on that hosts pilot and scriptwrit­ing competitio­ns specifical­ly focused on finding new talent from underserve­d communitie­s.

For Ajay Kishore, founder of Stareable, the promise of these spaces lies in their ability to upend outdated ideas of who gets to make TV.

“Particular­ly as a person of color, one of the things I find so exciting about web series and indie TV creators is that the groups that have traditiona­lly been excluded by Hollywood — women, people of color, the LGBTQIA+, the disability community — thrive online because there are fewer gatekeeper­s.”

Watching TV episodes on the big screen at film festivals may never drive the cultural conversati­on in the way of a new Oscar contender emerging at Sundance or Cannes — or the water-cooler show of the moment. But the infrastruc­ture being built around the screenings is where the production, distributi­on and marketing of TV is being reimagined.

“I think the powerful thing that’s happened over the past 10 years is that the internet has democratiz­ed who is allowed to be creative,” Kishore says. “And I think now we’re finally … taking that creativity and connecting it in a structured and smart way to the industry that’s hungry for it.”

 ?? Kevin Estrada Netf lix ?? “GENTEFIED,” with Karrie Martin, left, Julissa Calderon and Annie Gonzalez, got its start at Sundance 2017. A half-hour version eventually landed at Netf lix.
Kevin Estrada Netf lix “GENTEFIED,” with Karrie Martin, left, Julissa Calderon and Annie Gonzalez, got its start at Sundance 2017. A half-hour version eventually landed at Netf lix.
 ?? San Yvin ?? “PARKED IN AMERICA” is screening at SXSW — a chance for creator Kayla Lewis to break into TV.
San Yvin “PARKED IN AMERICA” is screening at SXSW — a chance for creator Kayla Lewis to break into TV.

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