small movies


Home Movies

Home Movies is a dialogue driven American animated series that originally aired from 1999 to 2004. The plot surrounds an eight year old Brendon Small (voiced by the creator, head writer, and lead musician of Home Movies, Brendon Small), who makes films with his friends Melissa Robbins and Jason Penopolis in his spare time. He lives with his divorced mother, Paula, and his baby sister, Josie. He is also friends with his alcoholic, short tempered soccer coach, John McGuirk. Home Movies was


Brendon Small

Brendon Small (born February 15, 1975 in Springfield, Illinois) is an American sitcom writer/producer, actor, voice actor, composer, and musician. He is best known as the creator of the animated series Home Movies and Metalocalypse. Small started learning guitar at 14 to assuage boredom after his family moved to Salinas, California. At his first public performance, his hands shook so wildly, he had trouble controlling the guitar. It would be another ten years before he was comfortable


Big Pictures on the Small Screen: Made for TV Movies and Anthology Dramas (The Praeger Television Collection)

The first season of the animated sitcom Home Movies originally began airing in the United States on the television network UPN on April 26, 1999, with the episode Get Away From My Mom. Co founders Brendon Small and Loren Bouchard, along with Tom Sydner, served as writers, executive producers, and directors for the season. The season utilized Sydner's signature squigglevision animation style, though it would change to a more conventional style in subsequent seasons. The series follows the


Home Movies

The second season of the animated sitcom Home Movies originally began airing in the United States on the television network Cartoon Network on January 6, 2002, with the episode Politics. The season aired on the network's Adult Swim programming block, every Sunday and Thursday night at 9:00 p.m. Central time and 10:00 p.m. Eastern time. Co founders Brendon Small and Loren Bouchard, along with Tom Sydner, served as executive producers for the season. Small and Bill Braudis acted as writers for


Home Movies

The third season of the animated sitcom Home Movies originally began airing in the United States on the Adult Swim programming block for the television network Cartoon Network on August 4, 2002, with the episode Shore Leave. Co founders Brendon Small and Loren Bouchard, along with Tom Sydner, served as executive producers for the season. Small and Bill Braudis acted as writers for the season, while Bouchard was director for each episode. The series follows the life of 8 year old Brendon Small


Home Movies

The Small Fry Club, also known as Movies for Small Fry, was one of the earliest TV series made for children. Aired from 11 March 1947 to 15 June 1951 on the DuMont Television Network, it was hosted by Big Brother Bob Emery . This weekday series was one of the few successful series on DuMont, and aired in the evenings for more than four seasons before it was cancelled. After cancellation, Bob Emery returned to Boston and continued to do versions of the show on WBZ TV until his retirement in


Small Fry Club

A cult film (also known as a cult movie/picture or a cult classic) is a film that has acquired a highly devoted but specific group of fans. Often, cult movies have failed to achieve fame outside the small fanbases; however, there have been exceptions that have managed to gain fame among mainstream audiences. Many cult movies have gone on to transcend their original cult status and have become recognized as classics; others are of the so bad it's good variety and are destined to remain in


Cult

MTV (MTV: Music Television) is an American cable television network based in New York City that launched on August 1, 1981. The original purpose of the channel was to play music videos guided by on air hosts known as VJs. Today, MTV doesn't play music videos, and primarily broadcasts a variety of popular culture and reality television shows targeted at adolescents and young adults. At one time, MTV had a profound impact on the music industry and popular culture. Slogans such as I want my MTV


MTV

Tristram Ogilvie Cary, OAM (14 May 1925 – 24 April 2008) was a pioneering English Australian composer. Cary was born in Oxford, England and educated at the Dragon School in Oxford and Westminster School in London. He was the son of a pianist and the novelist, Joyce Cary, author of Mister Johnson. While working as a radar engineer for the Royal Navy during World War II, he independently developed his own conception of electronic and tape music, and is regarded as amongst the earliest pioneers of