Exclusive: Comedy Central has picked up freshman animated comedy Brickleberry for a second season to premiere in fall 2013. The second-season order is for 13 episodes, up from 10 episodes for the current first season. Brickleberry, executive produced by Daniel Tosh, has done well airing behind Tosh’s hit Tosh.0 on Tuesday. The animated comedy, which revolves around a group of dysfunctional park rangers at a second-tier national park, premiered on September 25 to 1.7 million viewers and a 1.0 rating in adults 18-49. Its strength has been young male demos, which are coveted by advertisers. Seven weeks into the run, Brickleberry is averaging 1.8 total million viewers each week and is the second-highest-rated series in its time slot with men 18-34 and men 18-24 in all of television. “We are happy to continue educating America’s youth about nature, and the national conservation movement,” commented Kent Alterman, Comedy Central’s Head of Original Programming and Production.
- 11/9/2012
- by NELLIE ANDREEVA
- Deadline TV
Comedy Central has announced that their new show, "Brickleberry," has been renewed for a second season. The announcement game today from Kent Alterman, the network's Head of Original Programming and Production. Co-produced by Fox 21 and Comedy Central, "Brickleberry" is executive produced by Daniel Tosh ("Tosh.0"), and series creators/writers/executive producers Waco O'Guin and Roger Black (MTV2's "Stankervision"). The thirteen-episode second season is scheduled to premiere in Fall 2013. "We are happy to continue educating America's youth about nature, and the national conservation movement," said Alterman. "This is incredible news!" said O'Guin. "I can't wait to get more angry phone calls from my...
- 11/9/2012
- Comingsoon.net
[1] By now, everyone knows that Terra Nova's premiere has been pushed back multiple times thanks in a large part to its effects. You'll have to wait til the pilot airs September 26 on Fox to decide if the delays were ultimately worth it, but you can get a peek at the show's overall look right now. A new video explores the show's massive and really quite beautiful set. You can't accuse the crew of lacking for ambition, and considering that snowballing production costs were one of the problems that plagued the series early on, it's nice to know the money actually went somewhere. I caught the first half of the two-hour premiere at Comic-Con [2], and while there's room for improvement on the story side, I wrote that "f nothing else, the show looks absolutely gorgeous." After checking out this clip, I think you'll agree. Watch the video after the jump....
- 8/18/2011
- by Angie Han
- Slash Film
Daniel Tosh's star grows at Comedy Central, as the network announced "Brickleberry" - a co-production of Fox 21 and Comedy Central from Executive Producers Daniel Tosh, Waco O'Guin and Roger Black, is a go. The animated series was greenlit for 10 episodes and will premiere in 2012. The series revolves around a group of dysfunctional forest rangers at a national park, that will be executive produced by Daniel Tosh ("Tosh.0") along with comedians Waco O'Guin and Roger Black, who wrote and created the series, it was announced today by Kent Alterman, head of original programming and production, Comedy Central. "Brickleberry" is created, written and executive produced by O'Guin and Black (MTV2's "Stankervision") and executive produced by Tosh, who will...
- 8/15/2011
- by April MacIntyre
- Monsters and Critics
Comedy Central has ordered ten episodes of "Brickleberry," an animated series executive-produced by Daniel Tosh, the puckish host of the network's popular "Tosh 2.0" clip show. The cartoon, which will debut in 2012, will be written by creators Waco O'Guin and Roger Black (MTV2's "Stankervision") and is a co-production of Fox 21 and Comedy Central. "Brickleberry" is set at a national park and will document the shenanigans of dysfuntional forest rangers, said Comedy Central's head of original programming and production Kent Alterman in an announcement sent out Monday. Apparently, said park is scheduled...
- 8/15/2011
- by John Sellers
- The Wrap
MTV is expected to announce a slate of new broadband, mobile and shortform programming Tuesday, following the success of the company's initial forays into these areas. A new channel called the Stew will launch on www.mtv.com/overdrive as a broadband home for on-demand shortform programs, including original content, editorially selected user-generated submissions and footage from MTV's extensive archives. In addition to moments from Jackass, Andy Milonakis, Stankervision and other shows, viewers will get highlights like Denis Leary's infamous Cindy Crawford rant and Kurt Loder's impromptu interview with Madonna and Courtney Love from the MTV Video Music Awards.
- 9/25/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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