Last January, Netflix paid Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts, an animated adventure set for a happy post-apocalyptic future in which nature has taken over and humans have been secretly forced. Gift followed by a titine heroine, who had been separated from her downstream community and had to cross her head up, trying to get home. Along the way, he meets Wolf, the funky wannabe DJ Benson, and his smart talking bug, and they pass through a dangerous and beautiful world.
Now, GiftThe Writing Group begins a series of unofficial viewing groups in the series, beginning April 25 at 1 pm ET. Writers Ben Mekler, Chris Amick, Joanna Lewis, Kristine Songco, Taylor Orci, and Moore Baris, as well as viewers Bill Wolkoff and Rad Sechrist, will have a series with the Netflix Party. Links will be posted Mekler, Wksoff, again IschristTwitter accounts. Every Saturday, the group will watch two episodes and chat with fans, give details of the show's creation and answer questions.
Mekler told Polygon via DM's Twitter that even though the team was not planning to comment, he expects they will be discussing how the show has developed and changed from the planning stages.
"I feel that at least we're going to talk about some things that aren't there," said Mekler. “Obviously the founders, Bill (Wolkoff) and Rad (Sechrist), had a regular arc season before the writers started, but a lot changed as we went along. Sometimes that meant delivering great stories, and sometimes that just meant that something interesting was happening in the episodes. For example, the fitness score of raccoons consisted of 10 different times, with different animal packs. At one point, I believed that certain opportunities for line dancing were on the table. ”
Starting next weekend, you can watch KIPO AND THE WONDERBEASTS by the creators and writers of the show every Saturday morning. We'll watch two episodes at a time as we answer your questions, discuss the story behind the show, and try not to break our NDAs! pic.twitter.com/1znefsilTH
– ben mekler (@benmekler) April 19, 2020
Mekler hopes the experience will excite people who are aiming to reuse, but also invite new viewers into the world. In the end, however, they have decided to host viewing groups because authors enjoy spending time together.
“A big part of us who want to do this is that writers love each other and this is a great show. It's just a reason we are, ”said Mekler. “If you have never seen it Quote, hopefully this will be a fun excuse to watch it. If you've seen it before, hopefully this will be an interesting watch. And funny. We will definitely be making pieces. If you can't say in the picture, we're ducks. ”
She also added that parents who submitted their children's questions & # 39; s could end up getting a response to pressing questions such as, "How much weight does Mega Bunny have?" and "Are there cheetahs in town?"
"We hope they will be able to sign in and be able to answer some of these painful questions without breaking our NDAs," said Mekler.