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  • Gay

    Time Out New York / Issue 619 : Aug 9–15, 2007

    Mane attractions

    A gay rainbow-and-unicorn fantasy finds a following on YouTube.

    By Melissa Anderson

    <em>Planet Unicorn</em>
    PLAYTIME TV Shannon dresses like Tyra Banks to deliver a message to his friends in episode four.

    Key West. Provincetown. Mykonos. The Isle of Lesbos. All are legendary destinations for homos. But now a whole new world exists, and it’s gayer than all the rest: Planet Unicorn, just a mere mouse click away on YouTube and entertainment website Channel 101. The three swish unicorns that inhabit the universe—Feathers, Cadillac and Tom Cruise—were wished into existence by a bespectacled, 8-year-old gay boy named Shannon, and the whole genius concept is the creation of Mike Rose and Tyler Spiers, two 28-year-old writers based in Los Angeles. Since launching in February—and posting a new episode every month—the series has become a hit with both queers and kids, who appreciate it on varying levels.

    Rose and Spiers, who had previously worked together on a Channel 101 live-action show called Classroom, wanted to do something animated, and were inspired by a friend’s MySpace page devoted solely to unicorns. “We thought about those cartoons like My Little Pony, and said, ‘Okay, so a cartoon with unicorns. What else about it?’” Rose explains about the project’s origin. “Then I thought of the beginning: A gay boy finds a magic lamp and wishes for [the planet]. What’s he interested in? He can do whatever he wants.” What he does, of course, is conjure a pastel utopia (in addition to a fur coat and a flying car).

    In the five episodes of Planet Unicorn that have aired since its winter premiere, that little gay boy has assumed the shape of a bird, a bubble and Tyra Banks, all with the intention of sharing a life lesson with his unicorns: “It’s okay to express your emotions,” the tyke tells his friends in episode two.

    With its simple, colorful animation, done by Craig Morris and Robert Potter, Planet Unicorn has also developed a following among the under-12 set. “Tyler’s niece and nephew are three, maybe even younger, but they love it and ask to watch it every morning and sing to it,” Rose says. Yet anyone who’s ever spent time in a gay bar will instantly recognize the spot-on timbres of the three unicorns: Tom Cruise’s “stock gay voice,” in Spiers’s words; Cadillac’s whispery Latino lilt, and Feathers’s Southern-fried twang.

    In addition to writing all the episodes—some of which have taken only an hour to draft—Rose and Spiers do most of the voices. Rose performs Cadillac and Shannon and sings the techno-thumpy theme song (including the remix in episode four; all the music is composed by Ryan Elder); Spiers is the voice of Tom Cruise and various minor characters, such as the Crybaby Troll from episode two and the diabolical Watercorn, who tries to imprison the three horned pals in episode three. Actor Drew Droege provides Feathers’s inimitable intonation.

    Dividing who does what with the plots, however, is different every time—especially as the stories have become more complicated with each episode. The “conflict” in episode one simply involves the Unicorn waterfall turning from pink to brown; episode three sees the trio of ’cornpals competing to be on America’s Next Top Model; episode five introduces Shannon’s new best friend, Debbie, who quickly becomes a rival for the gay boy’s attentions. “Whoever has the clearer idea of the episode may take the reins a little more and write the specific episode. We want to keep the episodes as short as possible because people like how quick and fast everything is,” Rose explains. “Planet Unicorn is a big world, but it’s kind of small in that it concentrates on just the three unicorns,” Spiers adds. “In any cartoon you watch, they usually center on just a few characters. I liken it to The Smurfs.”

    But Rose and Spiers are planning on expanding their universe. The website planetunicorn.tv—complete with bios of all the characters plus a unicorn store for T-shirts, stickers and ring tones—is expected to be operating this week. And they’re also considering developing a network-TV show. “We thought we would do two small episodes with a half-hour format and then do something like a ‘Let’s Talk to Shannon’ vignette,” Rose says. “In the cartoon series The Littles, the end of each episode would show you how to make something, like a small table or chair. I might want Shannon to teach kids how to make paper dolls out of Us Weekly fashion pictures. He would cut pictures of Nicole Richie or Keira Knightley and put them on Popsicle sticks and do mock fights or conversations.” It’s a perfect formula: Kids learn crafts, and gays get laughs.

    Watch Planet Unicorn on youtube.com, channel101.com and planetunicorn.tv.




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