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Found Footage Festival

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Found Footage Festival
LocationUnited States
Founded2004
LanguageInternational
Websitefoundfootagefestival.com

The Found Footage Festival is an American film festival and live comedy event and featuring unusual and humorous found footage clips and films.[1][2][3][4]

History

Founded in 2004, the Festival originated in Wisconsin and Minnesota by Joe Pickett, Nick Prueher and Geoff Haas, childhood friends from Wisconsin. While still in high school, Pickett and Prueher began collecting videos from garage sales, training videos from odd jobs, and copies of tapes from a video production house. The friends would then play selections from this collection for entertainment at parties, a practice which continued through their college years at the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire. In 2004, Pickett and Prueher quit their day jobs to focus on production of their first feature documentary, Dirty Country. They started the touring Found Footage Festival show to fund the production of the documentary. In addition to its regular touring schedule, the Festival has appeared at the HBO US Comedy Arts Festival, Just For Laughs, the New York Comedy Festival, the Impakt Festival in the Netherlands, and the Central Standard Film Festival in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Festival is currently based out of New York City.

In April 2017, Gray Television filed a lawsuit against Prueher and Pickett for fraud and copyright infringement, after they appeared on multiple television morning shows (including Gray-owned WEAU-TV) as various fictitious "touring acts", including a fake strongman duo known as "Chop and Steele", and utilized the footage during their show as a critique of television stations only booking acts based on a press release and no further research. The parties agreed to a settlement the following year.[5][6][7]

Show structure

The found clips are projected onto a theater screen, with the "host/curators" hosting the event from a staging area in the front. The clips are presented in succession from a master DVD, with the hosts controlling the timing and order by remote control. In addition to introducing their found footage and presenting a brief history of how it was come across, the hosts offer running jokes and commentary during the clips, like a live version of Mystery Science Theater 3000, and implement live comedic sketches and pre-recorded bits between some of the selections.

Although the show evolves with new material for each tour, its midwestern influence is still prominent in its source material, and many of the clips come from this region of the country. In addition, the show continues to feature staple clips that have become fan favorites, including:

In 2006, the Found Footage Festival began offering for sale a DVD of the show's March 25, 2006, screening at Galapagos Art Space in Brooklyn, New York, called Volume One: Live in Brooklyn. This has been supplemented by the 2007 release of a second DVD, Volume Two: Live in Minneapolis, as well as the 2008 release of Volume Three: Live in San Francisco. In December 2009, the Found Footage Festival released Volume Four: Live in Tucson.

In September 2010 The Found Footage Show premiered on The Onion's The A.V. Club website. The series, which was hosted by Pickett and Prueher, showcased found footage clips and ran for 36 episodes over 2 seasons.

In December 2010 The Found Footage Festival Volume Five was released. The DVD was filmed in front of a live audience at the historic Oriental Theatre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and features a guest appearance by Bob Odenkirk.

On June 16, 2012 the program for The Found Footage Festival Volume Six was filmed at the Music Box Theater in Chicago. The DVD was released in August 2012 in conjunction with a 100-show tour.

In August 2012 the duo appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live! to talk about the festival and show clips from their current tour.

DVD releases

See also

References

  1. ^ Feature article in Wired Magazine, April 5, 2005
  2. ^ Interview with Pickett and Prueher on NPR, October 15, 2005
  3. ^ Feature article in the San Francisco Chronicle, September 11, 2005
  4. ^ Article from the Montreal Mirror, July 20, 2006
  5. ^ Saul, Emily (2017-04-13). "Pranksters sued by TV company over morning show antics". Archived from the original on 10 April 2018. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  6. ^ "Meet the comedy duo who got sued for pranking the news". VICE News. Retrieved 2018-06-25.
  7. ^ "Gray Settles With WEAU Pranksters For On-Air Fakery". Radio & Television Business Report. Retrieved 2018-06-25.