Friday, September 23, 2011
Forex teams with Audi for brief
'Unititled Jersey City Project'FX Network is riding together with Audi of America to create "Unititled Jersey City Project," an authentic 16-minute short-form drama that revs up Sunday and can air throughout the cabler's Sunday primetime movies broadcasts.The top quality entertainment project involves tales of fame, energy, money and dying, and it is set amongst the short-developing Jersey City waterfront.Payments from the series will air as eight, two-minute episodes over four consecutive days.Episodes were designed to appear as fragments of the television series or film, with each delivering a bit of a puzzle including males employed by an architectural firm who're hiding a dark secret.It is also available on the web at world wide web.untitledjerseycityproject.com, where audiences can explore the interactive realm of Jersey City and discover clues to patch together the mysteries in the shorts through new story lines and figures -- and suggest game titles for that project.Forex and Audi collectively created the series, that was taunted throughout the Emmys broadcast on Fox and through advertisements in theaters. Audi may be the official automotive partner from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.Audi's Studio Progress Films banner created the "Jersey" project, with Daniel Minahan, that has helmed instances of "True Bloodstream" and "Bet on Thrones," pointing.Naturally, the drama showcases Audi's automobiles, namely its new A6 sedan, and it is high-tech features.The "Jersey City" project is not Audi's first foray into creating entertainment. Company created an element-length docu around the 24-hour Le Guys race, and adopted that track of a docu concerning the U.S. Olympic ski team that broadcast on NBC. This season, additionally, it created a number of comedy shorts that featured Joel McHale teaching Melissa McCarthy regarding how to browse the Emmy nominees and Jeremy Piven, Kristen Chenoweth, Megan Mullally and Jackee Harry on which existence is much like after winning an Emmy trophy."Since our beginning, Audi has accepted creativeness, innovation and new methods for thinking," stated Scott Keogh, chief marketing officer of Audi of America. "Believe to interact with this progressive audience than through forward-thinking entertainment." Contact Marc Graser at marc.graser@variety.com
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