Every single episode of every single TV series you watch is the end result of hundreds of people working together as a team. I should know – I’m a professional animator who has worked on shows like Jake and the Neverland Pirates, DC Super Hero Girls, Dawn of the Croods, Rick and Morty, and Hulu’s The Awesomes. So what makes a good team worker?
The animation industry has what’s called a “pipeline.” It’s called this because each department’s work flows into the next. Ideally, the process should be seamless. The schedule should sync up just in time to complete an episode and pass it onto the next stage without a hitch.
To illustrate, here’s what goes into an 11-minute TV episode:
And that’s just the production end of it!
Furthermore, producers and coordinators determine the budget, schedule, scene break-down (what will go in which scene), crew hiring and production timeline. Lead artists oversee small teams of each production phase. The directors act as overall managers and determine what the final product looks like. Actors perform dialogue. Finance guys raise money from investors. Marketing teams create merchandise and advertising. Network executives schedule the air dates...
It’s not impossible to do all of this on your own. One of the animation greats, Richard Williams (he directed Who Framed Roger Rabbit, among other things), set to creating his magnum opus The Thief and the Cobbler in the 1960s. He did it all – producing, directing, storyboards, writing, animating, designing, compositing – all by himself.
Unfortunately, the project took him over 30 years, and he never actually finished it. The shots he completed are animation masterpieces. Nonetheless, the company footing the bill eventually took all the work he’d done, finished what he hadn’t (not up to his standards, of course), and released the final re-cut movie in the early 1990s. The finished product is nothing at all like his original vision (which fans try to recreate based on his notes, script, storyboard, unfinished animation and the scenes he did finish). We’ll never get to see what his true vision for “The Thief and the Cobbler” really was.
However, had Williams been given more time, he could have and would have produced his final vision up to his own standards. But not all animators are granted his level of expertise and genius, and not all projects have the budget to continue for 35 years before an end result is produced. Being a good team worker is absolutely critical for efficiency in animation.
In any animation, each department will typically have several people working on one episode. On average, an animator completes between 10 and 20 seconds of work per week. Imagine how long it would take to finish 11 whole minutes (or 22 minutes! or an entire feature film!) if only one person was doing it all! Instead, there are many people working on the same episode at the same time. This teamwork significantly reduces the amount of time it takes to finish.
When I worked on Jake and the Neverland Pirates, it took approximately 2 weeks per episode; as a result, 40 animators worked on each episode. If one person had a difficult scene and needed more time to finish it, their scenes would be given to someone else who had easier scenes or worked faster and was sitting idle. Working together, we stayed on schedule and made a pretty good-looking cartoon (you can find season 4 on iTunes and Disney Junior.)
The teamwork within departments is crucial. Splitting up the work between departments means that productions can hire the best people for each job. Personally, I’m not as good at background design or painting. I can draw a passable one that suggests the scene needed, but my digital painting skills are not my strength. On the other hand, I am pretty dang good with the software we use to rig, animate and composite shots, and I’ve been consistently employed doing those three things. Likewise, my friends who work on backgrounds are decent animators, but much stronger background artists.
Cartoons on TV happen because hundreds of people are working, laughing, whining about deadlines, and creating together. And it’s all worth it, because the end result is a show watched and loved by millions around the world. To me, nothing is more satisfying than being a small part of these teams.
Bio: Renee Calvert is a professional animator and comic artist living in Vancouver, Canada. When she isn’t working on popular kids’ cartoons, she helps out around People First Productivity Solutions as the company Art Director. She also writes and draws the web comic The Epic Odyssey of Thomas McLean, which now has its own Facebook page and Patreon! Check out Renee’s portfolio to see some of the things she’s worked on.