Hipsterhood

Hipsterhood
Genre Comedy
Created by Shilpi Roy
Starring Kit Williamson
Elizabeth Ferraris
Daniel Vincent Gordh
Composer(s) Anthony C Kuhnz
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 19 (list of episodes)
Production
Producer(s) Shilpi Roy
Location(s) Los Angeles, California
Running time 1-5 minutes
Distributor Independent (2012, 2013)
Release
Original network YouTube
Blip
Original release August 21, 2012 (2012-08-21) – October 29, 2013 (2013-10-29)
External links
Website

Hipsterhood is an American comedy web series, created and written by Indian-American director Shilpi Roy. The series is broadcast on the internet and premiered on August 21, 2012. So far, nineteen episodes have been made and the show can be found distributed across the web including on YouTube and Blip. Hipsterhood is about discovering what it is to be a hipster in LA, and what it is like to fall in love with fellow hipsters who are too cool for love.[1] The shows plot revolves around two hipsters who are both living in Silver Lake, Los Angeles, who keep crossing paths but can't seem to get to the next level of actually talking.[2]

History

Hipsterhood was inspired and written by Shilpi Roy, a director producer who moved to Silver Lake, LA in 2007 to follow her dream of becoming a filmmaker. In an interview with Shilpi Roy, it states that when she moved to Silver Lake, she did not see herself as a hipster. Shilpi bought a pair of skinny jeans and it made her ask the question ‘does that make me a hipster?', which created an identity crisis. Shilpi started analysing the hipsters around her and that is where the idea for the dialogue came from. The first season was solely funded by Shilpi’s own savings. The second season is being funded by a kickstarter campaign which launched on Feb 4 2013 and successfully raised $7,041 beating their original goal of $5000.[3] Shilpi Roy started her career working for Warren Littlefield, the former head of NBC. After attending the USC School of Cinematic Arts, where she made the award-winning short film The Indian & the Samurai, Shilpi worked for controversial companies such as Brave New Films, and PlayboyTV.[4]

Plot

The plot surrounds two hipsters - Cereal Guy and Faux Fur Girl - who are too cool for each other, but too awkward for themselves. The majority of the "dialogue" takes the form of the characters' thoughts as they consider talking to one another.[5] The characters, played by Elizabeth Ferraris and Kit Williamson, always obsess about what to say or do, resulting in awkwardly silent interactions in real life. Daniel Vincent Gordh of the Lizzie Bennet Diaries will be a new character in season 2.[6]

Season 1

Every episode was filmed in a different location in Silver Lake, Los Angeles.[7]

Episode 1: Hipsters meet at the grocery store.
Episode 2: Two Hipsters one street corner, Sliver Lake
Episode 3: The Hipster Jog
Episode 4: Hipster Catastrophe at the coffee shop
Episode 5: Hipsters at the dry cleaners
Episode 6: The “other” women at the 99 cent store
Episode 7: The “other” woman from hipster Guy’s POV
Episode 8: A hipster boutique on Sunset Blvd
Episode 9: Hipster’s dog birthday party

Season 2

Episode 1: Hipsters with Hangovers

Episode 2: Hipster Run-In at the Pharmacy

Episode 3: When Hipsters Date

Episode 4: Hipsters Texting

Episode 5: Sometimes a Hipster Just Needs a Drink

Episode 6: Flashback! Hipster Ping Pong

Episode 7: Hipsters Jogging, Again

Episode 8: The 99 Cent Store, Revisited

Episode 9: Hipster Mecca: The Silverlake Farmers Market

Episode 10: Hipsters in Nature

References

  1. Almendrala, Anna (9 March 2012). "Shilpi Roy, Creator Of 'Hipsterhood,' Is Sick Of Talking About Hipsters". Huffington Post. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  2. Cherita, Smith. "SCREENSHOT: HIPSTERHOOD – A WEB SERIES, IRONICALLY". Filmindependent.org. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  3. "Hipsterhood Kickstarter Campaign". Kickstarter.com. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  4. Hipsterhood Series. "Hipsterhood Crew". Hipsterhoodseries.com. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  5. Syad, Anam. "Courtship in the Age of Awkward". Huffington Post. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  6. Rohit, Parimal M. "Indian American Director Brings Hipster Content to the Internet with 'Hipsterhood'". Buzzinebollywood.com. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  7. "Shilpi Roy – Writer/Director of Hipsterhood". Tangledwebwewatch.com/. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
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