‘BoJack Horseman’ Creator on Re-Editing the Show’s Beginning for Comedy Central and If the Series Is Close to Ending
Raphael Bob-Waksberg explains why he had a lot of fun adding commercial breaks to the Netflix animated comedy.
Raphael Bob-Waksberg explains why he had a lot of fun adding commercial breaks to the Netflix animated comedy.
Creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg and consultant VyVy Nguyen spoke to IndieWire about representation, Easter eggs, and what got cut.
Raphael Bob-Waksberg isn’t afraid to make fun of pretentious TV writers because “I am certainly one, in certain cases.”
There’s a ton to unpack with the latest season of Netflix’s brilliant Hollywoo satire. But this is a great place to start.
Raphael Bob-Waksberg’s animated Netflix series seems infallible, yet the new season takes an unforgiving look inward to find flaws — and get better.
Ironically, the Hollywood satire devoted its greatest season yet to the cruelty of awards campaigns.
Raphael Bob-Waksberg gets honest about why he’s hoping “BoJack Horseman” gets awards consideration — but why he doesn’t think it will “fill any hole that I have in my soul.”
Raphael Bob-Waksberg also wants fans to remember that the “BoJack Horseman” Christmas special is worth revisiting, especially in the wake of Season 3.
In order to convince Netflix to let him make one of the year’s best television episodes, Raphael Bob-Waksberg wrote a letter proving the power of silent media.
Episode 3 dug deep into topical content — and aptly defended animal rights — after a flashback episode got “Lost” in 2007.
No spoilers, but the Netflix series proves to be a game-changer on an episodic level.
Everything isn’t awesome.