Quarterlife

This article is about the television series. For the stage in life, see Quarter-life crisis.

Quarterlife is an American web series, also briefly an NBC television series in 2008, created by Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick, the creators of Thirtysomething and Once and Again, and producers of My So-Called Life. The show is about a group of twenty-something artists who are coming of age in the digital generation.[1]

According to its official website, Quarterlife is the first Internet series to have been created alongside a social networking website, quarterlife.com.

The regular cast includes Bitsie Tulloch, Kevin Christy, Mike Faiola, Scott Michael Foster, Michelle Lombardo, Maïté Schwartz, and David Walton.

Characters

Main characters

Other characters

Television

Quarterlife
Genre Comedy-drama
Created by Marshall Herskovitz
Edward Zwick
Developed by Quarterlife, Inc.
Written by Devon Gummersall
Marshall Herskovitz
Lucy Teitler
Edward Zwick
Directed by Marshall Herskovitz
Eric Stoltz
Starring Bitsie Tulloch
Kevin Christy
Mike Faiola
Scott Michael Foster
Michelle Lombardo
Maïté Schwartz
David Walton
Composer(s) W. G. "Snuffy" Walden
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 6 (list of episodes)
Production
Producer(s) Marshall Herskovitz
Edward Zwick
Joshua Gummersall
Editor(s) Jennifer Pulver
Cinematography John O'Shaughnessy
Nicole Hirsch Whitaker
Running time Varies
Release
Original network NBC
Original release February 26, 2008 (2008-02-26) – March 9, 2008 (2008-03-09)
External links
Website

NBC announced on November 17, 2007, that the network had acquired the rights to air Quarterlife on broadcast television in early 2008, after the episodes have been broadcast on the Internet.[2][3] In February 2008, NBC announced that Quarterlife would premiere on Tuesday, February 26, 2008, with the show moving to Sunday nights immediately afterwards.[4] The show garnered dismal ratings for its first episode, approaching levels not seen on NBC since the XFL, and teen demographic and general household ratings lower than a Democratic presidential debate airing at the same time on sibling cable network MSNBC.[5] NBC announced that the series was canceled after airing only one episode.[6]

Its remaining episodes would air on its sibling channel Bravo following the NBC cancellation.[7] The show only had 3.1 million viewers in its debut—the worst in-season performance in the 10 p.m. hour by an NBC show in at least 17 years. The show also got pummeled in the adults 18-49 demographic, where it managed only a 1.6 rating.[6][8] The show aired on E! in Canada in simulcast, but all reference to the show has been removed from their website since the cancellation. Full episodes can still be viewed on the NBC and Fox sponsored video site Hulu.com.

Episodes

The first season was released online in 36 parts, each approximately eight minutes, from November 2007 to March 2008. Each eight-minute episode of the series premiered nearly simultaneously on MySpace and the official Quarterlife site. It garnered the third-highest views of any scripted series in Myspace history. These were combined into six hour-long episodes for television.

In five months, total online views for the series—on Myspace, Quarterlife, and YouTube—were over 9 million. After the series was picked up by NBC, some of the hour-long episodes (as edited for broadcast) were made available on the NBC and Hulu websites. During this time, Herskowitz claimed the show accrued an average of 300k views per episode.[9] After cancelation by NBC Episodes 2-6 were broadcast back-to-back on Bravo on March 9, 2008.

Television episodes

# Title Original airdate
1"Pilot"February 26, 2008 (2008-02-26)
2"Compromise"March 9, 2008 (2008-03-09)
3"Anxiety"March 9, 2008 (2008-03-09)
4"Goodbyes"March 9, 2008 (2008-03-09)
5"Finding a Voice"March 9, 2008 (2008-03-09)
6"Home Sweet Home"March 9, 2008 (2008-03-09)

Online episodes

Episode # Title Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6
1 "Pilot" November 11, 2007 November 11, 2007 November 15, 2007 November 18, 2007 November 22, 2007 November 25, 2007
2 "Compromise" November 29, 2007 December 2, 2007 December 6, 2007 December 9, 2007 December 13, 2007 December 16, 2007
3 "Anxiety" December 20, 2007 December 23, 2007 December 27, 2007 December 30, 2007 January 3, 2008 January 6, 2008
4 "Goodbyes" January 10, 2008 January 13, 2008 January 17, 2008 January 20, 2008 January 24, 2008 January 27, 2008
5 "Finding a Voice" January 31, 2008 February 3, 2008 February 7, 2008 February 10, 2008 February 14, 2008 February 17, 2008
6 "Home Sweet Home" February 21, 2008 February 24, 2008 February 28, 2008 March 2, 2008 March 6, 2008 March 9, 2008

Video Blogs

Characters in the Series post video blogs on quarterlife.com, Myspace, and YouTube.

Title Vlogger Airdate
Storyteller ANDY October 31, 2007
Hi roommates! DYLAN November 11, 2007
My first video blog! DYLAN November 11, 2007
There is no way Brittany is on Myspace, so... DYLAN November 14, 2007
On Lisa DYLAN November 14, 2007
Growing up DYLAN November 17, 2007
My rant about people, money and jobs. DYLAN November 25, 2007
Sexuality DYLAN November 25, 2007
I Have A Blog ANDY November 29, 2007
Choices are scary DYLAN November 29, 2007
We have a visitor... DYLAN December 1, 2007
Who's sexiest? ANDY December 6, 2007
Zoning Out DYLAN December 6, 2007
LET'S TALK ABOUT SWINGERS ANDY December 8, 2007
SERIOUSLY DAMAGED DYLAN December 8, 2007
Dylan Krieger and... DYLAN December 12, 2007
THE KISS DYLAN December 16, 2007
INTEGRITY AT 24 FRAMES PER SECOND JED December 16, 2007
The Toyota Commercial JED December 16, 2007
HUNKS OF GLOBAL WARMING DYLAN December 19, 2007
PEANUT BUTTER AND JELLY, BABY ANDY December 19, 2007
DATING CHICKS JED December 19, 2007
BLOG ATTEMPT DANNY December 20, 2007
MESSAGE TO MY SUITORS LISA December 20, 2007
Bathroom DEBRA December 22, 2007
Oh Sigh DYLAN December 22, 2007
WHY? JED December 22, 2007
I Too Can Blog DANNY December 23, 2007

References

External links

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