Emma Approved

Emma Approved
Genre Comedy
Created by
  • Bernie Su
Written by
  • Bernie Su
  • Tracy Bitterolf
  • Tamara Krinsky
  • Angelique Hanus
  • Ana Ávila
  • Julie Benson
  • Shawna Benson
  • Kate Rorick
  • Margaret Dunlap
Directed by
  • Bernie Su
Starring
  • Joanna Sotomura
  • Brent Bailey
  • Dayeanne Hutton
  • James Brent Isaacs
  • Stephen Chang
  • Tyra Colar
  • Alexis Boozer
  • Paul Stuart
  • Gabriel Voss
  • Mapuana Makia
  • Nikea Gamby-Turner
  • Jessica Andres
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 72
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • Hank Green
  • Bernie Su
Location(s) Santa Monica, California
Running time 4-8 minutes per episode
Release
Original network YouTube
Original release October 7, 2013 (2013-10-07) – August 23, 2014 (2014-08-23)
External links
Website

Emma Approved is an American multi-platform web series starring Joanna Sotomura and Brent Bailey based on Jane Austen’s Emma.[1] The show is a follow-up to The Lizzie Bennet Diaries and is the third production out of web series company and YouTube channel, Pemberley Digital.[1] In the series, Emma Woodhouse is reimagined as a lifestyle coach and matchmaker who is filming herself for the future documentary about her life. Emma Approved aired twice weekly on Pemberley Digital’s YouTube channel starting October 7, 2013. The show consisted of 72 episodes, ranging from five to seven minutes in length. The series ended on August 23, 2014 and has accumulated over 3 million views on the Pemberley Digital YouTube channel.[2]

Plot

The series focuses on the life of Emma Woodhouse and takes place at the offices of her eponymous lifestyle company, Emma Approved, an all-in-one lifestyle coaching, matchmaking, and event planning company. Emma decides to document her business successes (to the chagrin of her business partner Alex Knightley). Alex forces Emma to hire an assistant: Harriet Smith. When best friend Annie Taylor announces she wants to call off her wedding to Emma Approved client Ryan Weston, Harriet and Emma convince Ryan’s step-brother Frank Churchill to send a wedding gift because he can’t make it and the wedding is back on.

Harriet has a crush on Emma Approved’s IT guy Bobby Martin, but Emma doesn’t approve the match and thinks Harriet can do better. Emma plans to set Harriet up with Emma Approved’s newest client, Senator James Elton, but he likes Emma and thinks Harriet is below him. Elton leaves Emma Approved as a client when Emma rebuffs him. Emma takes a break from the company. When she returns, Izzy Knightley arrives, Emma’s sister and Alex’s sister-in-law. Turns out, Izzy isn’t feeling heard by her husband John. Emma’s meddling almost breaks the couple up, but eventually Izzy reveals what she really wants: to go back to school. Meanwhile, Harriet starts a music club (playing ukulele).

Alex finds Emma’s next client: Maddy Bates, whose accounting business is struggling. Emma decides to throw an elite fundraiser in order for Maddy gain more clients, and Frank Churchill arrives to help. Senator Elton returns to ask Emma Approved to plan his engagement party to Caroline Lee. Hating the experience with the Eltons, Emma decides to change the direction of the company and focus on high-profile charity causes. They hire Jane Fairfax to help, Maddy Bates’ niece and Emma’s self-identified rival. They put together a Bachelor/Bachelorette Auction for human rights as their first cause.

Emma decides to throw a baby shower for Annie at the same time that Emma Approved gets another benefit: the opening of Boxx, a celebrity-led restaurant. Emma gets too distracted by the Boxx Hill event and ends up missing most of Annie’s baby shower. Though the event is a success, Emma’s and Frank’s behavior toward Maddy and her homemade preserves in front of the celebrity guests at the opening event disgusts Jane and Alex, who both leave the company.

Emma apologizes to Maddy, and then to Annie, who reveals Frank and Jane were secretly together and that Frank sold his company. When Emma tells Harriet, Harriet tells Emma that she likes Alex. Emma realizes she has feelings for Alex, and apologizes once and for all to Bobby Martin for pushing him away from Harriet. Alex returns to Emma Approved and confesses to Emma that he is in love with her. They kiss. Emma approaches Harriet with the news that she and Alex are now together. Harriet reveals she still has feelings for Bobby Martin. She and Emma organize a surprise for him, and Harriet and Bobby kiss.

Format

The story is told in a vlog-style format from the point of view of the eponymous character, Emma Woodhouse. Each episode is between four and eight minutes. The show takes place entirely in the Emma Approved offices, where there are cameras set up in Emma’s office and at Alex’s, Harriet’s and Jane’s desks. Emma also speaks with clients and colleagues through video chat.

A second channel under Emma’s full name includes supplementary videos to the main story. These videos include Harriet’s initial application video to become Emma’s assistant, a series of six question and answer videos featuring various cast members, a video by Martin confessing to Harriet that he likes her, and Harriet’s Music Club videos which she starts after episode 32, though her first "song" (for Senator James Elton) appears after episode 21.

After episode 67, a short series following Frank Churchill and Jane Fairfax’s flirting in the office (comprising nine under-two-minute episodes) was released entitled "Frank and Jane" on the main channel.

Characters

Reception

Initial response to Pemberley’s Emma character was mixed due to her tendency toward "unlikable"[3] self-confidence and large ego, though the first two episodes garnered over 120,000 views in the show’s first week.[4] By early January (three months into the series), Emma had won over her audience with her caring for those around her.[5] Emma Approved’s viewership was only about 80% that of Pemberley’s predecessor series The Lizzie Bennet Diaries,[6] but unlike that series, all of Emma’s transmedia storytelling was monetized using brand integration including companies such as Modcloth and Samsung.[6]

The romantic leads, Joanna Sotomura and Brent Bailey, gained some attention for becoming a real couple during the run of the show, leading to their own fan following and the portmanteau "Brentanna."[7]

Awards and nominations

Awards and nominations for Emma Approved
Year Award Category Result Nominee(s)
2014
IAWTV Awards[8] Best Comedy Series Nominated
Best Female Performance: Comedy Nominated Joanna Sotomura
Best Ensemble Cast Nominated
Streamy Awards[9] Audience Choice Finalist
Best Actress in a Comedy Nominated Joanna Sotomura
Best Actor in a Comedy Nominated Brent Bailey
Cynopsis Digital Model D Awards[10] Web Series Comedy Nominated
2015 Creative Arts Emmy Award Outstanding Original Interactive Program[11] Won Bernie Su, Tamara Krinsky, Alexandra Edwards, Tracy Bitterolf, Kate Rorick

References

  1. 1 2 "Lizzie Bennet Diaries companion Emma Approved debuts today". Hypable.com. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  2. "Emma Approved". YouTube. 2014-08-25. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  3. "Emma Approved gives Austen a modern spin - The Tartan Online". Thetartan.org. 2013-10-14. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  4. "'Emma Approved' finds approval amongst fans - what'd you think?". Hypable.com. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  5. Narasaki, Rosie (2014-01-02). "Why You Should Be Watching 'Emma Approved'". Hollywood.com. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  6. 1 2 "Transmedia Shows Are Winning the Internet | Motherboard". Motherboard.vice.com. 2014-04-10. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  7. Jaworski, Michelle (2014-07-03). "'Emma Approved' actors dish about love and life after 'Lizzie Bennet'". Dailydot.com. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  8. "2014 IAWTV Awards Nominees and Winners — International Academy of Web Television". Iawtv.org. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  9. "4th Annual Winners & Nominees | The Streamy Awards". Streamys.org. 2013-11-25. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  10. "2014 Cynopsis Model D Awards Winners & Honorable Mentions - Cynopsis MediaCynopsis Media". Cynopsis.com. Retrieved 2015-09-23.
  11. "Emma Approved". Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
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