I’m not good at making speeches, so it’s hard to summarize my feelings about the She-Ra
I’m not good at making speeches, so it’s hard to summarize my feelings about the She-Ra finale eloquently, but I’ll do my best:I worked on the entire series in the production department, and for a first “big girl” job it was nothing short of fantastic. A lot of the crew have joked that it’s going to be hard having any other job experience like this one. Hopefully we didn’t all peak too early, and that we’re all destined for very lucrative and exciting careers.Passion was poured into this project at every level, from our writers, to our storyboard and editorial teams, to the art department. Even our timers, overseas studios, and post crew were all insanely invested in this show.And I think that passion comes from being able to tell a story that we all wanted to see. Production did the math one time, and the crew was basically 75% women, and we had LGBTQ+ representation at every creative department. Representation and diversity matters - this show would not be what it was without the voices of the people working on it.It wasn’t always an easy show. But, I find that time tends to dull bad memories and leaves me only remembering good ones. From our holiday parties, to the fanart wall, to our crew bar, to care packages from Australia, and our weekly push-ups; the fun times vastly outnumbered the bad. It’s also crazy to look back at the amount of big life-moments that also happened on the show – several people got married, or were proposed too, or had babies.I love this show and I love this crew. We really did win in the end, didn’t we? -- source link
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