The Booo Krooo
The Booo Krooo (occasionally also spelled Boo Kroo) started life as a comic strip and then turned into a web-series and then a UK adult animated sitcom created by Matt Mason, Alex Donne Johnson and Julian (Art Jaz) Johnson for the now defunct British TV network Channel U (now called Now 70s).[1] The series follows the mis-adventures of three up-and-coming grime/rap MCs who are constantly trying to find ways to get famous, get girls or save the world.[2] HistoryThe TV series originated from a web-series created whilst the production team were running the RWD magazine website and forum. Taking hints from underground music culture and the intersection between UK garage and grime, the 3 episode web series[3] was shortly co-signed by Missy Elliott after her PR team asked to feature the artist as part of the campaign for her hit single "Work It".[4][5][6] The series then acquired a 6-episode deal on Channel U[7] and recorded a music video with UK garage producer Sticky,[8][9] famous for hits such as "Booo!" featuring Ms. Dynamite. In 2004, the Prince's Trust featured the Booo Krooo as part of the marketing campaign for their first Urban Music Festival featuring the likes of Jay-Z, Beyoncé and a young up-and-coming Dizzee Rascal.[10] Also in 2004, the Booo Krooo gained interest from Christian Fussenegger and Arte TV, a German music and youth magazine program who asked to feature the Booo Krooo in a 10-minute slot. The director claimed: "French-German TV Arte is viewed as one of the best channels in the world. We would like to include the Booo Krooo in a piece about the garage-offshoots, show their videos or even do a little 'interview' with them, why? Because they tackle topics that are not purely music related and consumer-orientated, which makes them really interesting."[11] In 2005, the series came to a halt after the production team decided to pursue other commitments. In 2011 Alex Donne Johnson opened up about the collaboration in an article with Maxon entitled 'Vector Meldrew - Big In Japan'. The article states:
In 2017, music publication TheRansomNote cited the Booo Krooo as the first in the grime comedy genre.
The article states:
Channel UIn 2003, the Booo Krooo were commissioned for their first TV series for the launch of Channel U, a European music channel that focused on underground music. In 2016, Darren Platt, founder of Channel U died. Cited by an obituary in The Guardian, "It forged a place for a genre that began its life ignored by the mainstream." Artists such as Stormzy paid tribute.[15] In 2018, Channel U closed it doors and has since been remembered for introducing the music careers of artists such as Dizzee Rascal, Kano, Wiley and Lethal Bizzle.[16][17] Premise and main charactersThe show revolved around three up-and-coming MCs: Bucky, Flexster and Giro, pioneers of pirate radio station 'Dunce FM'. The crew often ended up in situations where they were worse off than when they started. Bucky is the leader of the gang, the brains behind the operation and the front MC. Giro is an MC/DJ and a notorious ladies man. Flexster is slightly less intelligent than his two friends, and an average MC at best. Together you can find them outside chicken shops, or "on road" causing trouble.[18][19][20] Discography"The Booo Krooo Theme", produced by Sticky, was released on Social Circles (JKSC040).[21] EpisodesWebisodes (2002)
Series 1 (2003)
LegacyIn 2020 Yomi Agedoke wrote in The Guardian : "The Booo Krooo comic strip from youth lifestyle magazine RWD was reimagined as an adult animated sitcom for the network. It also documented the misadventures of three cringy wannabe MCs, relatable to the majority of boys with a voice box and a mobile phone during that period. Everyone in “ends” wanted to be a grime artist and part of Channel U’s magic lay in the fact anyone could be, for a bit. It thrived with its mishmash of actual musicians and part-time MCs whose aspirations appeared to begin and end with their video airing on the channel. In 2015, I tracked down a handful of the channel’s lesser-known legends, famous in their own right, for a documentary called The Lost Stars of Channel U’. It was greeted with hysteria, with fans demanding a further spin-off series, updating them on those we hadn’t covered."[22] References
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