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Chartjackers

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British documentary series, produced by Hat Trick Productions

Chartjackers
The word "chartjackers" written in a black, bold font within a large, cyan speech bubble against a bright yellow background.
Genre
Developed byAndy Mettam
Starring
Narrated byMistaJam
Opening theme"Put 'Em Under Pressure" byRepublic of Ireland Football Squad
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series1
No. of episodes11(list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerJonathan Davenport
ProducerAdam King
EditorWill Hodgson
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time
  • 10× 5 minutes
  • 1× 30 minutes
Production companyHat Trick Productions
Original release
NetworkBBC Two
Release12 September (2009-09-12) –
21 November 2009 (2009-11-21)

Chartjackers is a British documentary series, produced byHat Trick Productions and commissioned byBBC Switch. It documents the lives of four teenagevideo bloggers over the course of ten weeks, as they attempt to write, record and release apop song for charity, with the goal to "sell an estimated 25,000singles to achieve their dream of anumber one single".[1] It premiered in the UK on 12 September 2009 onBBC Two, and ran for a single series of eleven weekly episodes. When first broadcast, the programme ran inreal time: its first ten episodes documented the events of the previous seven days, while the final episode was an extended compilation that summarised all ten weeks.

TheChartjackers single was written entirely throughcrowdsourcing, with the song's title, lyrics, melody, singers, band, production, cover art and music video all being solicited from the globalonline community. The crowdsourcing took the format of the four bloggers—Alex Day, Johnny Haggart,Jimmy Hill andCharlotte McDonnell (formerly Charlie McDonnell)—posting videos to a dedicatedYouTube channel namedChartJackersProject, where they invited viewers to suggest various ideas for the final song. After receiving advice from industry experts such asCharlie Simpson andDavid andCarrie Grant, the completedChartjackers single, entitled "I've Got Nothing", was released through theiTunes Store at the end of the ten-week period on 9 November. The track received mainly negative reviews from music critics and sold approximately 8,400 copies in the UK, earning it a peak position of number 36 on theUK Singles Chart.

Chartjackers garnered a viewing figures peak of almost half a million with its final episode and was critically panned by reviewers. Some commentators felt that the programme's concept was ridiculous and doomed from the start, others felt that the series showed a contempt for music and the general public, and other critics questioned whether the point of the project was to raise money for charity or for the four bloggers to promote themselves.[2][3][4] The show was nominated for a 2010Broadcast Digital Award in the Best Multi-Platform Project category, but lost out toThe Operation...Surgery Live.

Production

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Concept

[edit]

Chartjackers was devised in 2009 by Jonathan Davenport and Andy Mettam of the British production company Hat Trick Productions. It was commissioned by Geoffrey Goodwin and Jo Twist of the television brand BBC Switch, and was featured as part of a season of multi-platform content intended to appeal to teenagers.[5] The show was billed as a "YouTubeX Factor",[6] with its main focus being its direct link to the2009 annual appeal for the British charityChildren in Need[7] – profits from sales of the completed single were donated to the charity.[8]Chartjackers was executively produced by Davenport, Hat Trick's digital department head, who had previously worked on similar cross-platform projects that incorporated both television andonline media, such as the videopodcast ofHave I Got News For You and the YouTube-based seriesBryony Makes a Zombie Movie.[9][10] Digital agencyFish in a bottle were commissioned to provide creative content for the online platforms, such as the YouTube channel andTwitter account.[11]

Casting

[edit]

As a cross-platform project that incorporated YouTube, it was important that the video bloggers cast for the leading team already had a large fanbase – the four bloggers chosen had a combined YouTube subscriber total of over 200,000.[12] They were selected for their familiarity to young British YouTube viewers and to "act asPied Pipers to the teen audience".[7]Miranda Chartrand and Adam Nichols, the vocalists who sang on the completedChartjackers single, were cast halfway through the programme's series as part of an audition process and were featured in the remainder of the episodes.[13]

Filming locations

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Although much ofChartjackers was filmed in and around London—such as agathering at music venue 93 Feet East during episode nine and the music video for "I've Got Nothing" during episode seven[14][15]—various locations were featured throughout the series. Vocalist auditions in episode five took place at the Wellfield Working Men's Club inRochdale,[8] and the single itself was recorded at theUniversity of Wales inNewport.[16][17] During episode nine, some of the team visited theThree Ways School inBath, Somerset.[18]

Series overview

[edit]
Main article:List of Chartjackers episodes

Chartjackers documented the lives of Day, Haggart, Hill and McDonnell as they attempted to write, record and release a charity single through crowdsourcing.[19] The series was shown in real time, with each of the first ten episodes detailing the events of the previous seven days. On 5 September 2009, one week before the programme's first episode aired, the group announced on the YouTube channelChartJackersProject their intention to release a number one single within their ten-week time frame. A different task would be undertaken each week, so that, by the end of the project, the song would be completed.[20]

Upper body photograph of Carrie Grant.
Vocal coachCarrie Grant offered advice to the boys during episode four ofChartjackers.[21]

The first episode ofChartjackers documented the events of the first week of the project and explained what its ultimate goal was. To generate potential lyrics, viewers were asked each to post one line as a comment to a video onChartJackersProject. Viewers posted more than 4,000 comments,[22] from which were selected the winning lines. These lyrics were posted to the Internet the following episode, with the chorus having been composed by YouTube userblakeisno1 and the repeated phrase "I've Got Nothing" chosen for the song's title.ChartJackersProject viewers were then asked to create a melody for the lyrics and submit it in a video response, so that one could be selected for the single.

Out of a total of 51 melodies that had been sent in, the winning entry by Jonny Dark was chosen from them during episode three. It was also revealed that a band would be put together to perform theChartjackers single and that any potential members should apply by submitting video auditions. Episode four documented some of the hundreds of auditions that had been sent in – the group reviewed these auditions and selected from them their ten favourites to go through as finalists. These ten finalists performed for the four boys during episode five, where Chartrand, a 19-year-old au pair fromStroud, Gloucestershire, and Nichols, an 18-year-old musician fromEssex, were selected to sing on the official release. During episode six, "I've Got Nothing" was recorded inNewport by record producer Marc Dowding, and the group received advice from video director Corin Hardy on how to film the official music video.

Taking Hardy's advice, the music video for "I've Got Nothing" was filmed during the seventh episode ofChartjackers. To begin promoting its release, the team also petitioned95.8 Capital FM andBBC Radio 1 to try to get the radio coverage for the single, but it was notplaylisted and received no airplay. The boys feared that the song would not chart at all, so, during episode eight, they urged viewers tospam the Twitter feeds of radio DJs who could play the single on their shows. In the next episode, a gathering took place at 93 Feet East in London on 4 November, where the single was performed live for the first time by Chartrand and Nichols. During the tenth episode, "I've Got Nothing" was released online. Themidweek charts placed the single at Number 39, but its sales increased after comedianStephen Fry—who provided an outro for McDonnell's YouTube videos—was convinced to promote it on his Twitter profile.[23] Episode eleven, the final compilation episode, revealed onThe Radio 1 Chart Show that "I've Got Nothing" had reached number 36 on the UK Singles Chart, which disappointed the boys.

Celebrity guests

[edit]

Over the course of the series, several figures from both the music and entertainment industry made an appearance onChartjackers, usually to offer advice or encouragement to the four boys. The first celebrity to feature on the show was former pop starChesney Hawkes, who remarked that he felt that the team had "every experience between [them] to actually pull [their aim of reaching number one] off".[22] During the fourth episode, vocal coachesDavid andCarrie Grant offered advice to the group on what criteria to use when judging the submitted video auditions, and indie rock bandThe Young Knives sent in a video message, wishing the team success. The following episode,Charlie Simpson ofFightstar explained to the boys the differences between releasing music throughmajor and independent labels. During episode six, the team met withPeter Oakley, who spoke about his own chart success as part ofThe Zimmers, and Hardy, who advised ways in which the music video could be filmed. The next episode, the group received advice from celebrity stylist Hannah Sandling, who suggested how Chartrand and Nichols should be styled for the video, and entertainment journalist Rav Singh, who discussed how to get airplay for "I've Got Nothing" through publicity stunts.

Reception

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Critical reception

[edit]

[Chartjackers] stands as a shining example of how all the goodwill in the world isn't going to guarantee mass public support and so setting out a defined aim (such as a Number One single) which fails to take into account this one final variable will inevitably result in a small sense of "failure" when the true reality of reality TV finally kicks in.

James Masterton ofYahoo! Music[24]

Critical reaction toChartjackers was overwhelmingly negative. Although radio stations, newspapers and magazines were all canvassed,[25] the show was largely ignored by themainstream media and received generally negative reviews. It was misrepresented in an article onThe Times's website, which mistook the four boys for a new boy band.[2] Fraser McAlpine of BBC Radio 1's Chart Blog said that the project showed a basic "contempt for music" and "the public at large".[3]James Masterton ofYahoo! Music calledChartjackers "something of a failure" and its charting "lacklustre".[24] He did not mention it at all in his weekly chart podcast.[26] NeitherReggie Yates norScott Mills, two of the DJs whose Twitter feeds were spammed during episode eight, were impressed by the way that theChartjackers team had tried to get their attention.[27][28]

Similarly negative reviews came from Eammon Forde ofMusic Week, who said the decision to release the single without management was "ridiculous" and that the campaign was "doomed",[2] andPocket-lint, who described the show as a "car crash".[29] In the week of the single's release, Irish television personalityStephen Byrne questioned on his Twitter profile whether the main motivation for the project really was "charity"[4] – British comedian David Bass agreed with him.[30] The project was quickly overshadowed by asimilar, more successful campaign to get "Killing in the Name" by American metal bandRage Against the Machine to top the UK Singles Chart for Christmas 2009.[31][32]

Awards

[edit]

Chartjackers received one nomination at the 2010Broadcast Digital Awards, a British awards event commemorating success and creativity in digital television. The show was submitted in the Best Multi-Platform Project category, but was beaten byThe Operation: Surgery Live.[33][34] It was not nominated for any further awards.

YearAwardCategoryResult
2010Broadcast Digital Awards[33]Best Multi-Platform ProjectNominated

Distribution

[edit]

Chartjackers was distributed both on television and online. It ran for a single series of eleven episodes: the first ten episodes lasted for five minutes each, with the final compilation episode running for half an hour and gaining a viewership peak of half a million.[35]Chartjackers premiered on BBC Two on 12 September 2009 at 12:50 p.m., as part of the channel's two-hour-long BBC Switch segment – it was uploaded to the YouTube channelBBCSwitch the same day.[1][36] This practice of broadcasting an episode on BBC Two and uploading it to theBBCSwitch channel the same day continued throughout the series. Episodes were also streamed online throughBBC iPlayer to UK residents for seven days after their initial broadcast.[37] The show was not broadcast outside of the UK and, as of 20 September 2013[update], is not available onDVD.

I've Got Nothing

[edit]
Main article:I've Got Nothing

The completedChartjackers single was released worldwide exclusively through theiTunes Store at midnight on 9 November 2009.[38] Each copy was sold for £0.79 in the UK and $0.99 in the US.[2][39] Just under 8,400 copies were downloaded in the UK, giving "I've Got Nothing" a chart placing of number 36 in the UK Singles Chart.[40] The song sold approximately 20,000 copies worldwide,[41] but did not make the singles chart in any other country.

Like the series from which it originated, "I've Got Nothing" was poorly received by critics. Some called the effort "very bad"[42] and others predicted that it was "unlikely to make much of a top 40 impact".[43] The music video for "I've Got Nothing" featured footage of Chartrand and Nichols singing the song in a London park, along with an actor dressed asChildren in Need mascot Pudsey Bear. This footage, along with clips of viewers miming to the song, was then used to construct the final music video for the single, which McDonnell edited.[15]

"I've Got Nothing" was performed live twice. The first occasion was at the 93 Feet East gathering on 4 November 2009, during the promotion of the single's release. The gathering featured performances from other YouTube users and was headlined by Hawkes.[14] The second occurrence was four days later at Switch Live 2009, an awards show organised by BBC Switch at theHammersmith Apollo, where a performance of "I've Got Nothing" opened the event.[44]

See also

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Portals:

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Episode 1". London:BBC Programmes. 12 September 2009.Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved30 January 2010.
  2. ^abcdBowers, Mary (13 November 2009)."YouTube if you want to be a star".The Times.Archived from the original on 16 October 2012. Retrieved10 December 2009.(subscription required)
  3. ^abMcAlpine, Fraser (14 December 2009)."Thoughts About Rage Against The Machine vs X Factor". London:BBC Radio 1.Archived from the original on 3 February 2012. Retrieved30 June 2010.
  4. ^abByrne, Stephen (14 November 2009)."charity". Dublin:Twitter.Archived from the original on 25 September 2013. Retrieved26 October 2010.
  5. ^"Four YouTube legends, one mind-blowing challenge as Chartjackers comes to BBC Switch". London:BBC. 8 September 2009.Archived from the original on 12 September 2009. Retrieved3 October 2010.
  6. ^Rushton, Katherine (7 September 2009)."BBC Switch to launch "YouTube X Factor"".Broadcast.Archived from the original on 9 October 2009. Retrieved12 November 2010.(subscription required)
  7. ^ab"Entertainment Development Priorities". London:BBC. Archived fromthe original on 8 October 2010. Retrieved16 December 2010.
  8. ^ab"Club comes into focus for new TV show".Rochdale:Rochdale Observer. 7 October 2009. Archived fromthe original on 12 November 2012. Retrieved26 May 2010.
  9. ^"A lot more news for you". Chortle. 11 April 2007.Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved3 October 2010.
  10. ^"Production file: Hat Trick Productions".New Media Age. 22 October 2009. Archived from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved3 October 2010.
  11. ^"fish in a bottle – digital agency".Fish in a bottle. 2009. Archived fromthe original on 29 October 2010. Retrieved16 December 2010.
  12. ^Gauld, Esther (29 October 2009)."Stars of YouTube going for number one". Geeks.co.uk. Archived fromthe original on 14 January 2010. Retrieved5 November 2010.
  13. ^Producers: Jonathan Davenport and Adam King (10 October 2009)."Episode 5".Chartjackers. Series 1. Episode 5.BBC.BBC Two.[dead YouTube link]
  14. ^abNissim, Mayer (3 November 2009)."Chesney Hawkes to play with Chartjackers".Digital Spy.Archived from the original on 5 November 2009. Retrieved3 June 2010.
  15. ^abProducers: Jonathan Davenport and Adam King (24 October 2009)."Episode 7".Chartjackers. Series 1. Episode 7.BBC.BBC Two.[dead YouTube link]
  16. ^"Chartjackers' hit produced by Creative Newport Student".Newport:University of Wales, Newport. 23 October 2010. Archived fromthe original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved7 November 2010.
  17. ^Dowding, Marc (2 November 2009)."BBC Chartjackers and other news".MySpace. Retrieved3 June 2010.
  18. ^Producers: Jonathan Davenport and Adam King (7 November 2009)."Episode 9".Chartjackers. Series 1. Episode 9.BBC.BBC Two.[dead YouTube link]
  19. ^"Chartjackers: Crowdsourcing to Top the UK Charts". Hypebot. 17 November 2009.Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved3 November 2010.
  20. ^"Welcome To ChartJackers!". 5 September 2009.Archived from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved3 November 2010 – viaYouTube.
  21. ^Producers: Jonathan Davenport and Adam King (3 October 2009)."Episode 4".Chartjackers. Series 1. Episode 4.BBC.BBC Two.[dead YouTube link]
  22. ^abNissim, Mayer (18 September 2009)."Hawkes backs BBC 'Chartjackers'".Digital Spy.Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved23 June 2010.
  23. ^Fry, Stephen (11 November 2009)."The great @coollike &co ha ..."Twitter.Archived from the original on 20 September 2013. Retrieved19 January 2010.
  24. ^abMasterton, James (16 November 2009)."Chart Watch UK".Yahoo! Music. Archived fromthe original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved7 November 2010.
  25. ^"More composed now". 20 December 2009. Archived fromthe original on 17 January 2010. Retrieved4 June 2010.... We asked traditional radio to play the song. We asked newspapers and magazines for coverage ...
  26. ^Writer:James Masterton (19 November 2009). "Week Ending November 21st".James Masterton's Chart Update.
  27. ^Yates, Reggie (20 October 2009)."Spam is the worst way to g ..."Twitter.Archived from the original on 20 September 2013. Retrieved19 January 2010.
  28. ^Mills, Scott (20 October 2009)."Thanks for your MILLIONS o ..."Twitter.Archived from the original on 25 September 2013. Retrieved20 January 2010.
  29. ^Hughes, Ian (7 October 2009)."VIDEO OF THE DAY – Chartjackers".Pocket-lint. Archived fromthe original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved26 July 2010.
  30. ^Bass, David (14 November 2009)."@3sixty5days agreed". London:Twitter. Retrieved26 October 2010.{{cite web}}:|archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  31. ^"Rage Against The Machine to take on 'The X Factor' for Christmas Number One".NME. 4 December 2009.Archived from the original on 5 December 2009. Retrieved30 June 2010.
  32. ^Famethrowa, Johnny (4 December 2009)."Rage Against The "X-Factor"".Yahoo! Music. Archived fromthe original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved30 June 2010.
  33. ^ab"Awards". London:Hat Trick Productions. 2010.Archived from the original on 13 May 2011. Retrieved16 November 2010.... ChartJackers Nominated 2010 Best Multi-Platform Project ...
  34. ^"Awards". Windfall Films. 2010.Archived from the original on 1 February 2011. Retrieved16 November 2010.
  35. ^"Chartjackers – Episodes from 2009". London:BBC Switch. 21 November 2009. Archived fromthe original on 13 September 2010. Retrieved3 November 2010.
  36. ^BBCSwitch (12 September 2009)."Chartjackers TV episode 1". Retrieved25 July 2011 – viaYouTube.[dead YouTube link]
  37. ^"Chartjackers". London:BBC Switch. November 2009.Archived from the original on 13 September 2010. Retrieved3 October 2010.
  38. ^"Chartjackers attack the charts". London:BBC. November 2009. Archived fromthe original on 10 November 2009. Retrieved29 October 2010.
  39. ^"I've Got Nothing – Single by ChartJackers".iTunes. 9 November 2009.Archived from the original on 29 January 2011. Retrieved1 January 2011.
  40. ^"Singles Chart For 21/11/09".Official Charts Company. 16 November 2009. Retrieved16 December 2009.
  41. ^Producers: Jonathan Davenport and Adam King (21 November 2009)."Compilation".Chartjackers. Series 1. Episode 11.BBC.BBC Two.[dead YouTube link]
  42. ^"Subtle hints that Simon Cowell might not always be musically motivated".Popjustice. 16 November 2009. Archived fromthe original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved4 June 2010.
  43. ^Balls, David (9 November 2009)."Music – Single Reviews".Digital Spy.Archived from the original on 21 September 2011. Retrieved10 December 2009.
  44. ^"Go Chartjackers! And Tom Deacon. Obvs". London:BBC Switch. November 2009.Archived from the original on 25 September 2013. Retrieved22 June 2010.

External links

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