Story Published:
Sep 13, 2006 at 6:28 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 8:56 AM PDT
LOS ANGELES - The creators behind the Internet video
mystery teen Lonelygirl15 have revealed themselves and want their
fans to know they are not a front for a big Hollywood studio
marketing some upcoming film.
Instead, the three friends launched the adventures of the
doe-eyed, 16-year-old homeschooled "Bree" as an experiment in
storytelling that they intend to continue on their own Web site
that was launched Tuesday.
Bree's inventors went public after fans of the two- to
three-minute videos began questioning her existence and expressing
disappointment that the seemingly genuine video diaries were a
hoax.
The creators identified themselves to The Associated Press as
Miles Beckett, 28, of Woodland Hills, Calif.; Mesh Flinders, 26, of
Petaluma, Calif., and Greg Goodfried, 27, of Los Angeles.
Beckett, a self-confessed Internet geek, said he came up with
the idea of using short videos as a storytelling technique while a
surgical resident. Earlier this year, he met Flinders, a fledgling
filmmaker, at a party.
Flinders said he had been developing the character of a teenage
girl who was more at home relating to adults than with her peers.
The character never quite fit into any of his screenplays, but
seemed a perfect fit for Beckett's idea of telling stories using
video blogging.
The two joined with Goodfried, an attorney, recruited the actors
to play Bree and her dorky boyfriend, Daniel, and began writing the
broad outlines of an open-ended plot filled with the kind of
mysteries and clues TV watchers know from the hit ABC show
"Lost."
The short videos began appearing on the Web sites YouTube and
MySpace in June. The creators said Tuesday that they never intended
to stage a hoax or trick people into believing their characters
were real.
Rather, they intended to begin posting elements of the story
online and then incorporate reactions and suggestions from fans
into the plot.
The result was part video game, where viewers exercise some
measure of control over the characters, and part mystery novel,
complete with hidden clues and cliffhanger chapters that left
viewers wanting more.
Flinders writes scripts for each "episode" and the actress
playing Bree delivers her lines with a persuasive power that still
has some online viewers believing she is genuine, even after "The
Creators" posted their online confession several days ago.
The three creators declined to identify the name of the actress
Tuesday. But amateur Internet sleuths discovered she is Jessica
Rose, a 19-year-old actress from New Zealand who recently moved to
Los Angeles.
The revelation that Bree was fake initially angered fans on
YouTube, who suspected Lonelygirl15 was a slick Hollywood attempt
to advertise some upcoming movie or TV show.
But since the creators revealed the fictitious nature of the
show last week, the number of people subscribing to the
Lonelygirl15 channel on YouTube has skyrocketed.
"Just because I know a movie isn't real isn't going to stop me
from watching it," Alexandra Inman, a 17-year-old fan from St.
Louis, said Tuesday. "I'm there for the entertainment."
Bree's adventures will continue on a new Web site created in
conjunction with the online syndication network Revver. The company
helps video-makers profit from their efforts by attaching ads to
each video, then burying a "tag" in the computer code that tracks
where the video is posted. Revver then shares the ad revenue with
the authors.
As far as what happens to Bree next or just how long "Season
One" will last, the creators themselves are unsure. Stay tuned.