 It is the year 2020 so it's time to update my Spongella Animation Workshop overview. In short, it's an animation workshop where you can submit your work for animation feedback. Now that's very short, so let me elaborate. The submissions can be from beginner level up to advanced level. So you can show me bouncing balls, it could be a pantomime clip, it could be body mechanics, it could be advanced lip sync, it can be creature work, it can be a single shot, it could be a sequence, it could be a demo reel evaluation, whatever you want to send me for feedback, I'll take a look at it. And if you don't know what to do when you're brand new to animation, I can also create an outline of animation exercises to get you going with the basics and the principles and work your way up to more complicated body mechanics, all the way up to lip sync performance and all that meaty performance work you want to do. If you know what you want to submit but you also want to first talk about the plans and the ideas, the first couple rounds of just planning and layout at this early stage are not submissions, we can just email back and forth and kind of hash out a good plan for your shop. And the workshop covers 16 submissions. Every time you send me work for feedback, that counts as a submission. And the feedback is being given through video reviews. And if you want examples for what those video reviews look like, check out the channel and check out the playlist that have all kinds of reviews up there and you can kind of see what the content is, what the style is, what my video reviews are and if this is something that will work for you. You will also see that I'm uploading old work as an archive, so to speak, and new ones that are being sent right now. And if you check the title of the uploads, you will see from what year the critiques are, which means that the quality is going to be different. So if something from 2014 or older, all the quality is going to be different, the presentation is going to be different. The way I review things is going to be different compared to things that I'm uploading from two years ago last year and this year. And because some of these posts are archives, as I'm saying at the beginning of the clip, not all of the clips have a full run through. And it wasn't recorded with the intent of uploading it onto YouTube. Speaking of which, you don't have to upload your critiques. About half of the workshops that I have right now are private. They don't want things to be online. You can upload it and just put in anonymous. I don't have to put in your name if you don't want to. It really is all optional and completely tailored to your demands and requests and whatever you're more comfortable with. And the schedule is also completely up to you. You can submit this once a week, you can submit this twice a week, maybe once every two weeks, you can submit every week, take a little break and then come back. The schedule is absolutely flexible and tailored towards your needs. And that's the whole idea behind the workshop, that it's kind of a one-on-one setup in a way that works for you specifically. And all of this is going to cost you $500 paid via PayPal. And if this sounds great and you're wondering, well, when can I sign up? You can sign up at any time. There's no sign up window, there's no semester, this is not a school. You can just sign up, send me your work and get feedback. It's all fairly easy. But if you do have more questions, there's a link in the description with my FAQ. A bit more detailed and if you do have questions beyond that, leave me a comment, you can email me. Let's just talk about this so I can answer all of your questions. That's it. As always, if you watched this whole thing till the very end, I really appreciate your time. Hit the like button if you liked this clip. And if you want to see more and not miss anything, hit the subscribe button, hit that L button so you don't miss any of my uploads. I upload almost every day except weekends. And that's it for the 2020 recap. Thanks for watching and sign up.