To be honest, I think whatever ADWSS started out as, it turned into a train wreck that never got off the ground. The people involved do seem to be evasive, but there are many reasons that could be the case. It would have been a guy and a kid running around in a rented mascot costume for a day, put into 30-60 minutes of film. If the people involved in the project don't want to talk about the project, where exactly are we supposed to get information? I wasn't involved in the search at the time, but it seems like you exhausted most of your leads on the first go-around.
An anti-climactic end isn't good enough justification for me. Most of our big searches had disappointing ends.
There are plenty of ways to go about this. For example, part of the reason it felt anticlimactic for me, was because there were a bunch of leads we had listed that we never contacted.
And, please, keep this in mind: if this does become a full blown effort, what will most likely happen is a group DM will be created with trusted investigators to keep personal info from being spread around. And if any personal info or sensitive contact info is posted on here it will be deleted. I get why some people are worried but you really shouldn't be.
Obviously I cannot prove for certain whether Mr. Orange and Mr. Holley were lying, but again, there is no evidence to substantiate their claims. I was there when this was all going down and even I was suspicious at the time; however, I just brushed the suspicious stuff off. The purpose of this search isn't and never was to harass anyone. I just want the truth. I want real, tangible evidence that Mr. Holley and Mr. Orange were telling the truth. This has been weighing on my mind ever since the original search ended and I don't think it's right to claim victory just yet.
I'm trying something a bit different then in the last search: I'm gonna get in touch with people who produced and wrote other Regal Films (E.G Steve Jobs: Consciously Genius)and see if they know anything about A Day With Spongebob Squarepants since it's pretty commmon for people who worked on movies with one company to do another with that same one weather it's a script writer or an actor and i'll keep you posted on any leads I might find.
iirc a lot of those people don't even exist hahaha, but if you want to have a go at it you're more than welcome
As many of you all know, especially if you followed the initial search for A Day With SpongeBob SquarePants, the search turned up fruitless. Calls were made to the production company's CEO, Lorenzo Holley, who revealed that the movie was never made. Mr. Holley also revealed to us that he was making an attempt to revive the project through crowd-funding on Kickstarter.
Several calls were made to Mr. Holley to gain more information on the film, and he eventually put us through to the most important figure in the search's history: the creator/screenwriter for A Day With SpongeBob. I won't go into the nitty gritty of what was revealed from the screenwriter, who will hereafter be referred to as "Mr. Orange," his pseudonym, but in essence he revealed how A Day With SpongeBob came to be, why it was scrapped, and how he was attempting to revive the project.
Mr. Orange told us that he was going to set up a crowd-funding project that fall and subsequently revealed five pages of the original script for A Day With SpongeBob. Months passed and he disappeared a few months lated and ceased responding to emails and inquiries on the project. It has been nearly two years since this transpired.
As you could imagine, nowadays Mr. Orange's credibility has been called into question; some wonder if he will ever start the crowd-funding project, if he was telling the truth about A Day With SpongeBob, and some, including me, have even begun to question whether he is who he says he is in regards to the film.
Since these events, attempts to contact Mr. Orange have failed. Attempts to contact Mr. Holley have failed. The production company, Reagal [sic] Films has since apparently become defunct, the website having shut down and higher ups becoming impossible to contact.
This, including more reasons, is why I propose we reopen the case into A Day With SpongeBob SquarePants. I get a strange feeling that we are far from the truth and there is more that needs to be revealed. While part of me believes we were as close to the truth as ever, I also believe we were deceived, purposely misdirected so that we would stop looking. I say we need to look deeper; we need to find out what happened to Mr. Orange, what happened to Reagal Films, and most importantly: what happened to A Day With SpongeBob SquarePants.
Most everyone has heard of The Room, known as the greatest bad movie ever made, the "Citizen Kane of bad movies." Since the movie first became popular, it has become a pop culture phenomenon, spawning parodies, fan games and the book account of The Room's production written by Greg Sestero, The Disaster Artist.
One of the most interesting revelations from The Disaster Artist for me was that director Tommy Wiseau had hired someone to hang out on the set of The Room and film everyone's activity behind the scenes, essentially creating a documentary about the production of The Room. Aside from some very heavily edited behind the scenes footage on the DVD and some other clips online, not nearly the entirety of the footage has ever been released.
What does everyone think about this? Would you guys like to see the rest of the behind the scenes footage that Tommy Wiseau filmed?
oh GOD yes. This might get released soon, or we'll just have to pry it from Tommy Wiseau's cold, dead hands.
the only way i could see this getting released is as a bonus feature on The Disaster Artist's Blu-Ray, and even then it's a long shot.
Most everyone has heard of The Room, known as the greatest bad movie ever made, the "Citizen Kane of bad movies." Since the movie first became popular, it has become a pop culture phenomenon, spawning parodies, fan games and the book account of The Room's production written by Greg Sestero, The Disaster Artist.
One of the most interesting revelations from The Disaster Artist for me was that director Tommy Wiseau had hired someone to hang out on the set of The Room and film everyone's activity behind the scenes, essentially creating a documentary about the production of The Room. Aside from some very heavily edited behind the scenes footage on the DVD and some other clips online, not nearly the entirety of the footage has ever been released.
What does everyone think about this? Would you guys like to see the rest of the behind the scenes footage that Tommy Wiseau filmed?
Last Edit: Feb 1, 2018 3:22:47 GMT by matt: unreleaseD
welp, I guess i will scrub everything that relates to me off of the face of this website. As i can tell this site has gone to shit Thank you for the memories I now have no friends -Notelu
you got what was coming to you for awhile now tbh, don't act like this is sudden. Smh.
It ends like that huh. I told y'all don't get excited for the 4th lol. Sucks, year of work down the drain.
Okay well first off This was planned for the fourth but since William kept trying to leak everything we released it today And second This work isn't down the drain, we solved ADWSS, and you'd know that if you watched the video I just sent with the audio log and 5 pages of script.