Sausagefest 12 – The Year without a party. We hosted an online event, played some games and shared some drinks and raised $3,225, including donations collected through the month of October, which was triple matched to an effective donation of $9,675! Sausagefest 11 – Virtual Sausagefest! was a product of necessity, as Archon had to postpone due to COVID-19. We were able to donate $4,120, which was TRIPLE Matched making it an effective donation of $12,360, absolutely shattering any records we ever dreamed of setting when this started. Sausagefest 9’s donation of $3800 was also matched by an anonymous donor, bring the 2018 total to $7600, the biggest and best yet. We were still able to donate $1700 to BCRF.īetween Sausagefest 6 and 7 combined, we were able to donate $4600 to BCRF which was matched by an anonymous donor!Īt Sausagefest 8, we donated $3050 which was matched for our 2017 donation. Sausagefest 5 saw us with a few less donations before the event and the foot traffic the night of the event took a bit of a dip as well. We blew past everything we did previously for Sausagefest 4 and raised $2100 for BCRF! The following year at Sausagefest 2 and Sausagefest West, we were able to fund the event and donate $800 to the charity.Īt Sausagefest 3, we blew things out of the water and after funding the event brought in $1,500 for BCRF. We had fun, there were hugs, and a few tears, and in the end, after taking donations from some folks who couldn’t be there in person, we raised $580.06 I spoke to a few survivors and a parent of someone who was fighting the battle, and was struggling. So on Saturday evening of the con, we ate, we drank and we collected over $500 in donations from people who wandered in and out of our room. When he was in the process of turning the Back Seat Producers website pink, something they’ve done for the past few years to support awareness, Tony had the thought of collecting donations as part of the party. Archon takes place in October, which also happens to be Breast Cancer Awareness Month. It was born first as a room party and spun into something more. Sausagefest came from the mind of Tony Mast, host and creator of the Back Seat Producers podcast. What do you guys think? Did ya dig Sausage Party? Would you be interested in a Who Framed Roger Rabbit?-style sequel, or would you prefer they moved on to one of their other concepts? Sound off in the comments below.In October 2010, at Archon, a sci-fi, fantasy, gaming and media convention held annually in St. It probably won't even be the last R-rated animated movie Rogen writes. Sausage Party is definitely not the last R-rated animated movie that will ever be made. The whole problem before was there was no precedent for it, so hopefully ( Sausage Party) will show people that this is a viable thing to do…or it’ll do the opposite and this will be the last R-rated animated movie that ever gets made!” And hopefully it won’t take this long to make the next one because it won’t take five years to convince someone to make it. “We have ideas for other R-rated animated movies that have nothing to do with Sausage Party, and we’re hoping this goes well so we get to make them. With Sausage Party cleaning up at the box office (it's already made its production budget back, and then some), a sequel is all but guaranteed.but that's not the only animated project Rogen would be interested in working on. Rogen says: That’s one of the reasons why we took away the (original) ending because we thought, well, if that was the first scene of the next movie it’s probably not what you would want it to be, with them just seeing us and finding us basically.īut the idea of a live-action/animated movie, like a Who Framed Roger Rabbit?-style hybrid is also very exciting, mostly because Who Framed Roger Rabbit? is one of my favorite movies of all time.” So why'd they scrap it? To save it for the sequel, of course. Says Rogen: In a new interview with Fandango, Seth Rogen reveals that this wasn't the original ending: in the cut that screened at this year's SXSW Film Festival, we followed the characters through the portal, and actually saw them interacting with their human counterparts. When we last see them, our heroes are marching into a Stargate-style portal which will bring them into "our" world.and face-to-face with their creators. If you saw Sausage Party this weekend (and, judging by the box office receipts, a whole bunch of you did), then you already know that Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg's latest film ends on a bit of a cliffhanger: the foods, having finally conquered The Gods inside Shopwell's, learn that they are actually cartoons living inside a Hollywood movie.
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