Barry Mills (producer)

Barry Mills is an American film producer, director, writer, and voice actor. Mills grew up in Pine Mountain, Georgia.

Early work

Barry Mills started his career by writing and producing promos and bumpers for TBS and TNT in the early 1990s.[1] As a hobby, he videotaped live bands such as the Mekons, Butthole Surfers, and Sonic Youth. Mills also started Atlanta's first underground hip-hop radio show "Macadocious In Effect" (featuring a then unknown Lil Jon) on WRFG.[2]

Rudy and GoGo

In 1995 Barry and his friend, author Jack Pendarvis, created the TV show The Rudy and Gogo World Famous Cartoon Show for TBS, but ended up getting picked up by TNT and premiered in July of '95.[3] The Rudy and Gogo World Famous Cartoon Show was an afternoon block of classic cartoon shorts hosted by marionettes ("Rowdy" Rudy was voiced by Mills) and a mostly silent nanny goat named Gogo, taking place in front of an ever changing green screen. TNT would use the Rudy and Gogo concept for various cartoon and cult classic movie specials as well, until the show got cancelled in 1997.[4]

Cartoon Network and Adult Swim

In 1998 Mills started working for Cartoon Network and was a producer for the 1998 season of Space Ghost Coast to Coast. Later he wrote and produced the cartoon anthology shows The Bob Clampett Show and The Popeye Show, in which he restored most of the theatrical shorts to their original, unedited forms. Also in the early 2000s he did some voice-over work for Aqua Teen Hunger Force[5] and Sealab 2021. Mills' and Aqua Teen co-creator Matt Maiellaro's band, Donnell Hubbard also had their music featured in a few episodes of Sealab 2021.

Sheila Green Productions

In 2004 he started up Sheila Green Productions, which so far has produced music videos for the independent label Bloodshot Records and has released a DVD of the Hampton Grease Band's 2006 reunion concert. Sheila Green Productions also handled the multimedia aspects of Jon Langford's "Executioner's Last Songs" tour.

Mills directed, produced, and co-wrote the 2012 independent film Fun World, a dark comedy set in the future about the US Government being able to spy on the public through a new type of television set[6] .

References

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