Call to Cosplay

Call to Cosplay is an American reality television series on Asian American cable network Myx TV. It is a cosplay design competition show where contestants are tasked to create a costume based on a given theme and under time constraints.[1] The show is the first wholly cosplay-based competition show in the United States.[2] and premiered on June 30, 2014.[3][4]

Call to Cosplay
GenreReality competition
StarringKeith Kawamura
Taylor Chung (DJ Wednesday)
JudgesBrook Mahealani Lee
Marissa Floro
Johnny Junkers
Romeo Lacoste
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes19
Production
Executive producer(s)George Chung
Miguel Santos
Producer(s)Reko Moreno
Editor(s)Pridhvi Sunain Zoro
Running time22 minutes
(excluding commercials)
Production company(s)AEUTV (Creators)
Myx TV (Creators)
Priswes Studios, USA (Post Production)
Release
Original networkMyx TV (Parent) CONtv Amazon Video (Partners)
Picture format1080p (HDTV)
Original releaseJune 30, 2014 (2014-06-30) 
2016
Chronology
Related showsHeroes of Cosplay
External links
Website
Production website

Episodes

No. in
series
No. in
season
Title Original air date
11"Meet the Cosplayers"June 30, 2014 (2014-06-30)
The competitors are introduced. They discuss how they were inspired to cosplay and size up the competition.
22"Zoe vs Yirico"July 14, 2014 (2014-07-14)
The two contestants are required to create a costume based on shonen manga in eight hours or less.
33"Celeste Orchid vs Wednesday"July 21, 2014 (2014-07-21)
The two contestants must create a costume based on the magical girls theme.
44"Kimba vs April"July 28, 2014 (2014-07-28)
The two contestants are tasked with creating costumes based on non-Japanese anime characters.
55"Jayden vs Deanna"August 4, 2014 (2014-08-04)
Fantasy character is the theme the two cosplayers need to create for their costume.
66"Finals"August 11, 2014 (2014-08-11)
The winner is revealed.
gollark: Evolutionary fitness is also not the same as physical fitness.
gollark: That's plausible I guess, but it's possible that many of those could have been avoided (and your definition would count this as "fitness", even). I'm pretty sure it's still less common than, well, other day to day bad things.
gollark: Are those *common*? I don't think I know anyone who's actually experienced any of those. Except maybe animals, very broadly.
gollark: I mean, most common bad situations are going to be along the lines of "someone was rude to me at work" or "my car broke down", not "I must run away from a thing very fast" or "I have to lift a several hundred kilogram object for some reason".
gollark: That definition seems pretty orthogonal to actual common meanings.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.