He wanted to build a website that would incubate new television shows better than the networks. Icebox.com, launched just months ago, is already churning out low-cost, high-wit fare. And as rivals like Pop.com flounder and fold, Icebox has proved to be something else: a survivor

An Icebox Filled with Animated Goodies
By Adam Cohen

In Zombie College, our hero enrolls in a school with a small hitch: his fellow students are zombies who want to eat his brain. That's life in the world of Icebox.com, an ingenious Internet site presenting edgy cartoons written by top Hollywood talent.

Steve Stanford, the site's CEO and co-founder, learned his way around cyberspace when he started up power agency ICM's New Media Group. And that's where he realized the Internet could be an ideal incubator for scripts that weren't finding their way to production at the networks. Joining forces with three veteran producers (from The X-Files, The Simpsons and King of the Hill), Stanford launched the site last March with its first five cartoons.

Icebox takes advantage of the virtues of the Net. It can get a show up and running in a matter of months—not the one-year-plus lag time of the networks. Costs are about $7,000 a minute of programming, in contrast to about $50,000 for network-TV fare. And as its often over-the-top programming makes clear, it can take risks on content that the networks can't. Another un-TV-like feature: there's a spot where aspiring filmmakers can post their work and be considered for inclusion in the main site.

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Name: Steve Stanford
Why critics are taking note: With costs running about $7,000 a minute versus $50,000 for regular TV, online entertainment channels can take risks on content the networks can't
Icebox.com

Zombie College


THIS MONTH'S INNOVATORS


Will the 21st century produce more important innovations than the last? Who will be the top inventors? Tell us if you agree with TIME's choices.


Which of the following breakthroughs do you think will come first?

The ability to clone humans
A cure for cancer
Extending the average life past 100
Other


Do you know the next Einstein? Is your neighbor working on the next great health breakthrough? If so, e-mail us the name of your nominee, explaining in 50 words or less why we should choose him or her.


Transcript of chat with Steve Stanford, from Sunday, September 10th on CNN.com

Go to the Time 100

About the Series

Photos: Miguel de Icaza by RICHARD SCHULTZ FOR TIME,
Rob Malda by JONATHAN SAUNDERS FOR TIME,
Joseph Park by CATRINA GENOVESE FOR TIME,
Alain Rossman by DAVID STRICK FOR TIME,
Steve Stanford by GLEN WEXLER FOR TIME,
Sherry Turkle by AARON GOODMAN FOR TIME
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