Hey, Shipwreck

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Hey, Shipwreck
Genre(s)Comic science fiction
Military humor
Running timeSix minutes per episode (average)
Created byPatrick Hrabe
Release(s)March 22, 2007 – October 8, 2007 (Season one)

April 13, 2008 – August 7, 2009 (Season two)

TBA (Season three)
Website
http://www.tubedaze.com/

Hey, Shipwreck is the name of a series of Machinima spoofing the Silent Service, that is serving aboard a United States Navy submarine.[1] The animations are rendered using the Blender game engine, and can be watched in-browser in YouTube format, or downloaded in a variety of other formats. The title comes from the common Navy phrase: "Hey, Shipmate!" referring to a fellow sailor. Substituting "Shipwreck" makes it an insult. Similar to saying "Hey Dirtbag."

Description[edit]

The cartoons are set in the future in a fictional space navy, with the spaceships looking vaguely like submarines. The heroes, Thresher and Seawolf, are seen on the spaceship standing watch. Because of the boredom of standing watch, they spend their time complaining about such staples of navy life as ratings mergers (that is combining two dissimilar job specialties into a single job community). The cartoons imagine the natural successor to the Navy's current smoking cessation program by implementing a "swearing cessation program", with sailors' speech regulated by a computer. The heroes amuse themselves by creating ways to defeat the profanity filter. The heroes also combat such routine tasks as training new sailors (this is a spoof on how notoriously strict the training for new sailors is on submarines).

In an interview with Navy Times, the author of the cartoons, former ET1 Patrick Hrabe, admits the limited scope of his audience[2] by saying: "the average viewers will not understand what's being talked about at all...[S]ubmariners and Navy guys who watch it get this thing." Patrick Hrabe says former Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy Terry D. Scott wrote him and said he was "still laughing" after viewing the cartoons.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ewing, Philip (2007-05-14). "Futuristic 'Shipwreck' spoofs Navy". Navy Times. print issue: 10. Retrieved 2007-05-08.
  2. ^ "'Hey, Shipwreck' creator Patrick Hrabe anchors in Kingston". 11 February 2009.

External links[edit]