Mission to Zyxx (original) (raw)

Podcast

Mission to Zyxx
Presentation
Hosted by Jeremy Crutchley
Starring Alden Ford Allie Kokesh Jeremy Bent Seth Lind Winston Noel Moujan Zolfaghari
Genre Improvisational comedy Space opera Science fiction
Written by Alden Ford Allie Kokesh Jeremy Bent Seth Lind Winston Noel Moujan Zolfaghari
Language English
Production
Audio format Podcast
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 99 (+ specials)
Publication
Original release September 6, 2017 –September 23, 2022
Provider AudioBoom (seasons 1–2)Maximum Fun (seasons 3–5)
Related
Website Official website

Mission to Zyxx is a space opera comedy podcast series, created by and starring Alden Ford, Allie Kokesh, Jeremy Bent, Seth Lind, Winston Noel and Moujan Zolfaghari. The series premiered on September 6, 2017, and concluded its run on September 22, 2022, with the completion of its fifth season.[1] The series was produced on the AudioBoom network for its first two seasons, before switching to Maximum Fun for the remainder of its run.

Mission to Zyxx is a science fiction story set in a fictional universe where most of the known universe is under the authority of the Federated Alliance, and follows a crew tasked with acting as Federation ambassadors in the Zyxx Quadrant, an isolated part of space, to establish diplomatic relations with the inhabitants of its many planets. The overall story arc revolves around the crew progressively coming to revolt against the Federation and confront threats to the universe. 99 episodes were released, alongside a number of special episodes, mostly christmas-themed, shorter, or performed live in front of an audience, which are also part of the series' continuity.[2]

The series features almost exclusively improvised dialogue from its cast members, which are typically given a setting for each episode; it features an overall narrative arc, while focusing on mostly self-contained episodes. The six creators form the main voice cast, usually starring in each episode as the show's main characters alongside a guest actor portraying a character centric to the episode. The recorded dialogue is later edited for pacing by Ford and Bent, with Shane O'Connell adding music and sound effects reflecting the events featured in the story.

Mission to Zyxx takes place in the Zyxx Quadrant, a relatively isolated part of space. The Federated Alliance, which recently overthrew the Empire, the previous system in control of the galaxy, sends a crew of four on a diplomatic mission to Zyxx in order to establic relations with local planets and attempt to make them join the Federated Alliance. The crew consists of The Bargarean Jade or "Bargie", a sentient ship and former acting star, and her three occupants: Pleck Decksetter, a young farmboy who recently joined the Alliance, Dar, the crew's security officer, and C-53, a Protocol and Diplomatic Relations Droid, all working under the remote supervision of operations manager Nermut Bundaloy.

In the first season, the crew of The Bargarean Jade accumulates failed attempts at establishing lasting diplomatic relations; meanwhile, they progressively learn the many wrongdoings of the Federated Alliance. After The Council of Seven, the Alliance's corrupt leaders, mistakenly identify the crew as part of the Rebellion attempting to overthrow them, they capture Nermut with the goal to execute him. In a desperate rescue attempt, the crew manages to both save Nermut and destroy The Delegator, the famous Alliance ship he was held prisonner on. Although they are welcomed into the Rebellion, credit for the destruction of The Delegator is given to another crew, leaving them to serve in the Rebellion as nobodies. In parallel, Pleck meets Old Derf, a "Zima warrior" who claims to fight for the "Fresh Side" of an all-encompassing force known as "The Space", and that Pleck is "The Chosen One", another Zima Warrior and the prophesied Avatar of the Fresh destined to the unite the two sides of the Space, the Fresh Side and the Wack Side; he also warns Pleck to look out for "Nermut Bundaloy", whom he surprisingly claims is prophesied as the Avatar of the Wack Side.

In the second season, the crew continues to try to establish diplomatic relations with planets of the Zyxx Quadrant, this time attempting to have them join the Rebellion. They now travel with Beano, a strange being who hatches from an ancient bean-like artifact the crew acquired during season 1. The situation becomes desperate when the crew learns that The Council of Seven is planning on travelling to Zyxx with a Planet Crusher, a gigantic spaceship capable of destroying planets, and annihilate Resistance headquarters. Following infighting conflicts, a member of the Council uses a Planet Crusher Crusher, an even bigger version of Planet Crushers, to kill the six other Council members, destroy Resistance headquarters, and give himself the title and name of Emperor Nermut Bundaloy (coincidentally the same name as the crew's operation manager, therefore fulfilling Old Derf's prophecy), establishing absolute control over the galaxy. Beano saves the crew's lives, but reverts to being an inanimate bean in the process. In his last moments, he uses his powers to grant the crew one wish; Bargie abruptly wishes to become a successful actress once again.

The third season starts an unspecified amount of time after the season 2 finale. After being abandoned by Bargie so she could resume her revitalized career, the rest of the crew has separated and lives in hiding from the Emperor, who now rules the galaxy with an iron fist. After the Emperor sends squads of C.L.I.N.T.s, the clone soldiers under his command, to kill the former crewmates, they reunite to survive, with the addition of AJ, a defecting C.L.I.N.T. As the crew travels through Zyxx in an attempt to find a way to fight the Emperor, Bargie gets captured, and is put on trial for "financial murder"; although she is ruled innocent, the Emperor uses this opportunity to attack the crew once again, hoping to get his hands on a revived Beano, which would allow him to unleash the full power of the Wack. Although Pleck stops him from fully obtaining Beano's power, Beano and the Emperor fuse into The Allwheat, a black hole-like consuming entity.

In the fourth season, The Allwheat continues to exist and consume its surroundings, seemingly unstoppable. Additionally, the disappearance of the Emperor left a huge political hole, leading to countless conflicts for power all over the galaxy. In an effort to unite the galaxy and find a way to deal with The Allwheat, the crew, who now also travels with Dar's newborn child Horsehat, starts working for Seesu Gundu, a former commander of the Resistance who seeks to become the new ruler of the galaxy, in order to restore order and hopefully find a way to deal with The Allwheat. Having been taunted by the voice of the fusion of the Emperor and Beano inside his mind, Pleck plunges inside The Allwheat, followed by the crew attempting to save him. The Emperor reveals it was his plan to lure Pleck inside The Allwheat, as he is planning on using the accumulated powers of Beano, the Wack Side, and the Fresh Side to eradicate all life in the universe but that of the members of he and Pleck's species. Despite being fused with him, Beano rebels when the Emperor attempts to harm the crew, resulting in the destruction of The Allwheat; The Bargarean Jade, with both the rest of the crew and Seesu Gundu's family aboard, falls through a rift in reality.[3]

Season five starts after The Bargarean Jade drifted into the unknown for several months before crashing onto a planet devoid of sentient life, on which the crew, together with Seesu Gundu and her family, have remained stranded, far away from anything known to the natives of their original galaxy. After finally achieving lift-off, they make contact with the Coalition Of United Planets, or C.O.U.P., the leading organization of this part of the universe; with a return to Zyxx impossible in the near future, they are hired by the C.O.U.P. as galactic ambassadors while the organization works on finding a way to send them back.[4]

Cast and characters

[edit]

In addition to their main roles, cast members also portray several key recurring characters and many minor one-off characters.

Characters appearing in at least two episodes, not voiced by members of the main cast. Appearances during the canon advertising breaks are counted, with appearances in special episodes counted as part of the seasons during which said episodes were released.

The podcast is improvised by its comedian cast and recorded by Shane O'Connell, who also performs subsequent sound design and mixing. Editing is done by Seth Lind, Alden Ford, and Jeremy Bent.[1] Each week there is a special guest comedian who plays an inhabitant of the Zyxx Quadrant that encounters the crew. The guest pitches two or three episode ideas to the main cast, and one is picked that fits best with the story arc of the show.[5] Filmmaker Magazine interviewed the cast and highlighted the combination of improv comedy and longform narration as a major source of creativity and freedom for the podcast.[6]

The cast of the show are veterans of improv comedy performance, with all having performed with Upright Citizens Brigade[7] and separately or in smaller groups with other improv casts. Additional credits include writing, performing and directing comedy content/shows such as CollegeHumor and UCB Comedy Originals[8] (Alden Ford, Jeremy Bent, Winston Noel),[9][10][11] The Good Cop (Allie Kokesh),[12] Last Week Tonight and Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt (Moujan Zolfaghari).[13] Co-creator Seth Lind is Director of Operations at the highly successful podcasts This American Life,[14] Serial,[14] and S-Town.[15] Shane O'Connell, the show's sound engineer and designer, has worked with Ben Harper, Half Waif, and NAO.[16]

Podcast episodes are about 30 minutes, edited down from an initial 60–90 minute recording.[5] Each episode opens with an opening crawl narration by Jeremy Crutchley. As the story progresses, the narration changes to reflect the happenings of the Zyxx Quadrant, the Tremillion Sector, and the entire galaxy. The series introduction for the first season is:

The period of civil war has ended. The rebels have defeated the evil Galactic Monarchy and established the harmonious Federated Alliance. It's totally less evil. Now to restore diplomatic relations between systems, the Federated Alliance has deployed teams of ambassadors throughout the galaxy. The Alliance's newest recruit, a young farm boy named Pleck Decksetter steps aboard the starship Bargarean Jade to embark on his first diplomatic mission: a MISSION. TO. ZYXX!

The show also occasionally releases live episodes set in previous eras/seasons.

Like many podcasts, Mission to Zyxx generates revenue through sponsored advertisements in the form of advertising breaks. This podcasts is unusual, however, as these are done by the voice actors or guests as minor characters from the show, delivered in-character. The ad breaks are canon, consistent with the show's characterizations and events, occasionally delivering minor plot points or foreshadowing for the main storyline.

The Alliance's newest recruit is Ambassador Pleck Decksetter, a naive, gung-ho farm boy whose crew includes trusty, know-it-all droid C-53, and hulking, omnisexual security officer DAR. They travel aboard the outdated, sentient starship The Bargerian Jade – aka Bargie – who has as many ex-husbands as stories about her glory days. Their mission is nominally overseen by junior Missions Operation Manager Nermut Bundaloy, a striving, entry-level bureaucrat yearning for respect.[17]

No. overall No. in season Title Title Reference Guest Comedian Original air date
1 1 All Hail the Federated Alliance! None September 6, 2017
2 2 Nermie, I Shrunk the Crew Honey, I Shrunk the Kids Sasheer Zamata September 13, 2017
3 3 What Happens on Magnifiku What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas Connor Ratliff September 20, 2017
4 4 Assimilation Is Futile Assimilation in Star Trek John Robert Wilson September 27, 2017
5 5 A Critical Vulnerability The critical vulnerability of the Death Star John Murray October 4, 2017
6 6 Dust-Up at the Diner Lauren Adams October 11, 2017
7 7 The (Redacted) Michael Cruz Kayne October 18, 2017
8 8 Grt Milk? Got Milk? Zach Cherry October 25, 2017
9 9 This Juckin' Guy Jon Gabrus November 1, 2017
10 10 The Worry with Wiffles The Trouble with Tribbles Lorraine Cink November 8, 2017
11 11 It's Hard Out Here for a Blimp It's Hard out Here for a Pimp Jordan Carlos November 15, 2017
12 12 Jumped by a Shark Jumping the shark Josh Patten November 22, 2017
13 13 Dead Subquadrant's Got Talent Got Talent Caitlin Puckett November 29, 2017
14 14 There Are No Second Chances Lydia Hensler December 6, 2017
15 15 The Space Awakens Star Wars: The Force Awakens Justin Tyler December 13, 2017
16 16 X-Marse in Chimnacia X-MAS Paul F. Tompkins December 20, 2017
17 17 The One with the Council of Seven Friends, in which many episode titles begin, "The One with..." None December 27, 2017
18 18 The Delegator None January 3, 2018

Cultural references

[edit]

Like Star Wars, Mission to Zyxx is a space opera. Zyxx makes several references to Star Wars, including the CLINTs (referencing Star Wars' Clone Troopers) and "The Space" (referencing Star Wars' The Force). Rather than the Force's Light and Dark sides, Zyxx has "Fresh" and "Wack," respectively. Zyxx also has Zima warriors that fight with woodsabers (sticks) – analogous to Star Wars' Jedi warriors and their lightsabers.

Hello from the Magic Tavern

[edit]

Show co-creator Alden Ford has cited the Chicago-based improv podcast Hello from the Magic Tavern set in a Narnia/Middle-Earth-like fantasy realm as partial inspiration for the format of Mission to Zyxx.[18]

The concept of diplomatic relations missions mirrors that of diplomat crews in the Star Trek universe.

An episode of the podcast is named The Worry with Wiffles and has a similar plot in a direct homage to one of the most famous episodes of Star Trek, The Trouble with Tribbles.

In their Culture section, Newsweek covered the production of the first series.[18] Air & Space Magazine interviewed the cast after the first season.[19] Vulture, an entertainment news website, listed Mission to Zyxx as one of "100 Great Podcasts Worth Listening to."[20] The podcast was also number one on a Salon list of unpredictable improv podcasts.[21]

Charles Pulliam-Moore of Gizmodo praised the show, calling it "the best scifi podcast you're probably not listening to...yet," and "proof that [podcasts have] still so much untapped potential, particularly for fictional work."[22] He later reviewed Season 3, which he called "bolder" and "taking the piss out of Star Wars in the freshest way."[23]

As of November 2019, the podcast website Podbay shows Mission to Zyxx has an average audience review of 4.8 out of 5 based on 2325 reviews.[24]

Nick Douglas of LifeHacker wrote "Mission to Zyxx might be the best podcast. This science fiction comedy—a mix of Star Trek, Star Wars, and _The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy_—that leans on original jokes instead of references, is definitely the best of the current wave of fictional podcasts, partly because of its unique process." Douglas featured the podcast's cast on the How I Work series, which "asks heroes, experts, and all-around productive people to share their shortcuts, workspaces, routines, and more."[5]

The Season 2 opener was ranked 7th in IndieWire's "The 50 Best Podcast Episodes of 2018."[25] It was also nominated for the iHeartRadio Podcast Awards 2019 for the category "Best Scripted Podcast" (won by Wolverine: The Long Night).[26]

On Apple Podcasts, Mission to Zyxx has a 4.9/5.0 based on 2.6K ratings.[27]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "About". Mission to Zyxx. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
  2. ^ "Mission to Zyxx". Mission to Zyxx. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
  3. ^ "Total Recap". Mission to Zyxx. April 3, 2021.
  4. ^ 502: Themm and the Holograms [ft. Cody Lindquist and Charlie Todd ]
  5. ^ a b c "We're Mission to Zyxx, and This Is How We Work". Lifehacker. June 6, 2018. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  6. ^ Prigge, Matt (September 26, 2018). "Mission To Zyxx Makers At IFP Week 2018". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  7. ^ "About". Mission to Zyxx. Retrieved October 22, 2021.
  8. ^ UCB Comedy Originals (Short, Comedy), UCB Comedy, Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre, Upright Citizens Brigade, retrieved October 22, 2021
  9. ^ "Alden Ford". IMDb. Retrieved October 22, 2021.
  10. ^ "Jeremy Bent". ucbcomedy.com. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  11. ^ "Winston Noel". IMDb. Retrieved October 22, 2021.
  12. ^ "Allie Kokesh". IMDb. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  13. ^ "Moujan Zolfaghari". IMDb. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  14. ^ a b "Staff". This American Life. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  15. ^ "About". S-Town Podcast. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  16. ^ "Shane O'Connell". Maximum Fun. March 26, 2019. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  17. ^ "Season 1". Mission to Zyxx. July 22, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  18. ^ a b "Part 'Spaceballs, part UCB improv, Audioboom podcasters are on a 'Mission to Zyxx'". Newsweek. August 29, 2017. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  19. ^ Shiner, Linda. "Join Seth Lind and Friends on a Mission to Zyxx". Air & Space Magazine. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  20. ^ Quah, Nicholas (March 19, 2019). "100 Podcasts Worth Listening to". Vulture. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
  21. ^ "Yes, and . . . 13 delightfully unpredictable podcasts". Salon. September 16, 2017. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
  22. ^ "Mission to Zyxx Is the Best Scifi Podcast You're Probably Not Listening to... Yet". io9. March 20, 2018. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
  23. ^ "Mission to Zyxx's Third Season Is Bolder and Taking the Piss Out of Star Wars in the Freshest Way". io9. April 18, 2019. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
  24. ^ "Mission To Zyxx Reviews | Podbay". podbay.fm. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
  25. ^ Greene, Steve (July 13, 2018). "The 50 Best Podcast Episodes of 2018 (So Far)". IndieWire. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
  26. ^ "iHeartRadio Podcast Awards 2019 Winners". Billboard. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
  27. ^ "Mission To Zyxx on Apple Podcasts". Apple Podcasts. Retrieved November 29, 2019.