Japhet Asher


Simeon Japhet Asher is an English film and television producer, writer and director who has worked in the United States for most of his career. Having moved back to England, he was the executive producer for interactive at CBBC, the BBC's programming strand for children, and an executive producer of the live action comedy Big Babies broadcast by that network.
Asher is also the creator and author of “The Ghostkeeper's Journal & Field Guide”, the first ever augmented reality powered novel, published in 2018 by Carlton Books. Asher is considered a pioneer in the field of augmented reality storytelling, and has won multiple awards for the books with apps he has developed in this medium.
Asher wrote and produced his first television film for the American Broadcasting Company, Peace on Borrowed Time, when he was 21 years old, during 1982; it aired the following year. The 1985 HBO documentary Soldiers in Hiding, of which Asher was a producer and writer, was nominated for an Academy Award. As a partner in the San Francisco-based studio Pictures during the late 1980s and 1990s he was the creator of the MTV animated showcase Liquid Television and a key figure in its execution, serving as executive producer and creative director. He was also an executive producer and writer for Æon Flux, a segment of the programme which later became its own show. Between 1995 and 1997, he was the executive vice-president of programming at Tele-TV, an ultimately abortive joint venture by three American telephone companies to provide interactive television, video on demand and internet through customers' phone lines.

Career in film and television

Born in London, England, Asher attended Winchester College for five terms, before moving to San Francisco, California with his family. He graduated from New York's Tisch School of the Arts and worked extensively alongside director Malcolm Clarke during the 1980s. In 1982, when Asher was 21, the duo collaborated on a television film for the American Broadcasting Company, Peace on Borrowed Time, which aired the following year with Asher credited as writer and producer. Asher held both of these roles on two more documentaries directed by Clarke for HBO; the second of these, 1985's Soldiers in Hiding, about Vietnam veterans, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, but lost out to Broken Rainbow, a documentary about the relocation of Navajo Native Americans. Asher's sole release as a director, the television documentary Trouble on Big Mountain, also focussed on the Navajo and was released by San Francisco's KQED network in 1986.
During the late 1980s and 1990s Asher became involved in animation as a partner in the San Francisco-based production house Pictures, most notably as creator, executive producer and creative director of the animation showcase Liquid Television, which was first broadcast in 1991 on MTV. "We're not interested in boring TV," Asher told the Los Angeles Times soon after its première on 2 June that year; "it's zap-free TV. If you're not liking something you're watching, wait two minutes and you'll see something else... Wait till you see Madonna doing Express Yourself." He elaborated on this in an interview with Entertainment Weekly: "It's part fun house, part laboratory experiment. It's a mix of dozens of different animation styles. There's never been a TV show quite like it before."
Liquid Television was described by Los Angeles Times reporter Lauren Litpon as "state-of-the-art animation... unlike anything else television has to offer". It crammed about 15 unrelated, mostly animated segments into each half-hour slot at a vastly accelerated pace, linking them together with yet more animation. Violently and deliberately different from the rest of the TV schedule, it was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards during its four-year run, winning one, and included as one of its cartoons Æon Flux, directed by Peter Chung with Asher as an executive producer and writer. Æon Flux became a standalone series in 1992 and ran until 1995. Asher appeared as a voice actor on each of these shows, writing and performing the recurring "Psychogram" skit on Liquid Television and voicing the character "Clavius" in an episode of Æon Flux.
Despite the success of both Liquid Television and Æon Flux, Asher later came in for criticism from Mike Judge, the creator of Beavis and Butt-head, a successful animated programme initially featured on Liquid Television. Judge was being interviewed by the British magazine loaded in 1997 when the subject turned to the dislike of anything British by the title characters of Beavis and Butt-head. "You know," Judge said, "This just now occurred to me. There was this guy called Japhet Asher who was sort of in charge of Liquid Television.... He struck me as one of these British people who come over here and people think they're smart just because they have a British accent.... He would say things like, 'A bit of criticism, if I may, Mike.' I wonder if a lot of that is just down to him."
Asher left in November 1995 when he was appointed executive vice-president of programming at the newly set-up Tele-TV network, a joint venture by the Bell Atlantic, NYNEX and Pacific Telesis telephone companies to provide interactive television, video on demand and internet to customers through their copper phone wires, aiming ultimately to compete with cable and satellite providers. Asher was placed in charge of producing original programming for the service, an "unenviable task", said Tele-TV chairman-CEO Howard Stringer. However, Tele-TV failed in 1997 because of conflicts between the partner phone companies and technical difficulties regarding national co-ordination and distribution. Following this, Asher wrote for the MTV animated series Downtown in 1999 and edited stories for during the same year. He wrote for the computer-animated series Pet Alien in 2005 and for the documentary film Koryo Saram – the Unreliable People two years later. Having relocated back to England, he joined the BBC in the late 2000s as the executive producer for interactive at CBBC, the organisation's children's strand. With Asher working as one of its executive producers, the CBBC show Big Babies was nominated for a British Academy of Film and Television Arts Children's Award in 2010 as one of the best comedies.

Filmography

TitleYearType of mediaRoleAwards and nominationsDirector
Peace on Borrowed Time1983TV filmProducer
writer
Being Homosexual1984TV documentaryProducer
writer
Soldiers in Hiding1985Documentary feature filmProducer
writer
Nominated for 1985 Academy Award
Trouble on Big Mountain1986TV documentaryDirector
The West: Back to the Future1987TV documentaryWriterWon 1987 CINE Golden Eagle Award
The Serpent and the Rainbow1988Feature filmVisual effects producer
The Completely Mental Misadventures of Ed Grimley1988TV animated seriesProduction unit: PicturesVarious
Betty Boop's Hollywood Mystery1989Animated short filmExecutive producer
Brenda Starr1989Feature filmVisual effects producer
Liquid Television1991 to
1994
TV seriesCreator
executive producer
Creative director
writer
voice actor
Won 1992 Primetime Emmy Award

Nominated for 1993 Primetime Emmy Award

Ed Bell
'1991TV animated seriesExecutive producerVarious
The Wish That Changed Christmas1991TV animated shortExecutive producer
1992 to
1995
TV animated seriesExecutive producer
writer
voice actor
Downtown1999TV animated seriesWriterVarious
'1999TV animated seriesStory editorVarious
Pet Alien2005TV animated seriesWriterVarious
Koryo Saram – the Unreliable People2007Documentary feature filmWriter
Matt Dibble
Big Babies2010TV seriesExecutive producerNominated for 2010 BAFTA Children's Award

Footnotes