Warning: animation wonk post ahead…
In animation, camera placement/movement and much of cinematography is traditionally handled by a department called Layout. The title comes from the old Disney days when they would lay out the 2D backgrounds and the characters/props in the transition from storyboards to final shots. But in the world of CG animation, the term is confusing. The job is analogous to a live-action camera department: you’re picking lenses, designing shots in a virtual space. Many talented young tech-savvy filmmakers or cinematographers might like the opportunity to work on the camera team of an animated film and get experience telling story with camera, but don’t even know the job exists - and the term “Layout” isn’t helping: it sounds like you’re doing spreadsheets or something, not essential creative work.
Because of this, on Spider-Verse, we have changed the name to the Camera Department. I encourage other films and studios to do the same. It’s more respectful of the talented people who do this work and lets them say to their friends that they’re part of the camera team on a movie rather than the layout team, which means nothing to an outsider.
A user named Leoiscool on the wiki server discovered a snippet of a storyboard animatic for a seemingly unreleased or scrapped episode of Gumball on @JamieIles 's Blog, alongside two other Season 7 ones.
Possibly from the unaccounted for GB713 or GB721?
@desatle@gumballtakes In an interview from Luca Comics and Games 2025. Privated now (likely cause Ben swore a few times in it) but I have a clip of that section here
https://t.co/kkgZimqLl0
@Valha28 It was from a video of animation tests all done by Gaëlle Thierry which use to be up on YouTube before it got taken down days later. A few details from these clips were different compared to the final versions.
also the song from The Slap initially had some different lyrics