No hook up necessary...
Spinning head antic...





The end.Barq's Root Beer Is Good For The Ear
Like I said in the last post, no time for hookups in a 5 second spot. Just enough time for an elaborate plot.
George offers the inhabitant of the ear some of its own root beer.
The obvious punch line for pouring Barq's Root Beer into an idiot's ear is to have a hot dog come out.
I added the twist of having the hotdog have mustard on it so the joke wouldn't be so routine.
Another live action "realistic" expression in the midst of the stupidest gags I could come up with.

George marvels at the magic ear dirt puffs. I wonder what they are constituted of?
more to come...the resolution of the plot...

You can get a lot more meaning, feeling and power by controlling the drawings that are on the way to the moments you absorb consciously.
I found this out by studying Rod Scribner's animation and live action frame by frame.
This part of a comercial for Barq's Root Beer was only 5 seconds long and I wanted to get a lot of stuff crammed into it. That meant no pauses or hookups, less antics or at least shorter ones, so this became an experiment in making things read fast. No drawings could be wasted.







Here's one of her early bands, The Shitbirds.
I wonder why so many animators are also musically talented.
Human expressions are generally a lot more specific and interesting than animated expressions.
Watch Norton's face crawl around and do all kinds of extra things that the script doesn't require, but add extra life to the story.
This is very hard to do, if not impossible in animation. A lot of these expressions can't be translated well in line; they need the subtle shadows and shapes made by the many muscles in his face.
If we want to compete with this specificity, we have to be more exaggerated in our accents, but we can do very subtle expressions in between the accents as you can see in the Barq's frames above.
You can't compete at all with this kind of acting if you are habituated to approved animation stock expressions - no matter how smooth the action is. 
Plus it's a lot more fun to customize specific expressions to your characters and story. Of course for some mysterious reason most studios won't allow it. They all say they wanna compete with live action, but no way in Hell will they actually let you do what's required.

You can really see how much subtlety is in Art Carney's acting when you watch the clip of one simple line of dialogue. A Hell of a lot of stuff happening for just one script sentence!