An uncensored edition of the series, containing nudity, was available for paid download at, while a censored edition was freely available. Five more episodes followed, one released every subsequent Wednesday until October 17, 2012. The first three episodes of Hunting Season were released online on Wednesday, September 12, 2012.
Marcus financed the first season himself with "very, very little money", and a 2013 Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign to finance season 2 of the series raised $151,406. Hunting Season is set and filmed in New York City. Marcus enlisted Adam Baran, and the two began adapting the blog into scripts, while also fleshing out certain characters and expanding the concept to both appeal to a wider audience and to avoid stereotypes. He revisited the project in 2010 as he noticed the increased popularity and accessibility of online programming. Marcus shelved the idea for a few years when he found that "no one in the business wanted to make the show I wanted to make". Alex just flings open a second closet door that I think a lot of gay men have about being sexually active. A lot more sex than I had, certainly, but I really identified with him and sort of felt great about the fact that he could just reach out and celebrate it and make it okay. People don’t like to talk about it, and here was Alex writing gleefully about all the sex he was having. But I think that there’s real shame that accompanies that period for a lot of people. We all went through this period in our twenties of, you know, being quite taken with the complete availability of hot single gay men in New York. A lot of people that I know are like that, and certainly I had a phase like this. I thought that there was something about the way that he was so unabashed and shameless about his sex life. I thought he was as smutty, but he was also really funny and really smart.
Marcus said in a 2012 AfterElton interview: He contacted the anonymous writer of the blog and optioned it for development as a series. Noting the popularity of the racy gay drama series Queer as Folk (2000–05) on Showtime, Marcus thought one of these networks would be interested in a show about single gay men in New York.
It was really hot, it was really fun and it reminded us all of being in New York, which I had been in my 20s and it was just addictive." During the period of the blog's run, three cable TV networks directed at LGBT viewers had been launched: Q, Here! and Logo. A fan of the blog as it was being published, Marcus told Next Magazine in 2012, "My friends all passed it around. The story is inspired by and largely based on the 2005–08 blog The Great Cock Hunt and the 2008 novel of the same name published by Kensington Books. I think the time is right now for audiences to be able to do that through the Web, and to support an entertainment economy that takes risks and tells original stories. It reminded me of the ‘90s, when I started my career in indie film when you could see filmmakers like Todd Haynes, Eddie Burns, Spike Lee, and Ang Lee telling unique stories with characters who hadn’t been given screen time before and when there was a reliable audience who would show up to financially support them. Has the industry completely lost confidence in its own ability to come up with new ideas? The world of the Web was exciting to me. Show after show in development at American networks is a remake of something that was on the air first in another country. The series's theme music was composed by Jake Monaco.Įpisodes Season 1 (2012) No.Ĭreator Jon Marcus was inspired to produce his own web series after watching The Guild (2007–2013) and later Web Therapy (2008–2014). Season two, funded by a 2013 Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign that raised $151,406, premiered in May 2015 and consisted of four longer episodes. Season one premiered in September 2012 with eight short-format webisodes.
Following the romantic and sexual exploits of Alex (Ben Baur) and his small group of friends in New York City, the story was inspired by and largely based on the 2005–08 blog The Great Cock Hunt and the 2008 novel of the same name published by Kensington Books.
Hunting Season is an American LGBT-themed comedy-drama web series created by Jon Marcus.