Y: The Last Man: Eliza Clark s Post Will Bring Smiles to Many Faces
Posted on
Brian K. Vaughan and
Pia Guerra s comic book series
Y: The Last Man. But with the series set to hit the streaming service on September 13 and a teaser already out there, Clark and producer
Mari Jo Winkler were able to post the news that we know brought a smile to a large number of people who banded together to get the job done through some difficult conditions. Yup, that s right. Today s the final day of filming.
Image: Screencap Happy Last Swab. Last day of shooting Y: THE LAST MAN. 135 days of shooting in a pandemic. Streaming September 13th FX on Hulu, Winkler wrote in an Instagram post, also showing off the Y: THE LAST SWAB on-set sticker logos for the unsung heroes of many productions over the past year:
Y: The Last Man Wraps E08; Title, Director & Writer Details Shared bleedingcool.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bleedingcool.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Illustration by Violet Reed
While plastic waste explodes amid the pandemic, remote work has reduced greenhouse gas emissions and many companies are embracing such practices as paperless call sheets and battery generators.
For the past decade, sustainability in Hollywood has revolved around a handful of environmental pillars: reducing waste, conserving energy, curbing the carbon footprint and donating leftover food and goods. Then came COVID-19. So many of the advances that we ve had especially around craft services have just been shattered, says Environmental Media Association CEO Debbie Levin, who has worked with studios on their green practices since 2003. The pandemic has overturned what once was considered de rigueur for many film and TV productions: Sets are axing reusable water bottles and going back to single-use; shifting buffet-style craft services tables to individual meals wrapped in plastic; restricting food and clothing donations because of possible contamina