List of 24 media
The critical and popular success of the Fox television series 24 has led to the series being extended into other arenas, primarily media specifically created for mobile devices and the internet. In addition, the series has spawned video and board games, toys, soundtracks from both the series and the video game, and a number of original novels inspired by the series. There have been games (video and non-video), books, paperback novels, graphic novels, comics, action figures, trading cards and even an energy drink based on the show. 24 has even had its own bi-monthly official magazine that lasted for two years.
Mobile media
24: Conspiracy
24: Conspiracy is a low budget, cellphone-only spin-off of 24 set in Washington, D.C. It spans 24 one-minute episodes and takes place during Day 4, as indicated by a reference to the Heller kidnapping happening that day. It does not take place in real time. All of the episodes were released together as a special for the season 4 DVD boxset.
Online media
The Rookie
The Rookie, formerly named The Rookie CTU, is a series of online webisodes set at CTU in Los Angeles. It is made by many of the same crew members that make the 24 TV show. The Rookie utilizes the same CTU set as the series, and uses many of the same production elements, such as graphics, editing techniques, and music, giving it an "authentic" look and feel. One exception, however, is that it does not take place in real time. Unilever's Degree Men antiperspirant is a sponsor of "The Rookie" series.
The stories revolve around rookie CTU agent, Jason Blaine (played by Jeremy Ray Valdez), with appearances by Video Surveillance Manager Angie Lawson and CTU Deputy Director Alton Maxwell. In the first season, "Coffee Run", consisting of three parts, Blaine witnesses a bank robbery in progress during his coffee run. Without a gun, Blaine enters the bank in an attempt to stop the robbery. The second season, "Mistaken Identity", finds Blaine hand-delivering a Blackberry to his boss in his boss' car. He receives a call from Russian terrorists who believe Blaine is his boss. A third season, "Extraction", contains six parts and focuses on Blaine having to rescue Alton Maxwell from a drug smuggler named Esteban Salazar.
24: Day Zero
24: Day Zero is a series of online animated webisodes set at CTU in Los Angeles. It is a prequel series, focusing on Jack Bauer's first 18 months at CTU. The series debuted on May 21, 2007, following the airing of the Season 6 finale. As with "The Rookie", Degree Men is a sponsor of the "Day Zero" series.
24: Day 6 Debrief
24: Day 6 Debrief is a series of two-minute online webisodes starring Kiefer Sutherland and is set 35 hours after the events of Season 6. Available exclusively to American Express cardholders, the series explains what happened to Jack Bauer in China and set up the events of Season 7. It is in the Season 6 DVD's special features.[1] Like 24: Day Zero, this series also debuted on May 21, 2007 after the airing of the Season 6 finale. American Express is a sponsor of this series and hosted the webisodes on a special page of the Fox website.
Soundtracks
Various soundtracks have been created for the show, and its properties. The most notable is 24: The Soundtrack which contains nineteen tracks of music composed exclusively for the first three seasons by 24's multi-Emmy award winning composer Sean Callery, including the show's full
Books
24: The House Special Subcommittee's Findings at CTU written by Marc Cerasini, was a guide to the first season, as written by an in-universe journalist by the same name. The book contained Jack Bauer's grand jury testimony as well as character profiles and autopsy reports.
Titan Books published 24: The Official Companion Seasons 1 & 2 in 2006 in the US and UK. The second volume, 24: The Official Companion Seasons 3 & 4, was released in the UK in February 2007, and released in the US in May 2007. 24: The Official Companion Season 5 was released in November 2007. 24: The Official Companion Guide Season 6 was released with a bonus DVD in January 2008. All the guides are written by Tara DiLullo Bennett. These are quite popular among fans of the show, due to their accuracy and the fact that they are considered 'official' merchandise.
In 2003, an unofficial guide to season 1 of 24 was released, written by Jim Sangster. Later that year, Mark Wright published an unofficial guide to season 2 of 24, and Keith Topping published A Day in the Life: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to 24.
Paperback novels have also been published by Harper Entertainment under the title 24: Declassified. They are:
- ISBN 978-0-06-084224-6)
- Veto Power, by ISBN 978-0-06-084225-3)
- Trojan Horse, by Marc Cerasini, released on January 31, 2006 (ISBN 978-0-06-084226-0)
- Cat's Claw, by John Whitman, released on December 26, 2006 (ISBN 978-0-06-084227-7)
- Vanishing Point, by Marc Cerasini, released on February 27, 2007 (ISBN 978-0-06-084228-4)
- Chaos Theory, by John Whitman, released on May 29, 2007 (ISBN 978-0-06-084229-1)
- Storm Force, by David Jacobs, released on December 26, 2007 (ISBN 978-0-06-137884-3)
- Collateral Damage, by Marc Cerasini, released on February 26, 2008 (ISBN 978-0-06-143118-0)
- Trinity, by John Whitman, released on April 29, 2008 (ISBN 978-0-06-143119-7)
- Head Shot, by David Jacobs, released on April 28, 2009 (ISBN 978-0-06177152-1)
- Death Angel, by David Jacobs, released on April 27, 2010 (ISBN 978-0-06-177153-8)
- Deadline, by James Swallow, released on August 5, 2014 (ISBN 978-0-7653-7790-6)
- Rogue, by David Mack, released on September 8, 2015 (ISBN 978-0-7653-7792-0)
- Trial by Fire, by ISBN 978-0-7653-7794-4)
These titles are also available as Amazon Kindle editions.
Other titles include:
- 24: The Ultimate Guide, written by Michael Goldman featuring information about the first six seasons. This is considered by most fans as the 'definitive' book about 24. Fans have given it the nickname 'The 24 Encyclopedia' due to its all-inclusive information about the character detail, weapons, sets, vehicles, props, detailed season by season documentation, all full-color photographs, and the fact that the foreword was written by Co-Creator/Executive Producer Joel Surnow.
- 24: Behind the Scenes, featuring behind the scenes photographs and pictures. This is another stand-out volume, as the photoswere taken by Jon Cassar, 24 Co-Executive Producer/Director. Cassar also wrote the text, as well. A bonus DVD also is included.
- 24: The Counter Terrorist Unit Handbook, featuring a manual of how CTU works and their policies and procedures. It includes pictures from the first six seasons.
- 24 and Philosophy: The World According to Jack, published as part of The Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series.
- The Tao of Jack Bauer: What Our Favorite Terrorist Buster Says About Life, Love, Torture, and Saving the World 24 Times in 24 Hours With No Lunch Break, a study of Jack Bauer's influence in society.
- Secrets of 24: The Unauthorized Guide to the Political & Moral Issues Behind TV's Most Riveting Drama, which collects interviews and essays to pursue real issues of relevance to our times.
- Jack Bauer for President: Terrorism and Politics in 24, another collection of essays.
- Reading 24: TV against the Clock, a scholarly work of critical discussions of the series from many different perspectives.
- Jack Bauer's Having a Bad Day: An Unauthorized Investigation of Faith in 24: Season 1, which uses each episode to help illustrate a spiritual concept.
- Counterterrorism and Cybersecurity: Total Information Awareness (Second Edition), a scholarly book which examines U.S. counterterrorism history, technologies, and strategies from a thought-provoking approach that includes the make-believe of Hollywood such as 24, Homeland, and The Americans TV series.[3]
Magazine
"24: The Official Magazine" was a bi-monthly
Comics
Five
Games
24: The Game
24: The Game is a
24: DVD Board Game
There is a tabletop board game published by Pressman Toys, released in August 2006, based on the TV series. Rather than playing characters from the TV series, each player takes on the role of a CTU agent and the accompanying DVD is used to initiate the plot with a terrorist act, then passes threads to the players regarding the full plans of the terrorists, some of which may be useful and others that simply lead nowhere. The winner is the first person to identify and stop a terrorist threat. The DVD also acts as a timer to simulate the "real time" flow of the game. Reviews on websites such as amazon.com [7] indicate that it is almost universally disliked.
24: Mobile
There was a 24 game for cell phones released in Feb. 2006 from www.iplay.com
24: Agent Down
There was a 2nd game for cell phones released in Nov. 2006 from www.iplay.com
24: Trading Card Game
Designers | Jason Winter and Trevor McGregor |
---|---|
Publishers | Press Pass, Inc. |
Players | 2 |
Playing time | Approx 20 min. |
Chance | Some |
Age range | 10+ |
Skills | Card playing Arithmetic Basic Reading Ability |
24: TCG was a trading card game published by Press Pass, Inc. in which 2 players each play a deck of 24 cards made from characters and events from the television show. Players choose to build their deck as either containing CTU characters or Insurgent characters and play against an opponent, going on missions to attempt to score 24 points. The game had a preview release in August 2007 and released its First Edition in September 2007.[8]
Other board games
USAOpoly released a variant of the game Clue based on 24. Briarpatch has released two 24 original board games, Countdown and CTU: Undercover.
24 toys
- Hasbro GI Joe
- 2008 - CTU Special Agent Jack Bauer - A Real American Hero
- Diamond Select Toys – released 1/6 scale figures based on Jack Bauer
- 2008 – Jack Bauer 8:00 AM
- 2009 – Jack Bauer 3:00 PM (Season 1)
- 2009 – Jack Bauer 9:00 PM (Season 1)
- Diamond Select Toys – released 1/24 scale Minimates based on 24
- 2007 – Season 1 Box Set (Jack Bauer, Nina Myers, David Palmer, Kim Bauer)
- 2007 – End of Day 1 Two-Pack, PX Exclusive (Jack Bauer, Andre Drazen)
- 2007 – Season 2 Box Set (Season 2: Jack Bauer, Tony Almeda, Michelle Dessler, George Mason)
- 2007 – End of Day 2 Two-Pack, Suncoast/FYE Exclusive (Stretcher Jack Bauer, Prisoner Nina Myers)
- Cancelled – Season 3 Box Set (Undercover Jack Bauer, Sherry Palmer, Chloe O'Brien, Chase Edmunds)
- Cancelled – End of Day 3 Two-Pack (Jack Bauer, Stephen Saunders)
- Enterbay – released 1/6 scale figures based on 24
- 2009 – Jack Bauer
- 2009 – President David Palmer
- McFarlane Toys – released 1/12 scale figures based on Jack Bauer
- 2007 – Jack Bauer Boxed Set 1
- 2007 – Jack Bauer Boxed Set 2
- Medicom Toy Japan – released 1/6 scale figures based on Jack Bauer in their Real Action Heroes line
- 2005 – Jack Bauer (Suit) 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM (Season 4)
- 2005 – Jack Bauer (Tac) 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM (Season 4)
- 2007 – Jack Bauer (Season 5)
Attraction
On August 4, 2007, a 24-themed Interactive game attraction was opened in
Parodies
24's enormous popularity also led the series' format to be parodied in more than one occasion, most prominently in
The clock and split-screen style in 24 has also been parodied in the anime
CollegeHumor created a parody of 24 known as 24: The Unaired 1994 Pilot. In the short film, Jack Bauer dons a long scruffy hairdo and has to go back and forth to use a telephone booth (due to lack of wireless technology) to call CTU for objectives, as he tries to stop a bomb.
Late Night with Conan O'Brien had a 24 spoof segment called 60, where instead of 24's 1 hour episodes, episodes of 60 only lasted one second of a one-minute season. It would take numerous episodes to show a cell phone conversation, including one episode just showing the main character closing his phone.
The 2010 Albuquerque 48 Hour Film Project featured a short parody of 24 called Jane Backer: Dental Billing Assistant—complete with a female Jack Bauer who tortures an uncooperative dental patient. The film won multiple awards.[9]
A parody of Homo Zapping News features Jeanne Claude having 24 hours to know who is the AOPA
In "The Job", an episode of The Office, Dwight Schrute says when asked to pick his assistant, "My ideal choice? Jack Bauer. But he is unavailable, fictional, and overqualified."
During an episode of My Name Is Earl, Earl and Randy are strapped to a ticking bomb. Not only do the ticks sound extremely similar to the ticking of the clock in 24, but the scene eventually becomes splitscreen, with each tick adding a subsequent image to the screen, exactly like 24.
The series is also parodied in Grand Theft Auto IV as 72, where the series' main character targets "every person of color" before they carry out terrorist attacks by staying up for three days straight.
On
On the 2009 version of The Electric Company, there are recurring sketches called ":24" featuring a blue dog named "Jack Bowser" who speaks in the same deep voice as Jack Bauer.[10][11][12]
The Canadian television series Corner Gas season 5 episode "Final Countdown" parodies the clock in one instance. The episode also has a cameo appearance by Kiefer Sutherland.
The split-screen effect from the show was once used in Simple Plan's music video for "Don't Wanna Think About You", featured on the Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed soundtrack.
In the RPG
Soft drink
In late-2007, stores in the UK started selling an energy drink using the 24 insignia and branding.[13] The drink is produced in regular and diet versions.[14]
References
- ^ 24: Season Six on DVD December 4th Archived 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Play.com (UK) : Sean Callery (Soundtrack) - 24 (Twenty Four) Seasons 4 & 5 : CD - Free Delivery
- ISBN 978-3319172439.
- ISBN 978-1600100895.
- ^ "24: Nightfall". IDW Publishing. Archived from the original on 5 March 2010. Retrieved 7 March 2010.
- ^ "All-New 24 Comic Book Gives Fans Their Jack Bauer Fix". Newsarama.com. Archived from the original on 2009-02-14. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
- ^ "Customer Reviews: 24 DVD Board Game". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
- ^ Gaming Cards Archived 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "48 Hour Film Project Awards". 48 Hour Film Project. August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- ^ "THE ELECTRIC COMPANY: 24: Candy Corn". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
- ^ "THE ELECTRIC COMPANY: 24: Popcorn". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
- ^ "THE ELECTRIC COMPANY: 24: Sprinkles". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2010-09-02.
- ^ Loveday, Samantha (24 September 2007). "Energy boost for 24 fans". licensing.biz. Retrieved 7 March 2010.
- ^ "Fox Offers First Branded Drink". License! Global. 25 September 2007. Retrieved 7 March 2010.