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Nickelodeon USA's January 2020 Premiere Highlights

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Below are Nickelodeon USA's currently announced January 2020 premiere highlights for Nick, Nicktoons, Nick Jr., Nick at Nite and TeenNick:


Latest Update: 12/29(Check back regularly for the latest updates!)

Channel selector:Nickelodeon | Nicktoons | Nick Jr. on Nickelodeon | TeenNick | Nick@Nite | Nick Jr. | TV Land | Nickelodeon on Pluto TV

All times ET/PT

Schedules are always subject to change without notice.

Shareable URL:http://po.st/jan20onnick

Have I missed anything out? Let me know in the comments below or on Twitter!

NEW:Join the NickALive! Discord channel (beta)!

Check out Nickelodeon USA's December 2019 highlights at http://po.st/dec19onnick!

Find out what's coming up on Nickelodeon here!:http://po.st/2020OnNick

Nickelodeon


SpongeBob Appreciation Day: Patchy’s Beach Bash!

Premiering: Saturday, January 4, 2020 at 11:00 a.m. (#892)


A shipwreck survivor washes up on Bikini Atoll, the island above Bikini Bottom to celebrate SpongeBob Appreciation Day! Hosted by Patchy with special appearances by Meghan Trainor, Anthony Davis, Jon Heder, and Rob Riggle. It'll also count down fan-voted SpongeBob moments.

The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage!

Airing: Saturday, January 4, 2020 at 7 p.m.

Following a critically lauded run on Broadway, Nickelodeon reunited members of the original award-winning Broadway company of The SpongeBob Musical for The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage! And now you can sing-along with the The SpongeBob Musical: Live on Stage! Sing-A-Long special, premiering Saturday, January 4, 2020 at 7 p.m.!

Joining the cast is veteran SpongeBob SquarePants voice actor Tom Kenny as “Patchy the Pirate,” performing the original Sara Bareilles song “Poor Pirates.” The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage! was filmed for television in front of a live theater audience, capturing all-new depths of theatrical innovation, where the power of optimism really can save the world.

The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage! cast includes Ethan Slater as SpongeBob SquarePants, Gavin Lee as Squidward Q. Tentacles, Danny Skinner as Patrick Star, Brian Ray Norris as Eugene Krabs, Wesley Taylor as Sheldon Plankton, Christina Sajous as Sandy Cheeks and Tom Kenny as ‘Patchy the Pirate’. The ensemble will include Kyle Hamilton, Katie Lee Hill, Curtis Holbrook, Jesse JP Johnson, L’ogan J’ones, Jai’len Josey, Kelvin Moon Loh, Lauralyn McClelland, Vasthy Mompoint, Bryonha Marie Parham, Oneika Phillips, Jon Rua, JC Schuster, Abby C. Smith, Robert Taylor Jr., and Allan Washington.

Henry Danger - The Final Season


Saturday, January 11, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. - Mr. Nice Guy: (#531)

Saturday, January 18, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. - Theranos Boot: (#532)

Saturday, January 25, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. - Rumblr: (#533)

All That


Saturday, January 18, 2020 at 8:30 p.m. - 1114: (#1114)

Saturday, January 25, 2020 at 8:30 p.m. - 1115: (#1115)

SpongeBob SquarePants


Saturday, January 18, 2020 at 11:00 a.m. - Escape from Glove World: (#266)

The Casagrandes


Saturday, January 11, 2020 at 8:30 p.m. - Finders Weepers; Stress Test: Ronnie and Sid have to decide whether they should borrow money from a lost coin purse they found in the mercado. (#105B; #106A)

Monday, January 20, 2020 at 1:00 p.m. - Operation Dad: (#107)

Monday, January 27, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - How to Train Your Carl: (#106B)

Tuesday, January 28, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - Flea Market: (#108A)

Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - Copy Can't: (#108B)

The Loud House


Saturday, January 25, 2020 at 11:00 a.m. - Exchange of Heart; Community Disservice: (#415)

America’s Most Musical Family


Friday, January 3, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - Finals, Part 1: Six family bands perform, but only five will move on to the next round. (#109)

Friday, January 10, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - Finals, Part 2: Five family bands perform, but only four will move on to the next round, featuring special guest mentor Pete Wentz. (#110)

Friday, January 17, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - Finals, Part 3: (#111)

Friday, January 17, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. - Finale: (#112)

It's Pony - New Show


Premieres: Saturday, January 18, 2020 at 11:30 a.m.

Life is more exciting, fun, and unpredictable with a pony, as seen in Nickelodeon’s new original animated series It’s Pony, premiering Saturday, Jan. 18. The 20-episode series follows the comedic adventures of Annie and her best friend, who just so happens to be an enthusiastic, unpredictable, and carefree pony. Following its premiere, It’s Pony will continue to air Saturdays on Nickelodeon and will air internationally in April 2020.

The series stars Jessica DiCicco (Adventure Time) as Annie, an optimistic and determined farm girl living in the city with her family and best friend Pony; Josh Zuckerman (Strange Angel) as Pony, who is naïve and impulsive, but loves Annie more than anything; Abe Benrubi (E.R.) as Dad, who treats Pony as a nuisance, but recognizes the special bond he shares with Annie; and India de Beaufort (All Hail King Julien) as Mom, who loves Annie and Pony’s relationship and always has a new project in the works.

Additional cast members bringing characters to life include: Kal Penn (Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle) as Annie’s friend Fred; Bobby Moynihan (Saturday Night Live) as Annie’s friend Brian; Rosario Dawson (Rent) as Annie’s school principal Ms. Ramiro; Mark Feuerstein (Royal Pains) as the landlord Mr. Pancks; Megan Hilty (Smash) as the too-obsessed-with-Pony friend Beatrice; Yvette Nicole Brown (Drake & Josh) as Mrs. Dunscomb; Grey Griffin (Fairly OddParents, Danny Phantom, The Loud House) as Henrietta; John DiMaggio (Sanjay and Craig, The Loud House, Futurama, Adventure Time) as Dave the Sewer Worker and Tomatopalooza Judge; and Dee Bradley Baker (SpongeBob SquarePants, Legends of the Hidden Temple, Avatar: The Last Airbender) as Dog.

Throughout the season, the series will explore the everyday life and hijinks of two best friends whose optimism and enthusiasm turn any situation from ordinary to extraordinary. Whether making an epic quest down the street to mail a letter, heroically saving the local playground with a bake sale, or simply getting a haircut, Pony and Annie always stick together because life is better as a pair.

Created by Ant Blades, It’s Pony is inspired by a short from Nickelodeon’s 2015 International Animated Shorts Program. A pre-released episode will be available starting Wednesday, Dec. 25 on the Nick App, Nick On Demand, and YouTube.

Saturday, January 18, 2020 at 11:30 a.m. - Nosy Pony; Beatrice: (#102; series premiere)

Saturday, January 25, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. - Plants!; Unicorn: (#101A; #103B) Note: Nickelodeon digitally premiered "Plants!" on YouTube.

The Crystal Maze - New Game Show


Premieres: Friday, January 24, at 7:00 p.m.

Comedian/writer Adam Conover is the new host of Nickelodeon’s upcoming family game show, The Crystal Maze, an all-new version of the legendary UK hit series, premiering Friday, Jan. 24, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT). The Crystal Maze will feature Conover as the Maze Master, charged with guiding one family team through physical and mental challenges set within an elaborate labyrinth of four giant and immersive themed zones: Aztec, Eastern, Futuristic and Industrial.

The premiere episode of The Crystal Maze will feature a family from Houston, Texas, tackling a range of challenges in the maze for the first time ever for U.S. audiences. This season will feature families from: Scottsdale, Ariz; Lake Forest, Calif; Eastvale, Calif ; St. Augustine, Fla; Windemere, Fla; Chester, Va; Germantown, Tenn; Carollton, Texas; and Wheaton, Ill.

In each episode, the youngest family member takes on the role of team Captain. The successful completion of escape-room style challenges are rewarded with a “time crystal” granting the family five seconds in the centerpiece final zone called the Crystal Dome. The more crystals gathered throughout the game, the more time each family has for a dramatic clock countdown challenge inside the iconic Dome for a chance to win up to $25,000.

A current ratings smash in the UK, The Crystal Maze has been a beloved family and cult favorite since the mid ‘90s, with the current global popularity of the escape room phenomena reigniting interest further. The show was recently rebooted to great success with celebrity, charity and family seasons in UK, Australia and beyond.

Production on the new series (10 one-hour episodes) took place on the show's original set located at The Bottle Yard Studios in Bristol, England, earlier this summer.

Devised by Jacques Antoine, the UK version of The Crystal Maze was originally hosted by Richard O'Brien (Rocky Horror), followed by Ed Tudor-Pole. The reboot was originally presented by Stephen Merchant (for Stand Up To Cancer), and currently by Richard Ayoade (The IT Crowd, Travel Man) with his "hand." The show's theme song is the legendary "Force Field", below. The show is currently filmed at The Bottle Yard Studios in Bristol.

Friday, January 24, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - The Walls Are Closing In!: (#101; series premiere)

Friday, January 31, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. - Swing It Like a Boss!: (#107)

ALVINNN!!! and The Chipmunks


Sunday, January 5, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. - Bloodline: Alvin wants Dave to take a DNA test to see if he's related to a famous explorer or king, but the results are much scarier. (#401B)

Sunday, January 12, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. - Between a Rope and a Hard Place:

Sunday, January 19, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. - World Day: (#415B)

Sunday, January 26, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. - Allergic Reaction: (#416A)

LEGO Jurassic World: Legend of Isla Nublar


Sunday, January 5, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. - Spit Take!: A Dilophosaurus runs loose in the park's hotel; Owen and Claire must find it before the guests notice and before Vic's dino-hunting security team can damage the hotel and the guests. (#106)

Sunday, January 12, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. - A Fish Story: Vic, Owen and Sinjin find themselves in the middle of a massive dino-fight in the old Jurassic Park Visitor Center. (#107)

Sunday, January 19, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. - Blown Away!: It's déjà vu for Alan Grant as he returns to Isla Nublar and winds up stranded in the jungle during a dangerous storm with injured Simon and hero-worshipping Owen. (#108)

Sunday, January 26, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. - The Haunted and the Hunted!: Something mysterious lurking the jungle wrecks a construction site, and Hudson is convinced a ghost is responsible... but it might be something even more surprising. (#109)

Upcoming episodes:

To the Extreme!: Danny releases an energy drink into the dinosaurs' water supply, making them extra energetic and extra dangerous.

Symptoms: Owen falls prey to the toxin of a poisonous prehistoric jungle flower and believes he's a raptor.

Under the Volcano!: Danny dons powerful dino-mech armor to dig up Cap'n No-Beard's treasure beneath Mt. Sibo, making him more than a match for our heroes and a mighty allosaurus that unexpectedly joins the party.

The Monsters and the Mech!: Hudson desperately recruits powerful help to defeat Danny once and for all, in the form of the T-Rex.

Movies and Specials


TBA

Nick Jr. on Nickelodeon


The Adventures of Paddington - New Show



Preschoolers will journey across the pond to London for heartwarming adventures with beloved British bear Paddington in Nickelodeon’s brand-new CG-animated series The Adventures of Paddington. Premiering in the U.S. on Monday, Jan. 20, at 12:30 p.m. (ET/PT), The Adventures of Paddington (26 episodes) centers on a younger Paddington as he writes letters to Aunt Lucy celebrating the new things he has discovered through the day’s exciting activities. Following its U.S. launch, The Adventures of Paddington will roll out on the net’s international channels and branded blocks beginning March 2020.

The Adventures of Paddington is a Heyday Films and STUDIOCANAL production in association with Copyrights. Actor Ben Whishaw (Paddington 1 & 2) reprises his role as the voice of the title character, alongside new cast members Morwenna Banks, Bobby Beynon, Sheena Bhattessa, Darren Boyd, Noel Clarke, Phyllis Logan, Monica Lopera, Sabrina Newton-Fisher, David Schofield, Reece Shearsmith, Liz Sutherland-Lim and Jeremiah Waysome. The Adventures of Paddington will also feature a brand-new theme song “Paddington Bear” written and performed by one of Britain's most successful musicians, Gary Barlow (Take That).

Following the series premiere of The Adventures of Paddington, NickJr.com and the Nick Jr. App will feature short-form content and full-length episodes in the U.S. Episodes will also be available on Nick Jr. On Demand and Download-To-Own services in the U.S.

The Adventures of Paddington is directed by Adam Shaw and Chris Drew of BlueZoo (Go Jetters, Digby Dragon, Miffy, Q Pootle 5), and developed for television and written by Jon Foster and James Lamont (The Amazing World of Gumball, Cuckoo, Paddington 1 & 2).

The series is executive produced by multi-award-winning David Heyman (producer of all eight of the Harry Potter films, Paddington 1 & 2) and Rosie Alison (Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, Paddington 1 & 2). The Adventures of Paddington is produced by Karen Davidsen (formerly with Disney and HIT Entertainment) and Simon Quinn (Isle of Dogs, Fantastic Mr. Fox), and co-produced by Rob Silva.

Monday, January 20, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. - Paddington Finds a Hobby; Paddington and the Stamp: Paddington doesn’t have a hobby, so Mrs. Brown helps him find out what he’s good at. Then, Paddington gets his arm stuck in a mailbox while sending a letter to Aunt Lucy. (series premiere; #106)

Tuesday, January 21, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Paddington and the Magic Trick; Paddington and Poor Mr. Curry: (#103)

Wednesday, January 22, 2020 at 12:15 p.m. - Paddington Makes Pancakes: (#102A)

Thursday, January 23, 2020 at 12:15 p.m. - Paddington Plays Football: (#102B)

Monday, January 27, 2020 at 12:15 p.m. - Paddington and the Treehouse: (#104A)

Tuesday, January 28, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Paddington and the Monster Hunt:

Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Paddington and the Painting: (#105A)

Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Paddington Finds Buried Treasure:

Ryan's Mystery Playdate


Monday, January 13, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Gliding Playdate: (#214A)

Tuesday, January 14, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Climbin' Playdate: (#214B)

Wednesday, January 15, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Daring Playdate: (#219A)

Thursday, January 16, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Sortin' Playdate: (#219B)

Bubble Guppies


Friday, January 3, 2020 at 9:30 a.m. - Ocean Patrol!: The Ocean Patrol tries to stop Windy Pete when he sails around the world and blasts tropical climates with snow. (#505)

Friday, January 17, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Rockin' Out: (#506)

PAW Patrol


Monday, January 20, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. - Mighty Pups, Charged Up: Mighty Pups Versus the Copycat: The Mighty Pups get charged up to take on new superbaddie the Copycat; it will take all-new powers and gear to take down their most formidable foe to date. (#621; special)

Monday, January 27, 2020 at 11:30 a.m. - Pups Save a Humsquatch; Pups Save a Far Flung Flying Disc: (#622)

Blue's Clues & You!


Friday, January 10, 2020 at 11:00 a.m. - Growing With Blue: Josh, Blue and their friends learn that everything grows in different ways like fruits, vegetables, people and Blue too; a game of Blue's Clues reveals what game Blue wants to play outside. (#110)

Blaze and the Monster Machines


Friday, January 31, 2020 at 12:00 p.m. - Deep Sea Grand Prix: (#510)

Nicktoons


SpongeBob SquarePants


Wednesday, January 1, 2020 at 12:00 a.m. - Boss for a Day: (TBC)

Wednesday, January 1, 2020 at 12:30 a.m. - My Two Krabses: (TBC)

Wednesday, January 1, 2020 at 3:15 a.m. - Pineapple RV: (TBC)

Wednesday, January 1, 2020 at 3:30 a.m. - Shell Games: (TBC)

Movies and Specials


TBA

Nick Jr. Channel


Shimmer and Shine


Sunday, January 5, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. - Ladybugs on the Loose; Zeta the Powerless: (#424)

Sunday, January 26, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. - : (#425)

Abby Hatcher


Sunday, January 19, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. - : (#120)

Butterbean's Café


Sunday, January 12, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. - Stella Sprinkles!; Fairy Fancy!: TBA (#201; season two premiere)

Sunday, February 2, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. - : (#202)

Ricky Zoom


Monday, January 13, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - Ramp It Up:

Tuesday, January 14, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - :

Wednesday, January 15, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - :

Thursday, January 16, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - :

Friday, January 17, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - :

Trulli Tales


Monday, January 6, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - False Alarm; : Copperpot invades the village. (#122; #123)

Tuesday, January 7, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - Coppercat; : Grandma tells Zip not to delay doing things; when he sees a strange cat looking like Copperpot he decides to tell his friends later. (#124; #125)

Wednesday, January 8, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - Treasure Omelet; : When Ring, Stella and Sun join a new student for the school omelette challenge, Zip becomes jealous. (#126; #127)

Thursday, January 9, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - Oscar's Nose; : Sun isn't happy when the children are forced to team up with Oscar; Mamie Trulli has a recipe with vanilla. (#128; #129)

Friday, January 10, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. - Sincere Stromboli; : When Grandma gives the kids the recipe for stromboli, Sun puts olives into it. (#130; #131)

TeenNick


TBA

Nick@Nite


Movies and Specials


TBA

TV Land


TBA

TV Land


TBA

Nickelodeon on Streaming Services


Nickelodeon on Pluto TV


Nick Pluto TV


Welcome to Nick Pluto TV where you can watch your favorite classic shows from SpongeBob SquarePants, Hey Arnold!, Legends of the Hidden Temple, All That, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Fairly OddParents, iCarly, Are You Afraid of the Dark, Rugrats, Doug, True Jackson, VP, Victorious and more! It’s all on Nick Pluto TV.

Nick Jr. Pluto TV


Welcome to Nick Jr. Pluto TV where you’ll find your preschooler’s favorite friends from classic Blue’s Clues, Dora the Explorer, Wallykazam, Robot and Monster, Wonder Pets!, Yo Gabba Gabba!, Teletubbies Classic, Max & Ruby, Go, Diego, Go!, The Fresh Beat Band, Kuu Kuu Harajuku and many more hit Nick Jr. Pluto TV shows.

More Nick:2020 on Nickelodeon USA | New Shows, Specials, Events, Movies, Episodes, and More!

Originally published: Saturday, December 21, 2019 at 23:16 GMT.

Credits:

Based on a list compiled by Anime Superhero Forum members; Sources: Zap2it TV Listings, TheFutonCritic.com; Additional sources: @TVShowsFan, @kancsn01, @RealMagitroopa.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon and News and Highlights!

Tfou (France) to Premiere 'Abby Hatcher' on Sunday 12th January 2020

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WHEN TROUBLE IS ON THE WAY, ONE LITTLE GIRL WILL SAVE THE DAY IN ABBY HATCHER, NICKELODEON’S BRAND-NEW ANIMATED PRESCHOOL SERIES PREMIERING JANUARY 2020 ON NICKELODEON FRANCE


Share it: #AbbyHatcher


Nickelodeon's brand-new animated preschool series, Abby Hatcher (created and produced by Spin Master Entertainment), tells the story of a little girl with a big heart who helps her friends, the amazing and quirky Fuzzly creatures, fix their mishaps, learn from their mistakes and negotiate their emotions. Launching on Sunday 12th January 2020 at 7h05 on TFOU, the kids’ programming strand of leading French commercial broadcaster TF1, Abby Hatcher (26 episodes) features a social-emotional curriculum highlighting empathy, compassion and problem-solving skills. Following launch, new episodes of Abby Hatcher will continue to air regularly on TFOU.

In Abby Hatcher, Abby is an eternally optimistic, kind-hearted seven-year-old girl who loves to lend a helping hand to others and accepts everyone--no matter how different they are. In Abby’s world, humans coexist with Fuzzlies, incredible creatures that each have their own unique abilities that make them special, and Abby’s parents’ hotel is home to many. Together with her best Fuzzly friend Bozzly, Abby goes on wild adventures to fix Fuzzly mishaps and help them in any way she can. Whenever a problem arises Abby and Bozzly always say, “Fuzzly trouble can’t delay, to the rescue, save the day!”


In the series premiere of Abby Hatcher, “When Abby Met Bozzly/Hair Flair Everywhere,” Abby meets the best friend of her dreams, a fuzzly named Bozzly, for the first time. Then, when the hotel’s salon owner Mrs. Melvin closes the salon for the day, Abby tries to help Harriet, a hair-obsessed Fuzzly, find a new hobby, when all she really wants is to style. In additional new episodes, Mo and Bo are mistaken for a snow monster, and, after taking a tumble, Otis suffers a fear of heights and becomes scared to use his elevator.


Abby Hatcher made its world debut on Nickelodeon in the U.S. on Tuesday, January 1, 2019, and will be rolling out on Nickelodeon’s international channels and branded blocks throughout 2019. The series also airs on TVO and Knowledge in Canada. Nickelodeon renewed Abby Hatcher for a 26-episode season two earlier this year.

Abby Hatcher is the ninth series from Spin Master Entertainment and follows on the success of PAW Patrol. The new series is overseen by executive producers Ronnen Harary and Laura Clunie.

Online at tf1.fr, parents and children can find out more about Abby Hatcher as well as watch a exclusive sneak peek.

From MYTF1:

NOUVELLE SÉRIE ANIMÉE « ABBY HATCHER » DÈS LE 12 JANVIER À 7H05

Venez suivre les aventures d’Abby Hatcher et de ses nouveaux amis, les Fuzzly !

Abby est une petite fille au grand cœur qui vit avec ses parents dans un hôtel. Mais pas n’importe quel hôtel, puisqu’il est habité par des Fuzzly, des créatures incroyables, douces comme des peluches, colorées comme un arc-en-ciel, espiègles comme des enfants !

L’un d’entre eux, Bozzly, est son meilleur ami. Ensemble, ils sont toujours prêts à intervenir pour aider leurs amis. Entre Princesse Flug, Otis, les Mini-gazouillis et beaucoup d’autres à secourir, ils n’ont pas le temps de s’ennuyer ! A vélo, à l’aide de ses gants à crampons glu et autres accessoires fuzzlitastiques, rien ne peut arrêter Abby !

« Les missions Fuzzly, ça n’attend pas ! A la rescousse, on y va ! »

###

From Leblogtvnews.com:

Inédite en clair, la série animée Abby Hatcher fait son arrivée sur TF1.

Production Nickelodeon inédite en clair, la série animée Abby Hatcher débarque dans la case jeunesse de TF1, TFOU.

Épisodes programmés dès le dimanche 12 janvier à 7h05.

Abby est une petite fille au grand cœur qui vit avec ses parents dans un hôtel. Mais pas n’importe quel hôtel, puisqu’il est habité par des Fuzzly, des créatures incroyables, douces comme des peluches, colorées comme un arc-en-ciel, espiègles comme des enfants ! L’un d’entre eux, Bozzly, est son meilleur ami. Ensemble, ils sont toujours prêts à intervenir pour aider leurs amis.

Entre Princesse Flug, Otis, les Mini-gazouillis et beaucoup d’autres à secourir, ils n’ont pas le temps de s’ennuyer ! A vélo, à l’aide de ses gants à crampons glu et autres accessoires fuzzlitastiques, rien ne peut arrêter Abby...

###

Plus Nickelodeon:Nickelodeon France Launches Bookids, a New Subscription-Based Digital Reading Service for Kids!

Additional source: Google Translate.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Junior France and Abby Hatcher News and Highlights!

Interpreting the Kids' View of the World with the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Blimp

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TOWNSHEND, VERMONT — The next time you watch someone drenched in slime while receiving a coveted Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards blimp trophy or lifting the golden popcorn on MTV, know there is a little bit of Townshend being presented on a national level!


Robert DuGrenier, the owner of Robert DuGrenier Associates Inc., works on putting the final touches around the eyepiece. KRISTOPHER RADDER - BRATTLEBORO REFORMER

In a second-floor art studio in Townshend, Robert DuGrenier works next to a large window on assembling the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards.

DuGrenier was approached back in 1991 to redesign the award that was originally a little boy holding a teleidoscope, which is a kind of kaleidoscope with a lens and open view so it can be used to form kaleidoscopic patterns from objects outside. The current orange blimp award is a working teleidoscope.

"They wanted an award that was fun, that interpreted the kids' view of the world," said DuGrenier. "I looked at a bunch of their logo sheets at the time and came across four logos I really liked, and the blimp was one of them."

He made the prototype in 1991 and has been making them ever sense.


Robert DuGrenier designed and fabricates the iconic cast acrylic blimp award.

The award is not made from glass, a medium with which DuGrenier normally works, but instead, is made from a cast epoxy. The award is cleaned up and painted, and DuGrenier then puts in a functioning teleidoscope.

DuGrenier recalled a memorable story to The Brattleboro Reformer about a person who received one of these coveted orange awards.

"I was working with Whoopi Goldberg. When she just moved into her house in New Jersey, the movers broke two standing dome lamps and (she) wanted to get them reproduced," said DuGrenier. "I arrived at her house, she opened her door still wearing her nightgown, and invited us into the kitchen. I asked her where her Kids' Choice Awards were, and she went running out, and came back with all three of them (at the time) and I told her that I made those. She was totally astonished that I made them."


The Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards are not the only award DuGrenier makes. He also makes the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Sports trophy - a slightly larger version of the Kids' Choice Awards blimp (so that sport stars can hold them more easily) - the MTV Movie Awards, the CMT Country Television Awards, the Espy Awards, TV Land Awards and locally, the ITV Fest.

You can find out more about DuGrenier's work as well as about Robert DuGrenier Associates, Inc. at https://www.dugrenier.com, and make sure to follow the artist on Instagram and Facebook!


More Nick:2020 on Nickelodeon USA | New Shows, Specials, Events, Movies, Episodes, and More!
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Nickelodeon Catalyst On Pittman’s “Math & Magic”

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In this week’s episode of Math & Magic: Stories from the Frontiers of Marketing hosted by Bob Pittman, Chairman and CEO of iHeartMedia, Pittman sat down with Geraldine Laybourne, a legendary former television executive for major channels such as Nickelodeon, and an entrepreneur in media and technology.


Laybourne is known as the “fairy godmother of Nickelodeon”, having been the first president of Nickelodeon, and listeners can hear how she took a channel that was targeted for preschoolers, and turned it into a cultural phenomenon — how she led Nickelodeon into tween entertainment; why the channel truly spoke to its audience; and the real story behind why Nickelodeon started sliming kids. Plus, there’ll be discussion of how Laybourne transformed the Disney channel; launched her own network, Oxygen, with Oprah; and how her new project, CHKN, is creating a new type of sandbox for kids.

To hear the episode, click play below!


Gerry Laybourne: "Have you ever been slimed? It is wonderful!"

Known as the "fairy godmother of Nickelodeon," Gerry Laybourne took a channel for pre-schoolers and turned it into a cultural phenomenon. Hear how she led Nickelodeon into tween entertainment; why the channel truly spoke to its audience (it was the first one to take kids' side!), and the real story behind why Nickelodeon started sliming kids. Plus, we get into how Gerry transformed the Disney channel; launched her own network, Oxygen, with Oprah; and how her new project, CHKN, is creating a new type of sandbox for kids.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Embarks on New Direction with its Biggest, Most Wide-Ranging Content Slate Ever!

Original source: Radio Ink.
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December 2019 on Nickelodeon Russia: SpongeBob | RBUK | ALVINNN | Christmas + More

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--- This December (декабре), Nickelodeon Russia (Россия) will be airing:


Смотри в декабре 🎄| Nickelodeon Россия
В последний месяц года мы подготовили для тебя много сюрпризов! Подключайся и смотри Nickelodeon⭐

-- Brand new episodes of Rainbow Butterfly Unicorn Kitty (RBUK; Радужно-бабочково-единорожная кошка) weekends at 11:40 MCK between Saturday 7th and Sunday 29th December 2019!

-- The final new episodes of Cousins for Life (Под одной крышей) weekends at 16:30 MCK!

-- Infinity Nado (Инфинити Надо) season one weekdays at 20:55 MCK between Monday 2nd - Friday 13th December 2019!

-- Five brand new episodes of ALVINNN!!! and the Chipmunks (Элвиннн!!! и бурундуки) season four weekdays at 6:50 МСК from Monday 16th December 2019!

-- Brand-new episodes of SpongeBob SquarePants (Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны) from Saturday 21st December 2019 at 13:45 MCK!

-- Holiday specials of popular Nickelodeon shows, including Henry Danger (Опасный Генри), The Thundermans (Грозная семейка), The Loud House (Моего шумного дома), Game Shakers (Игроделов), SpongeBob SquarePants (Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны) weekdays at 16:05 MCK from Monday 2nd December 2019!

-- The Loud House (Моего шумного дома) marathons every Sunday from 12:05 MCK throughout December 2019!

-- Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Эволюция Черепашек-ниндзя) weekdays at 19:45 MCK between Monday 23rd - Friday 27th December 2019, including a 44-minute special!

-- To get viewers into the Christmas spirit, Nickelodeon will be airing special SpongeBob SquarePants (Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны) marathons between Monday 23rd - Friday 27th December 2019 at 18:55 MCK (encore on Saturday 28th December 2019 from MCK)!

-- And what is New Year without movies? This New Year's, Nickelodeon will be showing the best Nickelodeon movies on Tuesday 31st December 2019 (New Year's Eve) and Wednesday 1st January 2020 (New Year's Day), starting 14:10 MCK to the evening both days!

Meanwhile on Nickelodeon HD:

--- Nickelodeon HD has two new shows this December!:

-- Atchoo! (Апчхи), weekdays at 16:30 MCK from Monday 2nd December 2019!

-- LEGO City Adventures (Лего Сити: приключения), weekdays at 20:40 MCK until Thursday 19th December 2019!

-- On Sunday 1st and 8th December 2019 at 21:05 MCK, fans can catch Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Эволюция Черепашек-ниндзя)!

-- New episodes of ALVINNN!!! and the Chipmunks (Элвиннн!!! и бурундуки) season four weekdays at 19:40 МСК during the first week of the month!

-- Fans can also catch festive episodes of their favourite Nickelodeon shows, including Henry Danger (Опасный Генри), The Thundermans (Грозная семейка), The Loud House (Моего шумного дома), Game Shakers (Игроделов), SpongeBob SquarePants (Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны) weekdays at 18:10 MCK all month long, between Monday 2nd December 2019 and Friday 3rd January 2020!

In additional news:

-- Nickelodeon has launched a special competition titled Твой голос 2019, in which fans can win a trip to Moscow and visit the Nickelodeon Russia offices and a trip to the Nickelodeon dubbing studio! The contest is open now and runs until Friday 27th December 2019. For more information and to enter, visit https://tvoygolos.nickelodeon.ru. Good luck! :)

-- Nickelodeon has launched a NickRewind YouTube channel! Titled "Nick Rewind Россия", the channel features classic Nickelodeon content dubbed into Russian!: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFCO6ClvLF1hUxzk_dhRwZQ

From Nickelodeon Россия's VKontakte page:

Что новенького в декабре
СС первым днём зимы!

Пиши в комментарии свою любимую зимнюю забаву

Возможно, для кого-нибудь зима и не самое приятное время года… Но только не для тех, кто смотрит новогодние марафоны на Nickelodeon! Нас с тобой ждёт целый месяц самых сказочных фильмов и сериалов, новые конкурсы и целая гора новогоднего настроения!

В новой статье мы решили рассказать тебе не только о новостях Nickelodeon, но и о Nickelodeon HD :) Так что обязательно расскажи нам после, было ли тебе интересно читать сразу о двух каналах?

Nickelodeon
ННачнём с новых серий

К нам вернулась самая праздничная кошка, чтобы закатить парочку вечеринок перед Новым годом! А ещё Фелисити спасёт Мифество, попробует стать видеоблогером, поможет Зубной Фее и даже чуточку повзрослеет! Смотри «Радужно-бабочково-единорожную кошку» с 7 до 29 декабря по выходным в 11:40 МСК.

Выходные в декабре вообще будут весёлыми. С 7 декабря начнём смотреть финальные серии первого сезона «Под одной крышей». Вместе со Стюартом и Иви мы отметим День кузенов и встретим маму Стюарта из её длительной поездки! Включай Nick по выходным в 16:30 МСК. А ещё мы в декабре мы досмотрим первый сезон «Инфинити Надо» — со 2 по 13 декабря по будням в 20:55 МСК; и покажем пять новых серий мультфильма «Элвиннн!!! И бурундуки». По будням с 16 декабря в 6:50 МСК.

И в завершение: новая серия «Губки Боба». Да-да, пока что одна, но зато какая! Мы узнаем, на что Губка Боб потратит свой первый перерыв, а ещё увидим как очередной зловещий план Планктона… опять провалится. В общем, смотри шоу «Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны» в субботу 21 декабря в 13:45 МСК.

ММарафоны и НОВЫЙ ГОД

Со 2 декабря будем вспоминать все-все радостные причины любить Новый год! Каждую неделю по будням в 16:05 МСК в эфире серии твоих любимых шоу: про подарки, про семью, про сам праздник и, конечно, про сладости :) В марафоне мы покажем «Опасного Генри», «Грозную семейку», «Мой шумный дом», «Игроделов», «Губку Боба Квадратные Штаны» и всяческие празднично-пряничные серии других шоу.

А ещё, весь месяц по выходным в эфире марафоны «Моего шумного дома», каждый из которых посвящён Линкольну и его друзьям. Сможешь познакомится ближе с Ронни Энн, Клайдом, Бобби и Лиамом. Все эти подборки смотри по воскресеньям в 12:05 МСК.

С 23 по 27 декабря внимание будет приковано к «Черепашкам-ниндзя». По будням в 19:45 просмотрим все специальные 44-минутные эпизоды шоу. Сможешь вспомнить и назвать их все?)

Чем ближе к празднику, тем больше сюрпризов! Марафон новогодних серий «Губки Боба» подарит ёлочно-пряничное настроение всем без исключений. Смотри с 23 по 27 декабря в 18:55 МСК и повтор в субботу 28 декабря в 17:20 МСК. И какой же Новый год без фильмов? Новогодние и не только, самые крутые киноленты Nickelodeon будем показывать 31 декабря и 1 января с 14:10 МСК и до самого вечера.

Nickelodeon HD

На Nickelodeon HD сразу два новых шоу!

Во-первых, история о мальчике Тео и его необычных способностях. Каждый раз, когда мальчик переживает по какому-нибудь поводу… он чихает, а когда он чихает… он превращается в разных животных! И происходит это часто, очень часто. Поэтому шоу так и называется — «Апчхи!», а смотреть мы его будем со 2 декабря по будням в 16:30 МСК.

Во-вторых, мы продолжим просмотр историй о жизни и приключениях неугомонного города — «LEGO City Приключения». В декабре ещё несколько новых серий: по будням до 19 декабря в 20:40 МСК.

1 и 8 декабря в 21:05 МСК смотри новые серии «Эволюции Черепашек-ниндзя». Всё близится к финалу первого сезона и пропускать их ни в коем случае нельзя :)

А ещё — «Элвиннн!!! И бурундуки», новые серии четвёртого сезона покажем в первую неделю месяца — по будням в 19:40 МСК.

Будут и новогодние марафоны! Праздничные серии «Опасного Генри», «Грозной семейки», «Губки Боба» и «Моего шумного дома» будем смотреть весь месяц — со 2 декабря по 3 января. Так что включай телевизор по будням в 18:10 МСК.

АА теперь к другим новостям :)

Кроме конкурса рисунков, который продлится до 12 декабря, тебя ждёт ещё одно очень важное событие. Ежегодный конкурс «Нам нужен твой голос», где ты сможешь озвучить любимое шоу прямо на нашем специальном сайте!

Автор самой крутой записи выиграет не только поездку в Москву и посещение офиса Nickelodeon Россия, но и поездку на студию озвучания, где почувствует себя настоящим актёром дубляжа и озвучит персонажа для одной из новых серий! Конкурс уже начался и продлится до 27 декабря. Удачи тебе и вдохновения :)

###

From https://tver.aif.ru:

Ребёнок из Твери лучше всех озвучил «Губку Боба»

Восьмилетний мальчик из Твери признан победителем дня за 23 декабря в конкурсе по озвучке мультфильмов и сериалов телеканала Nickelodeon.

Детям предложили проиллюстрировать Красную книгу Тверской областиДля озвучки на сайте Nickelodeon необходимо выбрать один из предложенных мультфильмов и сериалов: «Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны», «Хантэр Стрит», «Мой шумный дом», «Опасный Генри», «Эволюция черепашек-ниндзя».
Успех восьмилетнему Леониду принесла озвучка мультфильма «Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны».

Каждый день определяют одного победителя конкурса из тех работ, что были присланы в течение суток. В конце также выберут победителя конкурса в целом. Он отправится в Москву, чтобы на профессиональной студии озвучить один из мультфильмов, который затем выйдет в эфир.

###

Official Viacom CBS Russia Press Release:

Опубликовано 23.12.2019

ЧЕМ ЗАНЯТЬСЯ В ПРАЗДНИКИ: НОВОГОДНЯЯ ПРОГРАММА ТЕЛЕКАНАЛОВ NICK JR. И NICKELODEON РОССИЯ


Первую новогоднюю серию покажут 29 декабря на телеканале Nick Jr. в рамках марафона анимационного шоу «Кафе Баттербин» о приключениях феи, которая открывает волшебную кофейню и превращает ее в самое успешное заведение в городе. Кроме того, в праздники на Nick Jr. покажут лучшие серии мультсериалов «Щенячий патруль», «Вспыш и чудо-машинки» и «Расти-механик».

31 декабря на Nickelodeon Россия начнется большой новогодний марафон фильмов и сериалов, специально отобранных редакцией телеканала. В программе — фильмы «Крошечное Рождество» и «Очень странное Рождество», анимационный фильм «Альберт», а также специальные выпуски мультсериала «Губки Боба Квадратные Штаны» и шоу «Никки, Рикки, Дикки и Дон», «Игроделы» и «Грозная семейка».

В эфире телеканала покажут три праздничных эпизода «Губки Боба Квадратные Штаны»: на дне океана впервые выпадет снег, и жизнерадостный Губка сделает все, чтобы создать новогоднее настроение в подводном городе. Максу, герою спецвыпуска телесериала «Грозная семейка», предстоит встретиться с Духами Прошлого, Настоящего и Будущего Рождества, чтобы вместе спасти атмосферу праздника, тогда как Никки, Рикки, Дикки и Дон из одноименного телешоу попробуют честным трудом заработать себе на подарок.

Анимационная комедия «Альберт» расскажет историю маленькой, но очень смелой ёлки, которая хочет стать самой известной во всем мире и для этого отправляется в центр Нью-Йорка в канун главного зимнего праздника.

Игроделы» отправятся на рождественскую телепередачу, в прямом эфире которой они столкнутся с непредвиденными обстоятельствами. Звезд Nickelodeon тоже ждет сюрприз: в спецвыпуске «Новогодняя вечеринка» они соберутся на торжество, но в скором времени окажется, что это – ловушка, подстроенная незнакомцем. Вместе ребятам придется пройти разные испытания, чтобы вернуться домой.

4 января программа Nickelodeon будет полностью посвящена анимационным шоу, а 5 января весь эфир на 24 часа предоставят хитам телесериалов. С 6 по 10 января на телеканале будет проходить тематический марафон с советами Губки Боба о том, как можно интересно провести каникулы, а в выходные с 11 по 12 января Nickelodeon устроит большой просмотр лучших премьер прошедшего года.

Праздничная программа Nick Jr. и Nickelodeon Россия поможет создать новогоднее настроение и весело провести время в кругу родных и близких за просмотром любимых фильмов и мультсериалов.

Кстати, в этом году телеканал Nick Jr. проведет свое первое новогоднее мероприятие «Новогодняя Ёлка Nick Jr.» с участием персонажей популярных мультсериалов «Щенячий патруль», «Даша-путешественница», «Вспыш и чудо-машинки», «Кафе Баттербин» и другими. Интерактивное шоу пройдет в концертном зале «Останкино» с 23 декабря по 7 января — гости перенесутся в атмосферу волшебства и помогут героям пройти сказочные испытания.

Смотрите любимые шоу в эфире Nick Jr. и Nickelodeon Россия: специальная серия и марафон мультсериала «Кафе Баттербин» наNick Jr. 29 декабря в 15:15 по московскому времени, новогодний киномарафон Nickelodeon с 31 декабря в 14:10 по 1 января в 18:50 по московскому времени. Узнать подробную информацию и приобрести билеты на первое интерактивное шоу телеканала Nick Jr. можно на сайте elkinickjr.ru.

###

From TRICOLOR TV MAGAZINE:

Чем заняться в праздники: что покажет Nick Jr. и Nickelodeon Россия в новогодние каникулы

Новогодняя программа телеканалов Nick Jr. и Nickelodeon Россия будет насыщенной. В зимние каникулы каналы представят зрителям специальную программу в эфире.

Кафе Баттербин
С 29 декабря на Nick Jr.
12:20, 15:15

Уже в воскресенье, 29 декабря, на детских телеканалах начнутся марафоны праздничных серий популярных мультсериалов и фильмов с новогодней тематикой. Первую новогоднюю серию покажут 29 декабря на телеканале Nick Jr. в рамках марафона анимационного шоу «Кафе Баттербин» о приключениях феи, которая открывает волшебную кофейню и превращает ее в самое успешное заведение в городе. Кроме того, в праздники на Nick Jr. покажут лучшие серии мультсериалов «Щенячий патруль», «Вспыш и чудо-машинки» и «Расти-механик».

Большой новогодний марафон
31 декабря на Nickelodeon
С 11:00

В последний день года на Nickelodeon Россия начнется большой новогодний марафон фильмов и сериалов, специально отобранных редакцией телеканала. В программе – фильмы «Крошечное Рождество» и «Очень странное Рождество», анимационный фильм «Альберт», а также специальные выпуски мультсериала «Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны» и шоу «Никки, Рикки, Дикки и Дон», «Игроделы» и «Грозная семейка».

В эфире телеканала покажут три праздничных эпизода «Губки Боба»: на дне океана впервые выпадет снег, и жизнерадостный Губка сделает все, чтобы создать новогоднее настроение в подводном городе. Максу, герою спецвыпуска телесериала «Грозная семейка», предстоит встретиться с Духами Прошлого, Настоящего и Будущего Рождества, чтобы вместе спасти атмосферу праздника, тогда как Никки, Рикки, Дикки и Дон из одноименного телешоу попробуют честным трудом заработать себе на подарок.

Анимационная комедия «Альберт» расскажет историю маленькой, но очень смелой елки, которая хочет стать самой известной во всем мире и для этого отправляется в центр Нью-Йорка в канун главного зимнего праздника.

«Игроделы» отправятся на рождественскую телепередачу, в прямом эфире которой они столкнутся с непредвиденными обстоятельствами. Звезд Nickelodeon тоже ждет сюрприз: в спецвыпуске «Новогодняя вечеринка» они соберутся на торжество, но в скором времени окажется, что это ловушка, подстроенная незнакомцем. Вместе ребятам придется пройти разные испытания, чтобы вернуться домой.

Анимационное шоу и сериалы
С 4 января

4 января программа Nickelodeon будет полностью посвящена анимационным шоу, а 5 января весь эфир на 24 часа предоставят хитам телесериалов. С 6 по 10 января на телеканале будет проходить тематический марафон с советами Губки Боба о том, как можно интересно провести каникулы, а в выходные, с 11 по 12 января, Nickelodeon устроит большой просмотр лучших премьер прошедшего года.

Праздничная программа Nick Jr. и Nickelodeon Россия поможет создать новогоднее настроение и весело провести время в кругу родных и близких за просмотром любимых фильмов и мультсериалов.

Смотрите любимые шоу в эфире Nick Jr. и Nickelodeon Россия: специальная серия и марафон мультсериала «Кафе Баттербин» на Nick Jr. 29 декабря в 15:15 по московскому времени, новогодний киномарафон Nickelodeon с 31 декабря в 14:10 по 1 января в 18:50 по московскому времени. Узнать подробную информацию и приобрести билеты на первое интерактивное шоу телеканала Nick Jr. можно на сайте elkinickjr.ru.

###

More Nick:Nickelodeon Russia Premieres New Locally Produced Game Show 'Всеология'!

Originally published: Saturday, November 30, 2019.

Additional sources: Google Translate, DeepL Translator, Anime Superhero Forum /@NickRewindRussia.

Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Russia News and Highlights!

JoJo Siwa Teases Her New Music

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JoJo Siwa is getting ready to give us new music!


While promoting her sold out D.R.E.A.M. The Tour, the 16-year-old Nickelodeon star revealed that she has new music coming out soon.

“I have actually nine new songs that are already done, that are coming out hopefully soon,” JoJo shared with Idolator before saying that she’ll be releasing them slowly and one at a time.

“I don’t think I will release them all and then go away for a year and go work on more stuff,” JoJo said. “I wanted people to keep being excited because new things keep coming out.”

JoJo then said that she’s changing up the sound of her music a bit to make it sound more “real.”

I’m trying to bring real music, instruments, back into my music,” JoJo added. “That’s what I’m trying to do with my new stuff, is make sure that it is going to be based around real music.”

JoJo also revealed that she is planning to release a new album! "That is on the horizon and I do have a timeline in my head with it," dished JoJo, "but that’s definitely in the future. It’s not currently."

I can’t wait to hear what JoJo has been working on!

The social media sensation has been busy lately, including moving home.

The former Dance Moms cast member recently opened up about how her signature logo - which looks like a heart with a loop on the end, is also present on all the JoJo merchandise that's available for sale and sometimes painted across one of her eye when she performs - came to be, and what it means to her. "You might not know this but my logo is a combination of a Heart, Infinity sign, and a Star," she explained in the post. "They each represent something special... The Heart represents loving everyone, The Star represents being different (no 2 stars are the same), and the Infinity Sign represents being you forever! Thought I would share that with all of you!"


From Idolator:

Interview: JoJo Siwa Talks ‘D.R.E.A.M. The Tour’ & New Music

JoJo Siwa's 'Celebrate' EP Kid-friendly bops! Teen sensation JoJo Siwa drops her second EP, 'Celebrate.'

In addition to being a wildly popular Nickelodeon star and YouTube sensation, JoJo Siwa is also a budding pop artist. The 16-year-old has already released two EPs — Celebrate and D.R.E.A.M. — and embarked on one of 2019’s most successful tours. In fact, 80 of the whopping 96 dates of D.R.E.A.M. The Tour sold out. Which is why the teen mogul is bringing it back for another 50 shows in 2020 (see all the dates and buy tickets here). Oh, and she’s also starring in her very own TV special, which airs on Nickelodeon on November 22.

I recent spoke with JoJo about her new concert dates, and she explained that D.R.E.A.M. The Tour has undergone radical changes including new costumes, new props, new lighting and new songs. Speaking of which, the “Boomerang” hitmaker also revealed that she has recorded nine new tracks and is in the very early stages of thinking about an album. Other topics of conversation included her custom-wrapped car, connecting with fans and managing unkind comments on social media. Get to know JoJo a little better in our Q&A below.

You have some exciting tour news. How long have you been planning the next leg of D.R.E.A.M. The Tour?

I’m a terrible secret keeper. No, wait, that’s a lie. I’m a really good secret keeper. If my friend tells me a super serious secret and she really doesn’t want it to be told, then obviously, I’m not going to tell. But stuff like this, where it’s really exciting, and I’m really happy to share with it the world. It was really difficult for me to keep it a secret, but it’s been about three months now that I’ve known about this.

How is it different from your last tour?

The thing is, it is still D.R.E.A.M. The Tour. But we are making sure that there are incredible changes to it. We’re going to elevate the show to a level that I didn’t think was possible. We’re going to upgrade everything. We’re going to add a couple of new songs. We’re going to change costumes, change props, change lighting, change the scenes. We’re going to add a whole new world into it. There is going to be a lot that’s different, but it is going to be based around the same thing.

Did you add extra shows due to fan demand?

Yes! They want to see more and I want to give them a different show. A lot of people — over 500,000 people — have already seen it. I want to make sure that I’m giving people a reason to come back to see what’s new.

Does this also mean that you have some new music coming?

I do. I have actually nine new songs that are already done, that are coming out hopefully soon.

Are you releasing an album or another EP?

I think I’m going to release them slowly. I don’t think I will release them all and then go away for a year and go work on more stuff. I wanted people to keep being excited because new things keep coming out.

Is the sound the same as your previous songs?

It’s not. I’m trying to bring real music, instruments, back into my music. That’s what I’m trying to do with my new stuff, is make sure that it is going to be based around real music.

Have you started thinking about an album?

That is on the horizon and I do have a timeline in my head with it, but that’s definitely in the future. It’s not currently.

I was recently in West Hollywood and saw you driving a car that was covered in your face.

That was definitely my car. That’s what I drive around town in.

Really?

I’m dead serious. [Laughs]. Why would I lie about that?

How did that come about?

I don’t know which one you saw but I have two cars. I have one where my entire face is all over the car, then I have another car that I call my dream car because the whole car is literally D.R.E.A.M. The Tour. It’s an incredible car. I love it so much. Depending on the one that you saw, both of them I just got them wrapped, paid for it, and drove away.

Do you like driving?

I love it. It’s so fun. I have a blast driving.

You’re not scared in LA? The traffic is crazy.

It’s really weird because everyone says that. The thing is this is the only place that I have driven. I don’t have anything to compare it to. Therefore, it’s all I know. So you don’t know the difference because all you know is the one that you know.

Can you tell me about your upcoming TV special?

It’s really exciting! Nickelodeon and I, we created three TV specials. The first one was digital. We did a whole bunch of digital video, digital content to show people the behind the scenes of the tour, and what tour life is like. That was really fun. I enjoyed that very much. Then we created a behind-the-scenes look into tour life and that was the last TV special that aired. This one is now at my concert. This one is really what my show is and what my show is about. That’s why this one is my favorite documentary.

Is it the whole show?

It’s all just the concert. Anyone who hasn’t seen it will get to see the show and anybody who wants to re-see it can do so. There’s also a lot of behind the scenes tour in it.

How do you feel about being so open on social media?

My life is pretty incredible and I have fun every day in my life. For me, it’s really cool that I get to bring people along on this journey with me of my life.

How did you get so many YouTube followers?

For me, it’s about being genuine. For me, it’s about being real in who I am. I think that translates and I think kids like it when things are relatable. I feel like I’m relatable.

People can also be a little unkind on social media.

Yes.

How do you manage that?

Honestly, it can be tough because people are just so mean sometimes. My thing is there’s so many really nice people that there’s no reason to let the mean people overrule the nice people.

That’s a good attitude. What’s your favorite song to perform on the tour?

My favorite song to perform? Oh boy. I think probably, “High Top Shoes.” That’s my favorite of my songs. It is one of the hardest of my songs to perform live but it really is so fun.

Why is it the hardest?

It just requires a lot of energy. They all do, but “High Top Shoes” is tough. It’s also in the middle of the show. It’s literally the middle song. That’s also makes it hard.

Congratulations on the new tour dates. Good luck!

Thank you so much.

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More Nick:JoJo Siwa, Why Don’t We, French Montana, and Blanco Brown to Perform at Nickelodeon's U.S. SlimeFest Music Festival, March 21-22 at the Forum in Inglewood, Calif.!

Original source: Just Jared Jr.
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Nickelodeon USA to Premiere 'It's Pony' on Saturday, Jan. 18

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Update (12/29) - Watch the first episode of It's Pony, "Plants!", here!: http://nickalive.blogspot.com/2019/12/its-pony-full-episode-series-premiere.html

Update - Below is Nickelodeon's official Press Release announcing the exciting news!:

Nickelodeon Debuts Brand-New Animated Series, It’s Pony, Saturday, Jan. 18
Rosario Dawson, Kal Penn and Bobby Moynihan Give Voices to the
Comedic Adventures of Unlikely but Loyal Best Friends

Share it: @nickelodeon

December 09, 2019 02:00 PM Eastern Standard Time


LONDON--Life is more exciting, fun, and unpredictable with a pony, as seen in Nickelodeon’s new original animated series It’s Pony, premiering Saturday, Jan. 18. The 20-episode series follows the comedic adventures of Annie and her best friend, who just so happens to be an enthusiastic, unpredictable, and carefree pony. Following its premiere, It’s Pony will continue to air Saturdays on Nickelodeon and will air internationally in April 2020.

The series stars Jessica DiCicco (Adventure Time) as Annie, an optimistic and determined farm girl living in the city with her family and best friend Pony; Josh Zuckerman (Strange Angel) as Pony, who is naïve and impulsive, but loves Annie more than anything; Abe Benrubi (E.R.) as Dad, who treats Pony as a nuisance, but recognizes the special bond he shares with Annie; and India de Beaufort (All Hail King Julien) as Mom, who loves Annie and Pony’s relationship and always has a new project in the works.

Additional cast members bringing characters to life include: Kal Penn (Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle) as Annie’s friend Fred; Bobby Moynihan (Saturday Night Live) as Annie’s friend Brian; Rosario Dawson (Rent) as Annie’s school principal Ms. Ramiro; Mark Feuerstein (Royal Pains) as the landlord Mr. Pancks; and Megan Hilty (Smash) as the too-obsessed-with-Pony friend Beatrice.


Throughout the season, the series will explore the everyday life and hijinks of two best friends whose optimism and enthusiasm turn any situation from ordinary to extraordinary. Whether making an epic quest down the street to mail a letter, heroically saving the local playground with a bake sale, or simply getting a haircut, Pony and Annie always stick together because life is better as a pair.

Created by Ant Blades, It’s Pony is inspired by a short from Nickelodeon’s 2015 International Animated Shorts Program. A pre-released episode will be available starting Wednesday, Dec. 25 on the Nick App, Nick On Demand, and YouTube.

About Nickelodeon

Nickelodeon, now in its 40th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The brand includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, digital, location based experiences, publishing and feature films. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of ViacomCBS Inc. (Nasdaq: VIACA, VIAC).

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Joining the main cast are:

- Yvette Nicole Brown (Drake & Josh, Victorious) as the voice of Mrs. Dunscomb

- Grey Griffin (Fairly OddParents, Danny Phantom, The Loud House, El Tigre, Wow Wow Wubbzy, As Told by Ginger, Avatar: The Last Airbender, The Mighty B!, Rugrats, The Simpsons) as the voice of Henrietta

- John DiMaggio (Sanjay and Craig, The Loud House, Futurama, Adventure Time) as the voice of Dave the Sewer Worker and Tomatopalooza Judge

- Dee Bradley Baker (SpongeBob SquarePants, Legends of the Hidden Temple, Avatar: The Last Airbender, Gravity Falls, Star Wars: The Clone Wars) as the voice of Dog.


Original post:

Nickelodeon USA will premiere the network's brand new animated series It's Pony on Saturday, Jan. 18! A pre-released episode will be available starting Wednesday, Dec. 25 on the Nick App, Nick On Demand, and YouTube.


It's Pony is an original 2D-animated buddy comedy that follows the life of an average girl, Annie, her (almost) average family and what happens when an excitable, unpredictable, loveable and talking pony comes to live with them in their city apartment. It's Pony is the first animated comedy series to be greenlit for the U.S. from Nickelodeon International. Created by Ant Blades, It's Pony (originally titled Pony) is based off a short of the same name from Nickelodeon’s 2015 International Animated Shorts Program. Nickelodeon greenlit the series for an initial 20-episodes in March 2018.


It's Pony follows Annie’s everyday life as a 9-year-old, from working at her parent’s city farm, located on their apartment balcony, homework, school friends and, most importantly, her friendship with Pony. Pony is Annie’s biggest cheerleader and best friend, although sometimes his optimism and enthusiasm lands the pair in unusual situations.

Ant Blades started his creative career writing and drawing for the cartoon strip Bewley. After his short stint as an animator, Blades worked for years in the digital creative industry before moving back to the animation field and setting up Birdbox, a studio that produces commercials, on-air spots and funny short films.


Nickelodeon’s International Animated Shorts Program is now a monthly themed outreach effort for original and funny content to fuel its dynamic development slate. Concepts for the program are received in all animation styles from 2D, digital 2D, stop motion, CG and mixed media. Finalists are provided with the necessary artistic and production support to help them complete their fully animated original, humor-based and character-driven short.

It's Pony is produced in London, UK by Blue Zoo, which has produced on-air presentation for Nick Jr. UK & Ireland, as well as series such as Nick Jr.'s Digby Dragon and Olive the Ostrich, and shows such as Miffy’s Adventures Big and Small and Q Pootle 5.

From Animation Magazine:

A Horse, Of Course! Ant Blades Talks His New Nick Show ‘It’s Pony’

***This article originally ran in the February ‘20 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 297)***


Who doesn’t want a fun, impulsive and always adventurous pony in their life? Annie (voiced by Jessica DiCicco), the bright-eyed girl in the center of Nickelodeon’s new animated series It’s Pony, certainly knows that her life is so much better with her best friend, Pony (Josh Zuckerman) — but it also makes it more complicated because they live in a city! The new show also features the voices of Abe Benrubi, India de Beaufort, Kal Penn, Bobby Moynihan, Rosario Dawson, Mark Feuerstein and Megan Hilty.

It’s Pony was created by animation veteran Ant Blades of London-based Birdbox Studio. “I was trying to think of a good idea for a series and wanted it to be relatable and simple,” he tells us. “I was looking for an idea that had scope for a lot of craziness, but also room for heart and charm. A girl trying to look after her pony in the city sprang to mind. Especially if it wasn’t that easy. How would you cope with a horse in an elevator?”


Blades came up with the first sketches for the pilot back in 2013 for Nickelodeon International Animated Shorts call out. “That seems like a long time ago now,” he notes. “It hasn’t been solid since then, though. Step by step to where it is now.

The 2D animated series is produced in London at Blue Zoo studio, home of Paddington, Numberblocks and Digby Dragon. A team of about 70 people work on the series, and the animators use Toon Boom Harmony to produce it. “The aim was to create a visually unique style to try and make it feel more hand drawn, to steer away from some more common styles and push towards something that felt more tactile and rough,” notes Blades. “Pony himself benefits from line work that’s more untidy and energetic.”

It’s Complicated!

The creator says he loves Pony, but he thinks the show is the most relatable when we, as viewers, are put into Annie’s shoes. “Pony’s a horse… of course, it’s not easy. I love them most, not when they’re acting like ‘best buds forever’, but when she’s pushing his nose out of her cereal.”

Before diving into the world of Annie and Pony, Blades had been directing ads, idents and shorts at Birdbox for the past nine years. “The work was varied and allowed me to jump from project to project, which keeps things interesting for me,” he says. “I’ve always enjoyed making shorts and, if possible, making people laugh. One of the biggest challenges for me is transforming from a short-form guy into a longer-form guy, and adapting to the schedules and teams that come along with that.”


Blades actually started off studying civil engineering, because he didn’t realize that animation could be a career. “I’d always loved comic strips and cartoons, but thought I should get a ‘proper’ job. While studying though, I managed to get a cartoon strip in a national paper and that gave the confidence that I should try cartooning and animation professionally. I watched a lot of TV cartoons, but what really inspired me was the world of comic strips. Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes was huge for me. I remember reading a friend’s collection and being totally lost in the world. And it’s such a lovely world.”

He says he also watched every animated movie he could find. “The first one that really got me was Pixar’s Monsters, Inc., which is still my favorite, and has a huge heart just like Calvin and Hobbes. So maybe that’s what gets me.”

Now that he has seen his clever idea come to animated life after so many years of work and development, we had to ask him to dispense some valuable advice, right? And of course, he obliges. “There are so many platforms out there to be noticed now,” says Blades. “If you love making things move, then try and regularly put stuff out there. Offering advice is hard! Work hard? Try and keep the passion? Step away at times, so you remember what you love about animation in the first place!”


It’s Pony premieres on Nickelodeon in the U.S. on Saturday, January 18. The show will bow internationally in April.

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More Nick:2020 on Nickelodeon USA | New Shows, Specials, Events, Movies, Episodes, and More!

Originally published: Sunday, December 08, 2019 at 18:21 GMT.

Press release via Business Wire; H/T: Special thanks to @Loudfan123212!; Additional source: Anime Superhero /@SweetShop209.
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Nostalgia Personified Announces All That and Holiday Editions

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Nostalgia Personified All That edition featuring the two rival “Vital Information-givers” Danny Tamberelli and Lori Beth Denberg!


Following the success of Nostalgia Personified with Nickelodeon’s Pete and Pete, Danny Tamberelli and Michael Maronna have announced the exciting news that they are expanding the Nostalgia Personified experience with a brand-new show, Nostalgia Personified: All That Edition, featuring '90s Nickelodeon stars Tamberelli and Lori Beth Denberg!

Billed as "an evening of fun and games with your childhood TV heroes,"Nostalgia Personified is an hour-long interactive live show born from the podcast The Adventures of Danny and Mike (featuring now grown TV brothers from Nickelodeon’s The Adventures of Pete and Pete) in which child stars confront their past in the most humorous way possible– trading jabs (and old videos!) The show utilizes audio/visual segments and live stage competitions wrangled by co-host Jeremy Balon. Nostalgia Personified is a humorous look back at the nineties through the eyes of child stars.

Nostalgia Personified: All That Edition Tour Dates:

11/12 – Bay Shore, NY @ Great South Bay Brewery
11/13 – Brooklyn, NY @ Littlefield
11/14 – Newburgh, NY @ Newburgh Brewing Co.
11/15 – Hamden, CT @ Space Ballroom
11/16 – Croydon, PA @ Neshaminy Creek Brewing
11/20 – Ashland, VA @ Ashland Theatre
11/21 – Lancaster, PA @ Chameleon Club
11/22 – Pearl River, NY @ Defiant Brewing
11/23 – Wilmington, DE @ 1984 Arcade Bar

01/21/20 - ALL THAT Edition @ SF Sketchfest 2019 - (SF) w/Danny Tamberelli and Lori Beth Denberg

Tickets cosy around $20 in advance for the all-ages show. For around $40, fans can get admission and a meet-and-greet with the comedians.

And don't worry, the boys have promised that the show that started it all, Nostalgia Personified: Pete and Pete Edition will still be touring, including with a very special Nostalgia Personified Holiday Edition with Nickelodeon's Danny and Mike, in which Nostalgia Personified's Danny and Mike will be spreading some Holiday Cheer, talking about things from Nickelodeon to Mike's role in Home Alone!

Nostalgia Personified: Pete and Pete Edition will take place on Thu, Dec 12, 2019 at 7:00 PM EST at Brooklyn Brewery in Brooklyn, NY! Click the following link for tickets!: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/nostalgia-personified-holiday-edition-with-nickelodeons-danny-and-mike-tickets-74634069511

More Pete & Pete Dates:

12/11/19 - PETE & PETE Edition @ Iron Horse Music Hall - (MA) w/Danny Tamberelli and Michael C. Maronna
12/13/19 - PETE & PETE Edition @ Colony Woodstock - (NY) w/Danny Tamberelli and Michael C. Maronna


Plus, for Halloween fans, check out these spooktacular HALLOWEENIE 2019 tees!:


For more information about Nostalgia Personified, visit http://nostalgiapersonified.com, and make sure to Like Nostalgia Personified on Facebook andfollow Nostalgia Personified on Instagram for the latest news, tour dates and highlights!

Make sure to catch the brand new series of All That, Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. (ET/PT), only on Nickelodeon!

Watch all your ‘80s, ‘90s, and ‘00s Nickelodeon favorites on NickRewind, your late-night destination for your favorite childhood Nickelodeon cartoons and live-action shows! NickSplat doesn't question football-shaped heads, but embrace them - along with Reptar bars, a Big Ear of Corn, orange soda, and even slime for Pete (and Pete's) sake. Make your slime-covered Nickelodeon childhood dreams come true every night on TeenNick USA, and anytime you want on NickSplat on VRV AND NOW ON Nick Pluto TV!

Like NickRewind on Facebook, subscribe to the NickRewind YouTube channel and follow NickRewind on Twitter and Instagram for exclusive digital content from all of your throwback favorites like Rugrats, Hey Arnold!, iCarly, Victorious, Kenan & Kel, CatDog, Doug, Rocko’s Modern Life, The Amanda Show, Clarissa Explains It All, The Ren & Stimpy Show, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and so much more!

Join Nickelodeon's official I Was A Nick Kid Facebook Group!: https://www.facebook.com/groups/IWasANickKid/

Are You Afraid of the Dark? premieres Friday, October 11, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon!

From Style Weekly:

All That and More

Former Nickelodeon television stars bring a nostalgic live show to Ashland Theatre.

Nickelodeon was different from other kids’ TV networks in the ’90s.

It was edgier, more adult, marked by shows that dared to be weird, gross and subversive. Think of shows like “Salute Your Shorts,” where fart jokes abounded, or “Ren and Stimpy” with its disgustingly hyper-realistic artwork.

Danny Tamberelli, who was a child star in the ’90s on multiple Nickelodeon shows, says it was a special time because network executives let the show runners have complete creative control. “They let the creators be creators,” he says, “and that’s why there were all these crazy shows that really resonated with people.”

“These were not cookie-cutter shows about attractive kids who could sing and dance, who you could put on lunch boxes,” Tamberelli explains. “Instead it was like, shows about the ordinary kid who’s picking his nose and he’s sitting in the back of the room in his mismatched socks, and like, one Nike shoe and one Converse shoe because he got dressed in the dark that morning because he was late.”

These shows have endured, gaining massive and dedicated cult followings and are prompting cast reunions more than 20 years later. It seems the children of the ’90s have quite the appetite for nostalgia as adults.

Nickelodeon seems to have figured that out this year, releasing a “Rocko’s Modern Life,” Netflix special and rebooting “All That,” the ’90s kids sketch comedy show that helped launch countless young careers, including Kenan Thompson, Kel Mitchell and Amanda Bynes.

Tamberelli joined the cast of “All That” in 1997, but he is probably best known for his role as Little Pete in the cult favorite “The Adventures of Pete and Pete.” And he’s no stranger to Nickelodeon fandom. He has been providing ’90s kids with the nostalgia they crave for years, now. Tamberelli plays host to the podcast “The Adventures of Danny and Mike” with Michael C. Maronna, who played Big Pete, his on-screen older brother. The podcast was so well-received that it led him to create “Nostalgia Personified,” a live show that brings fans and creators together for an interactive evening of humor, improv, backstage stories and more.

“‘Nostalgia Personified’ is a pretty appropriate description, in that we do show these old ’90s clips on a big screen and it’s kind of gritty, and it takes you back to that moment,’ Tamberelli says. He describes the live show as a combination of a reunion show and “Mystery Science Theater”-style commentary.

On Nov. 20, Richmond audiences have the chance to experience “Nostalgia Personified: All That Edition,” at the newly renovated Ashland Theatre. Tamberelli has called in former “All That” co-star Lori Beth Denberg, whom you may remember for her wacky characters like the Loud Librarian or Miss Fingerly, the eternally frustrated teacher. They’re characters she’s been revisiting lately, as part of the “All That” reboot on Nickelodeon.

“We’re mixing in the old characters with some of the old cast members, and it’s really seamless, there’s still the same vibe” she says. “‘All That’ was just totally wacky, and it was good enough and adult enough and goofy enough and messy enough to hit a lot of different tones that were enjoyed by a lot of different people. I think that’s what carried the show.’

Denberg says she can’t wait to go on tour with “Nostalgia Personified” to reminisce about Nickelodeon’s golden age. She and Tamberelli, who worked together on “All That” as well as the slime-filled Nickelodeon game show “Figure It Out,” have remained friends into adulthood, even working together on a few recent independent film projects.

“We just have a lot of fun together, always,” she says, “and I think that will translate to the audience at the live show. It’ll basically be like, ‘Here’s what it’s like to hang out with Danny and Lori Beth!’ Vital information versus vital information!”

When Denberg left the cast of “All That” in 1998, it was Tamberelli who took over her “Vital Information” sketch, a silly take on the evening news. “I was terrified to take it over,” Tamberelli says. “It was Lori Beth’s thing and it was perfect the way she did it and I didn’t want to copy her.”

It’s stories like this that make “Nostalgia Personified” such a treat for audiences. “It’s really cool to look back and think of what was happening on the other side of the camera. I think that’s a big part of the appeal of the live show,” Denberg says.

Tamberelli and Denberg will be available for a meet-and-greet before the show and a Q&A at the end. They both agree that it’s important for them to connect with fans personally.

“We’ll be hanging out at the merch table,” Tamberelli says. “I mean, you can’t beat it! If you were a ’90s kid you’ve got to come to the show. It’s important for us, and it’s important for the fans to relive it a little bit.” S

“Nostalgia Personified: All That Edition” comes to the Ashland Theatre on Wednesday, Nov. 20 at 8:30 pm. Tickets cost $20 to $37. nostalgiapersonified.com.

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From OUTBURN ONLINE:

NOSTALGIA PERSONIFIED: Nickelodeon’s Pete & Pete and All That on Tour

INTERVIEW WITH DANNY TAMBERELLI AND LORI BETH DENBERG BY JAMESON KETCHUM
PHOTOGRAPHS BY JEREMY SAFFER


We live in a culture of nostalgia, that beautiful cyclical phenomenon we all clamor for and have been fulfilled by via YouTube and Disney+. If you’re a child of the 90s, meaning you were born in the mid to late 80s and grew up during that seminal period, you probably begged your parents to let you watch Nickelodeon for 24 hours straight on the regular. Amazing programming such as The Adventures of Pete & Pete and All That were comedy staples in every healthy American kid’s diet. Thankfully, Danny Tamberelli and Lori Beth Denberg, giants in kid comedy from both of these pivotal hits, are giving us another taste of personified nostalgia with…Nostalgia Personified, their road show where dirt is dished, behind the scenes tales are told and, God willing, some green slime makes a cameo. We sat down with the two game changers separately in the hopes of getting some closure on our childhoods.

What first sparked the idea for the Nostalgia Personified tour? I know the fans were clamoring for it.
Danny Tamberelli: I’ve been doing it with Mike Maronna from The Adventures of Pete & Pete. We have a podcast we do and have a residency at a place, and I wanted to do a show that was more than the typical talking heads podcast. We thought we’d show some old clips of us and just kind of Mystery Science Theater the thing to make fun of each other. It was the 90s, we had bad hair, the clothing was ridiculous, etc. That spurs conversations like, “Do you remember what you were doing during that shot?” In making fun of each other, we’re also giving the audience a little deep dive into what we were doing at that time because they love that. Lori Beth is just a perfect fit because we worked together on All That and Figure It Out. We’ve been friends forever and we both have thick skin and love to make people laugh at each other’s expense. She’ll probably say some terrible things about me and they’re probably true (laughs).


“WE’VE BEEN FRIENDS FOREVER AND WE BOTH HAVE THICK SKIN AND LOVE TO MAKE PEOPLE LAUGH AT EACH OTHER’S EXPENSE.”

It’s funny, when I told a few friends I’d be doing this interview, we all talked about how we didn’t have cable, but we would go over to friends’ houses just to watch All That and Pete & Pete.
Tamberelli: That sounds like me with the Nintendo. My dad was an Atari guy, and I’d have to go over to my friends’ houses to play some Super Mario.

You were an Atari family?
Tamberelli: He sticks to brands (laughs).

“WHAT KID DOESN’T LIKE FEET AND CHEESE JOKES? IT’S THE MEAT AND POTATOES OF CHILDREN’S COMEDY”

You’ve been doing some form of sketch comedy for the majority of your life. When you were making Pete & Pete and All That, did you have an idea that you were making something that would last and connect so deeply with people?
Tamberelli: With All That, it was something I did when I was maybe a year or two too old to really pay attention to it. I was all cool in high school and being a dummy. Going back and watching these episodes, they were written real well. What kid doesn’t like feet and cheese jokes? It’s the meat and potatoes of children’s comedy, and we were really good at doing those jokes.

Did you have a sense back then of who was gonna emerge as a top performer? Or did it just feel like you’d do this thing as kids and then move on?
Tamberelli: For me, it did feel that way. I loved sketch comedy and grew up on Monty Python because my dad was a fan and watching SNL and Mad TV. I was really into it. I was so pumped to get on the show and make characters or make characters your own and throw whatever voice you think it could be on it. Watching that as a kid was really cool to see how people took characters they were given and how they grew into what they are. Jack Campbell Fat Cop was basically my uncle, an NYPD cop who throws his weight around, just a boisterous guy. That’s how I found my big character.

“IT WAS AN AWESOME EXPERIENCE. WHEN IT WAS OVER AND I WAS GOING TO COLLEGE, I JUST DITCHED EVERYTHING”

Did you ever think much about who was going to maybe go the distance?
Tamberelli: They picked the right group of people. I got to write on season six, and I got to go and be a part of the writer’s room and a few of the sketches I wrote went to air. It goes back to how awesome Nickelodeon and their crews are. They let an 18-year-old kid be a part of the writer’s room and get sketches on the air. It was an awesome experience. When it was over and I was going to college, I just ditched everything, I went to school, and played music and left sketch behind for awhile. When I graduated and came back to New York, I found a couple old friends who were trying to get into comedy and we’d do sketches together as Man Boob Comedy and making YouTube videos. It was really important to get back to that feeling of making comedy. I went to public school and was surrounded by kids always talking about the next step. If I missed prom because I was shooting in LA or something like that, those were the things that were important to me at the time. When I came back from shooting my senior year, everyone was applying to colleges. I wanted to be a normal kid and take a step back.

I’m sure that was difficult.
Tamberelli: I could have been Nick Cannon, you know? I was one Drumline movie away (laughs).

You and Michael Maronna went on to do a podcast together. How has your creative relationship with him evolved over the years?
Tamberelli: We are definitely real TV brothers. We’ve known each other since I was seven and he was 11, so it has run a long time with a little gap. When I went to high school, he went to college. And when I went to college, he was moving to New York. We ran into each other outside of a concert in Brooklyn, and I was hung over and I puked between two cars. “Oh, hey, things are going great. It’s been awhile (mimics vomiting sound), do you want to start a podcast (more vomiting).” It just opened up a line of hanging out again. We started doing these reunions, then we started doing the podcast. Most of it is just off the cuff, we just bullshit and it’s a casual, no agenda podcast. We have guests and short minis, and we have a hotline where people can leave us messages and we’ll respond to them on mini episodes. He was an older brother figure to me, and because I’m the oldest in my family, I never had that. He is definitely my influence as far as preferences and music he was into. He introduced me to Nirvana. He got me into the Pixies. He’s a very cool dude. His kid’s name is Gerard and my kid’s name is Alfred, both old man names.

Do you feel like your humor is the same?
Tamberelli: Pete & Pete was such a specific sort of older brother who wants to be an adult, but he has a little brother who’s still a kid and he’s jealous that the little brother has no shame. That Halloween episode is the perfect example with, “I don’t want to trick or treat with my little brother. I wanna smash pumpkins instead.” It’s that perfect push and pull of not wanting to be a kid, but wanting to be able to get away with kid shit. At the end of the day, we’re always friends.

You’re doing the tour with Lori Beth Denberg. Can you share a favorite or embarrassing memory of yours involving Lori Beth?
Tamberelli: Embarrassing Lori Beth? Lori Beth is hard to embarrass. She’s so fast. We did a New Year’s Eve Nickelodeon thing. We were doing the wraparounds for the day on the network. We were in Times Square at the Viacom building and everybody was gone. We were all just hanging out in this office building overlooking all the craziness. Lori Beth was just looking around saying, “There are so many people!” She couldn’t get over that fact. I told her she wasn’t from New York.

“WE DO A THING CALLED DIRTY SECRETS WHERE WE TELL SECRETS ABOUT OURSELVES OR EACH OTHER. WE GIVE A LITTLE DISH.”

Besides a lot of nostalgia, what can fans expect from the live show?
Tamberelli: The format is that it’s a 75 minute comedy show showing old clips of us as kids. We’ll show old commercials, or if one of us had a guest spot on a 90s TV show, we’ll show that. We’ll do some improv games because Lori Beth and Mike are really quick. It keeps us happy and keeps our brains working. We’ll do a Q&A at the end and answer them the best we can. We do a thing called Dirty Secrets where we tell secrets about ourselves or each other. We give a little dish.

Okay, you gotta give us an example.
Tamberelli: An example would be when I was on the set of Pete & Pete, I used to shake PAs down for cigarettes, as a 12-year-old kid. I was putting them in a bad position like, “I don’t want to give cigarettes to a 12-year-old kid, but he’s also the talent.” I wasn’t thinking back then. It’s a terrible position. What a jerk I was.

We’d be remiss to not mention your band Jounce. What’s currently going on with that project?
Tamberelli: It’s been almost 20 years of playing music together. We have a new record we’re working on right now. We’ll go into the studio to record our fourth full-length soon. The guitar player Matt [DeSteno] and I are the two who have stuck in it this long. We’re like a Dinosaur Jr. stoner rock kinda thing.

Does it scratch a creative itch that acting may miss?
Tamberelli: When I left LA after All That was over, I’d already been playing with this band, this trippy hippy jam band in high school. I have been playing in bands since I was in 8th grade—that was my passion. When I decided to go to school, I was gonna go to college for music. That was my jaded moment of being like, “You’re always taking direction from somebody else. Music is mine, I write the lyrics, I write the music.” In hindsight, the angle was maybe bad, but it did push me to dig deep. When I went to college, I figured it all out. I immersed myself in jazz theory, rudiments, etc. The last 12 or 15 years, we’ve kinda gotten back to what I grew up being into—90s alternative music, Guided by Voices, etc. “Who Hates the Office” was really our first record as Jounce. It’s a good song.

It’s crazy to go back and realize all the places you pop up during those years—The Mighty Ducks, The Adventures of Huck Finn, etc.
Tamberelli: The Adventures of Huck Finn was my first foray into knowing that you can be completely cut out of a movie (laughs). I was in the trailer and a few scenes, but I had a much bigger role. It just ran long, and they just didn’t think they needed those scenes in the movie. I thought it was funny. I didn’t lose sleep over it. “I did this cool movie. I can’t wait to see how they edited it. Oh, I’m not in it.”

What does it mean to you when people say, “You were my childhood?”
Tamberelli: It’s a huge thing. It’s the best feeling that there is, having someone say that to you and knowing that something like Pete & Pete was a crazy cult show. It wasn’t for everybody, and you had to be a certain kind of person to get it. I grew up the same way, so I completely get it—to have a show that wasn’t such a cookie cutter show. Same with All That—there were no real children sketch comedy shows, so when they’re done well, they really resonate with people. 99 percent of people who say that Pete & Pete affected their lives are people I’d end up running into in a bar and striking up a conversation. It’s a humbling feeling, and I can relate because it did the same for me.

I hear that you might try and do some West Coast dates with this tour.
Lori Beth Denberg: Hopefully, in January we’ll get to visit the Pacific Northwest.

I interviewed Danny last week, so now you get to hear his answers as we go.
Denberg: I get to hear all the lies and refute them.

I asked him for an old embarrassing stories of you, and he said that you can’t be embarrassed.
Denberg: (laughs) Yes, I’m pretty out there, man.

How about ones about Danny?
Denberg: I’m just a few years older than him, which doesn’t make a big difference now, but when we were working on All That, I was 21 or 22 maybe, and he was about 15. His mom had to go out of town for a weekend when he was out in LA shooting All That. His mom asked if I would take over guardianship of him for the weekend, and I was like, “He’s not a handful, no problem.” He was fine, but just a punk teenager with his big over the head I’m a teenager listening to my music headphones. I was like, “Oh, you’re such a teenager Danny.” And meanwhile I’m like 21, so I’m so mature (laughs). Danny was a pretty goofy guy, too, so it’s hard to embarrass him, but I do bust his chops, which he makes pretty easy.

Were you guys pretty close back then as well?
Denberg: I was a big fan of Pete & Pete, so the first time I got to meet him and Michael Maronna when they came to Orlando, I was star-struck. Eventually, he came and worked on All That, and we got closer and I spent time with his family in Orlando and Los Angeles. It was when we did Figure It Out, which had a celebrity panel, we did a bunch of those together and that’s when we really started to get closer and see how much fun it was to riff off each other.

“IT CAME FROM US GETTING TO SPEND TIME TOGETHER ON A PROJECT AND HAVING SO MUCH FUN. WE WONDERED IF PEOPLE WOULD ENJOY WATCHING US SPEND TIME TOGETHER.”
For the Nostalgia Personified tour, fans were hoping you’d do something like this, but on your end, what was the first spark?
Denberg: Danny and I worked on a digital series together called The Tonopah Five. It’s not quite finished yet, but it’s been in some festivals and stuff. There was a part in it that would be good for Danny, so I reached out to him and he said yes. Working together again was so much fun, and he came up with the idea of Nostalgia Personified like they’ve been doing for Pete & Pete but for All That. I think it came from us getting to spend time together on a project and having so much fun. We wondered if people would enjoy watching us spend time together.

Looking back, did you have any sense that what you were doing would be as impactful as it was? Or did it just feel like something you’d do as a kid and then move on?
Denberg: I had always wanted to be a performer since the time I was five or six. I did every play in school and knew everyone’s lines. I was way more into it than anyone else. I didn’t know how I was going to get into being a professional actor, but that was always my goal. I got my job on All That through a drama competition in high school. It was just kind of random. I say it was random and it was. Half of show business is luck, if not more, but I really dedicated everything to working in theater. I loved sitcoms and watched stand-up comedy and honed my skills in comedy. It was always the goal, so it seemed random that I ended up on a TV show. I was like, “Okay this is the start.”

From there, were you just thinking you’d go up and up?
Denberg: I didn’t have any specific “my dream is to be a movie star!” but I definitely wanted to continue to work, and I really liked working in the media of television, multi camera television, etc. I’ve also done movies and some more dramatic stuff. I love it all. The hope was that I would keep doing this, meaning All That.

“WE HAVE FAR FEWER TRAGEDIES THAN MAYBE SOME OTHER PLACES, SO THAT’S HEARTENING—THE FACT THAT I’M STILL FRIENDS WITH PEOPLE AND HAVEN’T HAD TO BAIL ANYONE OUT OF JAIL YET.”
It was like a dream scenario. Nickelodeon seemed like such a great place to work. The public just hears the horror stories of child actors or places like Disney, but Nickelodeon seemed to really create a great environment.
Denberg: It was pretty good. I think we have far fewer tragedies than maybe some other places, so that’s heartening—the fact that I’m still friends with people and haven’t had to bail anyone out of jail yet. Although, I’m still holding out for Danny for that call in the middle of the night.

Speaking of, Danny mentioned you’d be doing a segment called Dirty Secrets. His dirty secret was that he used to bum cigarettes from PAs.
Denberg: What a horrible human.

Can you share one of yours?
Denberg: You should know I haven’t done one of these shows before (laughs). Dirty secrets, what would that be? This is so low key, but when we were on Figure It Out, they would drop goo and yucky stuff on you. There would be all these things that were clues for the puzzle—tuna salad, plastic forks and knives, etc. We’d just steal that stuff. Once there were pool balls that we took, and they had to come to us and say they belonged to someone and they needed them back. Also, we’d get introduced for Figure It Out from behind the bleachers where the audience was sitting. If you were under the bleachers you could see everyone’s feet and the moms’ purses. We’d take the purses, and then when we’d get introduced, we’d go out and return them and they’d just be confused. It was just a fun little confusing gag for us. I guess it’d be a dirtier secret if we went through them and stole money.

“YOU THINK OF NOSTALGIA AS SUPER OLD, BUT THAT MEANS I DID SOMETHING OF WORTH SO LONG AGO THAT THEY REMEMBER IT FONDLY.”

It’s so cool now to see people around our age now making stuff in Hollywood and bringing their nostalgia to the forefront. Are you surprised this has all come back around?
Denberg: I certainly didn’t expect it. When we were making a TV show 25 years ago, I wasn’t saying, “I bet in 2020 this will be the biggest thing ever!” That is what’s interesting about it. There was a time where I didn’t pursue acting for about a decade. During that time was when people would find me. That was when Workaholics found me and asked me to be on. It’s super funny and a trip to be nostalgia. You think of nostalgia as super old, but that means I did something of worth so long ago that they remember it fondly. That is a total trip and it’s great, especially having done All That and Figure It Out that I’m proud of. It’d be different if I did something I hated. People responded to the show because it was funny and edgy. The parents loved it, too. I meet people who are fans that are millennials and their parents who say, “I had to watch a lot of crap with my kids, but I enjoyed your show.” It appealed to people differently based on what their deal was. You’re right, it’s people who grew up on me and Danny who are now writing, producing, and directing, so that’s really fun. People will hit me up to be on their web series or in their film. I’ve turned down some. Anything with bad grammar in emails is a red flag, like, “We want you to be in our short film and I’m a Nigerian prince.” I don’t think I want to do that one. I’ve also gotten to meet and work with some really cool talented people, just like The Tonopah Five. The writers and producers reached out to me to do a cameo as myself in another web series called The Doll. Based on everything they showed me, they were legit, and they came to me with another project where I was the lead and Danny came in as the second lead. That’s the kind of stuff that’s been really fun. Even when I wasn’t pounding the pavement with an agent, I still got to play and meet people who are fun to work with.

Did you have a sense back then of who was going to go the distance in show business? Or did you all feel mostly on the same level?
Denberg: Well, of course, not. It was definitely me (laughs). You look at someone like Keenan [Thompson] who has done fabulously well and I never thought, “Oh, he’s going to be a big deal and be on Saturday Night Live,” but he was always so good and funny and smart. What people would think of at the time for Nickelodeon was gross out and messy, but he was just always so smart and subtle and a really funny guy to watch and work with. You’d see him and say, “You could see him doing more.” It’s so gratifying to see him become successful doing what he’s so good at. When I looked at Danny, I thought, “Well, he’ll probably be dead by 20 of a heroin overdose.” (laughs) And he’s proved me wrong! He’s going strong!

“USE THAT AS A HEADLINE SO I SEEM LIKE A REALLY ELOQUENT PERSON. LB SAID, ‘ALL THAT WAS LEGIT AF!’”
It’s easy to think that the child star thing would work against someone like Keenan, but I recall him saying that he’s been doing sketch for the majority of his life. All That was ahead of its time. For how young everyone was, your comedic sensibilities were great.
Denberg: It was legit, man. It was legit AF. Use that as a headline so I seem like a really eloquent person. LB said, “All That was legit AF!” (laughs)

It’s easy to be snooty as an adult, but you’ve all gone the distance, disproving the kid star stereotype.
Denberg: I think that’s what All That turned out to be, giving kids more credit than usually what they’re given, what they can do, and what they can enjoy. It was goofy and messy, but it was smart. I think that’s what stood the test of time. You don’t look back and think it’s lame. I mean, I used to watch Full House every week, but watching it now is like, “Oh, Dear Lord.”

Did you watch the Full House reboot?
Denberg: I might have watched a couple, and I thought I’m just going to let the people who enjoy it, enjoy it and I’ll be okay.

“I HOPE PEOPLE ENJOY THIS CONTINUATION MORE THAN I WAS ABLE TO ENJOY THE CONTINUATION OF FULL HOUSE.”

I tried with Girl Meets World, but you’re just watching to see how the characters have aged.
Denberg: Meanwhile I’m doing some work on the All That reboot (laughs). So, on that tip, I hope people aren’t watching it like that. I don’t think they’re calling it a reboot but a continuation. I was on the first four seasons of All That, but they did 10, so coming back this last year, it’s called season 11. It’s not starting over, it’s a continuation, and they’ll be new kids and they’re so friggin’ awesome. I just had a dream last night that I had to take care of all of them and I was bad at it. I’ve been working on that and doing some old characters. They’re having some original cast members come back to do some of our old sketches, and it just fits in seamlessly with the new things and the kids are great. I hope people enjoy this continuation more than I was able to enjoy the continuation of Full House.

I just watched the Vital Information where you pass the torch. I think you’re doing it the right away. “Reboot” is becoming a dirtier and dirtier word.
Denberg: Exactly. Reboot is the new reality show like, “Oh, we’re doing another reality show or reboot because we don’t have any ideas.” I wouldn’t have just gone in for anything. I shied away, maybe to my detriment, because everywhere I went someone would ask me to do some Vital Information, and it was like “Guys, no. I’m not gonna dine out on this thing I did 20 years ago.” Going back to the actual show and doing the Loud Librarian sketch seemed totally fine with the new kids and new people for me to yell at. It doesn’t feel yucky, if that makes sense.

Totally, it’s a double-edged sword. You’ve created something 20 years ago that still resonates today, yet you don’t want to be known only for something you did back then. It’s like telling someone to go date the person they dated 20 years ago or work the job they worked 20 years ago.
Denberg: It’s like the really sad quarterback who became a townie and still goes to all the games. I don’t want to feel like this pathetic thing where I’m clinging to the glory days.

What is your top requested thing? I know Kel [Mitchell] can’t go to any burger place.
Denberg: Danny and I share this affliction as two Vital Informationers. People will say, “Give me some vital information,” and I’ll say, “Why don’t you?” I don’t think there’s anything I can post on Facebook where someone doesn’t comment. It could be like, “Dad’s funeral was hard, but I got through it with the help of friends and family.” And someone will comment, “That’s vital information for your everyday life.” (laughs) No matter what I post.

You know that person who posted that is just so happy thinking they got you.
Denberg: My dad is still alive, that’s just an example. Just the other week, and this is so frustrating, we were doing a live show for All That and I had done a library sketch on a Thursday then Friday is the live show. They set up chairs and stuff with people just hanging out in the library set. There’s a bunch of kids there, and during shooting, these kids wouldn’t stop talking. I went up to them a few times to tell them to be quiet. Other people told them, too. I got really frustrated, so I went up and told them they needed to be quiet. Sitting in the library set I can’t tell someone to be quiet. They thought it was a joke. It was so frustrating! I was completely neutered in the situation (laughs).

“I’M LOOKING FORWARD TO SEEING TEENY TINY DANNY WHEN HE WAS THE CUTEST KID IN THE WORLD THEN WONDERING WHAT HORRIBLE FATE BEFELL HIM TO TURN HIM INTO WHAT HE IS NOW.”

What can fans expect from the live Nostalgia Personified show?
Denberg: I’ve never been to one, so I don’t know! I’ll be as surprised as you will be! I think it’ll just be fun to see how much fun Danny and I have together. You always think of people you watch on TV or your heroes, and you know they say, “Don’t meet your heroes because what if they’re total dicks?” That should be the title “LB says don’t meet your heroes, they’re total di*ks” (laughs). I think it’ll be fun for people to see that we are like our personas that people have received through our work and that we really have affection for each other and how that affects the work. They’re digging up clips of me, so I don’t know what that will be like. I’m looking forward to seeing teeny tiny Danny when he was the cutest kid in the world then wondering what horrible fate befell him to turn him into what he is now.

Danny and I talked about how funny it is to go back and see him pop up in so many movies from that era, like The Adventures of Huck Finn and The Mighty Ducks.
Denberg: My boyfriend and I were looking for a movie to watch a while ago, and I said “Mighty Ducks 2?” And he wanted the first Mighty Ducks, so we watched it, and I thought, “Danny is gonna be so cute!” Then we watched Mighty Ducks 2, so we could see super cute Keenan.

It’s cool to see Keenan reference stuff like The Mighty Ducks or Good Burger on SNL a few times over the years. It’s not lost on him.
Denberg: You can’t come off from it because then you’re just some Shia LaBeouf serious guy that turns weird.

That could be a whole other conversation.
Denberg: There’s a balance between enjoying and being proud and understanding that the work I did means something to people versus clinging onto it like, “I’m a Hollywood icon!”

It’s how you got to where you are.
Denberg: It’s part of what gets you where you’re going. I’m really lucky that I can look back at the work I did on Nickelodeon and say I did a good job and I was given good material. Maybe I’m luckier than most so I shouldn’t judge, but yeah, that guy is a mess (laughs).

Don’t miss both the All That and Pete & Pete Nostalgia Personified tour in 2020: http://nostalgiapersonified.com

Keep up to date on all things Danny and Mike here: http://theadventuresofdannyandmike.com

###

More Nick:Throw Back with Ned's Declassified star Devon Werkheiser | Throw Back with Nickelodeon!

Originally published: Tuesday, October 01, 2019.

H/T: lancasteronline.com, Chronogram Magazine, Consequence of Sound.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon, NickRewind, The Adventures of Pete & Pete and All That News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon Partners with Faza Meonk for SpongeBob x Si Juki Collaboration

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Update (16/12) - Nickelodeon and Faza Meonk will launch Si Juki x SpongeBob Story Book : Dunia Imajinasi at an event at Kota Kasablanka Mall in South Jakarta on Friday 20th December 2019 at 5pm!

It's SpongeBob SquarePants' 20th anniversary, and to celebrate, Nickelodeon is partnering with Indonesian comic series Si Juki for a brand-new collaboration! Faza Meonk, the creator of the comic series, announcing the sponge-tastic news via his @JukiHoki Twitter page.



Meonk spoke of his excitement on working on the project, revealing that SpongeBob was his and Si Juki's idol, and that the time has come for the two iconic characters to 'play together'.

Si Juki's latest collaboration received positive responses from many Indonesian citizens on Twitter.

Si Juki follow its namesake character Juki, a deviant young adult male throughout a variety of humorous scenarios and adventures. Originally published as a webcomic in 2010, the series is now available in both print and Line Webtoon in addition to various social media platforms. An animated movie inspired by the series was released 2017. According to Faza, he based the humor of Si Juki on SpongeBob SquarePants' all-age humor. Si Juki-themed stickers has also been released for Facebook Messenger and LINE, the latter receiving over a million downloads within two days. An inspired mobile game for iOS and Android was released in 2016. The Indonesian comic series is created and authored by Faza Ibnu Ubaidillah Salman or Faza Meonk

A release date for the #JukixSpongebob collab is yet to be announced, however, Meonk teased that it's coming soon.

The news follows Nickelodeon and Johnny Lau, the creator of Mr. Kiasu announcing plans to collaborate on a coffee table book that features everyone’s favourite yellow sponge, SpongeBob SquarePants, and Singaporean comic figure, Mr. Kiasu.



From Media Formasi:

Si Juki Akan Berkolaborasi Dengan SpongeBob SquarePants

Ada kabar gembira dan mengejutkan buat MedForians yang sangst menyukai karakter komik Si Juki dan animasi SpongeBob SquarePants.

Melalui pengumuman yang dikirim lewat akun Twitter resmi Si Juki, serial komik karangan Faza Meonk itu resmi berkolaborasi dengan serial animasi SpongeBob SquarePants milik Nickelodeon.

Cuitan tersebut disertai dengan hashtag JukixSpongebob yang diunggah pada hari ini, Jumat (6/12).

Faza Meonk sebelumnya mengakui bahwa SpongeBob, selain merupakan salah satu karakter kartun favoritnya, juga merupakan inspirasi dari karakter dan dunia Si Juki. Kolaborasi ini bisa dibilang salah satu mimpinya yang bakal menjadi kenyataan.

Ia pernah membuat beberapa fanart bertemakan SpongeBob dengan art style-nya yang khas.

Belum ada info mengenai tanggal rilis dari kolaborasi yang menghebohkan warganet Indonesia ini. Cuitan terakhirnya hanya mengungkapkan caption “Are you ready kids?” dan mengunggah gambar bertuliskan Juki dan SpongeBob dengan tulisan “Coming Soon”.

MedForians tunggu saja berita terbaru lainnya ataupun info detail dari crossover antara Juki dan SpongeBob ini.

Sumber: @JukiHoki

###

From Nawala Karsa:

SI JUKI UMUMKAN KOLABORASI DENGAN SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS

Si Juki mengumumkan akan melakukan kolaborasi dengan Spongebob Squarepants. Karakter milik Faza Meonk ini pernah berkolaborasi dengan Boboiboy

Faza Meonk, melalui akun Twitter @JukiHoki, mengumumkan bahwa Si Juki akan melakukan kolaborasi dengan Spongebob Squarepants karya Stephen Hillenburg. Dalam cuitannya, ia menyebut bahwa kolaborasi antara keduanya merupakan ‘kesempatan’ bagus.

“Pernah gak lo kebayang karakter yang pas kecil sering lo liat di TV eh sekarang bisa kolaborasi ama lo?. Sama sob!”

“Dari dulu kliatan bnget kan kalo Spongebob adalah idola gue. Dan waktunya tiba. Tahun ini gue dapat kesempatan maen bareng Spongebob.”

Ia juga menyebut bahwa Spongebob Squarepants merupakan idola Si Juki, dan ia menyebut bahwa waktunya telah tiba bagi mereka untuk ‘bermain bersama’. “Are you ready kids?,” ujarnya dalam cuitannya di Twitter.

Kolaborasi terbaru Si Juki tersebut mendapat respon positif dari banyak warganet Indonesia yang mengikuti akun Intellectual Property karya Faza Meonk tersebut.

“Wah penasaran, kemungkinan juki pakai tabung gas kaya sandy ga ya,” ujar @YasinThohari.

“Juki aja bisa gaet spengebob buat collabs. Kamu kapan gaet dia buat di ajak ke pelaminan? Eaaaaaa wkwkwkw,” ujar @_haiirey.

“Kapan juk tayangnya episod pertama koleb bareng sepong.bob? Gasabar nih,” ujar @ni_KWB.

“Juki gagal jadi presiden tapi bisa kolaborasi dengan presiden bikini bottom. Keren lu jook!” ujar @Adamgrabbani.

“UwU sekali, ini dijadiin tayangan animasi atau komik ya?” ujar @hetaroin.

“Di bikini bottom nanti lo nge kost di sandy juk?” ujar @imampapafani.

Si Juki merupakan karakter komik di bawah asuhan Pionicon Management yang sudah cukup populer di kalangan pengguna media sosial dan telah hadir dalam berbagai media seperti buku, merchandise, mobile game hingga film.

‘Spongebob Squarepants: Sponge On the Run’ Paparkan Alur Cerita!

Seperti yang sudah kita ketahui bahwa Paramount Pictures melalui akun Twitter resminya mengumumkan produksi film terbarunya yaitu “The Spongebob Movie: Sponge On the Run”.

Berdasarkan trailer yang sudah dirilis oleh Paramount Pictures, diketahui film tersebut mengisahkan tentang pertemuan pertama antara Spongebob dan Gary saat Spongebob berkemah di Camp Coral.

Tapi di suatu hari, sepulang Spongebob bekerja, tanpa diduga Gary menghilang (lagi) entah kemana. Alhasil Spongebob panik dan mencoba menanyakan keberadaan Gary pada teman-temannya. Saya menambahkan “lagi” karena sebelumnya Gary sempat menghilang di salah satu episode Spongebob Squarepants yang berjudul “Have You Seen This Snail”.

Karena tidak membuahkan hasil, Spongebob memutuskan untuk berpetualang bersama Patrick untuk mencari Gary hingga ke kota yang hilang Atlantis. Bahkan menariknya selama perjalanan, Spongebob dan Patrick bertemu dengan Sage yang diperankan oleh Keanu Reeves.

Dikutip dari ComicBook, ternyata ada yang menarik dibalik judul film tersebut. Diketahui judul sebelumnya dari film itu adalah “The Spongebob Movie: It’s a Wonderful Sponge” yang akan menceritakan asal mula cerita Spongebob.

Dikarenakan pada trailernya, masih ada elemen cerita yang menampilkan Spongebob semasa muda dan momen pertama kali Spongebob bertemu Gary.

###

From Pikiran-Rakyat.com:

Karakter Si Juki Siap Kolaborasi dengan Spongebob Squarepants

PIKIRAN RAKYAT - Karakter Si Juki akan berkolaborasi dengan karakter Spongebob Squarepants.

Pencipta karakter Si Juki Faza Meonk, melalui akun twitternya @fazameonk membagikan rasa harunya.

"Terharu, dari awal cuma nonton dan ngefans sama Spongebob, sekarang officially diajak collab," tulis Faza.

Salah satu alasan Nickelodeon mengajak kolaborasi dengan tokoh Si Juki ialah karena adanya kemiripan dengan Spongebob.

Nickelodeon membaca keterangan Si Juki di Wikipedia berbahasa Inggris.

"..tertulis disana gue banyak terinspirasi bikin Juki karena Spongebob yang bisa menyajikan Jokes berlapis, dewasa, remaja, anak bisa ketawa bareng nonton Spongebob," tulisnya.

Faza mengatakan kolaborasi antara Si Juki dan Spongebob akan diumumkan di penghujung Tahun 2019.

"Tanggal 20 kita akan launching," ujar Faza dilansir Pikiran-Rakyat.com dari Antara News.

###

From kompas.com:

Si Juki Bakal Berkolaborasi dengan SpongeBob

JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com - Karakter Si Juki ciptaan Faza Meonk akan berkolaborasi dengan SpongeBob Squarepants.

Faza mengumumkan kolaborasi itu melalui akun Twitter @FazaMeonk, Jumat (6/12/2019) malam.

"Terharu, dari awal cuma nonton dan ngefans sama SpongeBob, sekarang officially diajak collab," tulis Faza.

Dia mengatakan, inisiasi proyek kolaborasi dua karakter terkenal itu dimulai sejak 2018 dalam rangka menyambut 20 tahun SpongeBob Squarepants.

Menurut Faza, salah satu alasan Nickelodeon mengajaknya bekerja sama memadukan dua tokoh tersebut adalah karena mereka membaca keterangan mengenai Si Juki di Wikipedia berbahasa Inggris.

"..tertulis di sana gue banyak terinspirasi bikin Juki karena SpongeBob yang bisa menyajikan jokes berlapis, dewasa, remaja, anak bisa ketawa bareng nonton SpongeBob," kata Faza.

Faza mengatakan, kolaborasi antara Si Juki dan SpongeBob akan diumumkan pada pengujung 2019.

"Tanggal 20 kita akan launch," ujar Faza seperti dikutip dari Antara.

Ini bukan pertama kali karakter Si Juki berkolaborasi dengan tokoh lain.

Karakter itu pernah muncul bersama karakter asal Negeri Ginseng untuk mempromosikan Seoul hingga bersama BoBoiBoy dari Malaysia.

Karakter ini juga sudah diadaptasi ke layar lebar pada akhir 2017 dan akan hadir dalam film baru Si Juki the Movie: Harta Pulau Monyet tahun depan bersama pengisi suara pesohor ternama, seperti Jaja Miharja, Maya Wulan, Indro Warkop juga Mandra.

Sementara itu, SpongeBob juga akan muncul dalam film layar lebar The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run yang dijadwalkan tayang pada 2020.

Film yang disutradarai dan ditulis Tim Hill itu melibatkan pengisi suara seperti Tom Kenny, Awkwafina, Clancy Brown, Rodger Bumpass, Bill Fagerbakke, Carolyn Lawrence, Douglas Lawrence, dan Reggie Watts.

###

From Duniaku:

Kolaborasi Keren Kreator Lokal, Ini Si Juki x Spongebob Squarepants!

Maskot lokal bertemu maskot Nickelodeon!


Jakarta, duniaku.com - Kolaborasi Si Juki x Spongebob Squarepants hadir! Seperti apa sih, proyek kerja sama kedua maskot pop kultur ini?

1. Pameran kolaborasi dua franchise anyar!

Dalam acara peluncuran pameran produk yang diadakan di Kota Kasablanka Jakarta Selatan, franchise Spongebob Squarepants berkolaborasi bersama Si Juki sebagai bagian dari ulang tahun ke-20 seri animasi stasiun televisi Nickelodeon tersebut!

Sepanjang tahun 2019 pihak Nickelodeon memiliki inisiatif untuk menjalin kerjasama dengan berbagai macam seniman dan merek di seantero dunia sebagai perayaan ulang tahun penghuni Bikini Bottom paling laris ini!


2. Kolaborasi Matang!

Kerennya, ternyata kolaborasi ini sudah terencana matang! Inisiasi proyek ini sudah dimulai sejak tahun 2018, yang berarti hal ini sudah berlangsung selama lebih dari satu tahun, lho!

Dengan begitu, Si Juki terpilih sebagai perwakilan dari Indonesia sebagai tokoh lokal yang turut merayakan ulang tahun karakter kelas dunia ini, melalui

3. Sepatah kata Faza Meonk

Inspirasi Juki dari Spongebob oleh Faza Meonk. duniaku.com/Adhitya Daniel

Faza Meonk, otak di balik karakter Juki berujar bahwa latar belakang Juki sendiri sangat terinspirasi dengan SpongeBob, sampai-sampai secara di bawah sadar, karakteristik sang Juki sendiri terpengaruh oleh si spons kuning!


Faza sempat menulis ungkapan kebahagiannya melalui cuitan akun Twitter-nya, @FazaMeonk, tanggal 6 Desember lalu. "Terharu, dari awal cuma nonton dan ngefans sama Spongebob, sekarang officially diajak collab," tulis Faza.

Apa pendapatmu tentang proyek kolaborasi Si Juki x Spongebob Squarepants? Sampaikan opinimu melalui kolom komentar di bawah ini, ya!

###

From iNews Portal:

MNC Licensing Hadirkan Nickelodeon Spongebob untuk Meriahkan Natal di Kota Kasablanka

Pengunjung mal Kota Kasablanka antusias berfoto barena karakter Spongebob Squarepants dkk di acara yang digelar MNC Licensing, Jumat (20/12/2019). (Foto: iNews.id/Irfan Ma'ruf).

JAKARTA, iNews.id – MNC Licensing menyelenggarakan acara bertajuk “Christmas Celebration with Nickelodeon Spongebob 20 Best Year Ever" untuk memeriahkan perayaan Natal 2019. Acara digelar di pusat perbelanjaan Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta Selatan.

Vice President MNC Content and Licensing Shierly Kosasih mengatakan, acara ini sengaja menghadirkan Spongebob Squarepants karena film tentang kartun itu mengisahkan persahabatan dan kekeluargaan. Selain itu Spongebob dkk dapat menjadi teman liburan akhir tahun bagi anak-anak.

Selain itu, kerja sama MNC Group dengan Nickelodeon telah berlangsung lama atau sejak 2013. Spongebob juga telah lama hadir di layar kaca GTV dan membuat anak-anak familiar dengan karakter tersebut.

"Ini merupakan bentuk kerja sama yang spesial dengan karakter Spongebob. Apalagi banyak pesan moral yang terkandung di dalamnya," kata Shierly di Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta Selatan, Jumat (19/12/2019).

VP MNC Content and Licensing Shierly Kosasih.

Dia berharap masyarakat bisa menikmati sajian liburan yang dihadirkan MNC Licensing. Anak-anak dapat bermain sekaligus belajar.

Acara Christmas Celebration with Nickelodeon Spongebob 20 Best Year Ever akan berlangsung sejak 21 Desember 2019 hingga 5 Januari 2020. Pengunjung dapat berinteraksi dengan Spongebob Squarepants, Patrick Star dan Squidward.

Selain itu, mereka juga bisa bermain di arena Spongebob Ball Pit dengan membayar Rp100.000.

Kehadiran Spongebob disambut antusias pengunjung. Salah satunya artis Eriska Rein (25) yang mengajak putranya Mikhail Zayn Mushin menghadiri acara meet and greet Spongebob Squarepants ini.

Eriska menuturkan, banyak hal yang bisa dieksplorasi dari acara ini mulai area permainan untuk anak hingga meet and greet. Kehadiran para karakter Nickelodeon ini menghadirkan keseruan.


"Seru banget, momennya pas sama liburan anak-anak. Zayn juga sudah kenal sama karakter Spongebob, jadi dia paling antusias," kata Eriska.

###

From Okezone Celebrity:

Antusias Eriska Rein Ajak Anak di Meet and Greet Spongebob Squarepants

Eriska Rein (Foto: Rena/Okezone)

JAKARTA - Eriska Rein menyambut antusias acara Meet and Greet Spongebob Squarepants bersama Patrick dan Squidward. Sebab, artis 25 ini tak perlu jauh-jauh mengajak sang putra, Mikhail Zayn Mushin berlibur.

Eriska Rein menuturkan banyak hal yang bisa di eksplore dari acara yang bertajuk Christmas Celebration with Nickelodeon Spongebob 20 Best Year Ever. Dimulai dari area permainan untuk anak hingga Meet and Greet bersama penghuni Bikini Bottom.

"Seru banget, momennya pas sama liburan anak-anak. Karena Zayn sudah kenal sama karakter Spongebob, jadi dia paling antusias," kata Eriska Rein saat ditemui di Mall Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta Selatan pada Jumat (19/12/2019).


Bagi Eriska Rein, tokoh Spongebob bukan hanya dikenal baik oleh sang putra. Namun juga dirinya yang kini menginjak usia 25 tahun.

"Datang kesini selain menemani anak, aku juga bisa nostalgia sama Spongebob," jelasnya.

Pemilihan Spongebob sebagai teman liburan anak-anak bukan tanpa sebab. Shierly Kosasih, Vice President MNC Content dan Licensing menerangkan kerja sama MNC Group dengan Nickelodeon berlangsung sejak 2013. Selain itu, penayangan di GTV membuat anak-anak familiar dengan karakter tersebut.


"Ini adalah bentuk kerja sama yang spesial dengan karakter Spongebob. Apalagi banyak pesan moral yang terkandung di dalamnya," kata Shierly.

Beberapa diantaranya seperti nilai persahabatan, kekeluargaan hingga saling tolong menolong satu sama lain.

"Berharap masyarakat bisa menikmati sajian liburan yang kami hadirkan. Bermain bisa sekaligus belajar juga," imbuhnya.


Sebagai informasi, acara ini akan berlangsung sejak tanggal 21 Desember 2019 hingga 5 Januari 2020. Pengunjung bisa berinteraksi dengan Spongebob Squarepants, Patrick Star dan Squidward.

Selain itu, mereka juga bisa bermain di arena Spongebob Ball Pit dengan membayar Rp100.000.

###

From SINDOnews:

Menikmati Keceriaan Natal Bersama Spongebob di Kota Kasablanka


Seorang anak berinteraksi dengan boneka Spongebob pada acara "Crismast Celebration With Nickelodeon Spongebob 20 Best Year Ever", mal di Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta, Jumat (20/12/2019).



Pengunjung menimati keceriaan bersama tokoh kartun Spongebob, Patrick dan Squidward dalam acara "Crismast Celebration With Nickelodeon Spongebob 20 Best Year Ever", mal di Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta, Jumat (20/12/2019).





###

From Warta Kota:

Nonton Yuk, Kolaborasi Spongebob Squarepants dan Karakter Lokal Indonsia Si Juki di Kota Kasablanka


Wartakotalive.com/Hironimus Rama - Booth Si Juki di 20 Best Year Area Grand Atrium Kota Kasablanka, Jumat (20/12/2019)

"Tidak mudah memilih karakter lokal yang sesuai dengan karakter Spongebob. Untuk Indonesia, Si Juki terpilih untuk berkolaborasi langsung dengan karakter populer karya Stephen Hillenburg ini..."

SpongeBob Squarepants meluncurkan kolaborasi dengan beberapa karakter lokal di Tanah Air Jumat (20/12/2019) kemarin.

Peluncuran kolaborasi ini diselenggarakan di Mal Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta Selatan dan terlaksana berkat kerja sama dengan MNC.

Shierly Kosasih, Vice President MNC Content & Licensing, mengatakan kolaborasi ini dilakukan dalam rangka perayaan ulang tahun ke-20 seri Spongebob Squarepants.

Menurut dia, inisiasi proyek kolaborasi ini sudah dimulai sejak tahun 2018 sebagai bagian dari ulang tahun ke-20 seri animasi dari Nickelodeon tersebut.

"Sepanjang tahun 2019 pihak Nickelodeon memiliki inisiatif untuk menjalin kerjasama dengan banyak brand dan seniman dari berbagai belahan dunia dalam rangka ulang tahun Spongebob Squarepants," kata Shirley di Kota Kasablanka, Jumat (20/12/2019).


Spongebob Squarepants hadir di Mal Kota Kasablanka, Jakarta Selatan dalam liburan akhir tahun 2019. (Wartakotalive.com/Hironimus Rama)

Si Juki

Salah satu karakter lokal yang dipilih Spongebob Squarepants untuk kolaborasi ini adalah Si Juki.

"Tidak mudah memilih karakter lokal yang sesuai dengan karakter Spongebob. Untuk Indonesia, Si Juki terpilih untuk berkolaborasi langsung dengan karakter populer karya Stephen Hillenburg ini," urai Shierly.

Faza Meonk kreator Si Juki merasa sangat terhormat bisa mendapat kesempatan untuk mengolaborasikan karakter ciptaannya dengan Spongebob Squarepants.

Sejak pertama kali tayang di stasiun televisi swasta pada tahun 2000an, Faza menjadi penggemar seri animasi tersebut dari kecil hingga sekarang.

Baginya Spongebob adalah salah satu karakter yang menjadi inspirasi terkuat dalam pembuatan karakter Si Juki yang masih terus dikembangkan hingga sekarang.


Pengunjung berfoto bersama dengan Spongebob, Show The Monster dan Si Juki di Kota Kasablanka, Jumat (20/12/2019). (Wartakotalive.com/Hironimus Rama)

“Saya suka Spongebob sejak kecil dan bahkan karakter tersebut menjadi salah satu inspirasi terkuat saya dalam membuat Si Juki," tutur Faza.

"Sebab, Spongebob bisa menyampaikan komedi berlapis yang bisa dimengerti oleh anak-anak maupun orang dewasa. Karena itulah saya membuat Si Juki untuk bisa dimengerti oleh semua umur,” tambahnya.

Menurut Faza, karakter Si Juki memiliki banyak kesamaan dengan Spongebob Squarepants. Tidak hanya dari segi komedi berlapis saja, dalam animasi warna suara antara kedua karakter ini tidak terlalu jauh berbeda.

"Secara karakteristik Si Juki memiliki sifat iseng yang mirip dengan Spongebob, meskipun Si Juki terlihat lebih licik, " paparnya.

Dari sisi visual, Faza mengakui bahwa selama ini ia membuat Si Juki dengan gaya gambar yang tidak jauh berbeda dengan gaya gambar Spongebob Squarepants.


Pengunjung menonton Spongebob di 20 Best Year Area Grand Atrium Kota Kasablanka, Jumat (20/13/2019). (Wartakotalive.com/Hironimus Rama)

Maka dari itu Faza tidak terlalu merasa kesulitan saat membuat berbagai artwork untuk kolaborasi ini.

Dalam kolaborasi ini, Faza membuat berbagai artwork Si Juki dan Spongebob sebagai teman sepermainan.

Nantinya berbagai artwork tersebut bisa dikembangkan ke dalam berbagai macam media seperti merchandise, fashion, toys, dan bentuk kolaborasi lainnya.

Kesempatan kerjasama juga terbuka luas bagi seluruh pihak yang ingin turut serta berpartisipasi dalam kolaborasi Si Juki dan Spongebob Squarepants ini.

Selain Si Juki, brand desain karakter lokal Indonesia Show The Monster juga mendapat kesempatan berkolaborasi dengan Spongebob.

Show The Monster terpilih sebagai salah satu karakter lokal Indonesia yang berhasil mengubah konstruksi Spongebob dengan menggabungkan karakter original Show The Monster dan Spongebob yang kemudian diaplikasikan dalam format busana.

Hasil karya Show The Monster x Spongebob ini bisa disaksikan dalam rangkaian pameran dan peragaan busana di Kota Kasabianka pada Sabtu, 21 Desember 2019.

"Show The Monster menggandeng Spongebob Squarepants untuk ikut serta meramaikan kampanye yang selama ini diusung untuk mengajak generasi muda Indonesia agar lebih berani mengekspresikan diri mereka melalui desain busana Show The Monster yang dipenuhi dengan warna dan karakter-karakter yang unik serta mencuri perhatian," tutur Evan Aditya Creative Director Show The Monster.

Tidak hanya itu saja, lanjut Evan, Show The Monster juga berhasil mendefinisikan Spongebob sebagai karakter internasional yang bersifat fluid dengan mengemas kolaborasi ini ke dalam bentuk print and pattern.

“Show The Monster berharap dapat memberikan generasi muda sarana untuk mengkspresikan diri mereka yang unik dengan karakter monster kami yang unik," kata Evan.

Pameran kolaborasi ini berlangsung dari tanggal 19 Desember 2019 - 5 januari 2020, dan peragaan busana dari koleksi kolaborasi Show The Monster x Spongebob Squarepants dilaksanakan pada tanggal 21 Desember 2019 pukul 19.00 MB.

Pameran dan peragaan busana ini bebas biaya, dan terbuka untuk umum.

###

From KAORI Nusantara:

Si Juki Umumkan Kolaborasi “Duet Maut” Dengan Spongebob Squarepants!

Pada tanggal 20 Desember 2019 yang bertempat di Mall Kota Kasablanka, karakter komik anti mainstream karya Faza Meonk yaitu Si Juki mengumumkan kolaborasi dengan karakter kartun yang sangat mendunia yaitu Spongebob Squarepants dalam rangka perayaan ulang tahun ke-20 serial kartun Spongebob Squarepants.

Inisiasi untuk melakukan proyek kolaborasi tersebut sudah dimulai sejak tahun 2018 sebagai bagian dari ulang tahun ke-20 dari serial animasi buatan Nickelodeon tersebut. Sepanjang tahun 2019 pihak nickelodeon memiliki inisiatif untuk menjalin kerjasama dengan brand dan seniman dari berbagai belahan dunia dalam rangka ulang tahun Spongebob Squarepants. Pada akhirnya kolaborasi tersebut sampai di Indonesia dan alhasil Juki yang terpilih untuk berkolaborasi dengan karakter populer ciptaan mendiang Stephen Hillenburg tersebut.

Faza Meonk selaku kreator Si Juki merasa terhormat bisa mendapat kesempatan yang sangat langka untuk mengkolaborasikan karakter ciptaannya dengan Spongebob Squarepants. Faza Meonk juga fans berat Spongebob Squarepants sejak serial tersebut pertama kali tayang di stasiun televisi swasta pada tahun 2000an hingga sekarang dan baginya Spongebob adalah salah satu karakter yang menjadi inspirasi terkuat dalam pembuatan karakter Juki yang masih terus dikembangkan sampai sekarang ini. Pihak Nickelodeon juga mengetahui bahwa Faza Meonk terinspirasi dari Spongebob Squarepants saat mencari informasi Juki di internet, dan itu adalah salah satu hal yang membuat Si Juki terpilih untuk kolaborasi ini dan ternyata, awal dari “duet maut” Si Juki dan Spongebob juga tercipta dari fanart iseng juga yang dikerjakan pada tahun 2012 yang lalu.

Faza juga mengatakan “Saya suka Spongebob sejak kecil dan bahkan karakter tersebut menjadi salah satu inspirasi terkuat saya dalam membuat Juki karena Spongebob bisa menyampaikan komedi berlapis yang bisa dimengerti oleh anak-anak maupun orang dewasa. Karena itulah saya membuat Si Juki untuk bisa dimengerti oleh semua umur“.

Faza juga berpendapat, karakter Juki mempunyai kesamaan dengan Spongebob Squarepants. Tidak hanya dari segi komedi berlapis saja, dalam animasi warna suara antara kedua karakter tersebut tidak terlalu jauh berbeda. Secara karakteristik Si Juki memiliki sifat iseng yang mirip dengan Spongebob meskipun Si Juki terlihat lebih licik. Dari sisi visual, Faza juga mengakui bahwa selama ini ia membuat Si Juki dengan gaya gambar yang tidak jauh berbeda dengan gaya gambar Spongebob Squarepants. Maka dari itu Faza tidak terlalu merasa kesulitan saat membuat berbagai artwork untuk kolaborasi ini.

Dalam kolaborasi ini, Faza membuat berbagai artwork Si Juki dan Spongebob sebagai teman sepermainan. Nantinya berbagai artwork tersebut dikembangkan ke berbagai media seperti merchandise, fashion, toys dan bentuk kolaborasi lainnya. Kesempatan kerjasama juga terbuka luas bagi yang ingin turut serta berpartisipasi dalam kolaborasi Juki dan Spongebob Squarepants ini.

Terwujudnya kolaborasi antara Si Juki dan Spongebob Squarepants ini menjadi bukti bahwa karakter karya kreator Indonesia memiliki potensi besar di kancah Internasional. Kolaborasi ini menjadi salah satu langkah penting bagi Juki untuk bisa menembus pasar internasional. Setelah ini diharapkan ada banyak lagi karakter internasional yang berkolaborasi dengan Juki dan berbagai karakter lokal lainnya.



###

Nickelodeon's is currently in the midst of the network's "Best Year Ever", a year-long global celebration of one of the most iconic TV series and characters ever created. The “Best Year Ever” launched with the premiere of “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout,” an original mixed live-action and animated special earlier this summer, and leads up to the Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies theatrical, The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run, coming May 2020.

A CG-animated prequel spin-off series, Kamp Koral, following 10-year-old SpongeBob SquarePants during his summer at sleepaway camp, is also slated to premiere during Summer 2020.

THQ Nordic and Nickelodeon are slated to release SpongeBob SquarePants: Battle for Bikini Bottom - Rehydrated, a remake of the much-loved video game, very soon.

More Nick:Nickelodeon and Mr. Kiasu Creator Make a Splash with SpongeBob SquarePants x Mr Kiasu Coffeetable Book Collaboration!

Originally published: Friday, December 06, 2019.

Additional sources: Google Translate, Wikipedia.

Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Asia and SpongeBob SquarePants News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon Announces Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 Winners

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Update (24/9) - Below is Nickelodeon's official press release announcing the exciting news!:

NICKELODEON’S KIDS’ CHOICE AWARDS ABU DHABI 2019
LIGHTS UP THE ABU DHABI NATIONAL EXHIBITION CENTRE

HOST JASON DERULO DELIGHTS FANS WITH ELECTRIC MASHUP OF
HITS INCLUDING WANT TO WANT ME, COLORS, MAMACITA, SWALLA

HAIFA BESEISSO CO-HOSTS SHOW AS MIDDLE EASTERN ARTISTS
CROWNED KIDS’ FAVORITES ACROSS 16 CATEGORIES

The show will premiere in MENA on September 24th at 17:00 UAE/16:00 KSA on
Nickelodeon on OSN, and will be aired globally on Nickelodeon channels in the
USA, UK, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, India, China, Philippines and Pakistan


Abu Dhabi, 21 September 2019: -- Nickelodeon and the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi delivered on their commitment to bring the leading kids’ brand’s slimiest, wildest show to the city to the delight of fans across the Middle East. Last night, the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 lit up the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre. The night featured stunning performances and stunts, including a mash-up of hits by global superstar and event host, Jason Derulo, including his latest hit, Mamacita, the sliming of co-host Haifa Beseisso, and performances by Conor Maynard, Maritta and al-Waleed Hallani, Nora Fatehi and Fnaire, Dyler and Egyptian star Mohamed Hamaki. Kids’ favorite artists and talent were crowned across 16 entertainment categories.

PERFORMANCES

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 featured seven musical performances from global and regional stars:

  • Jason Derulo, the global superstar with 17 multi-platinum singles to his name, kicked off the night with a high-energy mashup of some of his greatest hits including Mamacita, Colors, Swalla, and Want To Want Me.
  • Maritta was introduced by Jason and gave a moving performance of her hit Ana.
  • Dancer, model and singer Nora Fatehi was joined by Moroccan band Fnaire for a stunning Arabic performance of her song Dilbar.
  • Saudi Arabian singer and social media sensation Dyler arrived in a bright red sports car and then walked through the crowd singing his hit Samoly.
  • Lebanese star al-Waleed Hallani followed with a rendition of his hit song Aam Yessalo, and was promptly slimed to the delight of the audience.
  • British singer, songwriter and YouTuber Conor Maynard performed in a medley of his hits Turn Around, Waste Your Time, Hate How Much I Love You.
  • Platinum Egyptian artist and Arabian superstar Mohamed Hamaki closed the night delighted fans with Ya Sattar.


FULL LIST OF NICKELODEON KIDS’ CHOICE AWARDS ABU DHABI 2019 WINNERS:

Leading up to the show, kids across the Middle East voted for their favourite artists on Nickelodeon’s website https://kca.nickelodeonarabia.com/, on Instagram using the hashtag of their favourite nominee and via the Nickelodeon Play app. More than 15 million votes were cast over the summer to choose the winners across a range of music, film and entertainment categories. The winners in the 16 award categories were:

FAVORITE GROUP
RAJAA & OMAR BELMIR
DAFFY & FLIPPERACHI
BOYBAND
SHARMOOFERS

FAVORITE MALE ARTIST
ADHAM NABULSI
ESSA AL MARZOUG
SAAD RAMADAN
MOHAMED HAMAKI

FAVORITE FEMALE NEWCOMER
CYNTHIA SAMUEL
SANDRA SAHI
SALMA ABU-DEIF
ZEINA MAKKI

FAVORITE VLOGGER
THUNAYYAN KHALID
FEYHAN FAMILY
LOWI SAHI
ROZZAH

FAVORITE FEMALE ARTIST
HALA AL TURK
MANAL
SHAMMA HAMDAN
CARMEN SOLIMAN

FAVORITE ACTOR
MOHAMED RAMADAN
MOATASEM EL NAHAR
ASAAD AL ZAHRANI
AMR YOUSSEF

FAVORITE MALE NEWCOMER
MOHAMED EL SHARNOUBY
AL WALID HALLANI
DYLER
ADIL ECHBIY

FAVORITE ACTRESS
CYRINE ABDEL NOUR
DONIA SAMIR GHANEM
ASEEL OMRAN
DANIELLA RAHME

FAVORITE TV PERSONALITY
RAYA ABI RACHID
QUSAI (DON LEGEND)
ASSALAH KAMEL
WISSAM BREIDY

FAVORITE INFLUENCER
IBRAHIM BASHA
TAIM AL FALASI
BIN BAZ
MINA AL SHEIKHLY

FAVORITE GAMER
FIR4SGAMER
NEROGAMER55
AHMED AL NASHEET
IIKLAY

FAVORITE CARTOON
SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS
TOM AND JERRY
MAJID
GUM BALL

FAVORITE RADIO STATION
NRJ RADIO
VIRGIN RADIO
PEARL FM
AL ARABIYA

FAVORITE SPORTS STAR
RAMY NACHAR
RAHA MOHARRAK
ZAHRA LARI
RASHID AL DHAHERI

FAVORITE MUSIC VIDEO
NASSIF ZEYTOUN - KEL YOM BHEBIK
MAYA DIAB, MASSARI & FRENCH MONTANA - YA NOUR EL EIN
ADHAM NABULSI - HOWEH EL HOB
NORA FATEHI AND FNAIRE – DILBAR

FAVORITE INTERNATIONAL STAR
BILLIE EILISH
SHAWN MENDES
CAMILLA CABELLO
KHALID

BROADCAST

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 was recorded on September 20th at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre and will air exclusively on Nickelodeon on OSN in KSA, UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain on September 24th at 17:00 UAE/16:00 KSA. The show will also be aired on Nickelodeon channels internationally in the USA, UK, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, India, China, Philippines and Pakistan.

The Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 has been sponsored by Kellogg’s and Movenpick.

More coverage of the Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 can be found on Nickelodeon’s channels on Facebook, Instagram and through the following official hashtags:

#KCAAD2019
#KidsChoiceAwardsAbuDhabi2019
#NickelodeonArabia
#InAbuDhabi
#FamilyWeekInAbuDhabi
#ف أبوظ ب



















ABU DHABI FAMILY WEEK
The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 was part of Abu Dhabi Family Week, a 10-day programme of fun-packed, educational events dedicated to children’s and family entertainment organised by DCT Abu Dhabi. Additional activities included the brand new The World of Nickelodeon, a three-day Nickelodeon activation taking place from 19th to 21st of September at ADNEC

END

About Nickelodeon
Nickelodeon, now in its 40th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The company includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, digital, recreation, books and feature films. Nickelodeon is one of the most globally recognized and widely distributed multimedia entertainment brands for kids and family, with 1.2 billion cumulative subscriptions in more than 500 million households across 170+ countries and territories, via more than 100+ locally programmed channels and branded blocks. Outside of the United States, Nickelodeon is part of Viacom International Media Networks, a division of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAB, VIA), one of the world’s leading creators of programming and content across all media platforms. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com/. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom Inc.

About the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi
The Department of Culture and Tourism conserves and promotes the heritage and culture of Abu Dhabi emirate and leverages them in the development of a world- Globally, sustainable destination of distinction, which enriches the lives of visitors and residents alike. The organization manages the emirate’s tourism sector and markets the destination internationally through a wide range of activities aimed at attracting visitors and investment. Its policies, plans and programs relate to the preservation of heritage and culture, including protecting archaeological and historical sites and to developing museums, including Zayed National Museum, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. DCT - Abu Dhabi supports intellectual and artistic activities and cultural events to nurture a rich cultural environment and honour the emirate’s heritage. A key role is to create synergy in the destination’s development through close co-ordination with its wide-ranging stakeholder base.

###

Original post:


Nickelodeon’s Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 lights up UAE capital


The show will premiere in MENA on September 24th at 17:00 UAE/16:00 KSA on Nickelodeon on OSN. The show will be aired globally on Nickelodeon channels in the USA, UK, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, India, China, Philippines and Pakistan

Abu Dhabi, September 21st – Nickelodeon and the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi) brought the kids’ brand’s slimiest, wildest show to the city for the first time ever in the Middle East on Friday, September 20, 2019. The evening saw the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 light up the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre with performances and stunts, including a mash-up of hits by global superstar and event host, Jason Derulo, including his latest hit, "Mamacita", the sliming of co-host Haifa Beseisso, and performances by Conor Maynard, Maritta and al-Waleed Hallani, Nora Fatehi and Fnaire, Dyler and Egyptian star Mohamed Hamaki. Kids’ favourite artists and talent were crowned across 16 entertainment categories during the Orange Carpet ceremony, with each winner taking home a coveted Orange Blimp award.

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 featured seven musical performances from global and regional stars including Jason Derulo; Maritta; Dancer, model and singer Nora Fatehi with Moroccan band Fnaire; Saudi Arabian singer and social media sensation Dyler; Lebanese star al-Waleed Hallani; British singer, songwriter and YouTuber Conor Maynard; and Platinum Egyptian artist and Arabian superstar Mohamed Hamaki.

More than 15 million votes were cast across 16 wide-ranging award categories on Nickelodeon’s digital site https://kca.nickelodeonarabia.com/, on Instagram using the hashtag of their favourite nominee and via the Nickelodeon Play app over the summer to choose the winners across a range of music, film and entertainment categories. Kids had the chance to vote for their local as well as international favourites.

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 was recorded live on September 20th at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre and will air exclusively on Nickelodeon on OSN in KSA, UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain on Tuesday, September 24th, 2019 at 17:00 UAE/16:00 KSA. The show will also be aired on Nickelodeon channels internationally in the USA, UK, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, India, China, Philippines and Pakistan.

The Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 is part of a wider program of activations organized by DCT Abu Dhabi to celebrate Abu Dhabi Family Week, which will bring a series of activities for kids and families to the city. This will include The World of Nickelodeon from Sept. 19-21 at ADNEC, where visitors can interact with all their favorite Nickelodeon characters. With features such as the Paw Patrol Area, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles VR Experience and Pizzeria, and the SpongeBob SquarePants Museum and Arcade, plus the chance to meet the likes of Dora, SpongeBob, and Marshall and Chase at live entertainment shows and musical performances, it promises to be an unmissable event.

The evening kicked off a new partnership between Viacom International Media Networks (VIMN) and The Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi), which will see the capital city of the United Arab Emirates play host to the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards and The World of Nickelodeon over the next 5 years.

The Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 winners are:

Favorite International Artist (أفضل نجم عالمي)
Billie Eilish (بيلي آيليش) - WINNER
Shawn Mendes (شون مانديز)
Camila Cabello (خالد)
Khalid (كاميلا كابلو)

Favorite Music Video (أفضل فيديو كليب)
Adham Nabulsi - Howeh El Hob (ادهم نابلسي هو الحب) - WINNER
Nassif Zeytoun - Kel Yom Bhebik (ناصيف زيتون - كل يوم بحبك)
Maya Diab ft French Montana - Ya Nour El Ein (مايا دياب وفرنش مونتانا - يا نور العين)
Nora Fatehi & Fnaire - Dilbar (نورة فتحي و فناير - ديلبير)

Favorite Radio Station (أفضل محطة إذاعية)
Energy Lebanon (انرجي لبنان)
Virgin Radio Dudai 104.4 (راديو فيرجن دبي 104.4) - WINNER
Pearl FM (بيرل إف إم)
Al Arabiya 99 (العربية 99)

Favorite Sports Star (أفضل نجم رياضي)
Ramy Nachar (رامي النشار)
Raha Moharrak (راحة محرق)
Rashid Al Dhaheri (راشد الظاهري) - WINNER
Zahra Lari (زهرة لاري)

Favorite Gamer (أفضل لاعب فيديو قيمز)
NeroGamer55 (نيروقايمر55)
Ahmed Al Nasheet (أحمد النشيط) WINNER
Iiklay (كلاي)
Fir4sGamer (فيرفورزغايمر)

Favorite Cartoon (أفضل برنامج رسوم متحركة)
SpongeBob SquarePants (سبونج بوب سكويربانتس) WINNER
Gumball (غامبول)
Majid (ماجد)
Tom & Jerry (توم وجيري)

Favorite Influencer (أفضل إنفلوينسر)
Ibrahim Basha (إبراهيم باشا) - WINNER
Bin Baz (بن باز)
Mina El Sheikhly (مينا الشيخلي)
Taim Al Falasi (تيم الفلاسي)

Favorite TV Personality (أفضل شخصية تلفزيونية)
Raya Abi Rachid (ريا أبي راشد) - WINNER
Qusai (DON LEGEND) (قسيّ (دون ليجند))
Assalah Kamel (أصالة كامل)
Wissam Breidy (وسام بريدي)

Favorite Male Newcomer (أفضل فنان صاعد)
AlWalid Hellani (الوليد الحلاني)
D3ylr (دايلر) - WINNER
Adil Echbiy (عادل إشبي)
Mohamed El Sharnouby (محمد الشرنوبي)

Favorite Female Newcomer (أفضل فنانة صاعدة)
Cynthia Samuel (سنثيا صاموئيل) - WINNER
Sandra Sahi (ساندرا ساهي)
Salma Abu-Deif (سلمى أبو ضيف)
Zeina Makki (زينة مكي)

Favorite Vlogger (أفضل فلوقر)
Thunayan Khalid (ثنيان خالد) - WINNER
Lowi Sahi (لؤي ساهي)
Feyhan Family (فيحان فاميلي)
Rozzah (روزا)

Favorite Group (أفضل فرقة أو ثنائي غناء)
Omar & Rajaa Belmir (عمر ورجاء بلمير) - WINNER
Flipperarchi & Daffy (فليبرارشي ودافي)
BoyBand (بوي باند)
Sharmoofers (شارموفرز)

Favorite Female Artist (أفضل فنانة)
Carmen Soliman (كارمن سليمان)
Hala Al Turk (هلا الترك) - WINNER
Manal (منال)
Shamma Hamdan (شمه حمدان)

Favorite Male Artist (أفضل فنان)
Adham Nabulsi (ادهم نابلسي)
Essa Al Marzoug (عيسى المرزوق)
Mohammed Hamaki (محمد حماقي) - WINNER
Saad Ramadan (سعد رمضان)

Favorite Actress (أفضل ممثلة)
Daniella Rahme (دانيلا رحمه)
Aseel Omran (أسيل عمران) - WINNER
Donia Samir Ghanem (دنيا سمير غانم)
Cyrine Abdel nour (سيرين عبد النور)

Favorite Actor (أفضل ممثل)
Asad Al Zahrani (اسعد الزهراني) - WINNER
Amr Youssef (عمرو يوسف)
Mohammed Ramadan (محمد رمضان)
Moatasem el Nahar (معتصم النهار)

Stay up to date on all Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 news by liking Nickelodeon on Facebook, Instagram and following the official hashtags:

#KCAAD2019
#KidsChoiceAwardsAbuDhabi2019
#NickelodeonArabia
#InAbuDhabi
#FamilyWeekInAbuDhabi

ف أبوظ بي

# # #

About Nickelodeon
Nickelodeon, now in its 40th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The company includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, digital, recreation, books and feature films. Nickelodeon is one of the most globally recognized and widely distributed multimedia entertainment brands for kids and family, with 1.2 billion cumulative subscriptions in more than 500 million households across 170+ countries and territories, via more than 100+ locally programmed channels and branded blocks. Outside of the United States, Nickelodeon is part of Viacom International Media Networks, a division of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAB, VIA), one of the world’s leading creators of programming and content across all media platforms. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom Inc.

About the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi
The Department of Culture and Tourism conserves and promotes the heritage and culture of Abu Dhabi emirate and leverages them in the development of a world- Globally, sustainable destination of distinction, which enriches the lives of visitors and residents alike. The organization manages the emirate’s tourism sector and markets the destination internationally through a wide range of activities aimed at attracting visitors and investment. Its policies, plans and programs relate to the preservation of heritage and culture, including protecting archaeological and historical sites and to developing museums, including Zayed National Museum, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. DCT – Abu Dhabi supports intellectual and artistic activities and cultural events to nurture a rich cultural environment and honour the emirate’s heritage. A key role is to create synergy in the destination’s development through close co-ordination with its wide-ranging stakeholder base.

From Ahram Online:

Egyptian star Mohamed Hamaki crowned as Favorite Male Artist by the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi

Egyptian star Mohamed Hamaki was announced as the Favorite Male Artist chosen by the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 on Friday 20 September.

The choice of Hamaki comes as a result of votes cast throughout the months of August and September.

“I’m very happy… and it means a lot to me to be nominated by the kids. I’ve always said that kids don’t do flattery; either they like you or they don’t, so for kids to choose me as a favorite is an honor for me," Hamaki told the award organisers.

Over 15 million children and young voters took part in the process, using the hashtag of their favourite nominee on the Nickelodeon website, Instagram and via the Nickelodeon Play app.

The final results were announced during a grand celebration organised by the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre.

The celebration also included "performances and stunts, including a mash-up of hits by global superstar and event host, Jason Derulo, including his latest hit, Mamacita, the sliming of co-host Haifa Beseisso, and performances by Conor Maynard, Maritta and al-Waleed Hallani, Nora Fatehi and Fnaire, Dyler and Mohamed Hamaki," the organisers revealed in their press release.

Other favorite artists chosen by the young fans include Billie Eilish (Best International Star), Hala Al Turk, Bahrain (Best Female Artist), Rajaa Belmir and Omar Belmir, Morocco (Favorite Group), Cynthia Samuel, Canada/Lebanon (Favorite Female Newcomer), Dyler, Saudi Arabia (Favorite Male Newcomer), Asaad Alzahrani, Saudi Arabia (Favorite Actor), Aseel Omran, Saudi Arabia (Favorite Actress), among other winners from the Arab World in numerous categories.

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 was part of the 10-day Abu Dhabi Family Week, an event filled with educational activited dedicated to children’s and family entertainment organised by DCT Abu Dhabi. Additional activities included the brand new The World of Nickelodeon, taking place from 19th to 21st of September at ADNEC.

The multi-award-winning Egyptian artist Hamaki started as a composer for many years and gained widespread fame after his first album 'Khalina Neish' in 2003.

###

From Time Out Dubai:

Three Minutes on the Orange Carpet with Conor Maynard

Time Out UAE Kids catches up with the singer and YouTube sensation at the Nickelodeon Kids Choice Awards Abu Dhabi


When YouTube sensation and singer Conor Maynard touched down in Abu Dhabi to perform at the first ever Nickelodeon kids Choice Awards in the Middle East, we caught up with him to talk slime, collaborations and the future of YouTube.

Welcome to the UAE! What are you most excited about?
I am really excited to perform at the Kids Choice Awards. What I am looking forward the least is being slimed! I really hope I don’t get slimed, I’m not really feeling it.

Why are you so anti-slime?
Funnily enough I used Nickelodeon slime for a movie I did a few months ago in America and it was impossible to clean up afterwards. Eventually we just gave up and said to the location that we would just pay for however much it costs to get rid of it.

You are referred to as a YouTuber, how does that affect your music?
My whole career started on YouTube and I put my covers up online initially - and in fact still do put them and my remixes on my YouTube channel now, but my main thing is my actual music. It’s what I most enjoy working on.

What’s happening in your world right now?
Right now I’m directing my own music videos, which is a lot of fun and something I’ve always wanted to do. It makes it much more personal for me as it means the story is coming directly from me. I really enjoy doing it.

What is the future looking like for YouTube and YouTubers?
It’s definitely becoming very saturated. There’s a lot of people who want to do it now and so it’s becoming more and more difficult to stand out, but maybe that just means the most creative will rise to the top, which is the way it should be.

What tips would you give to kids hoping to make a career out of being a YouTuber?
If it’s something you truly love and truly enjoy I wouldn’t look at it as just a quick way to make money as honestly it’s not that simple – it can look like it is, but to stand out and get noticed is incredibly difficult to do. But if it is genuinely your passion and you want to create video content whatever the genre, then do it! And don’t get too worked up around the numbers – if you love doing it, then do it regardless of how well it does.

You did a collaboration with Pixie Lott, is there anyone else you would like to work with?
There are loads of people I’d love to work with. I really wanted to do a single with Billie Eilish when she first started out and now there’s literally a queue so not sure I will make that happen right now, but maybe one day, we’ll see.

www.youtube.com/conormaynard


###

From GulfToday:

Dhaheri named Favourite Sports Star

UAE’s young karting sensation Rashid Al Dhaheri was conferred the Favourite Sports Star award.

Abu Dhabi: Young Emirati karting driver Rashid Al Dhaheri was feted as he won the award for Favorite Sports Star at the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards’ Abu Dhabi 2019.

The announcement was made that the voting public had selected Rashid, at an awards ceremony held on Friday at Abu Dhabi National Exhibitions Centre (ADNEC), featuring co-hosts Jason Derulo and Haifa Beseisso.

Commenting on the Favorite Sports Star award, Aref Al Awani, General Secretary of Abu Dhabi Sports Council said: “We would like to congratulate young Rashid on this award. He deserves this recognition for his great feats in karting, as his steady rise through the ranks at the international level becomes increasingly well-known.

“Rashid has such great potential and many years ahead of him to make a name for himself in motor racing. I’m impressed by the maturity and the dedication he shows at such a tender age.”

This recognition is part of a growing momentum that motorsport is gaining in the UAE, with sports cars and racing ingrained in UAE culture.

A widespread passion and interest in motorsport have been ignited, which provides a strong and nurturing environment for young talent such as Rashid to emerge.

Much of the appeal of racing is driven by the Etihad Airways Formula One Grand Prix, staged in Abu Dhabi as Formula 1’s last race of the season, inspiring young people in the UAE with dreams of a career in racing.

This year has seen great success for Rashid, as he has taken part in the highly competitive World Series Karting Euro Championships against the best young drivers in the world, during his first season with the Parolin racing team.

This season, he has secured the double of the WSK Euro Series Championship and the WSK Super Master Championship victory in the Mini category. For the WSK Master Series, Rashid accomplished three wins out of four rounds of racing for this competition, which was the first such achievement by any driver in his category for the past six years.

Commenting on the award Rashid said: “I am honoured to have been elected Favorite Sports Star at the Nickelodeon Kid’s choice award.

“It’s great to receive such support from the UAE and Arab public and this gives me a lot of motivation to keep succeeding and winning in karting.

“With the active support of my partners, I am encouraged to progress up the racing ladder to enter one-seater racing championship levels soon.”

The Department of Culture and Tourism –– Abu Dhabi and Viacom International Media Networks presented the iconic ‘Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards’ –– the first-ever version of the globally renowned kids’ event to be staged in the Middle East.

The event featured musical and entertainment performances, while giving young fans the power to vote for their favorite artists and talent across a wide range of categories.

###

From ADNEC:

Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Case Study

I. Intro
Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards is an annual televised awards show produced by Nickelodeon, a kids brand part of Viacom International Media Networks (VIMN), a division of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAB, VIA). The KCA show features musical and entertainment performances, as well as bucketloads of Nickelodeon’s trademark green slime, while, at the same time, giving young fans the power to vote for their favourite artists and talent across a wide range of categories.

VIMN has signed an agreement with the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi) to bring the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards and The World of Nickelodeon to the capital city of the United Arab Emirates for the next 5 years.

The first-ever UAE version of the globally renowned kids event took place in Abu Dhabi the 20th of September and the show will be on air across multiple countries globally. Speaking about the agreement, Antonio De La Rosa – Vice President Events and Location Based Entertainment for Viacom International Media Network Southern & Western Europe, Middle East and Africa said “Abu Dhabi is a key city for the Middle East, it’s a city that is growing a lot in terms of entertainment events and we thought it was important to be part of their growth, especially with the Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi and World of Nickelodeon into the Family Week Abu Dhabi.

The Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi is a key partner for us, and we’re happy to have the possibility to sign a 5 years agreement with them. This region in general is important for Viacom and we wanted to deepen our strategy even further by bringing live tent pole events here that give our fans the opportunity to experience our brands and properties in real life.”

In addition to the KCA, Nickelodeon organized into the city the World of Nickelodeon, which took place at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre from September 19th to 21st, 3 days full of fun activities, exciting games and amazing prizes.

II. Objective and Challenges
The awards ceremony, a ticketed event for a live audience of just over 4,000 was filmed for broadcast over Nickelodeon networks worldwide.

A large scale production, the awards required an outside broadcast area, extensive back of house build, as well as a fully functioning space for rehearsals ready for use a full two days before the ceremony itself. The key challenge was to deliver all this within the busiest month of the year for ADNEC, the build also ran back-to-back with a full venue event. This presented quite the logistical test, particularly as the project was only confirmed three months before the show, with the first site visit in early June and the show on 20th September.

III. Solution
Nickelodeon required a 5-day build for the 922sqm back of house tent alone, this housed artists lounges, hair and make-up, wardrobe and catering areas. A 3-day build was also required for the extensive production in the ICC, front-of-house. In order to alleviate the pressure of a very tight turnaround time, the ADNEC and ADNEC Services teams partnered with the organiser to come up with creative solutions to ensure that the spaces would be ready on time. ADNEC allocated additional resource to the previous tenant to speed up their load out process, allowing Nickelodeon access at 3pm as opposed to midnight, freeing up 9 valuable hours of build time.

The ADNEC team also allocated the adjoining space, Hall 11 to be used as a loading bay and preparation area where certain items of staging could be assembled and then easily moved into the ICC once that space was empty. ADNEC Services, the venue’s in-house events services company were also involved in the meticulous planning stages and ensured the ICC was pre-rigged for Nickelodeon when they were rigging for the previous event.

Beyond operational assistance, ADNEC’s marketing team also supported the event with a comprehensive free-of-charge marketing and promotion package, which promoted ticket sales for both events across their marketing and social media channels as well as on ADNEC’s onsite and external digital screens. In house caterer Capital Hospitality provided catering for the VIP, media and crew areas as well as food trucks for members of the public.

Richard Godfrey, Executive producer of the show observed how ADNEC’s campus style setup made it very easy for the show organiser, “With crew staying at the Aloft and talent at the Andaz Capital Gate we never even had to leave the area and it was much easier than being spread out over the city.”

IV. Results
The build was completed in time and the show went without a hitch. Hosted by R&B star, Jason Derulo and YouTube sensation Haifa Beseisso, tickets for the awards night sold out very quickly and generated an enormous buzz both in regional and international press and positive sentiment across popular social networks as well as across the whole region.

De la Rosa also commented on the ADNEC team saying “It was great to work with ADNEC team and the venue has all the facilities we needed to develop such a Global Show. The team is very professional, very flexible and supportive on finding solutions when it was necessary.”

He went on to say “The venue is great, it’s a new building well equipped for hosting big events. The show went very well, and definitively the venue had an important contribution to this success.”

Khalifa Al Qubaisi, ADNEC Chief Commercial Officer said “Hosting the first ever Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice awards Abu Dhabi was a huge honour for the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre and a fantastic opportunity to showcase our facilities on a global stage. I’m proud of the whole team for pulling out all the stops to deliver such a successful event. The venue has had an exceptional year so far with a number of high profile international events and we look forward to an even more successful 2020.”

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From BroadcastPro ME:

What’s in store for media in 2020?

Content consumption is at an all-time high, but advertising is at an all-time low and monetisation has become challenging. MENA leaders discussed how they are revisiting business models in a rapidly changing media environment.

The CEO panel at the ASBU BroadcastPro Summit is in essence not just the culminating debate of the conference, but also the platform where regional market makers discuss how they have revisited their business models over the year, in a climate where the regional economics have changed forever.

Moderator Karim Sarkis, Partner, Entertainment and Media at Strategy&, has been known to ask challenging questions on this panel and has always managed to extract answers from those in the hot seat. Joining us this year as speakers were Amanda Turnbull, VP General Manager MEA at Discovery Communications; Danny Bates, CCO and co-founder of STARZPLAY; Hamoud Al Rumayan, CEO of Intigral; Manoj A Mathew, Territory Head, MENAPT, Zee Network; and Tracey Grant, VP of Content and Channels, VIMN ME.

It was clear from the start of the discussion that the focus has shifted from the linear versus OTT debate to how all the panellists are now incorporating linear and streaming platforms to distribute their content. It could be said that 2019 has been the year of more mature collaboration between media entities, to drive greater synergy and keep costs down.

As Zee’s Manoj Mathew pointed out, linear and OTT at the end of the day are just distribution platforms. “All of us on the panel are in essence, in the content business, whether as content producers, distributors or aggregators. The good news is that content consumption has not fallen. In fact, there is a huge increase in content consumption.”

He added that Zee’s two OTT launches – its Arabic and South Asian paid platforms – are doing very well in terms of content consumption and subscription numbers. “Are they making money? Not yet. We are all continuing investment in our content from our linear revenues.”

Viacom’s Tracey Grant concurred that “the demand for quality content and exceptional storytelling has increased enormously”, and the biggest driver for that are the “many distribution platforms for the potentially paying subscriber”.

“You have to be fluid and flexible in how you get your content out there and to whom, and build an appetite for it. You have to ultimately be confident that people will consume what you’re pushing out to them, whether it is advertisers paying or subscribers subscribing. The first instance has to be the content you are delivering.”
Developing that argument further, Amanda Turnbull commented that the “traditional model of working with a few key exclusive partners in the region who paid a premium for our channels” has changed.

“If you are producing fabulous content that people want in some shape or form, then you’re in a good place. Clearly the monetisation is changing over time, the conversations and who we are having them with are changing. But as long as you’re in control of the content, and it’s your IP, you have a choice about what you do with it.”
She cited examples of how Discovery is going into very deep consumer verticals and giving people the opportunity, for instance, to make a recipe they have seen on a food channel by partnering with Alexa to get those ingredients to their home from the local store; or in the case of Golf TV, learn from Tiger Woods through a series of exclusive videos that he and his caddie will create with the content network. “We are creating a direct-to-consumer proposition, where you can watch and your passion can be enhanced because you can do something as a result.”

When Sarkis asked Intigral’s CEO Hamoud Al Rumayan if he agreed that OTT is just another platform for content distribution, he offered the Saudi perspective. With 70% of the population under the age of 30 and the Kingdom having just opened its doors to the media, KSA’s consumers are more receptive to adapting to new technology – unlike in mature markets, where traditional platforms are fairly well embedded, he stated.

Intigral, which launched its Jawwy TV OTT offering last year, has a distinct advantage in KSA as it is backed by local telco STC and enjoys a 60% market share in the Kingdom. With this, a content-hungry young audience and KSA welcoming new ideas in line with Vision 2030, Intigral finds itself in the perfect place to “introduce a new platform and new content”, commented Al Rumayan.

And that’s what Intigral is doing. It is investing in local content, with 10 original productions in the pipeline for 2019, one of which is a feature film. Alongside this, it is building Jawwy TV up as a super aggregator and negotiating with all the major content providers, including Netflix, Amazon and Disney, to bring them to its platform. Intigral already has a rich library of content following partnerships with STARZPLAY and several local players. “We are trying to cover the lack in the Saudi market for the youth and the content they need,” Al Rumayan pointed out.

Interestingly, it is not just the traditional players moving into the linear streaming space. We discovered that streaming service STARZPLAY has decided to add linear distribution to its package. Confirming this, co-founder and CCO Danny Bates explained that consumer choice is not just driven by content, but also by experience.

“Previously, the customer could choose between free or a 500 AED linear service, but if the choice is between free and 40 AED for linear, the choice is much easier. This is why SVOD services like us with our price point have the ability to be part of the consumer’s linear experience. Our aim for 2020 is to be able to consolidate the experience for the consumer in their home.”

Zee’s Mathew agreed with Bates that unlike in India, where public transport commutes are long and therefore entertainment is consumed on mobile phones, OTT content is mostly viewed on the big screen in the GCC.
All the panellists agreed that the way forward is through multiple distribution points. In the case of Viacom, Grant commented that it recently explored a new avenue with the Nickelodeon Kids Awards event, which brought four times as many viewers to the Nickelodeon channel as any other programme on the channel so far.

“We are continually evolving and now, as much as we operate a traditional broadcast channel business, there is no one hard and fast answer on what model works. We are also expanding into event-based experiences. We have great relationships with partners here through our content deals and have multiple ways of exploring business opportunities.”

To Grant’s point, Turnbull added that Discovery is hiring a consumer product person and is “having interesting conversations in the region about a science museum and various Discovery properties for location-based entertainment… Essentially, we are looking at how we can monetise in an authentic and credible way on any platform.”

Speaking of monetisation, Sarkis asked the panellists if and when they hope to generate revenue from their digital ventures.

Turnbull said Fatafeat now makes 80% of its ad revenue from digital and social, rather than linear.
Mathew commented that 50% of Zee’s revenues come from advertising and the other 50% from subscription. “If we didn’t have that, it would be difficult to run our free-to-air products.”

Intigral CEO Al Rumayan said the company’s aim is to first aggregate the content and hit its subscriber numbers. While its content already reaches audiences in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman via Jawwy TV Home (set-top box) and Jawwy TV (standalone app), Intigral’s mandate now is to penetrate the wider MENA region, he said. If this means cooperating with other telcos and players in other markets where STC does not have a foothold, then Initgral will go ahead and make those deals.

When Sarkis expressed scepticism about such collaborations, taking the example of Intigral’s current partnership with STARZPLAY and commenting that at some point it could potentially break down because they had conflicting interests, Bates said: “Collaboration, utilising your content and distribution together, is the only way all of us sat on this panel will make any money.”

Elaborating on the partnership with Intigral, he added: “I am not going to get exactly the same channels that Hamoud does. What I am going to do is bring products that I think fit in with my brand and my strategy but will also complement my partners and make sense through their distribution. We complement each other. Our focus is on premium Hollywood content, while Initgral has all this great Arabic content. Together, we can offer a more rounded offering to the customer through the simple distribution methodology.”

Turnbull agreed, adding that the new ecosystem calls for experimentation and keeping an open mind to move between exclusive and non-exclusive deals to find the best place for each content.
She cited a collaborative deal Discovery did with Roya TV.

“We create content together with Roya TV in Jordan in the food space, and then each of us decide what is the most valuable way to monetise it. We take pay-TV rights first, then they take an FTA window, and then we take a digital window and it seems to work for all of us. It is just easier to create content together.”

For a streaming service like STARZPLAY, Bates commented that having a mix of exclusive and popular content is important to the survival of any platform.

“Having a series like Vikings exclusively and building a following is very powerful to bring customers on board. But then we also have series like Friends or Grey’s Anatomy that are not exclusive to us but are the two top consumed shows on our platform. That is the beauty of the OTT world, where data combined with Google search trends help us discover what content people are after without relying on any agency to tell us that. One thing we know is that if you sit there with a library of old and non-exclusive content only, people are going to tire. You need to have variation and new exciting shows to keep people inspired, and for that you need to rely not just on research, but sometimes your gut instinct as well.”

Exploring each panellist’s content strategy further, Sarkis queried if Al Rumayan is going after the bread and butter of the traditional broadcasters by investing in first window rights to Arabic content, thereby creating conflict.

“Yes, we are competing with Rotana, MBC and other FTA. But we have also taken a mixed approach like the other panellists here and acquired first windows to 60% of all Egyptian movies for six months for Jawwy subscribers. After that, the content will go in sequence on different windows. In addition, Intigral produced over 10 different series for the Saudi market within a time span of nine months. There is a huge gap in this domain, and our audience wants that content.”

Al Rumayan shared an incident during Ramadan in 2018, when Intigral secured the rights to the latest season of a Rotana production titled Shabab El Bomb, targeted at 10-15-year-olds.

“We took the series on an exclusive basis for Ramadan and the month after the Holy Month. We were launching Jawwy as a platform then and were encouraging people to subscribe. Concerned about the registration gate, I instructed my team to allow for 40,000 concurrent registrations. On the first day of Ramadan, our system crashed even before the Maghreb prayer because we were hit by a whopping 770,000 registrations. That is the power of that content. Now, we have acquired this series for the next four years.”

Intigral, however, went one step further to attract the age group that had grown up watching the Shahab El Bomb series and were now in their early 20s. To target them, Intigral hired the same actors and created a brand-new series called Galbat Jad, the brainchild of Intigral VP of Content Tony Saab. The media house produced and broadcast the series last Ramadan.

Sarkis concluded by asking for some exclusive numbers.

Manoj Mathew said Zee’s South Asian platform, which soft launched in February 2019, now has in excess of 70,000 subscribers in the UAE, and is hoping to cross 100,000 subs in the next three months. In India, Zee has crossed 85m subscribers.

Bates stated that nearly 70% of STARZPLAY’s consumption happens on one of two big screens. “OTT is no longer about niche for mobile. It has become the main viewing experience in the home. You are up against players like Netflix and YouTube, who bring a gold standard. So when a consumer comes to your service, they expect you to be on a Samsung TV or an LG, and if you’re not, it’s an immediate reason for them to step away. So it was important to get that device ubiquity.”

Turnbull confirmed that Fatafeat has a digital and social footprint of 13m people, which the company is able to monetise.

Al Rumayan hinted at the possibility of securing country-wide rights instead of MENA-wide rights to programmes, without spillage. He said KSA is rebuilding its audience measurement programme and that Intigral is considering the introduction of advertisements on Jawwy TV.

He concluded with a scoop that a “big development in the sports domain” is in the offing, implying that it will have an impact on sports broadcasting. “We will see broadcasting via DTH, OTT and more advanced methods … a major participant is going to do a lot of things in the near future.”

###

More Nick:Nickelodeon Embarks on New Direction with its Biggest, Most Wide-Ranging Content Slate Ever!

Originally published: Saturday, September 21, 2019.

Sources: BroadcastPro ME, Gulf News, Khaleej Times, Time Out Abu Dhabi.

Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Arabia and Kids' Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 News and Highlights!

TeenNick USA to Air Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Abu Dhabi on Monday, December 30, 2019

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TeenNick USA will premiere Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019, the first-ever fully localised Kids' Choice Awards held in the Middle East, on Monday, December 30, 2019 at 10:30 p.m. (ET/PT)! The special will give viewers a exclusive chance to see how the iconic Kids' Choice Awards are celebrated in another part of the world. Following its premiere, TeenNick will encore KCA AD on Wednesday, January 1, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT).


Nickelodeon and the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi delivered on their commitment to bring the leading kids’ brand’s slimiest, wildest show to the city to the delight of fans across the Middle East. In September, the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 lit up the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre. The night featured stunning performances and stunts, including a mash-up of hits by global superstar and event host, Jason Derulo, including his latest hit, Mamacita, the sliming of co-host Haifa Beseisso, and performances by Conor Maynard, Maritta and al-Waleed Hallani, Nora Fatehi and Fnaire, Dyler and Egyptian star Mohamed Hamaki. Kids’ favorite artists and talent were crowned across 16 entertainment categories.

PERFORMANCES

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 featured seven musical performances from global and regional stars:

  • Jason Derulo, the global superstar with 17 multi-platinum singles to his name, kicked off the night with a high-energy mashup of some of his greatest hits including Mamacita, Colors, Swalla, and Want To Want Me.
  • Maritta was introduced by Jason and gave a moving performance of her hit Ana.
  • Dancer, model and singer Nora Fatehi was joined by Moroccan band Fnaire for a stunning Arabic performance of her song Dilbar.
  • Saudi Arabian singer and social media sensation Dyler arrived in a bright red sports car and then walked through the crowd singing his hit Samoly.
  • Lebanese star al-Waleed Hallani followed with a rendition of his hit song Aam Yessalo, and was promptly slimed to the delight of the audience.
  • British singer, songwriter and YouTuber Conor Maynard performed in a medley of his hits Turn Around, Waste Your Time, Hate How Much I Love You.
  • Platinum Egyptian artist and Arabian superstar Mohamed Hamaki closed the night delighted fans with Ya Sattar.


FULL LIST OF NICKELODEON KIDS’ CHOICE AWARDS ABU DHABI 2019 WINNERS:

Leading up to the show, kids across the Middle East voted for their favourite artists on Nickelodeon’s website https://kca.nickelodeonarabia.com/, on Instagram using the hashtag of their favourite nominee and via the Nickelodeon Play app. More than 15 million votes were cast over the summer to choose the winners across a range of music, film and entertainment categories. The winners in the 16 award categories were:

FAVORITE GROUP
RAJAA & OMAR BELMIR
DAFFY & FLIPPERACHI
BOYBAND
SHARMOOFERS

FAVORITE MALE ARTIST
ADHAM NABULSI
ESSA AL MARZOUG
SAAD RAMADAN
MOHAMED HAMAKI

FAVORITE FEMALE NEWCOMER
CYNTHIA SAMUEL
SANDRA SAHI
SALMA ABU-DEIF
ZEINA MAKKI

FAVORITE VLOGGER
THUNAYYAN KHALID
FEYHAN FAMILY
LOWI SAHI
ROZZAH

FAVORITE FEMALE ARTIST
HALA AL TURK
MANAL
SHAMMA HAMDAN
CARMEN SOLIMAN

FAVORITE ACTOR
MOHAMED RAMADAN
MOATASEM EL NAHAR
ASAAD AL ZAHRANI
AMR YOUSSEF

FAVORITE MALE NEWCOMER
MOHAMED EL SHARNOUBY
AL WALID HALLANI
DYLER
ADIL ECHBIY

FAVORITE ACTRESS
CYRINE ABDEL NOUR
DONIA SAMIR GHANEM
ASEEL OMRAN
DANIELLA RAHME

FAVORITE TV PERSONALITY
RAYA ABI RACHID
QUSAI (DON LEGEND)
ASSALAH KAMEL
WISSAM BREIDY

FAVORITE INFLUENCER
IBRAHIM BASHA
TAIM AL FALASI
BIN BAZ
MINA AL SHEIKHLY

FAVORITE GAMER
FIR4SGAMER
NEROGAMER55
AHMED AL NASHEET
IIKLAY

FAVORITE CARTOON
SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS
TOM AND JERRY
MAJID
GUM BALL

FAVORITE RADIO STATION
NRJ RADIO
VIRGIN RADIO
PEARL FM
AL ARABIYA

FAVORITE SPORTS STAR
RAMY NACHAR
RAHA MOHARRAK
ZAHRA LARI
RASHID AL DHAHERI

FAVORITE MUSIC VIDEO
NASSIF ZEYTOUN - KEL YOM BHEBIK
MAYA DIAB, MASSARI & FRENCH MONTANA - YA NOUR EL EIN
ADHAM NABULSI - HOWEH EL HOB
NORA FATEHI AND FNAIRE – DILBAR

FAVORITE INTERNATIONAL STAR
BILLIE EILISH
SHAWN MENDES
CAMILLA CABELLO
KHALID

BROADCAST

The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 was recorded on September 20th at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre and made its world debut exclusively on Nickelodeon on OSN in KSA, UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain on September 24th at 17:00 UAE/16:00 KSA. The show is also airing on Nickelodeon channels internationally in the USA, UK, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, India, China, Philippines and Pakistan.

The Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 has been sponsored by Kellogg’s and Movenpick.

More coverage of the Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 can be found on Nickelodeon’s channels on Facebook, Instagram and through the following official hashtags:

#KCAAD2019
#KidsChoiceAwardsAbuDhabi2019
#NickelodeonArabia
#InAbuDhabi
#FamilyWeekInAbuDhabi
#ف أبوظ ب



















ABU DHABI FAMILY WEEK
The Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 was part of Abu Dhabi Family Week, a 10-day programme of fun-packed, educational events dedicated to children’s and family entertainment organised by DCT Abu Dhabi. Additional activities included the brand new The World of Nickelodeon, a three-day Nickelodeon activation taking place from 19th to 21st of September at ADNEC

END

About Nickelodeon
Nickelodeon, now in its 40th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The company includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, digital, recreation, books and feature films. Nickelodeon is one of the most globally recognized and widely distributed multimedia entertainment brands for kids and family, with 1.2 billion cumulative subscriptions in more than 500 million households across 170+ countries and territories, via more than 100+ locally programmed channels and branded blocks. Outside of the United States, Nickelodeon is part of Viacom International Media Networks, a division of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAB, VIA), one of the world’s leading creators of programming and content across all media platforms. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com/. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom Inc.

About the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi
The Department of Culture and Tourism conserves and promotes the heritage and culture of Abu Dhabi emirate and leverages them in the development of a world- Globally, sustainable destination of distinction, which enriches the lives of visitors and residents alike. The organization manages the emirate’s tourism sector and markets the destination internationally through a wide range of activities aimed at attracting visitors and investment. Its policies, plans and programs relate to the preservation of heritage and culture, including protecting archaeological and historical sites and to developing museums, including Zayed National Museum, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. DCT - Abu Dhabi supports intellectual and artistic activities and cultural events to nurture a rich cultural environment and honour the emirate’s heritage. A key role is to create synergy in the destination’s development through close co-ordination with its wide-ranging stakeholder base.

###

More Nick:Comedian/Writer Adam Conover Tapped to Host Nickelodeon's 'The Crystal Maze', Premiering Friday, Jan. 24, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT)!

Originally published: Wednesday, December 11, 2019.

Source: TheFutonCritic.com; H/T: Special thanks to @TVShowsFan for the news!; Additional sources: Anime Superhero Forum /@kanc, Zap2it TV Listings.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest TeenNick, Nickelodeon and Kids' Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon USA's December 2019 Premiere Highlights | Holidays

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Below are Nickelodeon USA's currently announced December 2019 premiere highlights for Nick, Nicktoons, Nick Jr., Nick at Nite and TeenNick:


Latest Update: 12/21(Check back regularly for the latest updates!)

Channel selector:Nickelodeon | Nicktoons | Nick Jr. on Nickelodeon | TeenNick | Nick@Nite | Nick Jr. | TV Land | Nickelodeon on Pluto TV

All times ET/PT

Schedules are always subject to change without notice.

Shareable URL:http://po.st/dec19onnick

Have I missed anything out? Let me know in the comments below or on Twitter!

NEW:Join the NickALive! Discord channel (beta)!

Check out Nickelodeon USA's January 2020 highlights at http://po.st/jan20onnick!

Check out Nickelodeon USA's November 2019 highlights at http://po.st/nov19onnick!

Find out what's coming up on Nickelodeon here!:http://po.st/2020OnNick

Nickelodeon


Top Elf


Friday, December 6, 2019 at 8:00 p.m. - Unwrapped: Six extraordinary kid creators are in the running for the title of Top Elf; guest Frankie Grande joins Santa and Ms. Jingles to judge life-sized action figures. (#102)

Friday, December 13, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. - Teamwork Makes the Tree Work: Five talented elf-testants are in the running for the title of Top Elf; actress Peyton List joins Santa and Ms. Jingles to judge the giant holiday ornament challenge. (#103)

Friday, December 20, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. - Gingerbread House Party: The final four elf-testants compete; superstar baker Amirah Kassem joins Santa and Ms. Jingles in judging their giant Gingerbread Clubhouse creations. (#104)

Saturday, December 21, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. - The Grand Finale: Holidays go high-tech as Pete Wentz of Fall Out Boy joins Santa and Ms. Jingles to judge the final three elf-testants. (#105; finale)

America’s Most Musical Family


Friday, December 6, 2019 at at 8:00 p.m. - Episode 6: Five more family bands take the stage in the hopes of winning the last two spots in the semifinals. (#105)

Friday, December 13, 2019 at at 8:00 p.m. - Semifinals, Part 1: Six of the top 12 bands battle it for out for a place in the finals. (#107)

Friday, December 20, 2019 at at 8:00 p.m. - Semifinals, Part 2: With only three spots remaining in the finals, six of the family bands fight to stay in the competition. (#108)

Friday, December 27, 2019 at at 7:00 p.m. - Road to the Finals: Meeting the top six finalists for "America's Most Musical Family." (#113)

Double Dare


Friday, December 6, 2019 at 9:00 p.m. - Holiday Week Game 2: Two returning kids team up with their favorite celebrities, Ally Brooke and Duff Goldman; one team pulls ahead and earns a shot at the obstacle course and a spot in the finals. (#218)

Friday, December 13, 2019 at 9:00 p.m. - Holiday Week Game 3: Tiffany Haddish and Shaun White team up with their fans for a festive face-off; as they take on a series of messy challenges, only one wins enough points to move on to the obstacle course and tournament finals. (#219)

Friday, December 20, 2019 at 9:00 p.m. - Holiday Week Finals: With the help of their celebrity partners, the remaining players compete to become the first-ever Holiday Week Champion; the winning team takes on the obstacle course to go for double the dollars. (series finale; #220)

44 Cats


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 7:30 a.m. - Santa's Little Helper: When Santa's helper cat, Glitter, crashes in the garden, the Buffycats must help him save Christmas for all. (holiday episode; #121B)

Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 7:30 a.m. - The Rolling Pin Quest: Granny Pina does some Granny-Karate moves when her rolling pin flies away and breaks before she can prepare her special noodles; the Buffycats must follow special instructions in order to find a solution. (#125B)

Sunday, December 15, 2019 at 7:30 a.m. - Recycling Romp: Boss, Blister and Scab toss old objects into Granny Pina's garden to annoy the Buffycats; on Creative Recycling Day, the furry fellows use the items to build toys for the park. (#121A)

Sunday, December 22, 2019 at 7:30 a.m. - Pilou the Kitten Sitter: Granny Pina is out and Lampo, Milady and Meatball are all busy for the day; Pilou goes for a walk with her doll and when she gets back home, she realizes her doll is missing and there's a kitten in her stroller instead. (#126A)

Sunday, December 29, 2019 at 7:30 a.m. - 44 Cats - The Musical: The Buffycats set up a musical with all 44 cats for the annual Cat Party; even Boss, Blister and Scab join, thanks to their talent for mischief. (#126B; season one finale)

It's Pony - New Show



Life is more exciting, fun, and unpredictable with a pony, as seen in Nickelodeon’s new original animated series It’s Pony, premiering Saturday, Jan. 18. The 20-episode series follows the comedic adventures of Annie and her best friend, who just so happens to be an enthusiastic, unpredictable, and carefree pony. Following its premiere, It’s Pony will continue to air Saturdays on Nickelodeon and will air internationally in April 2020.

The series stars Jessica DiCicco (Adventure Time) as Annie, an optimistic and determined farm girl living in the city with her family and best friend Pony; Josh Zuckerman (Strange Angel) as Pony, who is naïve and impulsive, but loves Annie more than anything; Abe Benrubi (E.R.) as Dad, who treats Pony as a nuisance, but recognizes the special bond he shares with Annie; and India de Beaufort (All Hail King Julien) as Mom, who loves Annie and Pony’s relationship and always has a new project in the works.

Additional cast members bringing characters to life include: Kal Penn (Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle) as Annie’s friend Fred; Bobby Moynihan (Saturday Night Live) as Annie’s friend Brian; Rosario Dawson (Rent) as Annie’s school principal Ms. Ramiro; Mark Feuerstein (Royal Pains) as the landlord Mr. Pancks; Megan Hilty (Smash) as the too-obsessed-with-Pony friend Beatrice; Yvette Nicole Brown (Drake & Josh) as Mrs. Dunscomb; Grey Griffin (Fairly OddParents, Danny Phantom, The Loud House) as Henrietta; John DiMaggio (Sanjay and Craig, The Loud House, Futurama, Adventure Time) as Dave the Sewer Worker and Tomatopalooza Judge; and Dee Bradley Baker (SpongeBob SquarePants, Legends of the Hidden Temple, Avatar: The Last Airbender) as Dog.

Throughout the season, the series will explore the everyday life and hijinks of two best friends whose optimism and enthusiasm turn any situation from ordinary to extraordinary. Whether making an epic quest down the street to mail a letter, heroically saving the local playground with a bake sale, or simply getting a haircut, Pony and Annie always stick together because life is better as a pair.

Created by Ant Blades, It’s Pony is inspired by a short from Nickelodeon’s 2015 International Animated Shorts Program. A pre-released episode will be available starting Wednesday, Dec. 25 on the Nick App, Nick On Demand, and YouTube.

The Crystal Maze - New Game Show



Comedian/writer Adam Conover is the new host of Nickelodeon’s upcoming family game show, The Crystal Maze, an all-new version of the legendary UK hit series, premiering Friday, Jan. 24, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT). The Crystal Maze will feature Conover as the Maze Master, charged with guiding one family team through physical and mental challenges set within an elaborate labyrinth of four giant and immersive themed zones: Aztec, Eastern, Futuristic and Industrial.

The premiere episode of The Crystal Maze will feature a family from Houston, Texas, tackling a range of challenges in the maze for the first time ever for U.S. audiences. This season will feature families from: Scottsdale, Ariz; Lake Forest, Calif; Eastvale, Calif ; St. Augustine, Fla; Windemere, Fla; Chester, Va; Germantown, Tenn; Carollton, Texas; and Wheaton, Ill.

In each episode, the youngest family member takes on the role of team Captain. The successful completion of escape-room style challenges are rewarded with a “time crystal” granting the family five seconds in the centerpiece final zone called the Crystal Dome. The more crystals gathered throughout the game, the more time each family has for a dramatic clock countdown challenge inside the iconic Dome for a chance to win up to $25,000.

A current ratings smash in the UK, The Crystal Maze has been a beloved family and cult favorite since the mid ‘90s, with the current global popularity of the escape room phenomena reigniting interest further. The show was recently rebooted to great success with celebrity, charity and family seasons in UK, Australia and beyond.

Production on the new series (10 one-hour episodes) took place on the show's original set located at The Bottle Yard Studios in Bristol, England, earlier this summer.

Devised by Jacques Antoine, the UK version of The Crystal Maze was originally hosted by Richard O'Brien (Rocky Horror), followed by Ed Tudor-Pole. The reboot was originally presented by Stephen Merchant (for Stand Up To Cancer), and currently by Richard Ayoade (The IT Crowd, Travel Man) with his "hand." The show's theme song is the legendary "Force Field", below. The show is currently filmed at The Bottle Yard Studios in Bristol.

The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage!


Following a critically lauded run on Broadway, Nickelodeon reunited reunites members of the original award-winning Broadway company of The SpongeBob Musical for The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage!, will simulcast on Saturday, Dec. 7, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT) across Nickelodeon, TeenNick, Nicktoons and Nick Jr. Joining the cast is veteran SpongeBob SquarePants voice actor Tom Kenny as “Patchy the Pirate,” performing the original Sara Bareilles song “Poor Pirates.” The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage! was filmed for television in front of a live theater audience, capturing all-new depths of theatrical innovation, where the power of optimism really can save the world.

The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage! cast will include Ethan Slater as SpongeBob SquarePants, Gavin Lee as Squidward Q. Tentacles, Danny Skinner as Patrick Star, Brian Ray Norris as Eugene Krabs, Wesley Taylor as Sheldon Plankton, Christina Sajous as Sandy Cheeks and Tom Kenny as ‘Patchy the Pirate’. The ensemble will include Kyle Hamilton, Katie Lee Hill, Curtis Holbrook, Jesse JP Johnson, L’ogan J’ones, Jai’len Josey, Kelvin Moon Loh, Lauralyn McClelland, Vasthy Mompoint, Bryonha Marie Parham, Oneika Phillips, Jon Rua, JC Schuster, Abby C. Smith, Robert Taylor Jr., and Allan Washington.

Premieres: Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. Click here for full information and a first look.

Power Rangers Beast Morphers


Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 8:00 a.m. - Evox Upgraded: The Rangers mount a desperate mission to stop Evox once and for all. (#920)

Saturday, December 14, 2019 at 8:00 a.m. - Scrozzle's Revenge: When the Rangers get trapped inside holiday ornaments, their Beast Bots must save both the Rangers and the city. (holiday episode; #922; season finale)

ALVINNN!!! and The Chipmunks


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. - Artsy Smartsy; The Crush: Theodore helps Simon get past his perfectionism in order to complete an assignment for art class; Simon has a crush on the babysitter and secretly prepares a romantic dinner while Theodore keeps Alvin distracted.

Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. - Best in Shoe; Royal Pain: To land the lead role in a play, Alvin wagers Brittany that he can remain in character as a shoe cobbler; When Brittany becomes convinced she’s a long lost princess she carries her new royal status a little too far. (#414)

Sunday, January 5, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. - Bloodline: Alvin wants Dave to take a DNA test to see if he's related to a famous explorer or king, but the results are much scarier.

LEGO Jurassic World: Legend of Isla Nublar


Sunday, January 5, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. - Spit Take!: A Dilophosaurus runs loose in the park's hotel; Owen and Claire must find it before the guests notice and before Vic's dino-hunting security team can damage the hotel and the guests.

LEGO City Adventures


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - Police Navidad; Paradoors: Officer Duke DeTain patrols without a partner on Christmas Eve; Astronauts reach Mars orbit and prepare to launch their probes; Tippy Dorman puts his own plans into motion to secure a large Mars rock that looks remarkably like a door. (holiday episode; #107A/#109B)

Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - Slam the Door; JAILBREAK!: Harl attempts to prevent Tippy from bringing the fabled "Mars Door" back to Earth. Tippy Dorman, faces the trial of the century after his attempt to take over the world. (#110; season finale)

Movies and Specials


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. - The Smurfs: A Christmas Carol: Visits from three ghosts help Grouchy Smurf learn to appreciate Christmas spirit. Animated • Children • Comedy drama • Holiday • Special • 2011 • 30 minute special

Saturday, December 14, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. - Paddington: After a deadly earthquake destroys his home in Peruvian rainforest, a young bear (Ben Whishaw) makes his way to England in search of a new home. The bear, dubbed "Paddington" for the london train station, finds shelter with the family of Henry (Hugh Bonneville) and Mary Brown (Sally Hawkins). Although Paddington's amazement at urban living soon endears him to the Browns, someone else has her eye on him: Taxidermist Millicent Clyde (Nicole Kidman) has designs on the rare bear and his hide. 2014 • Adventure • Animated • Children • Comedy

Friday, December 13, 2019 at 5:00 p.m. - Ice Age 4: Continental Drift: Scrat's continuous pursuit of an infernal acorn has world-changing consequences for Manny (Ray Romano), Sid (John Leguizamo) and Diego (Denis Leary) when the continents split apart. The continental crack-up separates Manny and his friends from the rest of the herd, including Manny's mate, Ellie (Jennifer Lopez) and rebellious daughter Peaches (Keke Palmer). The pals are desperate to return home, but a pirate (Peter Dinklage) and his ragtag crew stand in their way. 2012 • Adventure • Animated • Children • Comedy

Wednesday, January 2020, 2020 at 2:00 p.m. - Kung Fu Panda: Po the panda (Jack Black) works in his family's noodle shop and dreams of becoming a kung-fu master. His dream becomes a reality when, unexpectedly, he must fulfill an ancient prophecy and study the skills with his idols, the Furious Five. Po needs all the wisdom, strength and ability he can muster to protect his people from an evil snow leopard. 2008 • Adventure • Animated • Children • Comedy • Encore Presentation

Nick Jr. on Nickelodeon


The Adventures of Paddington - Sneak Peek


Friday, December 20, 2019 at 12:30 p.m. - Paddington Finds a Pigeon; Paddington and the Chores List: Paddington nurses an injured bird back to health and discovers a new friend in Pigeonton. Then, Mr. Brown creates a list of chores for Paddington, who accidentally picks up the wrong list. (#101)

Monday, January 20, 2020 at 12:30 p.m. - Paddington Finds a Hobby; Paddington and the Stamp: Paddington doesn’t have a hobby, so Mrs. Brown helps him find out what he’s good at. Then, Paddington gets his arm stuck in a mailbox while sending a letter to Aunt Lucy. (series premiere)

Thomas & Friends: Big World! Big Adventures!


Monday, December 30, 2019 at 8:00 a.m. - Deep Trouble; Rangers of the Rails:

Blue’s Clues & You!


Friday, December 13, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. - Getting Glasses with Magenta: It's an exciting day for Magenta because she is getting glasses; a special game of Blue and Magenta's Clues reveals what Magenta wants to do when she gets her glasses; meeting Dr. Eyeleen. (#111)

PAW Patrol


Friday, December 20, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Pups Save a White Wolf; Pups Save a Wrong Way Explorer: After a sudden snowstorm, Everest cares for a white wolf cub as they work together to help the PAW Patrol find them; famous wrong-way explorer Travelling Travis accidentally takes Chickaletta to the North Pole, where they run into some crocodiles. (#619)

Blaze and the Monster Machines


Friday, December 6, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Toy Trouble!: The Axle City toy store has an amazing machine that can make any toy you want! But when Crusher uses it, he makes giant toys that run amok! Only Blaze and Watts can stop the giant toys from making a giant mess! (#506)

Ryan's Mystery Playdate


Monday, December 2, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Merry Playdate: With the help of festive friends, Ryan must deck the halls with 12 challenge victories to prepare for the hopeful arrival of the big red guy himself. (holiday special; #213)

Tuesday, December 3, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Nimble Playdate; Ryan's Hilarious Playdate: Ryan dips, dives, and ducks through challenges to meet his obstacle crushing playdate. Ryan completes some whacky challenges before meeting his hilarious gem of a playdate. (#202)

Wednesday, December 4, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Subscribed Playdate: Ryan must swipe through his challenges before getting crafty with his follow-worthy playdate. Guest starring influencer Laura DIY. (#210A)

Thursday, December 5, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Plundering Playdate: Set sail with Ryan as he sets course for a day of challenge victories before meeting his plundering playdates. (#210B)

Monday, December 9, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Global Playdate: Let me hear you make some noise for Ryan as he goes for the three-pointer in his challenges before getting all net with his touring playdates. (#215A)

Tuesday, December 10, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Stacked Playdate: Ryan must speed through his stacked challenges before meeting his clock beating playdate. (#215B)

Wednesday, December 11, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Swift Playdate: Ryan sleds through his challenges before meeting his play date at the finish line. (#216A)

Thursday, December 12, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Delicious Playdate: Ryan must chop, dice and saute his challenges before serving the beast with his mystery play date. (#216B)

Monday, December 16, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Leading Playdate: There's no room for time outs when Ryan is put up against challenges before meeting his mystery play date. (#217A)

Tuesday, December 17, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Balanced Playdate: Ryan must cycle through his challenges before spinning out with his balanced play date. (#217B)

Wednesday, December 18, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Spectacular Playdate: Ryan must complete his big top challenges before meeting his play date in the center ring. (#218A)

Thursday, December 19, 2019 at 12:00 p.m. - Ryan's Feathery Playdate: Ryan leaves the nest and must be as light as a feather to complete his challenges before meeting his soaring play dates. (#218B)

Ricky Zoom


Friday, December 6, 2019 at 12:30 p.m. - SantaCycle Down; Shining: Ricky and the buddies help Santa Cycle when he crashes lands in Wheelford on Christmas Eve. Scootio’s parents are putting on a light display in Wheelford. (holiday episode; #113)

Nicktoons


Rainbow Butterfly Unicorn Kitty


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 11:30 a.m. - Merry Mythmas: When Santa Paws takes the year off, Felicity is chosen to replace him and deliver the Mythmas presents to all of Mythlandia; Rudy teams up with Timmy the Kraken to try and ruin Mythmas. (#108; finale)

Movies and Specials


TBA

Nick Jr. Channel


Nella the Princess Knight


Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - Freezing Out the Fleagles; The Big Concert: Nella must save Castlehaven from a surprise blizzard before it freezes her entire kingdom; when Nella's music idol comes to town to give a concert, there aren't enough tickets for everyone. (#212; Holiday special)

Sunday, December 29, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - Cici Saves the Day; Big Little Rides: Nella helps Cici learn how to stand up and stand out when Tricksy tries to steal a sparkly trophy; worried that he won't fit in, a giant ogre shrinks himself using a magical wishing wagon. (#217)

Corn & Peg


Saturday, December 14, 2019 at 11:30 a.m. - Backsteed Boys; Trotterball: Corn and Peg help their favorite band, the Backsteed Boys, out of a jam when their bus breaks down in the middle of nowhere; Corn and Peg help Ruby practice trotterball so she can feel more confident on the field and help her team win the big game. (#118)

Butterbean's Café


Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. - The Gingerbread Man!; Copykitties!: Ms. Marmalady's mishap causes a giant gingerbread man to run wild and the Bean Team tries to catch him before he wrecks their café; Dottie keeps copying Cricket on their playdate. (#133; holiday episode)

Sunday, December 29, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. - The Big Tomato!/Tough Customers!: Chef Carlo is impressed by Poppy's huge homegrown tomato; the Bean Team can't get an order right for a tough customer, but Jasper just might have the solution. (#139)

Abby Hatcher


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. - Abby Loses Elvin; The Berry Thief: Abby tries to kitty-sit Elvin, but the kitten keeps running off and disappearing.

Sunny Day


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - Commercial Success: A popular dog biscuit maker arrives in town looking for a dog to star in his new commercial; when Scratch's pursuit of a stray dog complicates things, Sunny steps up to help, leading to a surprise ending in more ways than one. (#209)

Sunday, December 15, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - On Thin Ice: After Rox and Blair accidentally destroy Doodle's beloved new sled, their efforts to find a replacement leads to a farcical series of winter-related trades with their friends around town, including a hard-bargaining Lacey. (#210)

Shimmer and Shine


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. - The Sea Enchantress; The Dance of the Jellyfish:

Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. - Found You Day; Nazboo Loses a Tooth: Zeta's upset when Nazboo abandons her on their special day, unaware that it's because he's planning a surprise party for her; when Nazboo loses one of his baby teeth, Zeta schemes to get a powerful present out of it from the Tooth Flitter. (#421)

Sunday, December 15, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. - Zeashell Surprise; The Zahramay Zuffer-Puff: The girls help the Zeashell Genie make surprise-filled zeashells, but sneaky Uzma swaps the surprises inside with her own; the girls run into trouble when Zeta enlists a cute magic-sucking fish to suck up their wish magic. (#422)

Sunday, December 29, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. - Zadazzler Dizzaster; Hotdog Havoc: Zeta wreaks havoc when she enchants her sister's new zadazzling wand in an attempt to take over Zahramay Falls; when Zac opens a hot dog stand in Zahramay Falls, Zeta tries using the hot dogs to make her most powerful potion yet. (#423)

Trulli Tales


Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. - Gingerbread Castle; Sorbet on Ice: The Trullalleri attend classes at the famous school of magic and cooking in Trulloland and before they can become great chef magicians, they must learn to use their cookery skills as well as their magic powers; Ring, Stella and Zip skate on the ice rink. (#137; #108)

Saturday, December 14, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. - The Curiosity Banana Souffle; Hero By Mistake: Zip wonders what Stella is hiding; he convinces Ring and Sun to follow her; they end up finding out Stella was preparing a surprise for them; Zip wants to make everybody believe he is a hero. (#116; #117)

Saturday, December 21, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. - Brave Fruit Salad; A Sticky Situation: Zip finds a four-leaf clover and is convinced he can now succeed at everything, even taking care of Copperpot; The children need to replace Miss Frisella's honey. (#118; #119)

Saturday, December 28, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. - Sun's Lost Notebook; Clock-A-Doodle-Doo: Stella is surprised to see an elastic arm appear and she knocks some ink onto Sun's notebook; Copperpot is now elastic; Granny Trulli gives the children a recipe for a boiled egg. (#120; #121)

Peppa Pig


Sunday, December 15, 2019 at 8:00 p.m. - Christmas at the Hospital; Buried Treasure; Bat and Ball; Cold Winter's Day; Sun, Sea, and Snow: Peppa falls and hurts her arm on Christmas Day; Peppa finds a box of pirate treasure; the children learn how to play Bat and Ball; Peppa and her friends play in the snow; Peppa goes for a day trip to the snowy beach. (#168; holiday episode)

Max & Ruby


Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 11:30 a.m. - One of a Kind Ruby; Ruby's To Do List: Ruby and Louise enter a snow sculpture contest and Max and Morris make a big snowball; Ruby has a list of things to do and Max just wants to have a fun day. (#117)

Saturday, December 28, 2019 at 11:30 a.m. - Happy Baby Huffington; Ruby's Cupcakes: Ruby babysits Baby Huffington while Max forms a band; Ruby decorates cupcakes while Max and Lily play in puddles. (#120)

Rainbow Rangers


Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. - Tigertastic; Seal Gone Wild: Preston destroys mangrove forests in India to create profitable shrimp farms, exposing the area and its wildlife to storms; the Rangers have to get a lost seal back home after it wreaks havoc on a city. (#209)

Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. - Chimney Caper; Smuggle a Snuggle: During the holidays, the Rangers need to remove a raccoon family looking for warmth that becomes trapped in Preston's chimney; Patty smuggles sugar gliders into the country to give as "goodie bags" at her birthday party. (#213)

Sunday, December 15, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. - Frozen Falls; Got Silk?: The Rangers save turtles trapped on an ice floe when a waterfall freezes over, but their save has consequences; the Rangers save spiders from the Praxtons, who are milking them for their silk. (#212)

Sunday, December 15, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. - Flyaway; Safari Soulmates: The Praxtons use helium balloons to try and set a world record; in Africa, the symbiotic relationship between ostriches and zebras is threatened when Preston rounds up ostriches for his own profit. (#210)

Sunday, December 29, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. - The Lost Puppy; Team Rainbow Rangers: (#214)

Top Wing


Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. - A Top Wing Christmas: The Cadets celebrate Christmas with Penny's penguin family; when Santa crashes on his way to deliver the penguin's presents, the Cadets have to rescue Santa and Penny's little brother. (#217; holiday episode)

Saturday, December 21, 2019 at 11:30 a.m. - Gone Gondola Gone; Hasselhawg Swim Lesson: While the cadets work on their snowboarding badge, a falling tree knocks a gondola loose; the Cadets help Davey Hasselhawg give the little Turkskis a swim lesson, and then have to rescue Davey from a whirlpool. (#215)

TeenNick


Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019

Premieres: Monday, December 30, 2019 at 10:30 p.m.
Encores: Wednesday, January 1, 2020 at 8:00 p.m.


An exclusive chance to see how the iconic Kids' Choice Awards are celebrated in another part of the world.

Nickelodeon and the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi delivered on their commitment to bring the leading kids’ brand’s slimiest, wildest show to the city to the delight of fans across the Middle East. In September, the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards Abu Dhabi 2019 lit up the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre. The night featured stunning performances and stunts, including a mash-up of hits by global superstar and event host, Jason Derulo, including his latest hit, Mamacita, the sliming of co-host Haifa Beseisso, and performances by Conor Maynard, Maritta and al-Waleed Hallani, Nora Fatehi and Fnaire, Dyler and Egyptian star Mohamed Hamaki. Kids’ favorite artists and talent were crowned across 16 entertainment categories.

Nick@Nite


Mom Season 6


Daily.

Movies and Specials


TBA

TV Land


TBA

TV Land


TBA

Nickelodeon on Streaming Services


Nickelodeon on Pluto TV


Nick Pluto TV


Welcome to Nick Pluto TV where you can watch your favorite classic shows from SpongeBob SquarePants, Hey Arnold!, Legends of the Hidden Temple, All That, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Fairly OddParents, iCarly, Are You Afraid of the Dark, Rugrats, Doug, True Jackson, VP, Victorious and more! It’s all on Nick Pluto TV.

Nick Jr. Pluto TV


Welcome to Nick Jr. Pluto TV where you’ll find your preschooler’s favorite friends from classic Blue’s Clues, Dora the Explorer, Wallykazam, Robot and Monster, Wonder Pets!, Yo Gabba Gabba!, Teletubbies Classic, Max & Ruby, Go, Diego, Go!, The Fresh Beat Band, Kuu Kuu Harajuku and many more hit Nick Jr. Pluto TV shows.

More Nick:Nickelodeon to Premiere 'The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage!' on Saturday, December 7, 2019!

Originally published: Saturday, November 23, 2019 at 00:03 GMT.

Credits:

Based on a list compiled by Anime Superhero Forum members; Sources: Zap2it TV Listings, TheFutonCritic.com; Additional sources: @TVShowsFan, @kancsn01, @TheAGames10, @RealMagitroopa, N Central Vids, Nickandmore!.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Holidays on Nickelodeon and News and Highlights!

Viacom18 Launches VOOT Kids, India's First and Only Multi-Format Kids App Offering Fun & Learning

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Viacom18 launches India's first and only multi-format Kids app offering Fun & Learning - 'VOOT Kids'

~ Watch, Read, Listen & Learn all at one place! ~

~ Certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA), VOOT Kids hosts the largest content library of over 20,000 content pieces across segments ~


(L-R): Sudhanshu Vats, Saugato Bhowmik, actress Soha Ali Khan, educationist Swati Popat, actor Aashish Chaudhary, and Gourav Rakshit at the launch event for Voot Kids

Mumbai, 12th November 2019: Viacom18, India’s fastest growing entertainment network is all set to expand its digital ecosystem with the launch of its first subscription play – VOOT Kids. Leading kids’ content on broadcast, Viacom18 now extends its thought leadership with a unique digital service for kids, which creates a seamless experience for both fun and learning in a safe, parentally controlled environment. Certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA), VOOT Kids is India’s first and only multi-format Kids app offering Fun & Learning, with its largest and most versatile collection of over 20,000 videos, e-books, stories and quizzes, aims to usher in the next evolution in the kid’s digital ecosystem. Priced at INR 799 for a year and 99 per month with Free Trials in both packages, the VOOT Kids app is available to download on iOS and Play Store.

“Viacom18 has grown over the years by focussing on white spaces that are challenging and yet have tremendous potential. As a network, we have been the undisputed leader in kids’ entertainment content since the past 5 years. Our digital play VOOT is the second largest video-on-demand platform in the country today.” said Sudhanshu Vats, Group CEO & MD, Viacom18, adding, “VOOT Kids is a synergy of these two growth stories from the house of Viacom18. Marking our sharper segmented foray into the world of subscription based VoD, VOOT Kids is India’s first and only multi-format Kids app offering Fun & Learning. No other kids app offers Watch, Read, Listen & Learn all at one place”


With a mission to make screen time meaningful for Kids, the app strikes a balance between fun learning and entertainment for kids between the age of 02 to 08 years. The app will achieve this by delivering a holistic experience focussed on viewing, reading, listening and playing all in one place. The app encompasses Kids’ favourite toons, best of pre-school and learning shows, beautifully crafted picture e-books, audio stories and fun quizzes and will empower parents with relevant and superior quality engagement options for their children. Behind this impressive content line-up are partnerships with best in class brand owners and leaders like Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, Lego and many more.

Speaking about VOOT’s venture into the premium subscription space, Gourav Rakshit, COO, Viacom18 Digital Ventures said, “The foray into the subscription space with VOOT Kids is the first step in our journey towards building an entire digital ecosystem under brand VOOT. VOOT Kids has been built on the 3 pillars of Product Experience, Content and Safety. In VOOT Kids, we are bringing an offering that is child-friendly, yet parent focussed and gives them an opportunity to bond with an immersive co-consumption experience. Our brand philosophy of ‘Masti Mein Acchai’ reflects our mission to make screen time meaningful.”


VOOT Kids is a key enabler that enhances the bond between parents and children through immersive co-consumption experiences. The curated ad-free content library has parental control features that allow parents to evaluate progress, limit screen time and track content consumed which makes VOOT Kids India’s safest one-stop online destination that entertains, engages and enriches kids, all under one roof.

Elaborating, Saugato Bhowmik, Business Head, VOOT Kids said, “VOOT Kids is a category creating product in the space of digital fun learning that caters to needs of discerning Indian parents who seek meaningful screen-time that aids in holistic development of the child’s mental, emotional and social faculties. The app has the largest and most versatile offerings in the space of toon videos, e-books, audio stories and fun quizzes that provides children with a parent-controlled, safe and entertaining content destination.” He further added, “We believe masti should never be served up without acchai and the same holds true the other way around. And this is our guiding philosophy at VOOT Kids”

VOOT Kids will be Viacom18’s first ever digital subscription service providing immersive content delivered through an elevated product experience and seamless gameplay. With this launch, VOOT Kids will bring alive the ‘Masti Main Acchai’ brand idea through a high decibel integrated marketing plan that will reach over 50 mn households driven by a mix of print, on-air, on-ground activations and digital outreach. Priced at INR 799 for a year with a 30 day free trial and 99 per month with a 7 day free trial, the VOOT Kids app is available to download on iOs and Android.

About VOOT Kids

VOOT Kids is India’s first and only multi-format Kids app offering Fun & Learning. The app has four major categories: WATCH, LEARN, READ AND LISTEN including hours of Indian and International content. The rich content library also consists of MCQ’s covering 5 skill set domains, audio books from Karadi Tales, Jataka Tales and audio originals with character led stories and best-selling e-books. The content on VOOT Kids will help a child create a perfect balance between learning and having fun. The app is available on iOS and Android phones.

About VOOT

VOOT is India’s second largest digital video-on-demand streaming service from the house of Viacom18. With a content library of more than 60,000 hours across Viacom18’s network content, exclusive content around network shows and VOOT Originals, the platform caters to varying needs of discerning audiences across segments. With over 80 million monthly active users, VOOT is the most engaged platform in the ad-supported service space. VOOT continues to take the leadership mantel on innovation, across content, technology and marketing initiatives, aimed at providing an immersive experience to its users.

About Viacom18

Viacom18 Media Pvt. Ltd. is one of India's fastest growing entertainment networks and a house of iconic brands that offers multi-platform, multi-generational and multicultural brand experiences. A joint venture of TV18, which owns 51%, and Viacom Inc., with a 49% stake, Viacom18 defines entertainment in India by touching the lives of people through its properties on air, online, on ground, in shop and through cinema.

From Livemint:

The idea of catering to kids is very close to Viacom’s DNA given that we own the top kids television channels, said Gourav Rakshit, COO, Viacom18 Digital Ventures

Viacom18 launches multi-format kids app, VOOT Kids

The app will be entirely separate from Viacom’s advertising-led video-on-demand platform VOOT and target kids aged between 2 to 8 years
The app is priced at Rs. 99 per month and Rs.799 per year and available for download on both iOS and Android formats

NEW DELHI : Media and entertainment conglomerate Viacom18 Media Pvt Ltd announced the launch of VOOT Kids, a new kids app that combines audio, video and text along with puzzles and quizzes. It is priced at Rs. 99 per month and Rs. 799 per year and available for download on both iOS and Android formats.

The app will be entirely separate from Viacom’s advertising-led video-on-demand platform VOOT and target kids aged between 2 to 8 years.

“The idea of catering to kids is very close to Viacom’s DNA given that we own the top kids television channels. We were running some content on VOOT itself but making it more meaningful wouldn’t have been possible on a video-on-demand platform," Gourav Rakshit, chief operating officer, Viacom18 Digital Ventures said.

Rakshit said the app will provide full security and parental control not just in terms of the content kids consume and engage with but also the amount of time they spend on the app. The 20,000 pieces of content on the service includes animation shows like Chhota Bheem, Motu Patlu and Rudra: Boom Chik Chik Boom, e-books from leading publishers and folk tales and fables narrated on audio besides games, puzzles and quizzes. These have been collated in collaboration with brand owners like Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, Lego and others, whom the platform has a long-term partnership with.

“Viacom18 has grown over the years by focusing on white spaces that are challenging and yet have tremendous potential. VOOT Kids is a synergy of the two growth stories from the house of Viacom18—our broadcast network and VOOT (the OTT platform). Marking our sharper segmented foray into the world of subscription-based VoD, VOOT Kids is India’s first and only multi-format kids app offering fun and learning," said Sudhanshu Vats, Group CEO and MD, Viacom18, said in a statement.

###

From Kidscreen:

Viacom18 enters India’s kids SVOD market

For two- to eight-year-olds, VOOT Kids offers a mix of Indian animated series like Nickelodeon's Golmaal Jr. and international acquisitions including Peppa Pig.

India-based entertainment conglomerate Viacom18 has launched VOOT Kids, the company’s first subscription app for children.

VOOT Kids targets children ages two to eight and is available for iOS and Android devices at US$1.39 per month (INR 99) and US$11 (INR 799) for a yearly subscription. The monthly offer includes a seven-day free trial, while the yearly package has a month-long free option.

The ad-free service provides a library of more than 15,000 episodes of animated series such as local Indian Nick shows Motu Patlu and Golmaal Jr., as well as international series like Peppa Pig, Pokémon, Ben 10 and PAW Patrol. The platform’s brand partners include Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, CBeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and Lego.

VOOT Kids also features more than 500 kids eBook titles from brands including Chhota Bheem, Dora The Explorer, Thumbelina, Masha & the Bear, Wheels on the Bus, Aladdin, Gulliver’s Travels, The Ugly Duckling, Jack and The Beanstalk and Little Red Riding Hood.

In addition, 150-plus curated audio stories are available spanning Indian folktales to princess stories like Cinderella and Princess and the Frog. More than 5,000 educational games and quizzes are featured, too, covering areas such as language skills, math and creative expression.

For parents, a special zone lets them assess their child’s learning progress, set screen time limits, track content consumption and create up to four kid profiles each with their own viewing preferences, recommendations and settings.

The app follows Viacom18′s AVOD service VOOT for older audiences. It features more than 60,000 hours of exclusive original and acquired content and, to date, has generated more than 80 million monthly active users.

VOOT Kids arrives in a crowded Indian mobile streaming market and will compete with the likes of Netflix, Apple TV+ and Amazon. Whether or not Disney+ launches in the region as part of its international rollout remains to be seen.

Disney-owned streaming service Hotstar currently leads the Indian online content market with more than 300 million monthly active users, according to recent findings by Bangalore-based research and consulting firm RedSeer. Chinese social media streamer TikTok is fourth on the list at 129 million, while Amazon Prime and Netflix land at 13 million and 11 million, respectively.

To increase its user base in the region, Netflix introduced a low-priced mobile-only tier in July that costs US$2.80 (INR 199) per month. It’s also investing more in local original animated content. Mighty Little Bheem, its first original Indian kids series, was renewed for a third season in August. On the linear TV side, Nick India has been launching more originals, too. Bollywood spin-off Golmaal Jr. premiered in May on Nick’s Sonic kids channel for 10 to 13-year-olds.

Meanwhile, Viacom18′s strategy for developing exclusive original toons for VOOT Kids is yet to be revealed.

###

From TVKIDS:

India’s VOOT Unveils Subscription App for Kids’ Content

Viacom18’s on-demand platform VOOT in India has launched an ad-free kids’ app priced at 99 rupees ($1.40) a month.

VOOT Kids will offer up more than 20,000 videos, e-books, stories and quizzes targeted at kids between the ages of 2 and 8. Content is available from Nickelodeon, WarnerMedia, Green Gold Animation, CBeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, Lego and more.

“Viacom18 has grown over the years by focusing on white spaces that are challenging and yet have tremendous potential,” said Sudhanshu Vats, group CEO and managing director of Viacom18. “As a network, we have been the undisputed leader in kids’ entertainment content for the past five years. Our digital play VOOT is the second-largest video-on-demand platform in the country today. VOOT Kids is a synergy of these two growth stories from the house of Viacom18. Marking our sharper segmented foray into the world of subscription-based VOD, VOOT Kids is India’s first and only multiformat kids’ app offering fun and learning. No other kids’ app offers watch, read, listen and learn all at one place.”

Gourav Rakshit, COO of Viacom18 Digital Ventures, added, “The foray into the subscription space with VOOT Kids is the first step in our journey towards building an entire digital ecosystem under brand VOOT. VOOT Kids has been built on the three pillars of product experience, content and safety. In VOOT Kids, we are bringing an offering that is child-friendly, yet parent-focused and gives them an opportunity to bond with an immersive co-consumption experience. Our brand philosophy of ‘Masti Mein Acchai’ reflects our mission to make screen time meaningful.”

Saugato Bhowmik, business head for VOOT Kids, noted, “VOOT Kids is a category-creating product in the space of digital fun learning that caters to needs of discerning Indian parents who seek meaningful screentime that aids in holistic development of the child’s mental, emotional and social faculties. The app has the largest and most versatile offerings in the space of toon videos, e-books, audio stories and fun quizzes that provides children with a parent-controlled, safe and entertaining content destination.”

###

From The Economic Times:

Viacom18 launches subscription VOD service for kids

Priced at Rs 99 per month and Rs 799 per year, the service is first subscription service from the broadcast network. Certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA), VOOT Kids will be available to download on iOS and Android Play Store.

MUMBAI: Viacom18 has announced the launch of VOOT Kids, a first of its kind multi-format Kids app offering ‘fun & learning’, with a collection of over 20,000 videos, e-books, stories and quizzes.

Priced at Rs 99 per month and Rs 799 per year, the service is first subscription service from the broadcast network.

Certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA), VOOT Kids will be available to download on iOS and Android Play Store.

“We realized that in order to make Viacom18 future ready, we have to build our digital portfolio. And while Voot is there for adults, it made a lot of sense for us to bring in a separate kids app as we have a lot of local and global IPs,” said Sudhanshu Vats, Group CEO & MD, Viacom18.

Vats added that VOOT Kids is a unique product, which combines watchin, listening, reading and learning. “It’s a first Indian multi-format app for kids,” he said. “As a network, we have been the undisputed leader in kids’ entertainment content since the past 5 years. Our digital play VOOT is the second largest video-on-demand platform in the country today.”

Targeted towards kids between age 2012 year olds, the service will have more content for the preschoolers. It will have toons, best of pre-school and learning shows, picture e-books, audio stories and fun quizzes.

Viacom18 has got content from Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, Lego and others for this service. “We practically have everything that is not Disney,” Vats said.

Gourav Rakshit, COO, Viacom18 Digital Ventures, added that the foray into the subscription space with VOOT Kids is the first step in the company’s journey towards building an entire digital ecosystem under brand VOOT.

“VOOT Kids has been built on the 3 pillars of Product Experience, Content and Safety. In VOOT Kids, we are bringing an offering that is child-friendly, yet parent focussed and gives them an opportunity to bond with an immersive co-consumption experience,” Rakshit said.

The company has planned a high decibel integrated marketing campaign that will reach over 50 million households driven by a mix of print, on-air, on-ground activations and digital outreach.

###

From TelevisionPost:

Viacom18 launches its first-ever SVoD service Voot Kids priced at Rs 799/ year

MUMBAI: Broadcaster Viacom18 is all set to expand its digital ecosystem with the launch of its first subscription play Voot Kids. Priced at Rs 799 for a year and Rs 99 per month with free trials in both packages. The Voot Kids app is available to download on iOS and Play Store.

Certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA), Voot Kids is being positioned as a multi-format Kids app offering Fun & Learning, with a collection of over 20,000 videos, e-books, stories, and quizzes, aims to usher in the next evolution in the kid’s digital ecosystem.

“Viacom18 has grown over the years by focussing on white spaces that are challenging and yet have tremendous potential. As a network, we have been the undisputed leader in kids’ entertainment content for the past 5 years. Our digital play Voot is the second largest video-on-demand platform in the country today,” said Viacom18 Group CEO and MD Sudhanshu Vats.

“Voot Kids is a synergy of these two growth stories from the house of Viacom18. Marking our sharper segmented foray into the world of subscription-based VoD, Voot Kids is India’s first and only multi-format Kids app offering Fun & Learning. No other kids app offers Watch, Read, Listen & Learn all at one place.”

He noted that Viacom18 has built a big TV kids business with a share of 34% between its four channels. “Kids content is in the DNA of Viacom18. Nickelodeon has been number one for five straight years. Sonic is number two.”

Therefore, Voot Kids is the next logical step. With 80 million monthly active users (MAUs) and watch time of 50 minutes a day, Voot claims to be the second biggest OTT platform with kids content contributing a significant chunk of the viewership. He added that 15% of Voot’s daily content consumption comes from the kids genre.

The SVoD platform’s content line-up is powered by brands like Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, Lego and many more.

The app encompasses Kids’ favourite toons, best of pre-school and learning shows, beautifully crafted picture e-books, audio stories, and fun quizzes and will empower parents with relevant and superior quality engagement options for their children.

Speaking about Voot’s venture into the premium subscription space, Viacom18 Digital Ventures COO Gourav Rakshit said, “The foray into the subscription space with Voot Kids is the first step in our journey towards building an entire digital ecosystem under brand Voot. Voot Kids has been built on the 3 pillars of Product Experience, Content and Safety. In Voot Kids, we are bringing an offering that is child-friendly, yet parent focussed and gives them an opportunity to bond with an immersive co-consumption experience. Our brand philosophy of ‘Masti Mein Acchai’ reflects our mission to make screen time meaningful.”

He further stated that given the value being offered the subscription price represents excellent value for money. He added that the price points were arrived at after some amount of experimentation and seeing what other services are priced at.

Voot Kids is a key enabler that enhances the bond between parents and children through immersive co-consumption experiences. The curated ad-free content library has parental control features that allow parents to evaluate progress, limit screen time and track content consumed which makes Voot Kids India’s safest one-stop online destination that entertains, engages and enriches kids, all under one roof.

Voot Kids business head Saugato Bhowmik elaborated further, “Voot Kids is a category-creating product in the space of digital fun learning that caters to needs of discerning Indian parents who seek meaningful screen-time that aids in the holistic development of the child’s mental, emotional and social faculties. The app has the largest and most versatile offerings in the space of toon videos, e-books, audio stories and fun quizzes that provides children with a parent-controlled, safe and entertaining content destination.”

With this launch, Voot Kids will bring alive the ‘Masti Main Acchai’ brand idea through a high decibel integrated marketing plan that will reach over 50 mn households driven by a mix of print, on-air, on-ground activations and digital outreach.

###

From Moneycontrol:

Viacom18 launches multi-format kids app VOOT Kids

To drive content, VOOT Kids has partnered with Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and Lego.


Viacom18 on November 12 announced the launch of VOOT Kids, India's first multi-format kids app with collection of over 20,000 videos, e-books, stories and quizzes.

VOOT Kids will follow the subscription-based model unlike VOOT, that is driven by advertising.

Priced at Rs 799 for a year and Rs 99 per month with free trials in both packages, VOOT Kids is available on both iOS and Play Store platforms.

"We wanted to build something that goes beyond video. One of the key things that came out in our interactions with parents is that content should safe for viewing by children. Hence, ad-free is important," said Gourav Rakshit, COO, Viacom18 Digital Ventures.

To drive content, VOOT Kids has partnered with Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and Lego.

"VOOT Kids been over two years in the making of VOOT Kids and content partnerships that have been rolling for a long time. Just to get the content portfolio right has taken a lot of work," said Rakshit.

The app has four major categories — watch, learn, read, and listen, including hours of Indian and International content. The content library also consists of MCQ's covering five skill set domains, audio books from Karadi Tales, Jataka Tales and audio originals with character led stories and best-selling e-books.

Viacom18's digital video-on-demand platform VOOT, launched three years ago, currently has over 80 million monthly active users (MAUs).

(Disclaimer: TV18 Broadcast is a part of Network 18, which also publishes Moneycontrol)

###

From Gadgets 360:

Voot Kids Launched as Viacom18's First Subscription Offering Just Ahead of Children's Day: Price, Free Trial, and More

With Nickelodeon, WarnerMedia, and Lego as content partners.

Just ahead of Children's day, after over half a year of beta testing, Viacom18-owned Voot has launched its first subscription-based, children-oriented offering Voot Kids. It claims to offer more than 20,000 videos, ebooks, stories, and quizzes, in an attempt to deliver on its four-quadrant play of “watch, read, listen, and learn” that is aimed at kids between the ages of 2–8 years. To build up its content library, it has partnered with the likes of Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, WarnerMedia, Green Gold, BBC's CBeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, and Lego among others. Available on Android and iOS, Voot Kids costs Rs. 99 per month after a 7-day free trial, or Rs. 799 per year after a 30-day free trial.

“Voot Kids [...] caters to needs of discerning Indian parents who seek meaningful screen-time that aids in holistic development of the child's mental, emotional and social faculties,” Voot Kids business head Saugato Bhowmik said in a prepared statement. “The app has the largest and most versatile offerings in the space of toon videos, e-books, audio stories, and fun quizzes that provides children with a parent-controlled, safe and entertaining content destination. We believe masti [fun] should never be served up without acchai [goodness] and the same holds true the other way around. And this is our guiding philosophy at Voot Kids.”

In its announcement, Viacom18 said that Voot Kids has been certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA). Additionally, its curated ad-free content library — which features multiple-choice questions covering five skill-set domains, audio books from Karadi Tales and Jataka Tales, and audio originals with character-led stories — comes with parental controls that allow parents to “evaluate progress, limit screen time and track content consumed”.

“The foray into the subscription space with Voot Kids is the first step in our journey towards building an entire digital ecosystem under brand Voot,” Viacom18 Digital Ventures COO Gourav Rakshit said. “Voot Kids has been built on the three pillars of ‘product experience', ‘content' and ‘safety'. In Voot Kids, we are bringing an offering that is child-friendly, yet parent focused, and gives them an opportunity to bond with an immersive co-consumption experience. Our brand philosophy of ‘Masti Mein Acchai [Goodness in Fun]' reflects our mission to make screen time meaningful.”

“Viacom18 has grown over the years by focusing on white spaces that are challenging and yet have tremendous potential,” said Viacom18 Group CEO & MD Sudhanshu Vats. “As a network, we have been the undisputed leader in kids' entertainment content since the past five years. Our digital play Voot is the second largest video-on-demand platform in the country today. Voot Kids is a synergy of these two growth stories from the house of Viacom18. Marking our sharper segmented foray into the world of subscription-based video-on-demand, Voot Kids is India's first and only multi-format kids' app offering fun & learning. No other kids' app offers watch, read, listen & learn all at one place.”

Voot is soon expected to launch a subscription offering of its main ad-led platform as well.

###

From TBI Vision:

Viacom18 launches first SVOD play in India with Voot Kids

Viacom18 is launching its first SVOD play in India with a kids app.

The platform, Voot Kids, is an extension of the existing AVOD brand Voot, headed up by Viacom18 group CEO Sudanshu Vats, who first detailed the kids SVOD plans to TBI last year.

TBI understands that the launch of an SVOD tier for the main service is also imminent.

The Voot Kids service – priced at INR799 ($11) per year or INR99 ($1.30) per month – is aimed at kids aged 2-8 and offers more than 20,000 videos, e-books, stories and quizzes. Free trials are to be made available in both packages, and the service is available to download via iOS and Android.

Content spans partnerships with the likes of Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, WarnerMedia, Green Gold, Cbeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and Lego.

Voot’s content library covers more than 60,000 hours and carries Viacom18’s network of content as well as originals. The platform has more than 80m monthly active users.

Vats said: “Viacom18 has grown over the years by focussing on white spaces that are challenging and yet have tremendous potential. As a network, we have been the undisputed leader in kids’ entertainment content since the past five years. Our digital play Voot is the second largest video-on-demand platform in the country today.

“Voot Kids is a synergy of these two growth stories from the house of Viacom18. Marking our sharper segmented foray into the world of subscription-based VOD, Voot Kids is India’s first and only multi-format kids app offering fun and learning. No other kids app offers [the ability to] watch, read, listen and learn all at one place”

Gourav Rakshit, COO of Viacom18 Digital Ventures, said: “The foray into the subscription space with Voot Kids is the first step in our journey towards building an entire digital ecosystem under brand Voot. Voot Kids has been built on the three pillars of product experience, content and safety.

“In Voot Kids, we are bringing an offering that is child-friendly, yet parent-focused and gives them an opportunity to bond with an immersive co-consumption experience. Our brand philosophy of ‘Masti Mein Acchai’ reflects our mission to make screen time meaningful.”

###

From exchange4media:

'VOOT Kids will be looking at expanding to South Asia'

Though the app will follow a subscription-based model, Saugato Bhowmik, Business Head, VOOT Kids, said the platform was getting a lot of interest from tech and TV partners

Viacom18 has announced its first subscription led offering VOOT Kids - a multi-format kids’ app that offers a collection of over 20,000 e-books, videos, quizzes and games.

To drive the content, VOOT Kids has entered into content partnership with 15 to 20 content companies including Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and Lego.

Saugato Bhowmik, Business Head, VOOT Kids, shared with exchange4media the app’s focus area, price point, advertising model and more.

“The focus is to create India's first multi-format, safe, parent controlled app that addresses various needs at one go. It entertains, enriches and enables at the same time. There is a dire need for parents to curate multiple learning but fun engagements for the child all the time. We are trying to solve that for parents, we are curating for them,” Bhowmik said.

With a mission to make screen time meaningful for kids, the app strikes a balance between fun learning and entertainment for children aged between the age of 2 to 8 years. Certified by Early Childhood Association (ECA), VOOT Kids aims to usher in the next evolution in the kids’ digital ecosystem. The app is priced at Rs 799 for a year and Rs 99 per month with free trials for 30 days.

Bhowmik also highlighted that on the VOOT app, which has an advertising-led model, 15 per cent of the daily viewership on the app was coming for kids’ content which led to the decision of launching a separate app for kids. “That is what got us started thinking that there is a large opportunity here and we must investigate more into the category,” he added. With VOOT Kids, the platform is targeting 107 million households with kids aged 2-10 years. The app is available across seven languages.

“We’re not solving for a few markets. This is a pan-India app and soon we will also be looking at expanding to it to South Asia and some other countries,” he informed.

Though the app will follow a subscription-based model, Bhowmik shared the app was also getting a lot of partner interest.

“We have experienced a lot of interest from tech partners, TV partners and others. So there's a lot of partner interest, which will also be a separate line of business and add to the revenue. We will also open conversations with multiple schools across the country, and take the app to schools. Maybe one day, we will also create a customised product for schools. But as of today, we are only going to go talk to schools about the need for such progressive fun learning capabilities and then we will see how it goes from there,” Bhowmik added.

With this launch, VOOT Kids will bring alive the ‘Masti Main Acchai’ brand idea through a high decibel integrated marketing plan that will reach over 50 million households driven by a mix of print, on-air, on-ground activations and digital outreach.

###

From Quartz India:

India’s leading kids entertainment network unleashes Peppa Pig and Paw Patrol to win OTT war

Indian media and entertainment giant Viacom18 is trying to carve a niche for itself in India’s overcrowded over-the-top (OTT) space.

On Nov. 12, the Mumbai-based network launched the multiformat app Voot Kids that offers children a collection of over 20,000 videos, e-books, stories, and quizzes in Hindi and English. The app will be separate from Viacom 18’s advertisement-led, OTT platform Voot.

Voot Kids, whose annual subscription plan is priced at Rs799 ($9.8), adds to Viacom18’s kids’ portfolio comprising TV channels Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. Its kids channels lead the genre on Indian television with a market share of over 34%, according to the company. The network boasts exclusive rights in India to air popular cartoon shows such as Peppa Pig and Paw Patrol, and also Indian ones such as Chhotta Bheem.

In the general entertainment OTT category, though, it is behind peers.

By some estimates, Viacom18’s Voot app, which was launched in 2016 and now has over 80 million monthly active users, lags home-grown rival Hotstar and international competitors such as Netflix and Amazon’s Prime Videos in terms of market share.

Voot Kids is not competing for eyeballs or revenues with Netflix, Amazon’s Prime Video, or Hotstar, according to Sudhanshu Vats, group CEO and managing director, Viacom18.

“Video content consumption is on the rise in India. It is estimated to be over Rs6,000 crore ($831 million) and growing,” Vats told Quartz India. “There are huge gaps in kids’ digital ecosystem. There is no single platform meeting kids’ entertainment and education needs at the same time. Voot Kids is aimed at filling this gap.”

In an interview, Vats talks about the importance of screen time for kids, bundling fun, and learning together and the challenges that parents and kids face in navigating the online space safely. Edited excerpts:

What are the key consumer insights that have gone into creating the Voot Kids app?

Many parents feel children’s screen time is junk time. Yet, with the digital revolution, the truth is, we cannot run away from the reality of children spending time watching video. So, we thought of flipping this notion of screen time being a non-productive activity on its head. With our brand philosophy of “Masti Main Acchai” (There is goodness in fun) we want to let parents know that fun time for kids can also be learning time for them.

How is Voot Kids positioned?

Entertainment is at the core of the app, but it’s not just about entertainment, it’s an edutainment product. When you hear of an OTT offering, you instantly think video. Next, one moves on to think about product and service offerings such as Apple, Kindle and other music apps. Voot Kids is a combination of all these products and services. It’s a first of its kind multi-format product. It makes kids’ video-watching and learning a richer experience.

There are many entertainment and edutainment apps like ChuChu TV and YouTube. How do you plan to compete with them?

We are trying to create a new digital ecosystem for kids. Voot Kids offers videos, audiobooks, e-books, quizzes, and gaming. Each of these segments is highly interactive. For example, our book reader is highly interactive. When we say, “The sun rises in the morning,” and a kid puts a finger on the sun, the app shows how morning comes. She learns to pronounce as well as spell words. In the kids entertainment-edutainment market, there are white spaces, and Voot Kids fills this gap.

YouTube, with its advertising-based model, might be the biggest free video content provider, but with our multi-format content offering, we are uniquely placed to offer kids both fun and learning.

What’s your target group and content strategy?

Our larger audience group for the app is kids in the 2-12 years age group. Having said that, the primary target group is 2-6-year-olds.

We have a strong content library, courtesy of our two existing kids offerings on TV—Nickelodeon and Nick India. We have also borrowed content from Warner Media, Oxford University Press, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel, Lego. Then we have also sourced content from Indian IPRs (Intellectual Property Rights) and from countries like South Korea and Japan. Our content portfolio consists of everything outside Walt Disney. It’s a massive advantage for us.

Going by your experience on TV, what are the most popular genres, and characters in kids entertainment?

Kids in India enjoy international as well as Indian content. Those in the two- to four-year age group enjoy watching international shows such as Peppa Pig. For older kids, the favourite characters and shows are Motu Patlu, Shivaay and Chhota Bheem. Indian kids’ entertainment market is big on animation.

Exposure to age-inappropriate content is a big concern when kids are online. How are you addressing safety concerns of parents?

The product has a strong in-built parental control and feedback mechanism. Parents can monitor and control the kind of videos kids watch on the app. We also have built-in features that help parents evaluate their kids’ performance, when it comes to learning through the app.

Voot Kids is a subscription-based offering. Are viewers ready to consume paid content, particularly in the kids’ space?

As a paid product, Voots Kids is an ad-free platform available in English and Hindi languages. Before launching the product, we carried out a simulation exercise looking at how much money parents spend on say video and other entertainment products for kids. Based on these insights, our monthly subscription plan is priced at Rs99 and we also have an annual plan for Rs799.

What’s the key challenge facing the company as it woos parents and kids?

The Voot Kids launch presents us with a classic marketing challenge, wherein we have to effectively communicate to parents why this app is relevant to their kids and educate them on how to use it. Creating awareness is a key challenge.

###

From ETtech:

Voot Kids partners with BBC Studios for CBeebies content

As part of this partnership, Voot Kids subscribers will be able to access pre-school content from CBeebies including several of its prominent shows like Hey Duggee, Go Jetters, Dinopaws and Mr Bloom’s Nursery.

Voot Kids, the subscription-based kids edutainment app from Viacom18, has partnered with BBC Studios’ CBeebies to strengthen its content library.

As part of this partnership, Voot Kids subscribers will be able to access pre-school content from CBeebies including several of its prominent shows like Hey Duggee, Go Jetters, Dinopaws, Mr Bloom’s Nursery and Old Jack's Boat Rockpool Tales along with CBeebies’ collection of bedtime stories.

"With VOOT Kids, our endeavor is to create a superior curated platform that brings together a prudent mix of fun and learning. Our diverse and expansive content library and games are a great way for parents to infuse meaningful and fun learning opportunities into the daily lives of kids, largely interested only in entertainment." said Saugato Bhowmik - Business Head, VOOT Kids.

Viacom18 had launched Voot Kids in India last month, after piloting the service for several months. Priced at Rs 99 per month and Rs 799 per year, this is the first subscription offering from the Reliance-owned entertainment network. Its flagship video streaming service Voot is currently available on an ad-supported basis.

Voot Kids claims to offer more than 5,000 hours of content across Indian and International shows like Dora the Explorer, Oswald, Motu Patlu, Peppa Pig, Chhota Bheem, Ben10 and Barbie Dreamtopia. Apart from video shows, the app also offers audio books, games and picture e-books. It claims to have content tie-ups with brands like Nickelodeon, Oxford University Press, Warner Media, Green Gold, Ceebeebies, TV Asahi, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and Lego among others.

###

From The Financial Express:

Why OTT platforms are carving a separate space for children’s content

According to Netflix, 83 million households on its platform (comprising 60% of its users) watch kids and family-content, globally

As of December 2019, the YouTube Kids app saw over 100 million installs, while ChuChu TV Pro, ChuChuTV Lite and Voot Kids have been installed by over one million users each on Google Play Store

With kids emerging as one of the fastest-growing audiences on digital media, over-the-top (OTT) service providers are busy vying for their attention with exclusive offerings. According to a PwC report, two million children around the world went online for the first time in 2018. Furthermore, streaming giant Netflix has reported that as many as 83 million households on its platform (comprising 60% of its users) watch kids and family-content, globally.

While YouTube was the first mover, players such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video have historically had a separate section for kids content. Now, Indian OTT players too, the likes of Hungama Digital and Viacom18’s Voot, have introduced standalone apps for kids. ChuChu TV, which runs several kids channels on YouTube, has also expanded its services to OTT.

With kids emerging as one of the fastest-growing audiences on digital media, over-the-top (OTT) service providers are busy vying for their attention with exclusive offerings. According to a PwC report, two million children around the world went online for the first time in 2018. Furthermore, streaming giant Netflix has reported that as many as 83 million households on its platform (comprising 60% of its users) watch kids and family-content, globally.

While YouTube was the first mover, players such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video have historically had a separate section for kids content. Now, Indian OTT players too, the likes of Hungama Digital and Viacom18’s Voot, have introduced standalone apps for kids. ChuChu TV, which runs several kids channels on YouTube, has also expanded its services to OTT.

As of December 2019, the YouTube Kids app saw over 100 million installs, while ChuChu TV Pro, ChuChuTV Lite and Voot Kids have been installed by over one million users each on Google Play Store.

Given that parents seek age-appropriate content for their kids, a separate app for kids-only content is a good idea, says Ashish Pherwani, partner and media and entertainment leader, EY India. But will they find many takers?

Not just fun

The newer OTT apps are differentiating themselves by including educational content on their platforms. Voot Kids, for instance, includes e-books, audio books and quizzes, besides content from Viacom18’s TV channel Nickelodeon. The platform has tied up with Oxford University Press, WarnerMedia, YoBoHo, BBC Studios’ CBeebies, Sony Music, Hasbro, Mattel and LEGO, among others, for the same.

“Almost 15% of the daily viewers on Voot come for kids content. We also learnt that 87% of Indian parents agree that mobile helps immensely with their kid’s learning,” says Saugato Bhowmik, business head, Voot Kids. Voot Kids focusses on fun learning, and has advertised this in its campaign, #MastiMeinAcchai. It is a multi-format app featuring key sections dedicated to ‘watch, read, listen and learn’ with over 20,000 content pieces. The app follows the subscription model, and is available at `99 per month and `799 per year.

Read Also: How ads, over the years, have unwittingly offended people with its “wits”

Hungama Kids has 2,000 minutes of video on its platform on topics ranging from general knowledge to science and mathematics. It has specific content across five age groups (from 0-18 years). “We are creating a product that not only talks about entertainment, but is big on education, too. We have realised that besides kids, we can also create content for parents and teachers keeping kids at the centre of it,” says Siddhartha Roy, COO, Hungama Digital Media.

Hungama Kids’ subscription packages are priced at `30 a month and `300 a year, with an initial free trial offer for a day.

Teething troubles

As these companies try to tap a larger share of kids’ viewership in the country, monetisation remains the biggest challenge. While advertising is not a viable option for these platforms, subscription-based apps have not found many takers in the country so far.

“There is a very good product in YouTube Kids, which is free so the subscription-based apps will have a tough time convincing parents to sign up for their products,” says an industry analyst.

Vinoth Chander, co-founder and CEO of ChuChuTV, says the company still gets a major share of revenue from its YouTube channels, despite being present across OTT apps such as Amazon Prime Video and Netflix, and having an OTT platform of its own. Its subscription-based app ChuChu TV Pro has over 50,000 paid subscribers.

The lack of original content is another impediment. A report by KPMG states that although OTT platforms have increased their share in the overall Intellectual Property (IP) production revenue pie, TV content still contributes significantly to it. Raman Kalra, partner, PwC India, says, “If you want customers to stick to your platform, a few IPs are needed, because viewers are not loyal to platforms these days, but to the content.”

Indian businesses have not invested in original content as they were discouraged early on with the poor performance of domestic animation, says Jehil Thakkar, partner, Deloitte. “Also, building IP is a long-term investment; you have to build an ecosystem around it,” he adds.

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More Nick:Nick India Announces Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards 2019 India Nominations!

Originally published: Tuesday, November 12, 2019.
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NEW Game Show Series Trailer ft. Host GUAVA JUICE 🎉 SpongeBob SmartyPants

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Watch SpongeBob SmartyPants now!: http://nickalive.blogspot.com/search/label/SpongeBob%20Smarty%20Pants%20Game%20Show

NEW Game Show Series Trailer ft. Host GUAVA JUICE 🎉 SpongeBob SmartyPants



ARE YA READY, KIDS? Coming soon to the SpongeBob SquarePants Official YouTube channel is the FIRST EVER official SpongeBob game show! Hosted by YouTuber Roy 'Guava Juice' Fabito, contestants will go head-to-head to test their knowledge, skill, and SquarePants-ery to win the coveted Golden Pineapple!

Watch more SpongeBob SquarePants on Nickelodeon!

From Vents Magazine:

Guava Juice Hosts New Nickelodeon “SpongeBob SmartyPants” Digital Series


SpongeBob SmartyPants, a brand-new weekly game show, debuts Sat. Dec. 21 on Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob SquarePants’ YouTube channel. Hosted by YouTuber Roi ‘Guava Juice’ Fabito, this 5-episode series features contestants going head-to-head to test their knowledge and skill on all things SpongeBob for a chance to win the coveted Golden Pineapple.

Roi Fabito, known as ‘Guava Juice,’ is the Nickelodeon for today’s digitally connected kids and families. With over 14.6-Million subscribers and 6.4-Billion views on his main YouTube channel ‘Guava Juice,’ Roi has mastered the art of creating captivating content and successful entrepreneurship. Known for his insane challenges, bathtub experiments, silly DIYs, and random shenanigans – he has been able to capture the hearts of many and remind us that we should always embrace our inner child.

Roi has been recognized in and outside of the media as a top creator and entrepreneur. This year alone he has received nominations for the Teen Choice Awards, Kids Choice Awards, Streamy Awards and Shorty Awards. Additionally, he recently launched a successful mobile gaming app ‘Guava Juice: Tub Tapper’ (now available on Facebook), as well as a slime-filled toy line ‘Guava Toys’ (currently available at Target and Walmart stores/online).

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CALLING ALL GOOFY GOOBERS! (ROCK!) Are ya ready for a deep dive into the world of SpongeBob SquarePants? The SpongeBob YouTube channel is THE PLACE for all fan-favorite SpongeBob moments! We’re serving up everything from legendary scenes to remixes of classic songs to deep dives into Bikini Bottom lore. Be sure to check back every week for Music Mondays, Wumbo Wednesdays, and Flashback Fridays! Subscribe now at https://www.youtube.com/SpongeBobOfficial!

Join the OFFICIAL SpongeBob SquarePants Facebook Group here!: https://www.facebook.com/groups/SpongeBobSquareFans

More Nick:Nickelodeon to Premiere 'The SpongeBob Musical: Live on Stage! Sing-A-Long' on Saturday, January 4, 2020!

Originally published: Saturday, December 07, 2019.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon and SpongeBob SquarePants News and Highlights!

'Why Am I Saying ‘Who’s ready?’ Three Times?': An Oral History of 'SpongeBob SquarePants'

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Please note that this post was originally published on Thursday, June 27, 2019.

'Why am I saying ‘Who’s ready?’ three times?': An oral history of SpongeBob SquarePants

Nickelodeon
For two decades, he’s lived in a pineapple under the sea, absorbent and yellow and porous, whose nautical nonsense we’ll always wish for more of. Created by Stephen Hillenburg, who died last November after battling ALS, SpongeBob SquarePants launched on Nickelodeon in 1999 as a surreal cartoon that appealed to adult fans of comedy as much as the kids who grew up singing the theme song. In the years since, it’s become a worldwide phenomenon, having spawned a Broadway musical, multiple movies, and some of the internet’s very best memes. (Who among us can look at a jar of mayonnaise without wondering if it’s an instrument?)

On a sunny June afternoon at Nickelodeon’s studios in Burbank — where the original SpongeBob cast was working on the partially live-action special "SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout" (premiering Friday, July 12 at 7 p.m. ET/PT) — EW sat down with the gang to discuss the series’ origins, development, and legacy. Are ya ready, kids?

THE BEGINNING


TOM KENNY (SpongeBob): I’d worked with [Stephen Hillenburg] on Rocko’s Modern Life [as the voice of Heffer and other characters]. So this was the easiest job I ever got: There was no audition, there was no callback, there was no “It’s down to you and two other guys.” Though I did hear that there was a push to have Fred Savage [The Wonder Years] play SpongeBob.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE (Sandy): I remember during the audition, it was in a conference room, which was awkward to me. [They] left the microphone on the table — we weren’t in a booth. [It was] awkward and weird. I had never done that. There’s the mic and there’s Steve. And there was a fly flying around. I’m watching the fly, trying to do it, and it landed on the paper I had. And I [slams on the table] killed it. I never kill anything! I always catch things and put them outside, and I totally panicked.

KENNY: Did you suck in that dead fly’s life force and channel it into your audition?

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: Oh my God, I don’t know. But when I left, I was like, “There’s no way.”

MR. LAWRENCE (Plankton): But that’s Sandy! That’s a Sandy moment.

KENNY: The last day of that fly’s life was the first day of the rest of your life.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: It’s true!

MR. LAWRENCE (Plankton): I was also friends with Steve from Rocko; we were directors on that show together. When he was working on the SpongeBob pilot, I came in and he said, “You’re going to be somebody on the show.” I actually read for SpongeBob with Plankton’s voice. I was like [does Plankton’s voice], “I’m ready! I’m ready, Gary!” But I read all the pages like that. All I know is they kept listening to the tape while they were making the pilot. I felt like I was in the room because they’d always say they played it; when the network had just come in, or when they were down in the dumps for some reason, they’d play the tape and listen to this stupid thing. It sounded so stupid. It did not work at all.

VINCENT WALLER (co-executive producer): Steve mentioned on more than one occasion about Doug auditioning for SpongeBob with Plankton’s voice. He definitely loved that.

RODGER BUMPASS (Squidward): I just looked at [the script] and said, “[Squidward] has got this big ol’ honking nose, he must have some nasality quality to him. He’s a little sarcastic. It was a match made in heaven with my personality.

KENNY: I felt like I just got [SpongeBob]. Steve did such a good job with it. Everything was right there. You go, “Oh, I know this guy. I can embody this guy.” I feel like there’s some shared DNA between me and this character. We’ve all felt that way. That’s part of Steve’s brilliance. He seemed to be pretty sure of his decisions once he made them, and couldn’t be dissuaded.

BILL FAGERBAKKE (Patrick): Recording [the pilot], I thought it was a dopey preschool kids’ show. I didn’t get it. I didn’t get most of the jokes. “Why am I saying ‘Who’s ready?’ three times? Okay, it’s for 4-year-olds.” Then when I finally saw it, my head blew up. It was so delightful.

BUMPASS: I played the pilot for my family. I looked back 11 minutes into the thing, and my father was asleep.

FAGERBAKKE: Along with thinking it was for 4-year-olds, we were recording with helium for the sound of the anchovies. I thought, “This is the weirdest $600 I ever made.”

CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT

Everett Collection
CLANCY BROWN (Mr. Krabs): The first time I read [for Mr. Krabs] for Steve, he told me to riff. I was just doing some pirate voice. I said, “Steve, you’re the director, right?” He said, “Yeah.” “Then direct me.”

BUMPASS: I remember one of our first episodes, I heard [Tom changing his voice as] SpongeBob. All of a sudden we had the latitude to do other voices — the “Krusty Krab Pizza” thing. I’m sitting there, and I didn’t know anything about the show, like, “What’s he doing? He’s totally out of character!” I didn’t realize [SpongeBob] had that latitude to be anything he wanted to be.

KENNY: It’s hard to riff when you don’t know the character yet, or it’s your first brush with the character. But now, Clancy riffs as Krabs all the time.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: I was always terrified [of improvising]. It took me a while to get comfortable because I felt like [you guys] were all so much more established. I was amazed.

BUMPASS: When we first started I was very monotone. Then we had this scene [in season 3’s “Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy IV”] with the utility belt and it zapped me, and I had to do a sequence of screams. Each scream had to be a different type of a scream. There, they learned I could scream, so now, every episode they make me scream. [Laughs] But that’s how it expanded. Now [Squidward] is more me than anything else.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: I can’t remember the first time that Sandy got angry. But I know there’s something about her being mad that became a thing.

WALLER: It was when they were messing with Texas!

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: Right! That’s where my personal life and Sandy [merged] also. When I was younger and I’d get really angry, people would laugh, and I’d be like, “I’m mad!” It’s the same with Sandy.

MR. LAWRENCE: We still try to [record together] as much as we can. What’s great to see every so often is when we roll down the road and there’s a lot of jokes happening because we’re laughing at something we’re saying, and it suggests something. Sometimes something comes out of that, and sometimes it doesn’t, but it makes the whole process fun to go through. It’s jazz riffing. I like watching it and I like doing it.

WALLER: That’s where some beautiful invention comes from that’s not in the script.

KENNY: And a conviviality. It feels like a workplace. It’s funny. I used to watch The Dick Van Dyke Show when I was a kid, and I’d go, “Wow, that’s what I want to do. I want the kind of job where you’re just hanging around with funny people.” This is as close to that.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: But we were unique. A lot of shows don’t record like that.

BROWN: I love stuff [like “My leg!”] that comes out of left field.

MR. LAWRENCE: It was one of those ad-libs where we’re trying to get the last word, going back and forth. I know Roger does it all the time. We all do it because it’s so stupid.

KENNY: The voice-director just needs people to go “Agh! Oop! Blargh!” Like, “We’re still alive under this rubble, kids.” It was kind of like that. “Give me my legs!”

MR. LAWRENCE: It just came down to a silence, and I just let it go a little bit longer, and popped out, “My leg!” We all laughed and started doing it more. It became a joke for us to do it. Nobody’s writing “My leg!” in there!

KENNY: It was never intended to be a meme.

CREATIVE CONTROL

Nickelodeon
WALLER: [I was there] from season 1 to season 2, then I went away for 3, and then came back on 4, after the movie. I was on Ren & Stimpy previous…. This was the first time collaborating with someone in the same room over one piece, rather than doing one thing and having someone come in and tear you a new one and rewrite it. But it was all fun.

KENNY: So you would say it was a more collaborative process than on other shows you’d worked on?

WALLER: Yes, much more collaborative. From beginning to end, rather than when you’re done, everybody comes in and collaborates.

MARC CECCARELLI (co-executive producer): The idea of writing in a storyboard phase had fallen out of favor in television animation. The reason they brought it back for [Ren & Stimpy], and the reason it’s so appealing for SpongeBob, is because it’s a much more visual way of writing the story. It’s one thing to write a visual gag in text.

KENNY: One picture is worth a thousand words, right? “His tongue unrolls like a staircase. His eyes bug out and hit the wall.”

BUMPASS: It’s one of the things that makes this show special because it deals with animation and cartoon-ism the way it used to be. Unlike, say, King of the Hill, which should’ve been a live-action show.

MR. LAWRENCE: We often will base a whole show on just some visual we really want to see; something we start drawing, like, “I’ve got to see that.” It doesn’t happen every time, but sometimes a whole episode will form out of a visual where we go, “That’s gotta happen.”

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: As an actor, it’s a lot more fun being able to get the board. I mean, that’s huge.

BUMPASS: [This is] the first show I was ever involved with where they gave us the storyboards in advance. It helps you so much to see what that gag is.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: Right! You know, and it’s amazing. You can see Sandy’s jumping off an enormous mountain instead of a little mountain. You can’t see that in a written script.

KENNY: Steve built a great foundation for this house. I think about that all the time, how much he knew what it was going to be. He was also really good at digging in his heels, usually in a very gentle, friendly way, and picking his battles and fighting bad ideas from non-creative people. He was good at that.

BROWN: Different milieu, though, right? Nickelodeon was its own thing back then.

KENNY: I guess everything was a different milieu back then. I always say with Rocko, the inmates were running the asylum to a pretty crazy degree. As long as they delivered the product and there weren’t any big content problems, you kind of are just left alone to make your quilt.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: Lot of creative freedom. And now…

KENNY: It’s a little less so now. It’s a double-edged sword: If something gets gigantic, there is a lot more at stake. A lot more eyeballs. That’s what I give [the writers] a lot of credit for, still having that subversive [quality]. SpongeBob still feels like a subversive show, even though it’s kind of the most mainstream show of all.

CECCARELLI: We’ve been grandfathered in and protected by the fact that the show was so good and successful from the beginning. They don’t really mess with us so much, content-wise, even to this day.

BROWN: I also think it’s because nobody really knows how to f— with it.

GUEST-STAR PARADE

Nickelodeon
BROWN: The stunt-casting sessions are always strange. You never know when somebody comes in what they’re going to be like. We’ve got our thing, but then you add somebody in who’s a stunt.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: Early on, didn’t it make Steve crazy? Everyone called him wanting to be on his show and he didn’t want them.

BUMPASS: Bruce Willis wanted to be on.

FAGERBAKKE: We’re not accustomed to it. It’s not like in every episode there’s a wacky guest.

KENNY: [Speaking] as the voice director, it’s interesting too, because it’s a little bit like celebrity roulette. “Wheel of Celebrities!” You had to give them almost a tutorial. Many of them have seen SpongeBob, but even if they have, you have to go, “Whatever you think you’re going to do, go bigger.” It’s a heightened reality. You probably won’t be too big. And if you are, we’ll tell you. But you probably won’t.

BROWN: Did you ever have to tell someone to pull back?

KENNY: No.

BROWN: Dennis Quaid came in pretty hot.

KENNY: That’s true.

CAROLYN LAWRENCE: I like when Ernest Borgnine [Mermaid Man] was in and he just kept going and going. We all just hung out and waited until he was done.

KENNY: Same with Tim Conway [Barnacle Boy]. It was the first thing they’d done together since McHale’s Navy, so that was fun to watch.

MR. LAWRENCE: It was arresting. For me, it was like if someone squeezed in your stomach. You’re seeing these two guys in that room. Just like, wow.

FAGERBAKKE: Jon Hamm was awesome. He clearly was enjoying himself.

KENNY: He actually stayed after he was done recording. We were like, “Okay, that’s it, Jon.” He goes, “You mind if I stay?”

MR. LAWRENCE: I remember Scarlett Johansson coming into the first movie we did [released in 2004]. She was so excited. We all got into the booth, and we were all there at the same time. She had her headphones on, ready to do her line, but as soon as we started talking…she looked like she was watching a pinball machine. She got to her line and she said, “I don’t know if I can do that.” You could see she was scared. Just the intimidation of watching us all do it at once, up front. And then: She was great!

PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES

Nickelodeon
CAROLYN LAWRENCE: I think my new favorite [installment] is going to be [SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout]. It was so much fun for us to do something so wild.

MR. LAWRENCE: We keep surprising. We’re trying to keep a surprise going with things. And…it’s going to be hard to surprise people after this one.

KENNY: It’s like being married for a long time. You’re like, “We’ve gotta spice things up! Here, put this on! Dress like me!”

MR. LAWRENCE: Like we just did an episode about “My leg!” recently. The idea was “How much can we abuse the audience in repeating a line over and over again?” [Laughs] There was something to creating a new structure to that, so it would hold that joke for 11 minutes.

CECCARELLI: Personally I like the two stop-motion specials we did. Back when I was 10 years old, I wanted to be Ray Harryhausen. That was my entry point into this fantasy world.

FAGERBAKKE: And that’s probably the only chance you’ll ever get to do stop-motion animation. It doesn’t happen very often.

KENNY: I love those episodes, too, because it’s kind of imperfect. It’s skittery. Like the 1933 King Kong versus some CGI, “Oh, okay, there’s Jack Black standing in front of a green screen.” There’s an imperfection to that the 2D version of SpongeBob has too. You can see people’s thumbprints. In the stop-motion and the 2D version of it, it’s imperfect. I went to Pixar once, and they had this giant bank of computers. I was just like, “That’s to make sure [for] this character, every hair flows like real hair.” I like imperfection. I like records with bad notes, where the drummer misses a beat. SpongeBob has still got that.

FAGERBAKKE: The discovery of the show, the nature of the show, I had no idea [when I first was cast], and I was very surprised until I saw it.

KENNY:SpongeBob is one of the last remaining super-visual cartoons. There’s just not a whole lot of shows like that anymore. In some ways, I feel like I’m working in this time-machine job. Like working on a radio show or Looney Tunes. It’s pretty cool that we’re still able to be employed as milkmen in 2019.

The brand-new hour-long SpongeBob SquarePants special “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout" premieres on Nickelodeon USA on Friday, July 12, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT), before rolling out on Nickelodeon channels internationally.

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Scroll down for lots more interviews with the cast and crew of SpongeBob SquarePants!:

From wionews.com:

Twenty years later, ‘SpongeBob ’ cast members still love each other

The loveable little yellow absorbent sponge who wears pants is turning 20. "SpongeBob SquarePants" first hit the air waves on Nickelodeon in July 1999. Tom Kenny, who voices the porous little creature, said the time has flown by.

[Click here for video!]

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From the Star Tribune:

At age 20, 'SpongeBob SquarePants' is still soaking up the love

As SpongeBob turns 20, the show remains a pop-culture phenomenon.

LOS ANGELES – Aquaman only thinks he’s king of the sea.

That title rightly belongs to SpongeBob SquarePants, whose superpower — an unsinkable spirit — has kept him on the throne for most of two decades.

“He’s the person you want to be with, that’s always looking at things from a positive angle,” said Carolyn Lawrence. She voices the character of Sandy Cheeks on the Nickelodeon series, which celebrates its 20th anniversary with a one-hour special Friday, “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout” and a party Saturday at the Mall of America.

“Something terrible could be going on and SpongeBob’s going to see the good side of it. That’s a really fun place to be.”

The show may not be as popular as it was in its heyday, when 60 million viewers were tuning in every month, but the characters are still soaking up the love. “SpongeBob SquarePants” remains the top-rated series in kids animation with a TV spinoff in the works and a third feature film slated for 2020.

New toys based on the show’s popular memes are helping to boost merchandise sales past the $13 billion mark. A Broadway musical garnished 12 Tony Award nominations last year. RockBottom Plunge, a roller coaster inspired by an early episode, remains one of the most popular attractions at theMOA’s Nickelodeon Universe.

Maroon 5 nearly salvaged its much-maligned Super Bowl halftime show last winter by having SpongeBob’s pal Squidward Tentacles introduce one of the songs. The band may have won over the critics if they had given the clarinet-blowing octopus a solo.

“People get mad at the NFL. They don’t get mad at SpongeBob,” said Tom Kenny, who has voiced the title character since the beginning. “They don’t hate on SpongeBob. They hate on Maroon 5.”

The series, which debuted on July 17, 1999, was the brainchild of Stephen Hillenburg, a biology instructor. He noticed how children were enraptured by underwater creatures when they visited the Orange County Marine Institute. His concept, which took 10 years to develop, was instrumental in making Nickelodeon a cable powerhouse.

By the third season, “SpongeBob” was TV’s most-watched children’s show, a title it has yet to relinquish. Hillenburg passed away last year, but the series continues to follow his original recipe: eye-popping colors, a frantic pace and over-the-top antics.

“You get hit in the face, your face takes on the shape of a frying pan,” said Rodger Bumpass, who plays Squidward. “SpongeBob starts crying, he turns into a lawn sprinkler.”

Those ingredients are all on display in Friday’s special, which includes a raucous party in a pineapple house and a dancing can of beans. But the cartoon is more than just a visual feast.

“I think kids look at [SpongeBob] and he has the life they want,” said co-executive producer Vincent Waller. “He has a job he loves. He doesn’t have parents to answer to. He lives in a house by himself. But he is still obviously a child at heart. And they just go, ‘Oooh, I want that.’ ”

The show also connects with grown-ups.

David Bowie was a fan. Former president Barack Obama called it one of his favorite shows. At one point, roughly a third of the audience was above the age of 18. It’s not just because of the references to Led Zeppelin, Edgar Allan Poe and Pablo Picasso.

“It seems to be a refreshing breath from the pre-irony era,” Syracuse University pop-culture expert Robert Thompson once told the New York Times. “There’s no sense of the elbow-in-the-rib, tongue-in-cheek aesthetic that so permeates the rest of American culture. ... I think what’s subversive about it is it’s so incredibly naive — deliberately.”

Cast to be at MOA

The “SpongeBob” cast isn’t immune to their show’s charms.

Bill Fagerbakke, who plays slow-witted starfish Patrick, once bought some golf balls only because the box was in the shape of SpongeBob’s head. Lawrence snagged giant banners from the first movie after they were done hanging at her local mall. Bumpass claims to have the world’s largest collection of SpongeBob merchandise, including dental supplies and toilet-training gear.

“I have things that no one else can have, because they are signed by the cast,” he said. “I’m going to have an open house.”

Bumpass may get to hide behind an animated character, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy for him to go shopping without fans doing a double take.

“I was recognized at my dentist’s office the other day and I was like, ‘How in the world do you know me?’ ” he said.

Fagerbakke discovered that youngsters knew his “true identity” way back in Season 2 when he was picking up his daughters from elementary school.

“I had this kind of John Lennon buzz around the playground,” he said. “I was kind of stunned that the kids were so hip to it. I mean, I loved Looney Tunes, but I wasn’t wondering who Mel Blanc was.”

Anonymity in the Twin Cities will be even harder after a celebration Saturday at the Mall of America that includes a chance for fans to meet Kenny and Lawrence.

In Friday’s birthday special, SpongeBob bubbles to the Earth’s surface for a live-action interaction with cast members in a diner that has more than a passing resemblance to the Krusty Krab.

Kenny said the taping was a bit surreal, being on the set with his fellow actors dressed as their characters after two decades of working out of a sound booth.

“I don’t want to tell tales out of school,” Kenny said. But I think Clancy [Brown, who voices Mr. Krabs] put it perfectly when he looked around and said, ‘Wow, this is like having sex with the lights on.’ ”

Despite the hoopla, “SpongeBob” still has a long way to go before it’s the longest-running animated series in America. “The Simpsons,” “Arthur” and “South Park” all debuted earlier and are still in production. Still, the ocean’s highest-energy bottom dwellers hope to stick around. The network has not announced plans beyond this season, but it has greenlit a 13-episode prequel starring a 10-year-old SpongeBob during his summer at sleep-away camp.

“We want to last a little bit longer than the pyramids,” Bumpass said.

SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout

When: 6 p.m. Fri.

Where: Nickelodeon.

Super Fan Event: With voice talents Tom Kenny and Carolyn Lawrence, 2 p.m. Sat., Mall of America, $25-$50. Eventbrite.com.

Viewing party: 11 a.m. Sun., Mall of America, free.

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From Variety:

‘SpongeBob’ Voice Cast on Acting Together in Live-Action for 20th Anniversary Special


Credit: Nickelodeon/Robert Voets

On a brisk morning in February, the members of the voice cast of Nickelodeon’s flagship animated series “SpongeBob SquarePants” gathered to work on a new episode, like they’ve done most weeks over the past 20 years. But instead of being in a recording booth, this time they’ve assembled at a diner in Castaic, Calif., shooting scenes as live-action versions of their animated characters for the hourlong 20th anniversary special, “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout.”

While it’s not the first time “SpongeBob SquarePants” has mixed animation and live action, it is the first time key cast members — Tom Kenny (SpongeBob), Bill Fagerbakke (Patrick Star), Rodger Bumpass (Squidward), Clancy Brown (Mr. Krabs), Carolyn Lawrence (Sandy Cheeks) and Mr. Lawrence (Plankton) — have acted together in live-action scenes.


Credit: Nickelodeon/Robert Voets

“The voice actors are all playing surface-world doppelgängers of their animated characters,” explains Kenny, the prolific voice actor who not only speaks for the naive sponge but also directs the cast’s voice-acting sessions. “SpongeBob and Patrick come up above the sea and go to a diner that’s very much like the Krusty Krab, but not quite,” says Kenny, “and there’s a human spazzy guy behind the counter that’s almost like SpongeBob, but not quite, and a mean boss like Mr. Krabs and a doofus customer that’s kind of like Patrick. It’s really fun.”

The cast members’ camaraderie is apparent on the live-action set: The actors break up over Fagerbakke’s line readings as an indecisive diner customer and Mr. Lawrence’s turn as an inept robber whose mask boasts a single eyehole. The constant laughter means a few extra takes, but everyone’s smiling.

The idea for the live show, which premieres July 12 at 7 p.m. on Nickelodeon, has been in the works for a while. “We wanted to do something special for the 20th anniversary, and we asked ourselves, ‘What haven’t we done yet? Where haven’t we gone?’” posits Mr. Lawrence, who is also story editor and a writer on the series. “This particular idea of everyone on camera playing themselves was something we’d thought about before. I think people will appreciate this even if you don’t know the show really well. It will be a nice surprise that no one will be expecting.”

The core cast has been together since the pilot, according to Kenny. “We’re really lucky in that it’s all the same actors that played the parts in the pilot are still in the game and still doing it. It’s really a rare, rare opportunity to work on the same show with the same people who are not psychotic … Or I should say are just psychotic enough to be fun, for 20 years. It’s unheard of and it’s just lovely.”


Credit: Nickelodeon/Robert Voets

Unlike a lot of animated shows or features, the “SpongeBob SquarePants” voice cast records episodes together. “So this is a little different,” Mr. Lawrence explains. “This is the first time there are cameras. When we’re [recording] with each other live, it’s [like] a play. No takes. You just do it. So this is weird because there are takes. It’s like doing voice work but you’re standing there, you know. I have to figure out what to do with my body when I’m doing this.”

Other cast members described the experience as surreal.

“It would be less bizarre if we’d only been doing this for a year or two,” Fagerbakke says. “But we’ve been doing this for 20 years, and for me, to be looking in the face of the actor who’s the voice of the character, it was very peculiar, and I was really tickled. Clancy [Brown] could not stop calling Rodger ‘Squidward,’ because that’s who he’s been talking to for 20 years. But instead it was Rodger playing a human version of Squidward. So yeah, there were all kinds of interesting scenarios.”

Brown, an accomplished voice actor who may be best known for his acclaimed live-action performances in such films as “The Shawshank Redemption” and the drama series “Billions,” called the experience “dissonant, because we always have our faces buried in the script [when recording ‘SpongeBob’ episodes] and talking into microphones. But then to actually face Bill Fagerbakke, have him do that voice to you and you have to respond, it takes some getting used to.” Brown called the live-action shoot “a little window into our recording sessions. We’re having a ton of fun.”


Credit: Nickelodeon/Robert Voets

For Carolyn Lawrence, the longtime voice actor who plays sea-dwelling squirrel Sandy, shooting the live-action scenes took some adjustment. “I’m so used to not being seen,” she says. “But now … we may need to wear our costumes when we record the show from now on.”

The experience was not without its challenges, Bumpass acknowledges. “When you’re working voice, there’s a whole different focus. Here, you have the costumes, the makeup, the gestures, the movement, the inflections, physical interactions. It’s a challenge to be the character in a more extensive manner, but it’s a great exercise, acting-wise.”

It’s something Bumpass would love to revisit. “For 20 years, we’ve seen each other do the voices, but to do it on camera in character on set in that world is a ‘Twilight Zone’ episode,” he explains. “It’s absolutely surreal for all of us. I’d love to redo the show as a live-action show.”


For Kenny, playing a live-action version of SpongeBob wasn’t that much of a stretch. “I’ve always kind of been that,” he says. “I think that’s how I got the gig in the first place. SpongeBob is kind of me to the 1,000th degree.” In fact, Kenny says he thinks that’s why series creator, the late Stephen Hillenburg, gave him the role. Kenny knew Hillenburg when they both worked on Nickelodeon’s “Rocko’s Modern Life” in the 1990s. “He told me he cast me as SpongeBob because he saw personality similarities, God help me, between me and SpongeBob. He said, ‘You know, you work really hard. You’re kind of hyperactive. You can’t sit down. You give 110 percent. You’re a goofball.'”

“SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout” will be dedicated to Hillenburg, who died last year due to complications from Parkinson’s disease.

That the show has lasted for 20 years is no surprise to Kenny. “In 1999, I saw this moment,” he says, chuckling. “No, no. The real answer to that is that in 1997, we did a seven-minute short cartoon about this sponge that worked at a fast food restaurant and he’s got a greedy boss and a dyspeptic co-worker. I knew it was good, I knew it was funny, I knew it was special.”

“SpongeBob SquarePants” did go through some shaky times, but the show, and the cast, hung in there. “At the 10-year mark, we were like, ‘This is already crazy,'” Mr. Lawrence says. “We did a show for the 10th anniversary, and we thought, ‘Alright, time’s up soon. It’s going to be done.’ But people keep discovering it. As long as they keep discovering it, we’ll be here.”

###

From the Los Angeles Times:

‘It’s more like a treasure hunt now’: Actor Rodger Bumpass has amassed 20 years of ‘SpongeBob’ memorabilia


Voice actor Rodger Bumpass plays Squidward Tentacles on the animated show "SpongeBob SquarePants." He has been collecting show memorabilia for about 20 years and has more than 2,000 pieces in his collection. (Courtesy of Nickelodeon)

Dental products, board games, baseball caps, cans of soup, PEZ dispensers, magazines, unique artwork and potty-training aides — these are items that shoppers may find at any general retailer.

These kinds of pieces can also be found in Rodger Bumpass’ Burbank home, except they’re all related to “SpongeBob SquarePants,” in the form of memorabilia he’s been collecting for almost 20 years.

Bumpass isn’t just a rabid fan of the show, he’s a veteran actor, with more than 45 years of experience. For the past two decades, he’s provided the voice of Squidward Tentacles on the iconic animated television series.

“About a year or two within the run, I started to notice that the show was really popular, and, at the same time, there was a preponderance of merchandise in the stores,” Bumpass said on June 26 at his home. “I used to go down to Target and see [them] everywhere — the toy aisle, the greeting-card aisle, the party aisle, the bedroom aisle, the bathroom aisle and even the automotive aisle.”

He decided about two years into the show that he would start collecting show memorabilia, and his first piece was a talking action figure of Squidward, which he bought from a Big Lots store.

From there, his hobby snowballed into collecting anything related to the Nickelodeon show.

He has either bought most of the items or received them from the network. However, Bumpass said there was one time when he bartered with a fan to complete a watch collection.

So far, Bumpass has more than 2,000 pieces of memorabilia, which he keeps in built-in glass display cases in his living room. The thought of quitting has never crossed his mind and, as the show continues to stay on the air, he said there will always be something for him to buy.

“The merchandising has gone down a little bit, but there’s stuff out there that I don’t have,” Bumpass said. “It’s more like a treasure hunt now.”

One item he’s still looking to add to his collection is a 1-foot-tall action figure of Handsome Squidward, an alter-ego of his character that appeared in an episode during the show’s fifth season.

Bumpass also has unique, fan-made memorabilia, which includes a Squidward made out of pipe cleaners and a recreation of “Bold and Brash,” a painting his character created during the second season.

“SpongeBob SquarePants” will celebrate its 20th anniversary on Friday with a mixed live-action and animated special.

According to Nickelodeon, the franchise has so far generated $13 billion in retail sales of consumer products and has received multiple Emmy Awards.

There are only a handful of other animated series — including “The Simpsons,” “South Park” and “Arthur” — that have been on the air in the United States as long as or longer than Nickelodeon’s hit show.

“You feel so grateful that you can be a part of something that has a legacy like that,” Bumpass said. “We have young adults come to us during conventions thanking us for their childhood. To be a part of someone’s formative years in a positive way is really the best thing about this whole show.”

When asked about what should become of his collection when he is finally satisfied, Bumpass said he hopes Nickelodeon will adopt the memorabilia and put the items on display for the public to admire.

###

From The Salt Lake Tribune:

‘SpongeBob SquarePants’ turns 20 with an episode that’s surreal, even for him

Is there anyone on the planet who doesn’t know who lives in a pineapple under the sea? You don’t even have to watch the animated series to know that absorbent and yellow and porous is he. Heck, you don’t even have to own a TV.

According to Nickelodeon, more than $13 billion in SpongeBob SquarePants-related consumer products have been sold since the show premiered in 1999.

Rodger Bumpass, who voices Squidward, said his own “world’s largest merchandising collection” of those Bikini Bottom treasures has taken over his house. “I’ve got a special room for it now,” he said. “I’ve got everything from food to candy to dental supplies — which, of course, follows the candy part — and models. Everything.”

Nickelodeon is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the show — TV’s No. 1 kids’ animated program for the past 17 years — with “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout” (Friday, July 12, 5 and 6 p.m., Nickelodeon). It will include a live-action segment that’s surreal, even for this series.

Tom Kenny voices SpongeBob and has appeared as Patchy the Pirate in live-action segments. But he’ll be joined for the first time by Bill Fagerbakke (the voice of Patrick Star), Carolyn Lawrence (Sandy Cheeks), the show’s writer, known as Mr. Lawrence (Sheldon Plankton and Larry the Lobster) and Clancy Brown (Mr. Krabs), all playing doppelganger versions of their characters.

It’s a tribute not just to the show and its voice actors, but to creator Stephen Hillenburg, who died due to complications of ALS in November; he was 57.

“It was really weird, and then really fun,” Carolyn Lawrence said. “Eventually, I think it became very familiar and it seemed just like a natural thing for us to do. But at first, just wearing the outfits and standing in that set was really strange.”

“Trying to actually look like your character, that was a pretty tough thing to try to do,” Bumpass said.

“Clancy couldn’t not call Rodger Squidward, even though his character’s name was something else, because he’s been calling him Squidward for 20 years,” Fagerbakke said.


(Photo courtesy of Robert Voets | Nickelodeon) The staff of the Trusty Slab in the 20th-anniversary "SpongeBob SquarePants" special — JimBob (Tom Kenny), Manager (Clancy Brown), Carol (Carol Lawrence), Robber (Mr. Lawrence), Patrick Star (Bill Fagerbakke), Manward (Roger Bumpass), Patchy (Tom Kenny).

In the hourlong episode, the residents of Bikini Bottom are planning a big surprise birthday party for SpongeBob, so Patrick takes him to the surface world to get him out of the way — and they visit a restaurant that looks suspiciously like the Krusty Krab, the restaurant where SpongeBob works.

‘The million-dollar question’

“SpongeBob” is seen in more than 200 countries and territories, translated into 55 languages and watched more more than 100 million people worldwide — according to Nickelodeon, its most widely-distributed property ever.

The network has produced a lot of really good, really successful animated shows — “Doug,” “Rugrats,” “Hey Arnold,” “CatDog,” “The Wild Thornberrys,” “Fairly OddParents” and more — but none have had the same broad, long-lasting appeal.

What made “SpongeBob” catch on and kept it popular for two decades?

“Man, that’s the million-dollar question,” Fagerbakke said. “I don’t know if there’s a formula. There’s something mercurial and enigmatic about it. And I’ve come to think it’s a magical combination of shapes, colors and sounds.”

Bumpass also pointed to the show’s animation style — bright colors and sight gags. Executive producer Vincent Waller said he thinks SpongeBob is wish fulfillment for kids.

“He has the life they want,” Waller said. “He has a job he loves. He doesn’t have parents to answer to. He lives in a house by himself. But he is still obviously a child at heart. And I think they see that, and they just go, ‘Ooh, I want that.’”

“He’s also the-glass-is-half-full all the time,” said Carolyn Lawrence. “He’s the person you want to be with that’s always looking at things from a positive angle. ... I think it’s a really fun place to go be.”

Way back in 1999, (the official series debut was July 17 of that year) my kids got an early look at “SpongeBob.” (TV critics get to preview shows. And, 20 years ago, that meant popping a tape in the VCR.) The three of them then kept bugging me about when the show would premiere so they could see more.

For 8-year-old Jonathon, it was love at first sight. “It was funny,” Jonathon remembers today. “It made me laugh.” And it was a show that I could watch with him, because I found it funny, too.

“I always feel like we’re writing a comedy show, not necessarily a kids’ show,” said the writer Mr. Lawrence (real name: Douglas Lawrence Osowski). “We’re writing a show for families to all be able to watch together, but we’re thinking of the comedy all the time.”

Besides the “physical humor,” he said, there’s always an emphasis on being witty and “visually stunning.”

“SPONGEBOB” FUN FACTS

• SpongeBob is 4 inches tall.
• SpongeBob was originally named SpongeBoy by creator Stephen Hillenburg.
• SpongeBob has failed his driving test 1,258,056 times.
• SpongeBob has been The Krusty Krab’s employee of the month 374 times.
• SpongeBob can cook Krabby Patties so quickly because he is ambidextrous.
• The recipe for Krabby Patties is a secret, but Hillenburg hinted that the burgers may be vegetarian. Otherwise, some inhabitants of Bikini Bottom would be cannibals.
• Squidward only has six legs because animators thought eight legs on the character — which would be correct for an octopus — made him look too burdened.
• SpongeBob is allergic to tulips. The Dutch named a new species of tulip after SpongeBob in 2010.
• In 2011, a new mushroom species — Spongiforma squarepantsii — was named after SpongeBob.
• Squidward was originally pink.
• “SpongeBob SquarePants” has saved lives. In 2007, a family was saved from a sinking boat by plugging up the hole with a SpongeBob football. In 2012, a Long Island girl saved her friend from choking because she learned the Heimlich from an episode of the show; and an Australian man lost at sea was found by a helicopter that spotted his yellow SpongeBob trunks.

‘SpongeBob’ spreads!

By Season 2, Fagerbakke recalled, there was a “John Lennon kind of buzz around the playground” when he “would pull up to the elementary school to pick up my daughters. ... I was kind of stunned that all those kids were so hip to it.”

Carolyn Lawrence said the kids in her neighborhood started calling her by her character’s name.

“I was recognized in my dentist’s office the other day,” Bumpass said. “I said, ‘How in the world did you know me?’”

When former President Barack Obama entered the White House in 2009, he cited “SpongeBob” as one of his favorite shows and said he watched it with his daughters. “That blew our minds,” Kenny said.

The series is a habit for a whole lot of people, and it’s continuing to find new fans with new generations of kids. “It found its way into the fabric of people’s lives, and it kept finding new life in new ways like memes and things like that,” Kenny said.

And “SpongeBob” continues to branch out. Nickelodeon has ordered a prequel series, tentatively titled “Kamp Koral,” about 10-year-old SpongeBob at summer sleep-away camp. A third movie, tentatively titled “It’s a Wonderful SpongeBob,” is scheduled for release in May 2020.

There’s no end in sight. “We want to be popular on other planets, too!” Kenny said. And, well, we can’t rule that out.

###

From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

Tuned In: Nick’s ‘SpongeBob’ turns 20, ‘Molly of Denali’ debuts

ASADENA, Calif. — Summertime and the viewing is easy – and new, at least if you’re a parent in search of new TV content for your child.

With children out of school, multiple networks have decided this year to debut new shows or new seasons of established hits, including a 20th anniversary special for “SpongeBob SquarePants” on Nickelodeon and the premiere of the Native American-themed “Molly of Denali” on PBS.

In addition, this month Universal Kids (formerly Sprout) debuts two new series, “Where’s Waldo?” (10 a.m. July 20), featuring the iconic character as he and best friend Wenda celebrate cultures worldwide, and “Norman Picklestripes” (11 a.m. July 27), which features a forest-dwelling handyman and Broadway-inspired songs.

‘SpongeBob’ special

Nickelodeon celebrates 20 years of “SpongeBob SquarePants” with a new season that kicks off with “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout” (7 p.m. Friday). This one-hour special features the show’s voice actors playing doppelgangers of their animated characters in live-action segments.

SpongeBob (voice of Tom Kenny) and Patrick (voice of Bill Fagerbakke) travel to the surface world where they encounter lunchtime rush at The Trusty Slab, itself a stand-in for Bikini Bottom’s Krusty Krab, while their friends under the sea set up a surprise birthday party for SpongeBob.

“It became very familiar, and it seemed just like a natural thing for us to do,” said Mr. Lawrence (that’s his full stage name), who voices Plankton, of filming the live-action scenes. “But at first, just wearing the outfits and standing in that set was really strange.”

Fagerbakke (“Coach”), who voices Patrick Star, agreed.

“Clancy [Brown, the voice of Mr. Krabs] couldn’t not call Rodger [Bumpass] ‘Squidward,’ even though his [live-action] character’s name was something else, because he’s been calling him Squidward for 20 years,” he said during a “SpongeBob” press conference at the Television Critics Association winter 2019 press tour in February.

To what do the actors attribute the show’s longevity? Cast member Carolyn Lawrence, the voice of Sandy Cheeks, says it’s SpongeBob’s “glass half-full” optimism.

“He’s the person you want to be with that’s always looking at things from a positive angle,” she said. “Something terrible could be going on, and SpongeBob’s gonna see the good side of it.”

Mr. Lawrence said it’s the show’s writers’ approach, which is to view “SpongeBob” more as a comedy than as a kids’ show. Bumpass agreed.

“The analogy of ‘Looney Tunes’ is something that I use quite frequently,” Bumpass said. “They’re both short cartoons, but different ages of people and viewers get different things [from them]. Little kids get something out of it ’cause it’s colorful, and it’s animated. And then the little older guys get a little bit more stuff out of it, and adults get something totally [different] out of it, too. And funny is funny, so I think that’s one of the reasons it has struck a chord.”

###

From Salon.com:

The "SpongeBob Squarepants" cast dives deep: On their iconic roles and humanity under the sea

Salon spoke with the cast of "SpongeBob Squarepants" to describe what makes this silly sea show so enduring

The main characters of the hit TV show "SpongeBob Squarepants" may be a bunch of fish — technically a sea sponge, starfish, cephalopod, crustacean, phytoplankton and squirrel, to be exact — but the key to the show's enduring success could very well be that, for all of their silly underwater antics, the population of Bikini Bottom is endearingly human.

There is a scene in "SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout," the 20th anniversary special for the show that premieres on Friday at 7 p.m. ET, which plays with the underlying humanity of SpongeBob, Patrick, Squidward, Sandy, Plankton and Mr. Krabs in a particularly clever way. Yet even if the episode had not included that memorable visual gag, the fact remains that a big part of the reason why "SpongeBob Squarepants" has become the fifth-longest running American animated series — one that gets discussed on social media every four seconds, according to Nickelodeon — is that its colorful characters ring true even as each episode does its best to deliver surreal comedy to audience members who reply in the affirmative when the theme song asks "if nautical nonsense be something you wish."

Indeed Tom Kenny, the voice of the titular character, told Salon that one of the things he cherishes most about working on the series is how the show has had a meaningful impact on the lives of its viewers through both its characterization and humor.

"I remember at some Comic-Con, and some girl comes around my table, and she's kind of hanging around — a young lady I should say," Kenny recalled. "She kind of surreptitiously leaves a note on the table and then just disappears."

When he finally had the opportunity to read the letter, Kenny was struck by what the woman revealed.

"She was going through a really bad depression time and really considering doing something to herself. Then, SpongeBob came on and it really helped her," Kenny said. "It helped her reset a little bit. You know what I mean? She credits that with like, 'Wow, that pulled me, literally pulled me off of the ledge. Hey, there's funny stuff in the world.' She went and got help. Then, things were better."

It's a recurring theme in Kenny's interactions with fans — the show occupies a significant place in their lives and memories. He hears from people who were cheered up by "SpongeBob" while they were sick in the hospital and who had "a great childhood, and SpongeBob was a part of it."

"'My childhood was horrible and SpongeBob was a refuge from the horribleness.''I used to watch SpongeBob with my grandpa, and he's dead now. I always think of him when I see SpongeBob.' Things like that, that are just extremely touching," Kenny told Salon.

Carolyn Lawrence, who voices the karate-proficient scientist squirrel Sandy Cheeks, is proud of helping to bring to life a strong female character for kids to emulate.

"I had two young kids as well, so I have a lot of parents who talk to me about the fact that they love being able to watch Sandy and have their girls or boys watch Sandy, and that she is a role model," Lawrence explained. She gave Steve Hillenburg, the late creator of the series who passed away from complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in November, tremendous credit for creating "this character who was so multidimensional. And she is a great, great role model. And I do think Nickelodeon does a particularly good job with their female characters that way."

She added, "They did not write her in a way that was specifically, you know, stereotypically female. They really made her just an amazing character all the way around."

Rodger Bumpass, who voices the curmudgeonly Squidward Tentacles, observed how fans identify with the character's existential malaise — how, in effect, they first identify with SpongeBob as children, and then with his cranky character as adults.

"There's a passage of time that people go through coming into young adulthood — and that really is where people tell me, when I go to conventions and stuff — that when they were young they associated and identified with SpongeBob because of his youthful playfulness and innocence, and then as they get to be adults and learn what the real world is like, and for a lot of people, that's a traumatic passage of time," Bumpass told Salon, who speculated that a lot of young people struggle with "this adult thing" once they reach a certain age.

"Once they get used to it and mature a little bit, it passes," he added.

Even the dimwitted starfish Patrick Star — who is brought to life by Bill Fagerbakke — has managed to strike a chord with audience members.

"It's a childlike thing, really," Fagerbakke observed. "Everyone understands the idea of connecting to your inner child. Well, that's certainly the case with Patrick. I'm very much engaged with my inner seven-year-old lunatic. That's what Patrick is to me, I guess."

He also recalled how one fan's relationship with the show struck a chord with him.

"There are always the extraordinary stories," Fagerbakke explained, recalling an encounter with a fan at a San Diego Comic-Con. "This gal came up to me, she was about 20 and she said, 'Can I hug you?', and I went, 'Yes.' She goes, 'You saved my life' and her mother was there with tears running down her face. Her daughter had gone through a lot of depression and had a lot of very profound issues and for whatever reason, SpongeBob became something that she really embraced and helped her through."

The underlying humanity of the "SpongeBob Squarepants" characters doesn't simply resonate with the fans, but also with the actors themselves. Take Sheldon Plankton, the unicellular antagonist who alternates between wanting to steal the Krabby Patty secret formula and craving world domination. (When Salon asked voice actor Mr. Lawrence — no relation to Carolyn Lawrence — how these two schemes connect to each other, he assumed the Plankton voice and cackled, "All baby steps, baby.") On the surface level, Plankton is one of the show's biggest goats, a maniacal creature with a Napoleonic complex who is almost always humiliated when he tries to pull off his various evil plans. Yet that doesn't mean he lacks depth — or that Lawrence hasn't been able to identify with his character.

"I think I relate to the fact that he wants all these things," Lawrence told Salon. "He wants to achieve all these things, and overachieve, and he can't quite do it."

He added that "I've always felt like there are things that are not within my grasp. Yeah, I'm going to get squashed when I try to reach for it. So I feel that all the time, so I really relate to him. And plus I have a temper that I try to keep from coming out all the time, which Plankton certainly does not care when he's mad. He lets it go, and I try not to let it go. And if I do, I let it into my pillow hopefully."

Carolyn Lawrence had a similar observation about her relationship with her own character.

"Her strengths actually informed me in my personal life," she explained. "Oddly enough, I feel like the character and I have melded to a certain extent into one. Like watching her handle things on the show and playing her and her ability to problem solve and feel powerful and handle things and correct the stakes . . . I do think it inadvertently made me feel the same in my real life."

To be sure, not all of the characters' relatable qualities are sympathetic ones. Clancy Brown, the voice of the greedy restaurant owner Mr. Eugene Krabs, argued that the crustaceous cheapskate's antics act as something of a critique of the real-life business world.

"Think about when Steve created it," Brown explained, noting Hillenburg's fascination with marine biology and comparing oceanic ecosystems with the business world. "Mr. Krabs, he's a reflection of sort of the way business was in the '90s. Greed was not necessarily a bad thing."

After adding that his character is "like one of those knuckleheads that thinks corporations are people and the Krusty Krab is a living thing," Brown observed "that's sweet in a certain way, but it ignores what's developed over the last two decades, which is corporations becoming so avaricious and creating all sorts of problems. But Mr. Krabs is, you know, at that point he sort of thinks he's a job creator. He's the 'indispensable' member of society."

Brown hasn't always been happy with the social commentary offered through his character's story arcs. He cited the episode "Squid on Strike"— when Squidward and SpongeBob attempt to unionize against Mr. Krabs — as one example.

"I was very dissatisfied with that episode," Brown recalled, arguing that "the whole idea of unions is with collectively standing together, to make everything better for themselves and for everybody else. Supposedly if you all stand together and you try to improve the conditions of your workplace and your treatment, everything rises with that. Even the quality of the business goes up. That's supposed to be how it works. It's not supposed to be so adversarial. That was my problem with it. It just became this kind of adversarial thing and it shouldn't be that."

That said, Brown noted that the show's attitudes have evolved over the years, and that "Mr. Krabs becomes a problematic character the longer in the tooth the show becomes because he's all about money, and money is suddenly all about the accumulation of wealth. The wealth gap has gotten bigger since we started, so now there's a real sense of disenfranchisement from the employees and the ownership. That's not the show's fault. That's society's fault."

At the same time, Brown observed that even Mr. Krabs has a human side, one that becomes particularly evident in his relationships with other characters such as his daughter Pearl (played by Lori Alan) — who, to the ongoing mystification of the show's fans, is a whale. When I pointed out that this has prompted many theories about how a crab could father a whale, Brown insisted that the origin of their relationship isn't really that important.

"Like the secret formula, I hope it never gets told," Brown told Salon. "It's really irrelevant in the relationship to each other. Maybe they just don't want to know it. But Mr. Krabs is completely smitten and in love with his daughter — as am I in real life, and also my son. I totally get it."

He also saw something touchingly metaphorical in the idea of a parent-child relationship being analogous to the difference between a crab and a whale.

"There are times when reality overcomes you and you say, 'Wait a minute, who is this other person? They don't resemble me at all,' and then other times you look in the mirror and you say, 'Who am I looking at? Because I just let my kid get away with that thing that I would never let anybody else get away with. Why do they have this effect on me?'"

With 20 years under its belt, it's difficult to imagine where SpongeBob Squarepants will go from here. The cast members liked to joke about some of the weirder directions that might be in store for their characters.

"I think you just gave us an idea for a storyline," Bumpass told Salon when asked if a cryptozoological character like the kraken, or perhaps even a real-life giant squid, might wind up wandering into Bikini Bottom. He noted how, with the exception of one episode, no one swims in Bikini Bottom. "You only have one episode where creatures that we cast turn into their actual real life creatures and they actually swim around, but it's an interesting convention that Stephen came up with, that there's no swimming there. There are crypto aspects to that."

Mr. Lawrence, meanwhile, speculated on what would happen if Plankton was actually able to take over Bikini Bottom for more than the span of a single storyline.

"Yeah, well this is the theory which we haven't explored, but I think that if he really did get in charge all of a sudden, he would screw things up for a little while, and then Karen [his computer wife] would pull his plug, and take over, and everything would go back to normal and peaceful," Lawrence surmised. He added that this wouldn't be an assassination, per se, but rather that "she just puts him on ice. Gets him out of there for a moment, while she can run things, because she knows how to do it. Karen's smart." After all, Plankton can't ever be allowed to win because, as Lawrence put it, "he is a naughty boy."

When I asked Brown if Krabs may have a future outside of being a restauranteur — after all, there is a precedent for businessmen moving on to other projects, like running for political office — he said that he doubted this was in the cards.

"He wouldn't want to be mayor," Brown told Salon. "I think he's really afraid of stuff. I think he's really afraid of anything except running a restaurant. Because he's always trying out other businesses. I got all wrapped up in the Krusty Kronicle, which was one of my most horrible performances. [I disagreed with him on that.] Then there was Krusty Towers. But those just end up being sort of Fred Flintstone sort of vehicles for other jokes because he always fails at them, or some other character takes advantage of him. His real place is in the Krusty Krab, and when he's there that's where he's supposed to be."

Of course, like other classic animated TV shows such as Looney Tunes, the likelihood is that "SpongeBob Squarepants" will stick with its floating timeline and allow things to remain in their status quo forever — with SpongeBob manning the grill at the Krusty Krab, Squidward muttering to himself behind the cash register, Mr. Krabs in the back counting his money, Plankton scheming and figuratively face-planting each time, Patrick sleeping under his rock, Sandy getting into adventures and saving the day. That may even be preferable for a show which, though truer to life than its absurd tone would have one belief, nevertheless works best as a form of child-like escapism.

"One thing I'm realizing after years of SpongeBob is that he can stand up to any amount of different treatments, I guess the way that Jeff Jones's Bugs Bunny was different than Bob Clampett's or Tex Avery's Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck, or whatever," Kenny told Salon. "A lot of it depends on who wrote the script, whose concept it is, what storyboard team did the storyboard for that particular episode. And some of them skew, like you correctly say, some of them skew differently in different areas."

He emphasized that the versatility is one of the show's strengths as long as the writers — past, present and future — remain focused on keeping it funny.

"This all had its genesis with Steve — and hopefully we'll be able to continue on without too much corporate interference — is that it was really just about making something funny," Kenny explained. "Some shows focus on the childlike aspect of SpongeBob and things they can do by fooling around in the back of the classroom or whatever, or getting bullied by Flats the Flounder. Or sometimes, like you said, it's more about 'Midlife Crustacean' where it's about other, more adult concerns."

One thing that is certain, though, is that as the series celebrates its 20th year, it remains a testament to Hillenburg's imagination and creativity of its creators.

"I think it's deep, and heavy, and long-lasting," Kenny explained when discussing Hillenburg's legacy. "Not just on me and the cast, because he totally changed our lives, but people tell me all the time how things changed their lives. And they thank me for their childhood or whatever and go, 'Well, you know, thank Steve Hillenburg. I was just being me on the phonograph. He made the record.'"

He added, "Steve Hillenburg allowed me to help raise his baby, SpongeBob SquarePants. And it's been great to see what that has become."

###

From AOL:

Tom Kenny on 20 years of voicing SpongeBob SquarePants: 'We have more fun than movie stars'

[Click HERE for video!]

You know Tom Kenny. Not so sure? Just trust us: You know Tom Kenny.

If you've watched an animated show on TV sometime in the last three decades, you've almost certainly heard snippets of his voice here and there. He's brought to life characters in, literally, hundreds of TV shows, from major franchises ("Ultimate SpiderMan,""Star Wars: The Clone Wars") to kids' cartoons ("Fairly OddParents,""The PowerPuff Girls") to adult comedies ("Rick and Morty,""American Dad").

But it's "SpongeBob SquarePants" that made Kenny's voice ubiquitous around the globe. The No. 1 kids' animated series on TV for the past 17 years (!) is about to celebrate its 20th anniversary, and Kenny's been the man behind that little yellow sponge season after season.

Nickelodeon is celebrating with a special episode, "SpongeBob's Big Birthday Blowout," and AOL sat down with Kenny in New York to talk about the future of animated features, late show creator Stephen Hillenburg's lasting legacy and why it's cooler to be behind the mic than on the red carpet.

You've been doing voiceover work for longer than 20 years — before SpongeBob.
Yeah, SpongeBob was not my first rodeo. I'd kind of been doing voiceover for five or six years before that and including "Rocko's Modern Life," the nineties Nickelodeon series where I first met Steve Hillenburg.

You've done so many different voices beyond SpongeBob. [Kenny has brought to life characters in literally hundreds of TV shows, Do you always recognize your own voice?

No. Sometimes I don't realize it's me and my kids will go, "Dad, that's you," and I'll say, "I don't think so. I don't remember ever doing this show." My IMDb is like 200 pages long! They'll show me the credits and say, "Yeah dad, that was you." Okay, it's something that took me a half hour in 1994, cut me a break kids. I've lost a lot of brain cells since then.

Your kids must have been exactly at the right age to be watching "SpongeBob."

They were! My kids are 21 and 15, so they grew up right when SpongeBob was on the rise. My son was actually born in '97, the year we did the pilot. In fact I remember my wife was pregnant with him when I got the call that the pilot was going. I was like, "Yes!" Looking at her pregnant stomach going, "Good, a job right now would be a really good thing." They were right now during those years when SpongeBob sort of took over the world. I was always glad they were able to enjoy it. They didn't think of me when they were watching it. They just went right into the world of Bikini Bottom. They weren't thinking of Dad being behind a microphone at work doing this recording nine months ago.

Were you breaking out the character voice at home?

No. Hardly ever. They would ask me to not do voices: "Dad, could you just use your own voice?"

Do you find that when you're watching something for fun, your'e not in work mode, that you notice the voices more acutely than most people do?

Yes, and I always did. As a kid, iId think, "Oh, that's the same guy who does George Jetson on 'The Jetsons'!" Most of the other kids, including people in my family, didn't really care one way or the other. "Why do you care so much about that?" I don't know, I just do. Luckily that turned into a viable way to make a living later.

Do you have any particular thoughts on seeing the flat animation films of the 20th century being re-made into live-action features, like "The Lion King"?

Just aesthetically, that's a weird thing I don't understand. To me, I'm always going, why do you need to re-make that? I don't need to see a live-action version of "Dumbo" without the mouse in it! [However], the "SpongeBob" musical, the Broadway musical, I was asking the same questions: Does this really need to exist? And then it turned out to be awesome.

What's the professional voiceover community like?

It's a pretty tight-knit group, and occasionally new people come in, and then they're part of the group. I really like the community. In particular, the cast on "SpongeBob" are super cool. Nice folks to spend 20 years of your life with. Boy, if one of them were a jerk, that would be awful! How do I know I'm not the jerk?!

We were talking a bit earlier about stunt casting, when celebrities are cast in animated features to recite lines in using their own speaking voices. Of course, there are some exceptions, like Mark Hamill.

Mark is great. He's a good friend of mine. People forget there was a point when "Star Wars" wasn't cool at all! That second trilogy — people were down on "Star Wars," and being Luke Skywalker meant less than being the Joker on "Batman." Mark's voiceover career kind of sustained him, and now he's a movie star again, which is crazy! A crazy second act, or third act! Mark is a real voice actor. Even if Mark had never met George Lucas, he would be a great voice actor. Some [voice actors] get bitter about the stunt casting. Our job is to be chameleons, and their job is to be movie stars. I don't want to be a movie star, do you? We have more fun than movie stars.

Over the several months, the "SpongeBob" cast and crew have had to move forward without Stephen Hillenberg, who you all cared deeply for. [Hillenburg died in November 2018 after a battle with ALS.] What has that been like?

It's been really beautiful, actually. Not easy, because SpongeBob sprang from Steve. His DNA is in every aspect of SpongeBob. He had the whole show in his head before any of us were ever brought in. To top it all off, he was a great boss and a lovely guy. Just a nice person, a sweet man. People ask me what he was like, and I go, "He was exactly what you'd hope he would be." Nice, silly, respectful of other people ... It's interesting that he's the first death in the "SpongeBob" family. You take this new situation where he's not around and try to carry on the show. He left a roadmap for us because he knew he was sick for a couple years, so there's a roadmap we're following. Twenty years and still going.

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From KATV via KAIT8:

Little Rock native who voices Squidward talks 20 years of 'SpongeBob Squarepants'

Rodger Bumpass, the voice of Squidward on Nickelodeon's SpongeBob SquarePants (Photo: Bonnie Osborne/Nickelodeon©2019 Viacom, International, Inc. All Rights Reserved)

LITTLE ROCK (KATV) — Nickelodeon is kicking off SpongeBob's "Best Year Ever" tonight to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the premiere of "SpongeBob Squarepants," their highest-rated show.

We talked with Rodger Bumpass, the Little Rock native who has spent two decades voicing SpongeBob's sarcastic octopus neighbor Squidward Tentacles.

How often do you get back to Little Rock?

That’s an interesting question because I usually come back about once a year or so. However, in 16 days I will be getting married in Little Rock on the steps of the old State House. We’ll have the reception over at the Capital Hotel and all that.

A former classmate of mine, who’s in broadcast, is going to be speaking at the ceremony. It’s going to be quite the affair. Now, my family has passed away but in getting closer to my fiancé, I made more trips to Little Rock. We both went to Central High School.

How has your Arkansas upbringing, which is probably different than a lot of your peers, influenced your work?

That's a very interesting question. I don't think I've ever been asked that before. Just off the top of my head, it was just the way that I grew up. I was always interested in comedy, TV and movies. My heroes were people like Jerry Lewis and Red Skelton and Dick Van Dyke, and The Three Stooges, and all that. I would sit in my home in Little Rock and watch these shows. I had a very good family experience. So, I never was burdened by contention or bad things happening in our family.

They didn't have anything to do with show business so I never really got a whole lot of encouragement because no one ever used the word "actor" without using the word "starving" before it. Only after I got some good reviews in New York, my parents started saying, "Hey, maybe he's got some ability here."

I was brought up to be a polite kid and actually, am very thankful for that because some kids weren't brought up that way and they're lives will reflect that also. Growing up in the South, all that you think it is, the stereotype or not, shape me to be as good a person as I can be. Now that I'm thinking about it, I’m very grateful for being brought up right.

How did you land the role on SpongeBob?

You know, it was just another audition. You know, back then a whole lot of people did not have the recording studios in their houses. They would go to their agent's office or go to some third party casting place, and you just read it – look at the breakdowns, read it and then just go away. And if you get a job, you get a job. Nothing portentous to it whatsoever.

I wish I had a great Hollywood story about it, but it was just another audition. I did see the breakdown and that's how I got the idea for his particular type of voice. He had this big honking nose and it was supposed to be sarcastic. So I kind of put him in the back of my throat and made him very sarcastic. It just happened to be what Stephen Hillenburg ( the show's creator) was looking for. The rest is history there.

So, you developed the voice of Squidward?

What I gave them was a very one-note kind of character. He was "blah, blah, blah, sarcastic, blah, blah, blah, blah." And they liked the general tone of it. But as the show went along, I was given more and more different emotional situations to do. So I got to spread my wings and he became much more fleshed out. Which of course is the evolution of most long-running characters and shows, that you have to look for new things to put in there and then it really just kinda just fleshes the character out so much more fully.

What did you do before becoming Squidward?

Well, it wasn't the first. I've been doing this for 45 years. I worked on countless movies, TV shows, commercials, cartoons, and well, whatever came my way. I worked on a lot of the Pixar films, Disney films and lots of games. But this is the biggest project I've ever been a part of.



Want to hear Squidward say "Woo Pig Sooie?" Press play.{ }

When I left Arkansas for New York, I had this vague goal, I wanted to do something on a national level, on a national scale. There just wasn't that opportunity in Arkansas, unfortunately. And so I was able to finally get something like this that was not only national but global.

So it's one of those things, you just have to sit back and say, "Thank you, God, for this." To be a part of such an iconic project and product, that’s something to just be grateful for and I am.

What is it like to be part of something as iconic as SpongeBob?

When we premiered in '99, a lot of people that are your age were three, four or five, six years old. And so, that was very much part of their formative years. And so we chaperoned them through their childhood. When I go to comic cons where I get to actually meet the fans, that story is a very common refrain from people – they come and thank us for their childhood. And being a part of that legacy is a very cherished thing because that’s what I would've said to Mel Blanc because Looney Tunes did the same thing for me.

We’re a short cartoon and people from different ages and different intellects and different senses of humor get different things from the comedy that's in our show. Different people will get different jokes and appreciate them. So it's the overall thankfulness to be a part of something like this that affected so many people positively. We're not a show that gets dirty, cutesy maybe – we talk about butts sometimes. But we don't go into the dark side of comedy like that to keep it wholesome.

It’s one of those things that you just, every so often, have to step back and say, "I'm a part of the character, this show, that everybody knows."

Is it a lot of pressure for you to have everyone know your voice so intimately? Is it bizarre?

Actually, that's one of the perks – one of the great things. Because when I'm out and somebody says, "Hey, that’s the guys that does Squidward!" They go, "really?" Then I do the voice, and there’s this explosion of recognition. The eyes get huge and the jaw drops and they inevitably say "No way!" and that’s nice.

It’s one of those little perks of being in show business. Once you do the voice, that’s what people want. It's like going to a rock concert. You want your band to play, not something new, you want them to play what you know and love. People want that familiarity and all of a sudden, when they’re in front of you, it’s thrilling for some people. And, in a different way, it’s thrilling for me – I gave them that moment.

What character do you think you relate to the most?

Oh, completely Squidward, absolutely. I love being sarcastic and I love being that sarcastic observer of the insanity around me. I have a very dry sense of humor. My favorite comedians are people like Steven Wright and Rodney Dangerfield who are just so great with those one-liners. I used to say Squidward was my alter-ego. But, I'm incorporating more and more of my general acting technique and proclivities, that he's becoming more me. And vice versa. You know, it's pretty much I am he and he is me.

There’s an evolution that I hear about quite frequently that when people your age, where they were younger, they identified with SpongeBob. His energy, it's fun-loving stuff. Then, as they get to be in a job and they see the realities of adulthood and adult life and all those negative things, they become more like Squidward.

Do you have a favorite episode?

We have several. There's one that's actually a crowd favorite, which is called “Band Geeks” where they play the Bubble Bowl. It produced some of the more iconic lines like from Patrick saying, “Is mayonnaise an instrument?” There’s a song at the end, the "Sweet, Sweet Victory" song. It was told to me that the animators came across this song and they thought it was so stupid that they decided to write the episode building up to it – it turns out to be a pretty good production too.

In a recent episode, “Goons on the Moon,” Squidward goes to the moon and gets lost in a cave and he’s sticking his head into different universes trying to get out. The last universe, he pops out into live-action at one of the Nickelodeon animator’s workstations. I had the idea, that they fell for, to use me as the animator. So when Squidward pops out and sees me, he screams. And when I see him, I scream. And it’s the same scream. It was a nice little moment.

After 20 years, do you get tired of being Squidward?

No. But, once they learned that I scream well, they made me scream a lot. Every shot I have to scream and that’s a lot. There was only one episode that really tired me out and that was the “Lemonade Stand” episode where they scare Squidward and he exuded his ink for the first time ever. I had to do this terribly tiring, exhausting series of screams.

As far as getting tired of the character? No. He's been too good to me. And has been too much fun for all these years that I will never ever get tired of this, this little guy. He's such a familiar friend that has done well for me.

One of the things that is weird, I mentioned Comic-Con, when you're on the floor at Comic-Con, I do my voice constantly. So, by the end of three days, I find it difficult to get out of the character and speak like myself.

Like a second language?

Right, a second language: cephalopod.

What would fans be surprised to know about Squidward?

Well, if we ever come across those things, we'll put them in a show. We've explored a whole lot about him. He loves canned bread, interpretive dance, he likes to ride his bicycle – which by the way, was inspired by my bicycle. I ride a recumbent bicycle where you kind of leaning back a little bit. So, Stephen Hilenburg and his son, came across me riding outside and I let him ride it. Ever since that moment he always had Squidward riding that particular type of bicycle.

You really are becoming the same.

Oh, we are absolutely the same. All my license plates on my cars are all versions of Squidward. I have what I'm calling the world's largest collection of SpongeBob memorabilia and merchandise. It's surrounding me right now. There's an excess of 2,000 pieces here. So I'm submitting it to Guinness.

There are some conspiracies on the internet about Squidward being dangerously depressed and suicidal messages surrounding his character. Is there any validity to those?

To my knowledge, it is fully conspiracy. You wouldn’t want to go seriously dark, you could do it in a comic sense because he is pretty depressed, to begin with, it’s a short jump. But, I've seen some of the Internet stuff, it's totally manufactured by fans. Whatever there is out there is going to be corrupted by someone, no matter how good.

What is your favorite thing about Squidward?

One of the fun things to do about him is, he is on two ends of the spectrum here. He gets to be this sarcastic observer of the insanity around him, which brings up some of the most fun moments for me. But then when things get too much for him, once things get too crazy, he gets to go completely apoplectic and scream. That's just so therapeutic for me. I've saved a lot of money on psychiatry.

What is the community like within the cast of SpongeBob?

This is kind of an unusual thing. With cartoons, especially television cartoons, you don't get to spend this much time, as far as the years go. When you're doing a show, it's usually a four-hour span of time together once in a while. But we all get along exceedingly well, which is very refreshing because that's not always the case in Hollywood, that's for sure. And so we are definitely a family and Nickelodeon expressed that terminology to all of us too – that we are all part of the Nickelodeon family. It's the most benign, supportive group that you would want to be in, especially for a long period of time. So here again, I'm just grateful to be a part of this.

How do you feel celebrating 20 years of SpongeBob?

It's been a lot, and there will be more. We're celebrating all year with "The Best Year Ever." It's just all of a sudden, the concentration of all this press and interviews and filming. It’s nice getting out there and then telling everybody what it’s been like all this time.

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From Den of Geek:

SpongeBob SqaurePants' Mr. Lawrence Reveals the Finer Points of Yelling "My Leeegg!!!"

Mr. Lawrence, the voice of Plankton and a writer/story editor on SpongeBob SquarePants, reflects on 20 years of the series.

Doug Lawrence, known professionally as Mr. Lawrence, is an integral part of SpongeBob SquarePants’ DNA. As a writer, story editor, and general co-conspirator to creator Stephen Hillenburg, as well as the voice of Plankton and several others of Bikini Bottom’s finest (MY LEEEEG!!!), Mr. Lawrence is hugely responsible for SpongeBob being the beloved animated institution that it is today.

With the show’s 20th Anniversary Special just around the bend, Den of Geek chatted with Lawrence about all things SpongeBob, from his favorite episodes, characters, and his thoughts on SpongeBob becoming one of the most meme’ed figures on the web. Follow along as we plunge deep with Mr. Lawrence on Nickelodeon’s most enduring, and endearing, hit.

Den of Geek: How does it feel to inhabit the same character for a 20-year period? I'm talking about Plankton, of course. We'll get to some of the others...

Mr. Lawrence: Plankton, sure, sure. It's a thing that we've been sort of... even at

Mr. Lawrence: Plankton, sure, sure. It's a thing that we've been sort of... even at the 10-year mark, it was like, "Wow, we're still making this." Even at the five-year mark, we were like, "Hey, people are still watching this show." All animated shows have a short shelf life mostly, so you get like two seasons, three seasons, you're happy, and you kind of move on to the next show. This has been on so long that I've left the show and come back. I've always been Plankton on the show, but as far as writing the show, I've gone away and done other things and the show is still sitting here going, "Hey, you want to come back?" It's been like a sort of place to come back to that still exists, which doesn't really happen ever. Usually, you don't get the opportunity to keep going back to a show that's still there. That rarely happens and I've come back several times, back and forth.

It's weird because you start to get complacent about it, because usually you're waiting for the ax to fall. You're waiting for the other shoe to drop and go, "Okay, you're done. You've been canceled now. You're finally done." But that hasn't happened yet. After a while you start to count on it. You start to worry that you're counting on it too much to be there. It's funny. It's nice that people still like it and, because we sort of feel like an ownership or a responsibility to make sure that the shows are still quality and that the shows are really funny and that they have a surprise in them or two each show, so it doesn't get stale. It's a hard thing to make a show keep having sparks flying out of it and I think we're still able to achieve that.

It's a testimony to the characters' longevity, just how good the character development has been on our show, and I think we're lucky that people still like it, and because it's kind of easy to take the characters and put them in new situations, even though you would think it would get insane after a while trying to come up with new things for the characters to do. We have our lives and new things happen to us all the time and new stories happen to us all the time, so why not have new stories happen to SpongeBob? I mean, that makes total sense. If you're around long enough, you're going to have more experiences, more stories to tell.

Now, when it comes to voicing the character... we'll talk about the writing and the story editing aspect, but when it comes to voicing the character of Plankton, has your approach to voicing the character changed at all, or was there anything that was not on the page about Plankton that you feel like you specifically brought to the role, whether it was the first time you voiced the character, or that you found as time has gone on?

Well, everything that Plankton said the first 5-6 years, I wrote. So, it's been a back and forth. I don't always write exactly what Plankton says, but I always have a say in it because I play him, so I get a chance to say, "Hey, that doesn't sound like how he'd say it. He might say it like this." But, you know, the character was something that I had to practice when we first did it. I had to practice to keep it consistent. You know, because it's a certain kind of a voice that I'm putting on. My voice doesn't sound like Plankton normally, so I have to actually make a pocket in the side of my mouth and bring it down low, as low as I can go.

So, that's what Plankton is, me scooping down as hard as I can into my larynx and getting it to be as low as I possibly can. So, when you do that, for me, it was something I had to go back and forth about. I've been doing him for so long though now that I can pick him up any time and do him. I don't have to practice anymore to remember. I have like a muscle memory in my voice box now. It knows exactly where to go to get Plankton and make him make sense and act through him. I can do him easily now. It's way easier than it used to be. It's much, much easier for me to get to where I need to get even as an actor playing that part just because I've gone through so many emotions with that character already. I already know who he is and I feel like he's more me. It's really weird, when you play a character long enough you sort of become that character, or I should say the character becomes you.The lines blur.

Yeah, the lines blur a little. When I see the character doing things lately, I hear Plankton yelling something that I wrote and had him yell in the show, and I'm thinking, "God, that's all about my car breaking down that day." It's all about stuff that happens to me that I remember why he's mad, it was inspired by something that I was actually mad at. It's always been cathartic, but now it's gone beyond that. I really count on that. I count on the catharsis of having an outlet for my emotions. Playing that character is that for me too. It's therapeutic. I think if the show ever ends, I'll still be doing Plankton at home just to the walls. I gotta get it out, you know?

You're also the voice of many of the supporting characters like Larry the Lobster and I was just wondering, beside Plankton, do you have a favorite character on the show that you've voiced?

Yeah, I like the announcer stuff and the other characters I play in the show, but currently we've been getting a lot of play out of this character called Rube, who is sort of like Huell Howser spin-off. I don't know if you know who Huell Howser is, but he was a local California guy who used to go around and interview people in California, go to beautiful places in California and show off things you didn't know about, that kind of thing. So, Rube became this guy who goes around and he's showing you all around Bikini Bottom. So, that character lately, I've really enjoyed doing it. People seem to respond to it even if they don't know the genesis of the character, they respond to how happy he is about everything. So, we've been using him more often. We used him in a couple of episodes the past season or two, so we're using him more often. So, as far as a new character goes, Rube is my favorite new character.

Other than that, it's really fun. None of them are like Plankton though. Plankton I sort of set aside in my head as a different thing. The other characters are sort of supporting player. I don't get to act as much with the other guys. With Rube a little bit in some of the new things we just did, but it's mostly Plankton. That's my thespian. That's where I do my Shakespeare. The rest of it is just sort of doing the comedy, but I always feel like I'm going for something deeper when I'm doing Plankton. I always feel like I'm trying to at least make it feel real so everyone relates to it and it doesn't just feel like a guy who is pretending to be angry. I want you to feel like he really is angry or really sad or happy or whatever he is. We all do that on the show. I think we're all trying to make the characters as believable as possible even though they are absolutely fake and absolutely could never exist. It's great to be able to put human emotions into them and make them feel real. That might be one of the reasons it's still around.

On that note, was it surreal getting the chance to essentially play a live-action version of Plankton in the 20th anniversary special? Did it feel a lot different than voicing him in the booth?

Yeah, that's the thing; everything that is sort of familiar and comforting about being in a booth, that's all gone when you're standing there on the set, and you're actually talking to the other people and trying to remember your lines. We didn't have a ton of lines, it's a short sequence, but it was enough. It was enough for us to screw up enough and go, "Ah man, why can't I remember this?" A lot of us don't do that much acting on camera, so this was a thing. About a year before we came up with the idea to do this show and I wrote that scene and all the live-action stuff that's in this episode, that was one of the most fun I've ever had writing in my whole life.

It was just sitting alone in the room and I was able to give myself an atmosphere where I could just have fun, which I always try to do anyway on the show, but this just was... I don't know what it was, but there was something cool about it. I had so much fun writing this thing. I was giggling all the way through because I knew how this was going to look. I know this is going to look so silly to people and be so funny. When we show people, because there are people seeing it here and there, you know other PAs and people connected to the show on the side, younger people, they see it and go, "Oh my God, that is the most amazing thing I've ever seen." Their minds are blown because we've been on for so long and now you're getting to see us do it live in front of you as if we're real people. I mean, it's so unique, it's so weird, it's so different. It's going to be hard to top.

We're really excited to see it.

I hope you love it. We really loved making it and I've been so excited for people to see it. I cannot wait to see what the reaction is to this thing. It will be one of those things that's famous from the show that we did. It's funny, because I thought The Simpsons had done this before. I thought The Simpsons must have done this already, and we looked into it and we're like, "No, they haven't done that one yet. They haven't tried it that way."

The classic animation saying, "The Simpsons have done it." You beat them to it.

Yeah, this time. I wanted to do it years ago when the show started, like first season. I think the idea came up that "Why don't we have the characters either tear their faces off and you see live-action heads underneath?" or you know, a way to get to that joke to show that off. It always got torn down because usually when you're starting off a show, especially in animation, there is no budget for you to make it live-action. You have to kind of fudge the numbers to make the situation right so you can do that. But the show has been on longer now and we can ask for things and say, "Hey, we have an idea to do this, this might be good for the show." So, it's a different situation than we used to have. The timing was right and we finally got it together. I am kind of glad we waited because if we had done it sooner, it wouldn't have had as much of an impact as I think it's going to, so I think it was good timing for us.

As a writer and story editor on the series, what are the hallmarks of a classic SpongeBob episode and do you feel you have a favorite episode that you've written that sort of encompasses what the show is to you?

Really, the show has so many different stripes to it. We have so many different character dynamics that we can take you down different roads. We've been creating new ones lately just to make the show more interesting for the audience and for us to write it because there's certain things you can only do so many times, you need to come up with a fresh take on everything. We're always trying to kind of team up characters that maybe haven't been together before. We found a few different combos that we hadn't tried too much before, like Plankton and Patrick together. They are really funny, we found out, because Plankton just cannot take how stupid Patrick is. It's fun to watch that happen. We're doing more with Bubble Bass. We've made him more of a star. We're making more characters out of some of the side characters on the show. We're doing more with them because we feel like, "That guy has got a little more depth. I think we could make more of this guy or that guy."

It's hard to say what the perfect episode is. Of the ones that I've participated in, or wrote or voiced in, there are a lot I liked as a voiceover actor. There was "Frankendoodle," which I really was pretty proud of. I'm in that in live-action too. It was the first time I was on the show in live-action in the boat with the magic pencil. I love that one, not just because I'm in it that way, but because that whole episode has such great surreal quality. It's just a great story with an impossible situation, a surreal situation, an evil character that's magical. You know, we usually don't do that, so it's a very unique show. That's the funny thing, when you're saying do I think there is a show that says it all, I think that's the great thing about the show, why it's lasted too. I think we're always trying to be funny and surprising, so we're always trying to reinvent the wheel with the show and by doing so, it changes all the time.

It's almost hard to say what is the formula except character. To me, character can be formula because you know how this guy acts, just like in real life, you know how your mom acts. You know certain things will set your mom off. You know certain things your mom doesn't like and other things your mom loves. That's the same thing. We know about these characters. We know them like our family. We know what they like and don't like. That's really the formula of the show is the characters. Going off of that, there are so many episodes and so many different things that I like, and I did like "Frankendoodle," but there is an episode we just did last season called "My Leg," which is about Fred.

I wrote that one and I'm very proud of that one, mostly because the format of that show goes against what the normal format is for the show. The normal linear story telling? We didn't do with that one. There is a story being told, but we're also trying to see how many times we can say "my leg." It was like, "How can we take a running joke on the show, and turn it into a real story?" It was a challenge to figure it out. And then the idea came up of course to, "Well, if we're going to make Fred seem real, then we're going to have to make him do something like be in love." You know, he's going to need to fall in love. So, that episode turned into Fred being in love and SpongeBob helps him reunite with his beloved. But it's all silly.

It's all crazy and the structure of that episode is very unlike other episodes. And we have ones like that every so often where there is something else going on, you know a piece of music that's carrying what's happening, or a certain character comes in and it's themed to that character. But that would have to be my all-time favorite right now, "My Leg." And I could go on, of course. There are so many episodes that I'm proud of.

When the show debuted, I remember exactly where I was when the first episode aired. I am 26 now. I love the show just as much as I did back then and I feel like for the generation directly above mine, I feel like Seinfeld is the comedy touchstone that everybody quotes and everybody knows what you're talking about when you reference it. For my generation, I feel like that is SpongeBob. Rarely does a day go by that my friends don't reference SpongeBob in some way and it pretty much always gets a laugh.

Oh, that's funny.

It has always appealed to both children and adults, and I was wondering if you thought of why that is? Or as a story editor, how to approach the balance of making the show that is for all intents and purposes for kids, but something that parents can sit down and watch right alongside their children and they're not dreading it. They enjoy it as well.

First, thanks for the kind words. It's always nice to hear that people quote it and are still into it, that makes me feel good.

Yeah, it's a part of the daily lexicon.

That's always amazing. I think the show itself... remember, the show started in the '90s when the climate was a little different as far as what was being done in animation. There were a lot more independent kind of shows that were all eclectic. There seemed to be more different kind of shows and less shows that were just being marketed towards kids specifically. It was sort of more like family. We always thought of being more of a comedy show, not a kid's show. We try not to talk down to kids ever. We are always trying to make it as smart as possible, but then also realizing, "Hey, that subject, or that theme, or that idea, or that joke goes into an adult theme." It may not even be something that's bad for kids to hear, it just might not be something kids grasp, so we don't do those things.

So, we try to stay away from certain adult themes just because kids won't get it. It will be too much over their head and they won't have fun. They'll just wonder what we're talking about. And we draw out stories sometimes that aren't kid friendly enough, as well as entertaining for everybody. We kind of see ourselves as more like Pixar, where we're really making family entertainment. We're not shooting for a kid demographic. I know it hits many demographics, our show, but that's the thing, we never looked at it that way. In fact, any of the shows I've worked on, like Ren and Stimpy and Rocko's Modern Life, all those shows were the same thing. We were just making comedy shows that kids could sit down and watch too.

It's less of a kid-centric thing and more about stories. You know, we always are going to do stories about our childhoods, because that's part of what SpongeBob is, how innocent he is and how childlike he is. So, we're kind of spoofing childhood. It's almost that's what the show is. It's kind of a spoof or a satire of childhood in a way, and I think that sort of pulls it into a satirical bend, which kind of allows us to do different kinds of humor. In other words, it is a conscious thing that we're trying to do, but it's not that hard because we have a tone that we have already set and we know what the tone is.

So with that comedy tone in mind, we're able to write off of that knowing, "Okay, this is the kind of thing we can get away with." And we push it sometimes. There are certain things we think, "Oh, this will be perfect for the show," and it isn't. We realize later, "No, that's not for us. That's for another show to do." We're very specific. We have our roles in certain spots, but I think the main thing I want to see more of in TV is less specific humor, less making fun of things that are topical, which you see a lot of too. They try to be so topical they forget about just telling a story.

Part of it too is that we really are a rapid fire kind of show that has a lot of jokes per square inch on it all the time. There are many jokes happening all the time and I think that a lot of shows don't have that tone. They're more telling like a sitcom type of a story. I think we are a sitcom, but we know we're a cartoon and we know that we need to push the boundaries of being a cartoon, otherwise, for us, why are we doing it. Why is this in animation if we're not going to push it? That's all of us. The group that makes the show grew up on old theatrical shorts from Warner Brothers and MGM and we like gags. We like to see gag cartoons and we need more of that because I think it gets lost sometimes. People forget how much they love that. And then all these other sitcom things, they all look the same. We need more fun. Gags are fun.

That's why I always think of it as being funny and fun. It goes hand in hand with doing gags and slapstick and things that you know you can stretch. That's why we stretch SpongeBob all over the place as much as we can. We blow him up. We do whatever we can to the characters to distort them and push them because it's funny and that's really our goal is to be funny. I think a lot of shows are out to tell their story about their characters, and that's fine too, but really for us, the bottom line for us is always "Is this funny?" Because if it isn't, we'll throw it back. If it's not funny enough, it bothers us. We sit there going, "It has to be funnier. There has to be a way to do this."

So, I mean, I think that's what it is about. We do precision comedy. We're trying to do well-timed comedy like we grew up with, like we've seen from other guys over the years that we loved in the industry. You know, just other guys who are really good at character comedy and making you really laugh at the situation between two characters who you know are perfectly matched to milk the best joke they can out of this situation.

Well, I want to shift gears to something a bit more serious. I'm sure everyone who works on the show and is involved in the production are probably still emotional about the death of Steven Hillenburg. I was just wondering if you could talk to me a little bit about what it was like to work with Steven, and besides brainstorming the entire enterprise, about what he specifically brought to the production of the show.

Well, we were friends on Rocko's Modern Life. We were both directors side by side on that show and even directed a few shows together. We did a few half hour specials together. So, Steve and I just always had a similar style of humor. We laughed at the same things. We liked the same kind of stuff and so, when you hang out with somebody, when you're on a show with someone, you just kind of have a kinship, and you know, "If I get something going, I'm calling this guy." And he says the same thing, "If I get something going, I'll call you, you call me," you know that kind of thing. So, it was that kind of connection we always had. If one was doing something, they called the other one.

So, this came up while he took over Rocko for one season, and he was able to swing a deal where he could get a pilot made. We were all trying to get pilots going around the same time. Not just me and him, but others from Rocko, and this is the one that happened. This is the only one out of all of us that actually got made because it was really still very hard, especially with us being younger then, to trust us and say, "Yeah, we want you to do this show." So, it finally happened and there we were again being close as we were in the comedy sense that we were on Rocko, now here we were trying to come up with this new thing. There was a [show] bible in place and all, but we still had to come up with how the character dynamics were going to work and who is going to play these characters and make them work. So far we only had Patrick and SpongeBob cast, and Squidward. But we weren't sure about all the characters yet. We hadn't explored them yet. Sandy wasn't there yet. Plankton wasn't there yet.

Right at the beginning it was mostly me, Steve and [writer, creative director] Derek Drymon and we would be in a conference room together just throwing out ideas for the next shows. In fact, one of the last times I got to work with Steve, where we were actually writing together, was on the second SpongeBob movie. I came in there to do punch up with him. The two of us and a couple of other storyboard guys were in the room and we were just coming up with ideas and pinning them up and having a ball laughing and stuff. That's what I remember the most about the show with our small group, was just enjoying laughing about what we were going to do with these characters, their dynamics with each other and how they were going to antagonize each other, and how we were going to bring all these ideas we had. It was exciting.

Steve's thing definitely was about character-driven stuff. Rocko was a good training ground for us. That's where we first started to deal with characters that will stick, characters that were solid, and I think that was part of what we wanted. We wanted to make sure that we got another show where the characters really resonate, that they stick. You can only guess half the time what to do, but we took a lot of chances with stuff because that's what you do when you're starting off with a show. A good thing about Steve and I was that he always looked over at me, because he knew that if I hated something, then I would just look at him like, "No, we're not doing that." I'd give him a look and he would know. We would talk about stuff like that all the time and it would be this back and forth about what's right. What should we do and what shouldn't we do for the show because we're making it up for the first time.

He knew what he didn't want a lot and that was really helpful, and so did I at times. We both kind of back and forth knew "that's not good, this is not good", but he knew as he was going through it where to navigate to try to get the best out of the situation and the animation, and the music, and everything else. He cared about each department of each thing, as you should when you're creating a show. And of course we all did that, but not everybody had the same dedication to the comedy of it. Some people, you get a show, you get it on and you're happy it's on and you're not worried about necessarily how good the humor is, you're just trying to get a show on.

Read more: SpongeBob Spinoffs - Which characters can carry their own show?

This was more like, "Okay, we have to be funny. We really have to be funny. Let's try to be as funny as we can within the boundaries of a kid's show, how far we could take it." And again, we were still young then too, so it was new territory for all of us, but at the same time, something we were sort of ready to do at that time. It was the perfect time for us. We had just finished another show and now here's this one and let's make this great. So, we all kind of laser focused hard, all together, to make that. But like I said, Steve was good at knowing who was good. He always surrounded himself with guys that he knew could help him put the house together. He was good at all that and good at picking the voices too, and good at being just the arbitrator of his vision.

We all have those shows where it's something about our childhood or something that comes from us personally, and this show came from a personal place. Even though it's silly and crazy, that's Steve bringing it from a personal place and saying that the optimistic little guy, the little guy who people kind of want to step on and put down, he's too optimistic to let that be a problem for him. There's something about that kind of character, the optimism and the hope of a character, and it makes you go, "Gee, I wish I was more like that when I was a kid when I was getting picked on." You know what I mean? I wish I was more like SpongeBob. There's something in that. And I think that's what we were trying to do, and Steve was definitely trying to do, was re-tell our childhoods in a way that's funnier and not as tragic.

So, I think that becomes part of what this all was, you know this all has become. It's sort of a re-imagining of our growing up and saying, "Boy, what if I had all that?" And some kids are like that. I was like SpongeBob when I was really little, but later you get more cynical. That's being a teenager.

You become a Squidward.

Yeah. So, it's fun, it's like a safe place to say here's what it could have been like. Here's what I could be like. Everybody wants to be like him, like SpongeBob. Be naïve, not stupid, but naïve enough where you can enjoy things a little bit more than everybody else and see the joy in everything and pay attention to the joy in everything. That's the way we'd all like to be. That's the thing that Steve brought that we now reap the benefits of, for that character and the characters surrounding that character, because without SpongeBob being relatable or believable, the other characters wouldn't work at all.

So, having our main character be somebody who everybody relates to, it makes it much easier to have the other characters emotionally also have resonance and have weight. It's a good group and like I said, as far as the cast goes, that's why Steve was the thing that helped us figure out what this was all going to be, because he didn't know either. In certain cases you don't know, you're just hoping you'll find out as you go along. It was fun to be part of that process with Steve. We miss him, of course. He was sick for a while, so he's kind of been gone for a bit as far as we're concerned on the show, but you know I think of him all the time because we're on the show and I always think, "Oh yeah, remember that time Steve was telling me this, or we went to that show and this happened..." There are so many touchstones in my head with Steve that goes back to Rocko. There are great memories connected to it. And then we keep making it, so it's even weirder, you just keep rekindling these memories constantly.

SpongeBob has taken on almost a new life online as a source of countless popular memes, and I was wondering if it's interesting to see the way that fans use SpongeBob and moments from SpongeBob as a means of reacting to things online pretty much every day in every situation?

Yeah, it's funny. It's a weird thing in general because they've been doing it with everything.

SpongeBob in particular.

You think you're not going to see it anymore and then there it is in a meme.

SpongeBob pops up quite a bit. Different little shots from different episodes all over the place.

They just came out with a series of vinyl dolls based on popular memes. There's a whole group of them. I'm looking at one right now. There's a whole bunch of these little box characters that look just like the meme and say the meme on it. It's a phenomenon that wouldn't be something I would have guessed they'd be coming up with. It's another thing. It's like a bumper sticker. It's like the stuff we grew up on when we were kids. There is always a sort of bootleg shirts of like Calvin and Hobbes and that kind of stuff. There's those bootleg copies. That's what memes are to me. They're like these bootleg tattoos you could get. It's not a tattoo, but its a visual version of something like that. Just something to throw out there.

It's funny when I see them because it's like a new version of the show. It's another thing that exists unto itself. It has nothing to do with the show except that it's derived from it, you know what I mean? We just keep seeing them too. There have to be billions by now. There are so many. People keep asking us, "What's your favorite meme?" I said, "I don't know, I've seen hundreds of them. I don't really have a favorite." There are so many, its hard to decide.

The only ones I remember now are the ones that they made the dolls out of because I'm like, "Oh yeah, that one." There are so many. It's nice that it resonates that way too. I like that there is another way that the show is permeating the culture and being part of the conversation, which I always think is good to keep the show relevant. I think it's a good way to keep the characters alive too.

This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

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From Den of Geek:

No, This is Patrick: Bill Fagerbakke Celebrates 20 Years of Patrick Star

Voice of Patrick Star, Bill Fagerbakke, talks about 20 years of SpongeBob SquarePants and playing a live-action version of the character.

There can’t be a Laurel without a Hardy, an Abbott without a Costello, or for the kids out there, a Will Ferrell without a John C. Riley. And certainly, there can’t be a SpongeBob without a Patrick.

For 20 years, Bill Fagerbakke has been voicing Patrick Star, the dim other half and best friend to SpongeBob SquarePants. Den of Geek had the chance to speak with Fagerbakke about making up one half of everyone’s favorite cartoon duo, how theater school doesn’t train you for a 20 year role, and about the upcoming third feature-length SpongeBob film, The SpongeBob Movie: It’s a Wonderful Sponge.

Den of Geek: Well, I'll jump right in here. 20 years, that has to be pretty surreal. I was wondering how does it feel to inhabit the same character for 20 years?

Bill Fagerbakke: Well, you know, it's not like when I was in acting school studying theater that had a chapter on how to handle the 20th year of a character. No, it's really obviously extraordinary and I really love my character and so that really makes it all wonderful.

I suppose if someone didn't enjoy doing this kind of stuff or didn't like the material or didn't like kids or something, it might be a real tough ride, but none of those things apply to me. I also love the people I work with. I had a taste of a long running job when I was on a sitcom that ran for nine years, so I was already built kind of in a way to be able to appreciate the longevity of the relationships and that it's a transient occupation, so being able to have sustained relationships is really extraordinary and there's really nothing bad about it.

Now, I've just got off the phone with Tom Kenny and he made the comparison that it's like playing in a band for a long time, like even though the solo that your bandmate plays might be different in some way, you kind of know what to expect and how to gel, and I was just wondering, obviously there's familiarity, but has your approach to voicing the character changed at all over the past 20 years?

Yeah, I suppose it has. And first of all, Tom, good observation and well stated. He's an extraordinary guy to work with. He's just one in a million and every session we have, I thank my lucky stars that he was cast as SpongeBob because absolutely, you know, there's no one else that could have done and is still doing like what Tom is. I mean, we are all so fortunate.

But in terms of changing character, you know, I'm more actively looking to just anticipate what I can do to it beyond what they've already wrote. It's not like camera work. There's already very specific ideas of what a given beat is supposed to be in animation, because there's a storyboard along with the script so you have a very specific concept and so I always want to honor that while at the same time also finding a way to play within that and bring a little something extra, you know, as a performer. So I suppose that certainly is something that's a built in part of the experience for me.

Was there anything that wasn't initially on the page about Patrick that you specifically feel like you brought to the character, I mean besides your fabulous voice?

That I really can't speak to. I don't know. I like to think I hope I contributed to his sense of warmth and play and also to that sense of bizarre potential that exists with Patrick but I can't really know for sure. In animation, you're so compartmentalized, there's so much work done before you get into the studio to record and then you walk out of the studio and there's all this other work done, and then maybe you get another look at it, but probably you don't, so it's hard to know that stuff.

For the 20th anniversary special, you essentially got to play a live action version of Patrick Star and I was wondering if presenting Patrick as a live action character felt a lot different than having to voice him in the booth?

Despite my career reality, which is to a large degree playing morons, despite that, it was still really strange because your focus, when you're recording, is so specific as to those moments but also your imagination. You know, it can go anywhere with what you imagine. You look at the storyboard and then you also let your imagination spring off of that to inform your vocal performance, and here I was bound by me and my body and it was really strange. It was a very unusual thing and I kept looking around the set going, "Why do I feel like I've never acted before?"

So that was an interesting challenge. Yeah, again, it's something that was never covered in my theater training.

I bet. You know, I wanted to switch to a little bit more of a somber note. Fans of the series, and I'm sure the cast and the people behind the scenes, are still emotional about the passing of Stephen Hillenburg and I was just wondering if you could talk to me a little bit about what it was like to work with Stephen and besides this whole thing being his brain child, what specifically he brought to the production of the series and the spirit of the show.

Well, all that unique heart and sweetness that characterized the show and the development of the show, that was all Steve. He was such a lovely human being, and you know what? You're so kind of fractured and compartmentalized in the process, it took me a while to get to know him beyond just a casual working relationship and everything about him was unique. Those first three years, he was our session director and he would sit in the room with us very often and he'd set up a table and he'd wear earphones and he would doodle and it would be kind of like he was a part of us performing the show, and he'd give us notes as we went along.

He was such a unique guy. I always got the sense that one of his skills, such a special skill, was to be clever and innocent at the same time and that's just such an amazing ability. That was him. He was a beautiful person and I miss him and I'll never forget going to the opening of the SpongeBob musical on Broadway. I just sat a couple of seats from him and seeing how happy he was and how excited he was, and I was. You know, out of anyone who ever saw that musical, no one cried as much as I did. But yeah, just having that sense, having that sense of what that meant to him.

Well, that sounds really special and I'm sorry about the passing of your friend. You know, you touched on it for a minute there, about the ability to be clever and innocent at the same time. I think the series has always appealed to both children and adults. I was six-years-old when the series started, I remember exactly where I was.

Oh.

I still revisit so many of the episodes or my friends and I still make references to jokes on such a daily basis. It clearly has an appeal for both children and adults, and I was wondering why do you think there is that sort of connection, that the whole family can kind of get behind this silly show about underwater creatures?

I don't know. I really truly don't. It's hard to qualify that with something concrete. For me, personally, I think it's all built on Stephen Hillenburg's character and also I think the way it was developed was really important. The way Nickelodeon let it just happen and let it develop in an organic way was really critical, really crucial, because that's not an easy thing to do. To produce a show as a network and then just let a young animator kind of develop it on his own. You know, he really got to make this thing his and so kudos to Nickelodeon for that.

What a ride it is. I love every day. I love every session and your generation, you know, it feels like 80% of a person under 30, I can just say, "No, this is Patrick." And you start laughing or smiling...

Yeah, well, it does work because I just started laughing and smiling.

It's really an amazing scenario and I love it and I love Patrick. He makes me laugh and I feel that Patrick is linked in a real personal way to me as a seven year old, you know?

Sure.

And there's something really deep and profound about it for me.

The show is broadcasted now in over 50 different languages and the show, the merchandise is everything from beach towels to band-aids to ice cream that you can get from the ice cream truck. I mean, SpongeBob is everywhere.

Yeah.

Is that bizarre?

Yeah.

Like if you travel outside of the country or you see Patrick onscreen speaking in a different language? That has to be quite a surreal feeling.

For sure. Yeah. Well, it's today's global commerce, right? And entertainment is an integral part of that but, yeah, that's pretty amazing and all the more reason to be grateful that my face has nothing to do with the product. But no, that's really cool, yeah.

You know, there are so many shows that I love that if you tried to translate it into a different language, it probably just wouldn't work, there'd be something off about it or there'd be something that would be lost in translation. What is it about these characters that make them so universal?

There's something elemental, isn't there? It's almost like a commedia dell'arte or something but I tell you, man, there's some weird alchemy at play here. I don't know what it is ... I don't know, with the colors and the shapes of the characters. I just don't know how else to explain it. I really don't.

But that the character of SpongeBob, I think, has some kind of profound fundamental human appeal. And Tom Kenny is just the right person to embody that and bring him to life. And then we all just kind of respond, we all just kind of relate to that character and bring what we can. Goodness, Roger Bumpass [voice of Squidward] is so hilarious, Clancy Brown [voice of Mr. Krabbs], so funny, Mary Jo Catlett [vocie of Mrs. Puff] and Carolyn Lawrence [voice of Sandy Cheeks], they're so wonderful at what they do, they bring so much humor and Lori Alan [voice of Pearl] and everyone, Doug Lawrence [various voices], wow, I mean, look at that vibrant character in Plankton and what that means to the show.

There's a balance there. It all works so well, but you remove SpongeBob from that, then I don't know. I don't know.

I find it interesting that you guys still record as an ensemble. You know, there are a lot of animated programs where you hear about people doing their vocal takes in isolation or even, you know the phrase "phoning it in," but doing it over the phone sometimes. What do you think that that has added? Do you think the fact that you guys are still so plugged in and together in the room, do you think that that's a part of the longevity of the show and why it's lasted so long?

All I know is personally how I feel about it and that recording by myself offers so much less satisfaction. When we're all in the booth and we're working together, it really lifts everything up and we're so in tune with each other. You know, it's so funny, when we're together I can't stop myself from doing Krabs and Squidward. I just go ... I've got them both. I love those characters so much, I can't stop doing them. It's like I have this weird envy of I want to do those characters too, you know? But I know that I couldn't do them like those guys do them.

Maybe if you guys get to 30 years, the next special will be you guys getting the chance to swap roles a little bit.

Yeah, well, how many of us will be in the home? (Laughs) Shady Shoals.

You know, SpongeBob, it's lasted a long time. There's no cartoon that I came up with as a kid that's still producing new episodes where the show hasn't been rebooted or re-imagined or anything like that.

Right.

The only comparisons you can look towards are the Looney Tunes or Mickey Mouse. Is it strange to think that 20 years in, these characters could be the Looney Tunes for a new generation of fans?

That phenomenon is not lost on me because, you know, that was the joy of my youth, the Looney Tunes. I enjoyed some other cartoons also, but not like Looney Tunes. So, yeah, I mean, to be able to be considered such a key part of the fabric of animation is really thrilling and it means a lot to me.

I'm sure there are some things that you can't, but anything that you could tell me about the upcoming third SpongeBob feature length film?

Well, I can tell you this certainly, that much of what we've talked about in the last 30 minutes or so is, in terms of recognizing the breadth of the show and the characters, I think that dynamic is a part of the story, if that makes any sense.

It does.

That's not a sexy quote that's going to get you very much but that's really about all I can say, I think.

This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

###

From Den of Geek:

Squidward Actor Rodger Bumpass Discusses Being Spongebob's Voice of Despair

Voice of Squidward, Rodger Bumpass, reflects on 20 years of SpongeBob SquarePants and playing a live-action version of his character.

We all probably wish our personalities were more like SpongeBob SquarePants — friendly, selfless, and eternally optimistic — but there's a good chance that you more readily identify with his easily annoyed, pessimistic neighbor Squidward Tentacles. Squidward has been called the voice of "millenial despair" and the man responsible with imbuing the character with such a relatable malaise, Rodger Bumpass, is happy to voice the animated poster child for existential desperation.

Den of Geek had the chance to chat with Bumpass about voicing Squidward for the past 20 years, the series live-action anniversary speical, and why the successful SpongeBob Broadway show made him jealous.

Den of Geek: I'll start with the obvious: 20 years is a long time to be working in the same role. It's pretty peculiar. Definitely doesn't happen for a lot of actors, so I was wondering, how does it feel to inhabit the same character for 20 years?

Rodger Bumpass: It becomes a second skin. I used to say that he was my alter ego. As the years have gone on, I have become more Squidward, so I shoo people off my front lawn a lot more than I used to. It really is a very interesting thing and quite unique. With the possible exception of The Simpsons, we're pretty much up there, as far as longevity for animation, and it's a very honored position to occupy.

It's interesting that you said you feel yourself becoming more like Squidward. I find myself feeling the same. The show debuted when I was six. I watched the first episode, and 20 years later, whereas in the past I more so identified with SpongeBob, when I watch the show now I find myself more so identifying with Squidward. Do you have a lot of fans coming up to you and relaying similar sentiments?

I was just going to say this is perhaps the most common story that I am regaled with at Comic-Cons and wherever. When we premiered, most of our audience, our young adult audience, was somewhere between three and six. Very formative years, and they all identified with SpongeBob to begin with, the youthfulness, the innocence, the enthusiasm and all that. But then, as they got to be adults and saw what the real world was like and all its frustrations and anxieties, and they all tell me, well, they became Squidward. And I understand that fully. It's great to be a part of a human being's translation into pessimism.

Yes. Anything this long, there's an evolution. When we first started, Squidward was very monotone, almost like Oscar Madison in The Odd Couple, but he was [monotone Squidward voice] "blah-blah-blah-blah-blah." That was the signature. That was the thing I focused on when we first started. And then, as the show went along, the other writers found different things to do, and so I was able to spread my wings and actually become more and more me, more expressive in many different ways. And that's what I mean by me becoming Squidward, or actually, Squidward becoming me, because I wasn't doing this monotone thing. I was doing my acting and my characterization of him, so yeah.

And then they learned that I scream, and once they learned that I scream, they made me scream in every episode. In fact, when we do the post-production, I always say, "I did my words absolutely perfect." What they have to add in the post-production is all the screams and utterances and grunts and groans and all that stuff. But they enabled me to develop into this character that goes from sarcastic observation comments, "How did I ever get stuck with such loser neighbors?" to total apoplexy. And I get to scream. It's very therapeutic. I have saved a lot of money on psychiatry fees [laughs].

Now, like you said, the character's becoming more and more you. Are there any specific character traits, besides the yelling, that weren't on the page about Squidward that you feel like you brought to the characters or that the writers started writing specifically around aspects of your personality or your interests?

Yeah, there's just certain ... It's kind of a vague subjective answer, but there was just nuances and flows that I seemed to choose as my signature. It's just inflection things that I tend to do, and I was able to keep doing, so they became part of Squidward's persona also. It's just certain lilts. It's hard to remember exactly what I'm talking about, but I do know that going from monologue to more fleshed-out character is what he has become. But thankfully, he's become a more complex character, and yet simplistic at the same time, with all the screaming. And he explodes a lot. You ever notice that? He explodes a lot?

I have, actually.

There's was actually a YouTube collection compilation of the times that Squidward has exploded, and I didn't know that there was that many.

Was it surreal getting the chance to essentially play a live-action version of Squidward in the 20th anniversary special? I hope that you didn't have to be blown up.

No, yeah, I didn't [laughs]. You are right on the nose. The word is "surreal." In fact, we all turned to ourselves during the shoot and said, "Golly, this is surreal," because we have heard all of our fellow cast members do the parts for 20 years, but when we're on the set, on camera, in essentially costume, trying to look like our characters ... And I worked darn hard to look like Squidward. I mean, the mannerisms ... When you see this, I hope you'll appreciate the work that I'm putting in there, as far as the droopy eyes, the boredom, the sarcasm, the certain mannerisms that Squidward is. And to actually see ... see, I think that should be a spinoff, to tell you the truth. The spinoff should be a live-action version of SpongeBob, absolutely. We would have so much fun.

You kind of read my mind, because I had heard that spinoffs had been teased in a press release from Nickelodeon, and I was going to ask you if you had-

Yeah, they're going to do some.

Yeah, did you have any Squidward-centric ideas for a spinoff?

Well, like I said, I think the live-action would be absolutely novel and be absolutely just so silly, and you'd be hearing the voices, seeing live-action people. I think there's a hook there.

I think so, too. You have my interest.

But then, I'm selfish. I mean, if you want to do something really weird, a weird direction for the show, live-action's the way to go.

SpongeBob has always appealed to both children and adults. I love it just as much now that I am an adult as I did was when I was a child. And part of the fun of watching the show or rewatching my favorite episodes is, not only seeing all the jokes that hold up just as well as I thought they did when I was a kid, but finding new layers and things that I may have missed that were subtly ... I would never say overtly adult-themed, but just little things that are definitely hidden in there for a more mature audience. But why do you think it is that the show has this appeal to people of such a wide variety of age groups?

The comparison I always give is the old Looney Tunes. Looney Tunes, animation itself will attract young people because it's animated, it's a cartoon. But then Looney Tunes, like us, because we're both cartoon shorts, we're not half-hour shows, will appeal to different people. It's kind of like a parable, where it appeals to different people and different age groups for different reasons. The little kid will get something because it's colorful and moving around. A teenager will get something, "Oh, that's a little ... we said the word 'butt.'" And then an adult will get the topical references and even historical references. So there's something for everyone, and that makes this show non-age-specific.

It's not like a ... not to denigrate, but it's not like, say, watching Rugrats, which was a fine show, but it kind of appealed to the parents and the little kids, or The Smurfs, that had a relatively narrow appeal. Even though those were both good shows, they had a relatively narrow appeal. Our show has this broader appeal because funny is funny, and if you can have comedy as your central tenet, your central emphasis, then people, as you grow older, will get different things from it. You revisit and say, "Oh, I didn't get that before," just like I've done with Looney Tunes throughout the course of my life.

That's interesting that you bring up Looney Tunes, because is it strange, thinking that SpongeBob could have the same longevity that Looney Tunes has had, that 30 years from now, the show could still be on the air?

Yeah, well, Looney Tunes has been going on since pretty much the '40s, so that's 70 years, and it's still going strong. And yeah, I'm hoping that SpongeBob will last just a little bit longer than the pyramids.

I want to shift to something a bit more somber. Fans of SpongeBob, and I'm sure those involved with the creation of the show, are still emotional about the death of Stephen Hillenburg, and I was just wondering if you'd be willing to talk to me a little bit about what it was like to work with Stephen, besides brainstorming this entire enterprise, just what he brought to the production of the show.

Well I have, as we all have, worked with many, many directors and creators of various shows and stuff, and I have never seen a more mild-mannered, unassuming creator/director of a show. Working with him was so easy. He was easily pleased and yet he never compromised his original concepts for the characters. Very soft-spoken, and I have dealt with such demanding directors; hard taskmasters that make your work a living hell. To be around a person who was genuinely humble and yet wonderfully creative, it was a joy. Very few people get to see their legacy while they are still alive, and thankfully, Stephen got to see how much respect and admiration and love this world had for him, and I hope wherever he is right now, he can see that he is appreciated. He was a joy to know and to work with, and one of the true lovable people that I have ever come across.

Well, once again, I'm sorry about the passing of your friend, and I just have so much respect for the show and all those involved. And from what I've heard about him, he seems like such a lovely person.

He definitely was. Even that is an understatement. He really was.

I know that there is a third SpongeBob feature-length film, The SpongeBob Movie: It’s a Wonderful Sponge, on the way-

Yes.

...and I'm sure that Nickelodeon doesn't want you to tell us too much about it, but I was wondering if there was any small details that you could share with us about what we can expect from the third SpongeBob full-length film.

Well, not knowing what I shouldn't say, I don't know what I should say, so I have to be cautious about that. I've already opened my mouth before. As far as I can tell, the way it looks right now ... because we don't see a lot of it, we come in and do our voice parts, and we may see a little bit of an unfinished segment to give us an idea of how that scene is supposed to go. But it seems to be, in at least some respects, a tribute to Stephen. That's my surmising about that, as far as I can see about the script and what's in there. But my lips are sealed, as far as giving away things. I'm just not going to do that. Sorry.

Understandable.

And I really can't, anyway.

How about the Broadway show? I was going to ask if you had-

I was so jealous.

You were jealous? Why is that?

I was so jealous because theater is where I started, and I wanted to be onstage. And I really enjoyed the performance of Squidward and the whole thing. And they had a really interesting costume dilemma because, in the cartoon, we're taking an octopus and anthropomorphizing him, and so that's why they have four tentacles forming two legs. Well, as a human who already has two legs, you have to make him look like a squid. So they had this wonderful appendage, extra tentacle appendages on him to make a human look like a squid, which was very difficult to do, and they did it beautifully. It was a wonderful sight gag. So to see the different incarnations... I'm a selfish person. I don't share my character very easily, but watching the execution of these various incarnations, it is a lot of fun.

When I was talking to Tom [Kenny, voice of SpongeBob] he was describing you guys recording as an ensemble. He was saying that part of the fun is not only knowing your character so well, but knowing the other characters so well. He likened it to a band, that you might not know exactly the solo that someone's going to play, but you know what's in their wheelhouse, and you sort of know what to expect. I was just wondering if you could tell us a little bit about what it's like to record as an ensemble, as I'm sure not all animated programs have the opportunity to do that. And what do you think that that brings to the overall quality of SpongeBob as a series?

It's an apropos comparison, as a band or orchestra, especially a jazz band. Knowing ... you have a skeleton of the melody and a progression, and everyone riffs off of that, and you know what the other person ... you know your colleague, you know kind of what they're doing and what they're going for, and then you play off of that. One of the good examples is that whenever Tom and I have a little scene together, we have very good chemistry and back-and-forth just because of the differences in the characters. And if you're old enough to remember the old Jackie Gleason show, The Honeymooners-

Yeah.

Jackie as Ralph Kramden and Art Carney as Ed Norton, and Norton was a SpongeBob kind of character. He was goofy, and he would go off on these abstracts, and then eventually, he would get to a point where Jackie couldn't handle it anymore, and Jackie would go, "All right!" And Squidward does that several times in several episodes with SpongeBob, and we always make reference to The Honeymooners on that. So that's a dynamic that's wonderful to both experience and to hear played back, because we know that we are jazz musicians that work together well.

Well, thank you so much for talking to me today, Rodger. I really appreciate you taking the time out of your day. I'm really excited for the chance to see not only the upcoming film, but to get to watch you bring Squidward to life in live-action. I'm very excited to see it.

And please remember when you see it, I am working my butt off trying to be Squidward!

This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

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From Celeb Secrets:

WATCH: The Cast of “SpongeBob SquarePants” Reflect on 20 Years

Celeb Secrets got the scoop about SpongeBob’s “Big Birthday Blowout” straight from the voices of SpongeBob, Patrick, Squidward, Sandy, Plankton and Mr. Krabs.

Can you believe it’s been 20 years since the first episode of SpongeBob SquarePants aired on Nickelodeon?

To celebrate this milestone, the network threw SpongeBob an epic “birthday blowout” last month at the Nickelodeon Animation Studio in Los Angeles where we got to see the special episode and speak with the cast about being apart of such a staple in animated television.



The episode, which premiered on Friday (July 12), featured the celebrated voice talent behind SpongeBob, Patrick, Mr. Krabs, Sandy, Squidward and Plankton playing live-action doppelgänger versions of the animated characters they voice. In the one-hour special, Patrick and SpongeBob journeyed to the surface world, where they came across a few familiar characters during lunchtime rush at The Trusty Slab restaurant. Meanwhile, the Bikini Bottom residents set up a surprise party for SpongeBob. It seems as if fans liked the finished product, as “SpongeBob’s Birthday Blowout” racked in over 2.2 million viewers across Nickelodeon, TeenNick and Nicktoons!

“I think SpongeBob has managed to become a comfortable companion — like a comfortable friend — to people. For years, their affection for the characters and the show and the type of humor doesn’t go away. They still like it and hang on to it,” Tom Kenny, the voice of SpongeBob, tells Celeb Secrets when asked about his character’s longevity.

Up next, Nickelodeon will bring SpongeBob SquarePants’ Bikini Bottom to life at Comic-Con International: San Diego on July 18-21, 2019. The network also announced a pick up for a 13th season of the hit animated series (13 episodes) this week, which will begin production soon.

Watch our full interview with the cast of SpongeBob SquarePants below and let us know what you thought about the Birthday Special by either leaving a reaction at the bottom of the post or by sending us a tweet at @celebsecrets.



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From The Pop Insider:

SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS IS READY FOR THE BEST 20TH ANNIVERSARY EVER

Every four seconds, someone in the world is talking about SpongeBob SquarePants on social media. Let that sink in.

The iconic, eternally optimistic sponge has also inspired multiple fashion designs for international runways, starred in a Tony Award-winning Broadway musical, was the first square-shaped balloon in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City, and even has a species of tulips named after him in Holland — and that is just the beginning of SpongeBob’s legacy.

SpongeBob SquarePants is celebrating his 20th anniversary this year. He may live in a pineapple under the sea, but the Bikini Bottom resident is a worldwide pop culture icon. Fans in more than 208 countries watch SpongeBob SquarePants. The show is translated into more than 55 languages and is the most widely distributed property in Viacom Media Networks’ — Nickelodeon’s parent company — history. The series received countless awards throughout its history, such as multiple Emmy Awards, Annie Awards, Kids’ Choice Awards, and the British Academy of Film of Television Arts Awards, just to name a few.

THE BEST YEAR EVER
The SpongeBob SquarePants animated series debuted on July 17, 1999, and chronicles SpongeBob’s nautical adventures alongside his undersea friends. He lives in a two-story pineapple with his pet Gary and spends his days working at the local restaurant, The Krusty Krab, or jellyfishing with his best friend, Patrick. More often than not, SpongeBob approaches life in an unconventional way.

“I think it’s that inherent optimism and eternal positivity,” says Charlotte Castillo, senior vice president of global franchise planning at Viacom. “No matter what, everybody smiles when they hear how he embraces the world and his approach to the world, and I think at different moments in his 20-year history, people have needed that, and now we need it more than ever globally, and that eternal positivity continues to shine bright and that never gets old.”

Nickelodeon kicked off the anniversary with the “Best Year Ever,” a tribute that included an original one-hour special, “SpongeBob’s Birthday Blowout,” which premiered on July 12. The episode was a mix of live-action and animation, featuring the voice cast playing human versions of their characters. It was the first time the voice talent behind SpongeBob, Patrick, Mr. Krabs, Sandy, Squidward, and Plankton played live-action doppelganger versions of the animated characters they voice.

“We’ve done [live-action] before in theatrical. Paramount did it in the first two movies. The first movie with David Hasselhoff — who could forget that great moment — and then the last movie when SpongeBob and his friends came up on the beach at Santa Monica and were like superheroes. So, we had experience with that before on a theatrical level, and it’s worked really well and fans are clamoring for more, and we thought on his 20th, this special one-hour episode would be a great moment to do that again,” Castillo says.

In the episode, it’s SpongeBob’s birthday, and Patrick and SpongeBob journey to the surface world, where they come across familiar characters during the lunchtime rush at the Trusty Slab restaurant. Meanwhile, the other Bikini Bottom residents set up a surprise party for SpongeBob.

NEW SPONGEBOB CONTENT IS THE CONTENT FOR YOU AND ME!
The one-hour special was the beginning of a new season airing throughout the celebratory year. Fans can look forward to this season’s other episodes because they’ll feature a lot of moments that they’ve been waiting for, according to Castillo.

More than 200 SpongeBob SquarePants episodes have aired to date, with more on the way this year. Don’t let that number fool you: Despite the extensive catalog, the writers for the series keep coming up with fresh, new content. This summer’s new episodes will put the characters in situations they’ve never been in before, including SpongeBob closing the gap in his teeth, resulting in a personality change; SpongeBob finally becoming boss for the day at the Krusty Krab; and Plankton and Karen having a baby together (somehow).

“They have a great lot of fun within the writer’s room. They think that they’re going to dry up but they keep coming back. There are so many great stories, and fans sometimes send ideas. Sometimes questions fans ask on Twitter when they’re engaging spark other ideas, so they feel like there’s so much more to the world of SpongeBob,” Castillo says.

Nickelodeon is also developing spin-off projects for SpongeBob characters for the first time. While the projects are under more secrecy than the Krabby Patty Secret Formula, plans are in place to expand the SpongeBob universe into formats such as new series, specials, and feature-length movies, all with a focus on the core characters.

The anniversary will culminate with the May 22, 2020, release of the new theatrical movie It’s a Wonderful Sponge, from Paramount Pictures, Paramount Players, and Nickelodeon Movies.

“D” IS FOR DIGITAL INITIATIVES
Nickelodeon recently debuted an official global SpongeBob SquarePants YouTube channel, featuring the most iconic SpongeBob moments, music from the show, and more. SpongeBob is the first Nickelodeon property to be worthy enough of its own vertical channel; before, all of his content would sit on the multi-property Nickelodeon channel.

New, short-form content will also debut on the channel, such as “Bikini Bottom Mysteries,” which explores the secrets, scandals, and unsolved mysteries of the animated series. There will also be themed content added weekly, including Tuesday Tunes, Throwback Thursdays, and SpongeBob Saturdays.

Ever wonder what it’s like to be a fry cook at the hottest restaurant in town? A new mobile game will launch next spring, giving fans the opportunity to share in SpongeBob’s experience of being a fry cook at the Krusty Krab in Bikini Bottom.

UP FOR MEME-INGFUL DISCUSSION
SpongeBob has garnered $13 billion in lifetime retail sales of consumer products, with no signs of slowing down. This year, there’s more new product on the way, and Nickelodeon is commemorating the series with Alpha Group for a new line of toys, collectibles, plush, and novelties. The star of the line is Masterpiece Meme, which embraces meme culture and reimagines fan-favorite memes into vinyl figures.

“Memes have become such an integral part of how many of us communicate,” says Amritz Lay, senior marketing manager at Alpha Group. “Making them into collectible vinyl figures is actually easier than you might think. With so many great SpongeBob SquarePants memes in existence, the fans around the world have essentially helped us to choose the very best of the best to bring to life as real vinyl figures.”

Viral memes, such as Mocking SpongeBob, Imaginaaation SpongeBob, Surprised Patrick, and Handsome Squidward, are all available for purchase in figure form. There are more memes in development that fans will love — simply because they’re already using them daily on social media, according to Lay.

“It was just so telling of how … SpongeBob has almost become synonymous with [meme culture]. The day that the Brexit vote was announced, and we found out the results, [what] J.K. Rowling … used to announce and put out there publicly for all her millions of fans was a meme of SpongeBob being so upset and horrified by what happened. That’s the level that he’s reached, that that’s what people turn to [to] really show their happiest and their most frightening feelings,” Castillo says.

New products also include black-and-white SpongePop CulturePants with designs inspired by the golden age of animation. Slimeez figures will feature Nickelodeon slime, which seems like a natural fit, and will be a first for the SpongeBob brand. In addition to collectible vinyl figures in various scales and novelties, such as wearable SpongeHeads, throwable SpongeBalls, and squishy Squeazies will be available. In the fall, Alpha Group will also debut the Giggle Blaster, which comes with a can of aerosol string that can be sprayed more than 15 feet, a working periscope, and sounds and phrases from the voice of SpongeBob himself: Tom Kenny.

“For those millennials who grew up with SpongeBob, there’s a sense of nostalgia. We find that they adore our new scales of collectible vinyl. For those who have become parents, it’s a timeless show with humor that resonates for the entire family. They appreciate the silly humor of our toys. Then there are the kids who identify with SpongeBob, Patrick, and the others in their own unique ways,” Lay says.

IS ART AND FASHION AN INSTRUMENT?
SpongeBob is no stranger to high fashion or fashion collections. For the past few years, the sponge has been part of multiple partnerships in the fashion industry, including being featured by designer Jeremy Scott on the Moschino runway at Milan Fashion week in 2014, a capsule collection with Pharrell Williams, a partnership with (RED) to raise awareness for the fight against AIDS, an exclusive collection with Vans, a colorful collaboration with Lisa Frank at Hot Topic, and more. For the 20th anniversary, Nickelodeon collaborated with lifestyle brand Cynthia Rowley, which sent a fun SpongeBob SquarePants wetsuit down its New York Fashion Week runway in February.

Nickelodeon also partnered with international, mixed-media artist Romero Britto, who reimagined SpongeBob in his vibrant, bold, and colorful style through a mixed-media art installation that will be exhibited at pop-up experiences across the U.S. He also developed a limited-edition piece of art for Nickelodeon to work with on a charitable basis.

“We have had so many incredible conversations with different designers, brands, retail, and IP, and everybody wants to get on board. What’s great about it is that people are actual fans. Most of the collaborations and partnerships are super organic in that folks say, ‘I remember when,’ ‘my child watched that show,’ or ‘I was a big fan of the show; I’d love to do something with SpongeBob,’ which to me is what results in the best product and the best design when there’s real, organic love for the property,” Castillo says.

There are more deals and collaborations with artists worldwide, including those in Hong Kong, Canada, and Brazil. These artists are inspired by SpongeBob, but they each bring their own take to the character for diverse interpretations. At the end of the day, though fans will get to see SpongeBob in so many ways, it still reads clearly and truly as SpongeBob.

“We’re doing product that is high end with designers and limited editions, but we’re also doing a celebration cake with a big food brand — and it works because that’s the beauty of SpongeBob. You can see designs inspired by him walking down the runway in Milan, but you can also see him walking down an aisle in Walmart, and it fits. It doesn’t feel jarring. As long as the interpretation is developed in the right way with the right audience in mind, it works,” Castillo says.

FIRMLY GRASP THE DEMOGRAPHIC
SpongeBob is one of the few characters that anyone could recognize anywhere. While there were some slight tweaks throughout the years to his overall modeling to keep up with technology and keep all of the animation sharp, SpongeBob’s overall look remains the same. People can spot his square pants, red tie, gap teeth, and iconic laugh anywhere. The ever-optimistic sponge appeals to adults and parents who grew up watching the show, as well as to a new, younger audience.

With such a broad fan base, there’s a particular level of strategy in play to make sure that activations reach all fans at every level. A 20th anniversary doesn’t really mean anything to a kid, and most kids don’t even know what “anniversary” means, according to Castillo. So for the hour-long episode, the theme is a birthday. For kids, the message is that it’s a party, a celebration, SpongeBob’s best year, and the ultimate party and birthday ever. But for superfans, press, the industry, and designers, talking about the anniversary is relevant.

“We had lots of debate about whether that’s confusing, but we felt like it’s not confusing because these are different audiences and we want to make sure that we’re really connecting to what the different audience really connects to and needs. Those live side by side and are parallel, and they are working together,” Castillo says.

Did you know that SpongeBob was originally named SpongeBoy in creator Stephen Hillenburg’s original idea for the character? [...]

IS THIS THE KRUSTY KRAB? NO, THIS IS MORE PLANS FOR THE YEAR
The strategy of connecting to a wide fan base is crucial for events, such as pop-ups. There will be multiple layers to them to ensure that the whole family will get the most out of the experience. While pop-ups are going to have a high-level gallery space and showcase artwork, a family can come, and their child can also enjoy toys from the past 20 years, a scavenger hunt, or an obstacle course with the characters, for example.

Nickelodeon will also bring SpongeBob to other activations, such as a kit in a box to send to its partners around the world, and host celebrations at malls and retail worldwide. “The one thing that’s a wonderful thing to be able to say is that we’re never going to stop making SpongeBob. It’s one of our tentpole, pillar properties, which by the way, continues to perform. It’s been the top-five animated show for 19 consecutive years,” Castillo says.

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From Den of Geek:

SpongeBob SquarePants: Celebrating 20 Years with the Classic's Cast and Crew

After two decades, SpongeBob SquarePants is as big and beloved as ever. We talk to the people behind the Sponge.

When Game of Thrones ended earlier this year, pop culture pundits not only mourned the end of a monumental hit, but also the perceived death of the monoculture – omnipresent pieces of pop culture that feel like most of the population is engaging with it. And while it’s true that creating brand-new worldwide blockbusters in the age of streaming, social video, and Peak TV seems increasingly unlikely, the death knell for monocultural television hasn’t quite rung. Need proof? Ask anyone between the ages of six and 26 about SpongeBob SquarePants, then stand back and listen to the barrage of quotes, favorite gags, and beloved episodes. Then marvel at the fact that after two decades on television, SpongeBob is still cruising, full steam ahead.

Celebrating its 20thanniversary this year, SpongeBob SquarePants is a comedic touchstone for a generation, spawning 244 episodes and counting, two feature-length films (with a third on the way), a Tony-winning Broadway show, global merchandise sales north of $13 billion, an upcoming spinoff series, and enough memes to power its own corner of the internet. Naïve, sweet, and optimistic, yet deeply bizarre and character-driven, SpongeBob SquarePants appeals to innocent children, mischievous teens, nostalgic 20-somethings, and parents enjoying time with their kids. Nickelodeon has released over 100 programs since SpongeBob’s first episode on May 1, 1999, and while most of those series have come and gone, the absorbent, yellow, porous pop culture icon perseveres.

“It just has gotten into people's lives. Everybody's got a story about some fun SpongeBob moment they’ve had, or some episode that they love, or some SpongeBob joke that they've been doing with their best friend every day for years,” Tom Kenny, the voice of SpongeBob, says while reflecting on his gig for the past 20 years. “It's pretty great. We're definitely aware of the unusualness of it, and that it's just an incredible opportunity.”

The longevity of the series isn’t lost on the show’s voice actors. In the age of the gig economy and the increased scarcity of long-term jobs, the cast of SpongeBob knows that they’re in rare waters. “When I was in acting school studying theater, we didn't have a chapter on how to handle the 20th year of a character,” says Bill Fagerbakke, the voice of SpongeBob’s best friend and partner in nautical nonsense, Patrick Star. “That phenomenon is not lost on me.”

For Rodger Bumpass, who voices SpongeBob’s pretentious and cynical neighbor Squidward Tentacles, the line between where he ends and where the character of Squidward begins has started to blur. “It becomes a second skin. I used to say that he was my alter ego. As the years have gone on, I have become more Squidward, so I shoo people off my front lawn a lot more than I used to,” Bumpass says with a laugh. “It really is a very interesting thing and quite unique. With the possible exception of The Simpsons, we're pretty much up there, as far as longevity for animation, and it's a very honored position to occupy.”

SpongeBob has ebbed and flowed through the life of writer and story editor Doug Lawrence, who professionally goes by the name Mr. Lawrence, but it’s always remained a constant. Lawrence voices misunderstood villain Plankton and a plethora of other supporting characters, and while he’s always been an integral voice on the series, he’s left the show as a writer and come back - a rarity in the industry.



“Usually, you don't get the opportunity to keep going back to a show that's still there,” he says. “That rarely happens. After a while you start to count on it. You start to worry that you're counting on it too much to be there. We sort of feel an ownership or a responsibility to make sure that the shows are still quality and really funny and that they have a surprise in them or two, so it doesn't get stale. It's a hard thing to make a show keep having sparks flying out of it and I think we're still able to achieve that.”

There’s a lot you can credit SpongeBob’s success to: its use of character archetypes grounded in classic forms like commedia dell'arteand the works of Shakespeare, its penchant for broader slapstick and physical comedy that harkens back to duos like Laurel and Hardy, and its clever peppering of highbrow references, surrealist flights of fancy, and continued experimentation. However, ask the cast and crew of the series, and they’ll agree that it all comes back to creator Stephen Hillenburg, who tragically passed away at the age of 57 in November 2018 following a lengthy battle with ALS.

further reading - SpongeBob Spinoffs: Which Characters Can Carry Their Own Show?

“I never really met anybody like him, and I'm sure I never will,” Kenny says. “He was super smart and intensely interested in a lot of different things. Whether it was surfing, oceanography, earth science, animation, or comedy. He was just this amazing stew of stuff that he liked. SpongeBob, I think, was this lightning in a bottle, where he just synthesized a bunch of his interests into one bit.”

A former marine biology teacher, Hillenburg created SpongeBob back in 1989 as a character in a comic titled The Intertidal Zone, intended to teach children about the diversity of the intertidal pools. Hillenburg eventually moved into television and worked on Nickelodeon’s Rocko’s Modern Life. When that series ended, Hillenburg and several co-workers on Rocko’s, including Lawrence, got the opportunity to pitch a new series to Nick’s top brass. “We were all trying to get pilots going around the same time,” Lawrence remembers. “This is the only one out of all of us that actually got made.”

The cast fondly recalls Hillenburg as a creator focused on character, with a strong sense of what the show was and wasn’t. They credit him with having a knack for hiring the right people, for imbuing SpongeBob with his own sense of optimism and hope, and deeply caring about not only the comedy, but the integrity of the show. The cast describes the upcoming third SpongeBob film, The SpongeBob Movie: It’s a Wonderful Sponge, as a loving, feature-length tribute to Hillenburg.

The sentiment of respect and admiration shown to Hillenburg spreads throughout the whole cast. Since episode one, the voice actors have recorded as an ensemble, and their deep knowledge of not only their own characters, but of the others, has made them operate like a tight, improvisational jazz group, still capable of being blown away when a member of the band grabs the spotlight for a virtuosic solo.

Speaking about his colleagues, Fagerbakke says, “[Tom Kenny is] just one in a million and every session we have, I thank my lucky stars that he was cast as SpongeBob. Rodger Bumpass is so hilarious, Clancy Brown [Mr. Krabs], so funny, Mary Jo Catlett [Mrs. Puff], and Carolyn Lawrence [Sandy Cheeks], they're so wonderful at what they do, they bring so much humor, and Lori Alan [Pearl Krabs] and everyone. Doug Lawrence, wow, I mean, look at that vibrant character in Plankton and what that means to the show.”

Credit the vision, the craft, and the care, but at the end of the day, the goofy goober at the center of this landmark animated series is the ever-endearing hook. SpongeBob is both who we all are – capable of being silly, neurotic, over-confident, and a little annoying at times – and who we aspire to be: kind-hearted, selfless, happy-go-lucky, and innocent. Broadcast in over 50 languages, SpongeBob is a rare character that cannot be lost in translation or the evolution of pop culture. Why? Because at the end of the day, he still makes us smile.

“It's neat to know that all these different people with different cultures and different experiences all over the globe, they find something in SpongeBob and his world that's identifiable to them,” says Kenny. “All these different corners of the globe, there's something there that people glom onto, regardless of their hugely heterogeneous life experience and ways of life. I guess that's a testament to Steve Hillenburg, but in a bigger sense, a testament to comedy and silliness and laughter.”

###

From Animation Magazine:

In Praise of That Sweet, Hilarious Sponge

It’s hard to believe that everyone’s favorite absorbent sponge is celebrating the 20th anniversary of his arrival on Nickelodeon this month. Since SpongeBob SquarePants began his laughter-filled life in a pineapple under the sea, the animation world has gone through a lot of changes, but our collective fondness for this amazing, optimistic creation and all of his weird and wonderful friends remains untouched.


Stephen Hillenburg

“I wanted to do a show about a character that was an innocent, and so I focused on a sea sponge, because it’s a funny animal, a strange one, I thought he was a funny, nerdy, squeaky-clean square,” said SpongeBob’s creator, the late Stephen Hillenburg, in a 2001 interview. “It finally dawned on me that if I was going to do my own show, all those things I lectured about and obsessed about would make for an interesting world. I think we all thought the show would be good, but I didn’t ever assume it would catch on in a mass audience sort of way, that’s unexpected, and we’re flattered and relieved… Our characters act silly, even totally ridiculous at times, and most of our jokes don’t come out of pop cultural references, he added. It seems like we’re aiming at a child audience, but everyone can laugh at the basic human traits that are funny. It’s playful, the humor is playful, the world is playful. You can kind of let go.”

Of course, we are still grieving the loss of the amazing Hillenburg, who passed away last November after fighting ALS, but it’s a comfort to know the character will continue to live on in pop culture in many forms, after having launched many specials, movies, a Broadway musical, and an enviable global toy and merchandising emprise. Paramount is planning a new movie for 2020 which explores his beginnings, and a CG-animated prequel is also in the works at Nickelodeon. On the occasion of the porous one’s 20th birthday, Animag caught up with some of the brilliant men and women who are responsible for the show’s phenomenal worldwide success:


SpongeBob star Tom Kenny honored Stephen Hillenburg before death

“If there’s one thing I’ve learned over the last 20 years, it’s that SpongeBob SquarePants means a lot to a lot of people. As the cast and crew of the show, we are fully aware of what a rare and special situation that is, and we are grateful every day! Steve Hillenburg gave me the gift of a lifetime when he asked me to voice his porous alter ego, SpongeBob SquarePants. He literally changed my life! He changed ALL of our lives!”
– Tom Kenny (voice of SpongeBob SquarePants)


Carolyn Lawrence

“This show has been such an incredible once in a lifetime opportunity. It is so surreal to be celebrating this milestone. Being able to work alongside the cast and crew for 20 years now to continue to bring these characters and world to life is enormously gratifying.”
– Carolyn Lawrence (voice of Sandy Cheeks)


Mr. Lawrence

“Having the incredible opportunity to work on SpongeBob SquarePants for 20 years isn’t something you plan on; it’s not something you think is going to happen. It’s an incredibly unique and rewarding situation to have a thing that you can go back to, almost like it’s nostalgic but it’s happening now.”
– Mr. Lawrence (voice of Plankton and writer)


Bill Fagerbakke

“I am tickled beyond measure at the duration of this show. It is amazing. I am in a ridiculously transient career and to have a fantastic job that you love as much as I love this, go this long, is incredible.”
– Bill Fagerbakke (voice of Patrick)


Rodger Bumpass

“I am deeply thankful to be a part of something that became an American icon, a show that people constantly thank us for accompanying them through their childhoods. The world that Steve Hillenburg created continues to draw fans in because of its humor, characters and relatability.”
— Rodger Bumpass (voice of Squidward)


Vincent Waller

“It’s been an incredibly rewarding journey over these last 20 years to have the opportunity to be a part of a show as uniquely special as SpongeBob SquarePants. Steve Hillenburg’s creation has left a lasting footprint on the world, and it is an honor to continue to tell authentic and entertaining stories with the rich characters of Bikini Bottom.”
— Vincent Waller (co-executive producer)

Marc Ceccarelli

“Thanks to Steve Hillenburg, SpongeBob SquarePants provides a huge palate to work with, and an incredible cast and crew behind the series. Since the debut, we have continued to tell stories from an honest place and it’s been the highlight of my career to be a part of it.”
— Marc Ceccarelli (co-executive producer)

“Working as a composer and editor on SpongeBob since 1999 has been a dream come true. Meeting Steve Hillenburg changed my life forever. I feel incredibly privileged to have the opportunity to work with those who I consider to be some of the best people in business and to be able to touch so many people around the world and make them laugh a little, that is what makes SpongeBob the best show ever.”
— Nicolas Carr (composer)

###

From Cartoon Brew:

How Cartoons Met Their Own Voice Actors In ‘Spongebob’s Big Birthday Blowout’


Spongebob Squarepants is at a turning point. This year, the franchise celebrated its 20th anniversary, which was marked with, among other things, a one-hour tv special, Spongebob’s Big Birthday Blowout. Meanwhile, the series was renewed for a 13th season, and audiences were shown the trailer for The Spongebob Movie: Sponge on the Run — the character’s third theatrical outing, and the first to be predominantly cgi.

For the jaunty sponge and his aquatic friends, the future is secure. Yet it also contains unknowns, for this was the first year of the franchise since the death of its creator Stephen Hillenburg in November 2018. Although Spongebob’s Big Birthday Blowout was conceived before he died, it was subsequently recast as a tribute to him. The live-action director Jonas Morganstein, who studied at Calarts alongside Hillenburg, tells Cartoon Brew below about his efforts to honor the creator’s artistic spirit.

The special sees Spongebob (voiced by Tom Kenny) take a birthday tour of the live-action “surface world” with his best friend Patrick Star (Bill Fagerbakke). There, they encounter human versions of themselves, played by the voice cast (which, remarkably, has remained broadly unchanged throughout the show’s history). This surreal encounter — a first for the show — plays out in The Trusty Slab, the counterpart to the underwater burger joint frequented by the cartoon characters. Watch part of it below.



The special was well received when it aired on Nickelodeon in July, and has picked up an Annie nomination for best special production. Cartoon Brew caught up with Morganstein to discuss the joys and challenges of staging the hybrid scene in The Trusty Slab. He is joined by Hema Mulchandani, co-owner of the studio Jonas & Co., who served as executive producer on the special.

How did you direct the cast in this scene, particularly in terms of their physical performances?

Jonas Morganstein: This was an unprecedented situation: a group of actors who have been voicing characters for 20 years depicting a live-action “alternate reality” version of their characters for the first time ever.

When we’ve worked with Tom Kenny and Mr. Lawrence (Plankton) in the voiceover booth, you see them act out the lines physically: arms in air, animated faces. They bring the dialogue to life with their movements. Those pitch-perfect performances were already inside them.

We created the right set of parameters to nurture that performance. We built the perfect setting, founding a greasy spoon with the right layout of pass through window and grill and transforming it into The Trusty Slab. Next, we outfitted the cast in wardrobe that represented a real-world interpretation of each character. Then we rehearsed a few times with the entire cast, working out the blocking.


On the set of “SpongeBob’s Big Birthday Blowout.” Photo: Robert Voets / Nickelodeon. © 2019 Viacom, International, Inc. All Rights Reserved

The live-action segments are full of cartoonish touches, like Kenny’s magnified eyes and multiple arms. How did you decide how far to push the cartooniness?

Morganstein: In the show, Spongebob is generally the only character that physically transforms. He’s the Tex Avery character whose emotional responses and reactions to physical situations are more powerful than can be contained within the simple sponge rectangle. My favorite nook of the Nickelodeon animation offices is the storyboarding team’s door, where the artists tape up their favorite Spongebob body transformations.

We needed the physical manifestation of Spongebob to express that same level of boundless personality that defies physical reality. So [his human counterpart] Jimbob dances in high speed, twirls the spatula like a propeller, and sprouts multiple arms like a Hindu god. These effects required over-the-top performances from Tom Kenny.

Were the live-action segments precisely storyboarded and scripted, or was there room for improvisation on set?

Hema Mulchandani: The entire episode was precisely boarded and scripted by the Nickelodeon Animation team. They came to us with all the story beats in place — especially for how the animated characters are integrated into each scene. Shots without character integration were open to improvisation.

Morganstein: There was a ton of improv, because it helped the actors lose themselves in their characters. Much of the horseplay between Tom and Clancy [Brown] in the kitchen was off book, especially as Tom teases Clancy — the ultimate intimidating straight guy next to Tom’s over-the-top performance. Bill and Roger [Bumpass] (as Patrick and Squidward) improvised vaudevillian banter, some of which made the final cut. And Mr. Lawrence used his writing skills as he explored variations in his robbery monologue.


What were the main challenges in compositing and editing this sequence?

Mulchandani: To hit the fast-paced schedule, a lot of the character animation had gotten started before the shoot. We had to be very precise with the live-action plates so it would seamlessly composite in post. For example, Spongebob jumping out of the tank to touch the spatula is a combination of multiple live-action plates, animated characters, cartoon water effects, cg elements, and smoke effects. The whole project needed to bounce back and forth between Nickelodeon Animation and us, because we worked on the scene in tandem. Multiply that times 407 shots.

The cartoon cast are replaced with figurines in some shots — I found this striking. Why this choice?

Mulchandani: Generally, the wide shots use figurines and the closeups use cartoon animations. It was both a time-saving device and a fun way to keep that indie DIY surreal vibe.

Did any hybrid films or series particularly inspire you in staging this scene?

Mulchandani: Spongebob showrunners Marc Ceccarelli and Vincent Waller encouraged us to watch the early 1980s avant-garde film Forbidden Zone as inspiration for the whole special. This cult classic [directed by Richard Elfman] is filled with mixed live action and animation, in-camera special effects, and fun low-budget solutions to tell an unconventional story. Marc and Vince would always encourage and challenge us to make sure we take creative risks and find mixed-media solutions.

Morganstein: That recommendation was liberating for us. You can see the film’s influence in the diner scene with its in-camera effects, speed ramps, and unabashed use of figurines. You can also see it in the office scene, especially the conference room with the monkey outfits and a dog puppet.

Plus this sensibility affected how we brought the segments with Patchy [the Pirate, played by Kenny] to life. For instance, when Patchy sails down the sidewalk like a boat. This was created in camera through human stop-motion pixilation inspired by Norman McLaren’s Neighbours, a film I loved back when I was at Calarts with Steve Hillenburg. I felt a personal responsibility to contribute artistry that reflects Steve’s artistic spirit, so these avant-garde film techniques seemed right on target.

If you look back at the Spongebob episodes for 20 years, the show has always embraced its live-action segments with a similar DIY sensibility that’s in tune with the animation’s comedic point of view. It’s all part of the joke.

(This interview was conducted by email, and has been lightly edited for brevity.)

###

More Nick:Nickelodeon Marks 20 Years of "SpongeBob SquarePants" with the "Best Year Ever"!

Originally published: Thursday, June 27, 2019.
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Watch Ethan Slater Perform an Acoustic Cover of ’Simple Sponge’ from 'The SpongeBob Musical'

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The Tony nominee puts his own twist on the song that “means the world” to him!


Tony nominee Ethan Slater has shared an acoustic cover of "(Just A) Simple Sponge" from The SpongeBob Musical on his Instagram in celebration of the holidays. The Tony nominee, who played the affable titular sponge on Broadway—and recently in the Nickelodeon broadcast—lovingly re-named the song "(Not A) Simple Sponge."

Watch Slater perform the cover, and read his holiday message below!


The SpongeBob Musical: Live On Stage! made its debut on Nickelodeon USA on Saturday, Dec. 7, 2019, where it was a ratings hit. The SpongeBob Musical: Live on Stage! Sing-A-Long premieres Sat., January 4, 2020 at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nick USA.

The SpongeBob Musicalis now on tour across North America.

More Nick:'The SpongeBob Musical' National Tour Announces Cast & Dates!

Original source: Playbill.
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'It’s Pony!'🐴 FULL Episode Series Premiere | Nickelodeon

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'It’s Pony!'🐴 FULL Episode Series Premiere | Nick


Meet Annie and her unpredictable and outrageous talking pony named Pony! Check out the full first episode of It’s Pony!, the BRAND NEW animated series from Nickelodeon! And don’t forget to watch the full series starting January 18, 2020 at 11:30 a.m. (ET/PT)!

Share this video!: http://po.st/ItsPonyPremiere

Life is more exciting, fun, and unpredictable with a pony, as seen in Nickelodeon’s new original animated series It’s Pony, premiering Saturday, Jan. 18. The 20-episode series follows the comedic adventures of Annie and her best friend, who just so happens to be an enthusiastic, unpredictable, and carefree pony. Following its premiere, It’s Pony will continue to air Saturdays on Nickelodeon and will air internationally in April 2020.

The series stars Jessica DiCicco (Adventure Time) as Annie, an optimistic and determined farm girl living in the city with her family and best friend Pony; Josh Zuckerman (Strange Angel) as Pony, who is naïve and impulsive, but loves Annie more than anything; Abe Benrubi (E.R.) as Dad, who treats Pony as a nuisance, but recognizes the special bond he shares with Annie; and India de Beaufort (All Hail King Julien) as Mom, who loves Annie and Pony’s relationship and always has a new project in the works.

Additional cast members bringing characters to life include: Kal Penn (Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle) as Annie’s friend Fred; Bobby Moynihan (Saturday Night Live) as Annie’s friend Brian; Rosario Dawson (Rent) as Annie’s school principal Ms. Ramiro; Mark Feuerstein (Royal Pains) as the landlord Mr. Pancks; Megan Hilty (Smash) as the too-obsessed-with-Pony friend Beatrice.




Throughout the season, the series will explore the everyday life and hijinks of two best friends whose optimism and enthusiasm turn any situation from ordinary to extraordinary. Whether making an epic quest down the street to mail a letter, heroically saving the local playground with a bake sale, or simply getting a haircut, Pony and Annie always stick together because life is better as a pair.

Created by Ant Blades, It’s Pony is inspired by a short from Nickelodeon’s 2015 International Animated Shorts Program. A pre-released episode will be available starting Wednesday, Dec. 25 on the Nick App, Nick On Demand, and YouTube.

More Nick:2020 on Nickelodeon USA | New Shows, Specials, Events, Movies, Episodes, and More!

Originally published: Thursday, December 26, 2019 ar 16:40 GMT.

H/T: Special thanks to @needer300 for the link!
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Henry Danger: The Final Season Is Here | Trailer | Nickelodeon

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After countless criminals, a slew of secrets, and a whole bunch of bubbles, the final season of Henry Danger is here, and it's going to BLOW. YOUR. MIND. The final season of Henry Danger is here! Starts Saturday, January 11, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT), only on Nickelodeon USA!


Make sure to subscribe to the brand-new Henry Danger YouTube channel! Up the (You)Tube!: https://at.nick.com/HenryDangerYouTube

More Nick:'Henry Danger' Wraps Production
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January 2020 on Nickelodeon Russia: New Year's Party | All That | JoJo's Follow Your D.R.E.A.M. | The Loud House | RBUK + More

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--- This January (январе), Nickelodeon Russia (Россия) will be airing:


Смотри в январе | Nickelodeon Россия
Узнай что ждёт тебя в январе 2020 на Nickelodeon!

-- Nickelodeon's brand-new fresh out the box All That (Всякая всячина) revival weekends at 14:55 MCK starting Saturday 25th January 2020! Each episode will encore the same evening at 21:40 MCK! Click here for more information about All New All That!

-- JoJo Siwa's brand new Nickelodeon Special JoJo's Follow Your D.R.E.A.M. (Следуй за мечтой) on Wednesday 1st January 2020 at 10:50 MCK! Following its debut, Nick Россия will encore Следуй за мечтой the same evening at 21:40 MCK, as well as on Friday 3rd January 2020 at 12:05 MCK and 20:55 MCK and on Sunday 5th January 2020 at 09:40 MCK and 19:20 MCK.

-- Brand new episodes of The Loud House (Моего шумного дома) Fridays at 07:15 MCK from Friday 17th January 2020! Plus, fans can catch back-to-back episodes of Моего шумного дома Mondays - Thursdays at 07:15 MCK!

-- Brand new episodes of Rainbow Butterfly Unicorn Kitty (RBUK; Радужно-бабочково-единорожная кошка) weekends at 11:15 MCK from Saturday 18th January 2020!

-- Nickelodeon Россия will be counting down to the new year with a aweslime New Year's Party starting on New Year's Eve (Tuesday 31st December 2019) at 22:05 MCK and encored on Wednesday 1st January 2020 from 09:40 MCK!

-- Nickelodeon Россия will also be airing fan-favourite holiday-themed Nickelodeon Original Movies such as A Fairly Odd Christmas (Очень странное Рождество), Albert (Альберт) and Tiny Christmas (Крохотное Рождество), as well as episodes of hit Nick series such as Henry Danger (Опасный Генри), The Thundermans (Грозная семейка), SpongeBob SquarePants (Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны) and more on Tuesday 31st December 2019 and Wednesday 1st January 2020, beginning 14:10 MCK both days!

-- Movie Mania! Fans can tune into to catch their favourite Nickelodeon Original Movies, including Rufus (Руфус), Splitting Adam (Расщепление Адама) and Lucky! (Везунчик) everyday at 20:10 between Thursday 2nd and Sunday 12th January 2020 (encore at 09:40 MCK)!

-- On the first weekend of the fresh new decade, Nick will be conducting a little experiment: on Saturday 4th January 2020, Nick will air nothing but cartoons for a full 24 hours, with Sunday 5th January 2020 being dedicated to 24 hours of live action series! Nick wants to know what YOU think! Let me know on their official VKontakte page:

-- Fans of Henry Danger (Опасный Генри) can catch the show's animated spin-off The Adventures of Kid Danger (Приключения Опасного Малого) weekdays at 13:45 MCK between Monday 6th and Friday 10th January 2020!

-- Bring it around town! Fans can tune into five back-to-back episodes of SpongeBob SquarePants (Губка Боб Квадратные Штаны) weekdays at 10:50 MCK between Monday 6th and Friday 10th January 2020!

-- Fans can catch the very best new episodes of 2019 across Saturday 11th and Sunday 12th January 2020 from 12:05 MCK to 20:10 MCK!

-- And finally, fans can catch iCarly (АйКарли) and Victorious (Виктории-победительницы) weekdays at 16:05 MCK from Monday 6th January 2020, plus two whole weeks of Sam & Cat (Сэм и Кэт) from Monday 13th January 2020!

From Nickelodeon Россия's VKontakte page:

Что новенького в январе

С наступающим тебя!


В новом году нас с тобой ждёт очень много новых шоу, новых крутых марафонов, конкурсов и сюрпризов. И нам так не терпится начать этим всем делиться, что рассказать об эфире января мы решили чуточку заранее :)

КАНИКУЛЫ

Любимая «Новогодняя вечеринка» пройдёт прямо в эфире Nickelodeon в канун Нового года — 31 декабря в 22:05 МСК и повторится 1 января в 9:40 МСК. А ещё мы с тобой будем смотреть новогодние фильмы — «Очень странное Рождество», «Альберт», «Крошечное Рождество», которые разбавим самыми любимыми сериями «Опасного Генри», «Грозной семейки», «Губки Боба» и других шоу. Начнётся всё это веселье в 14:10 МСК 31 декабря и 1 января.

Фильмов, кстати, на этих каникулах будет много: и «Руфус», и «Расщепление Адама», и «Везунчик»… и все-все. Со 2 по 12 января мы будем крутить их в 20:10 МСК с повтором в 9:40 МСК.

В первые выходные 2020 года мы немножечко поэкспериментируем: в субботу все 24 часа будем смотреть только мультики, а в воскресенье — только сериалы, тоже все 24 часа. А что ты любишь больше? Пиши нам в комменты.

А если ты соскучился по «Опасному малому», у нас крутые новости: с 6 по 10 января мультфильм в эфире в 13:45 МСК. Мы посмотрим все серии подряд!

И ещё с 6 января по будням в 10:50 МСК «Губка Боб» будет подсказывать тебе, чем бы заняться на каникулах! Целых 5 марафонов подряд — до 10 января.

Завершим каникулы повтором премьер: 11 и 12 января с 12:05 до 20:10 МСК смотри лучшие новые серии 2019 года!

НОВЫЕ СЕРИИ

Новый год встретим вместе с ДжоДжо Сивой и премьерой специального выпуска — закулисье тура «Следуй за мечтой». Смотреть будем 1 января в 10:50 и 21:40 МСК, 3 января в 12:05 и 20:55 МСК и 5 января в 9:40 и 19:20 МСК.

Новые серии «Моего Шумного Дома» возвращаются к нам с 17 января! Смотреть будем по пятницам в 7:15 МСК. А с понедельника по четверг в этой же время смотри марафон про семью Лаудов! «Радужно-бабочково-единорожная-кошка» тоже вернётся с новыми сериями — с 18 января по выходным в 11:15 МСК.

И ГЛАВНАЯ ПРЕМЬЕРА МЕСЯЦА: скетч-шоу «Всякая всячина»! Стартует на Nickelodeon 25 января, а показывать будем по выходным в 14:55 МСК с повтором в 21:40.

МАРАФОН

В январе нас ждёт всего один марафон, но зато какой! Ещё на каникулах — с 6 января по будням, в эфире «АйКарли» и «Виктория-победительница»! И неспроста именно эти два шоу, ведь с 13 января на целых две недели к нам возвращаются твои любимые «Сэм и Кэт»! Все три шоу смотри по будням в 16:05 МСК.

И классных тебе каникул!

###

Больше Nick:Nickelodeon Russia Announces 'Новогодняя ёлка от Nick Jr' New Years Activation!

Originally published: Monday, December 30, 2019.

Additional sources: Google Translate, DeepL Translator


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First Look at Nickelodeon's 'SpongeBob Appreciation Day: Patchy’s Beach Bash!' Special

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Splash down with a first look at Nickelodeon's SpongeBob appreciation special

Are ya ready, kids?! Nickelodeon is showing its appreciation for SpongeBob and the rest of Bikini Bottom in a brand new televised special in early January: SpongeBob Appreciation Day: Patchy’s Beach Bash! Hosted by the yellow sponge's No. 1 fan, Patchy the Pirate (Tom Kenny, the voice of SpongeBob), the event features such celebrity guests as pop sensation Meghan Trainor, NBA superstar Anthony Davis, cult movie star Jon Heder (Blades of Glory), actor Rob Riggle (21 Jump Street), and even Abraham Lincoln.


“I’ve always been a big fan of SpongeBob SquarePants, so appearing in this special, was a fun opportunity. Especially having the chance to work alongside Meghan Trainor," Davis tells SYFY WIRE.

While Nick has been tightly guarding the half-hour variety program much like how Mr. Krabs guards the top-secret Krabby Patty formula, SYFY WIRE has been able to reel in a handful of exclusive stills from the highly anticipated beach party, which is being held on Bikini Atoll, the iconic deserted island located right above Bikini Bottom.

Nick is also hosting the SpongeBob SmartyPants Challenge, "a week-long event where trivia questions will appear over SpongeBob SquarePants episodes on-air, syncing with Nickelodeon’s Screens Up! companion app," per the official description. "The challenge runs between today (Monday, December 30, 2019) and Saturday, January 4, 2020. Fans can test their water-logged knowledge with 200 SpongeBob-themed questions with each response gaining a special message from fan-favorite characters.

The popular animated series turned 20 this year and is looking forward to the release of its third feature-length film, Sponge on the Run, in late May of 2020. Sadly, the world lost creator Stephen Hillenburg in November of 2018.

"I just remember when [Stephen] had me come over," Kenny said at SDCC 2019, recalling how they talked about pitching the show to Nickelodeon, and him seeing the initial artwork. "It turned into this thing that conquered the world. Talk about the power of ideas ... About four seasons in, I was resigned to the fact that Tom Kenny was just SpongeBob’s host body."

SpongeBob Appreciation Day: Patchy’s Beach Bash! makes port on Saturday, Jan. 4, at 10 a.m. ET/PT. Encore showings will air at 12 p.m., 2 p.m., and 4 p.m. ET/PT.

Whet (pun intended) your appetite with all of the first-look images from the upcoming special in the media gallery below, courtesy of Nickelodeon and SYFY WIRE!


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