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Gravitas Ventures to Release 'The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story' on Blu-ray and VOD on Tuesday, November 17

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Gravitas Ventures, Llc will release The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story, a documentary that explores the golden years of Nickelodeon and beyond through interviews with the actors, writers and creators of iconic Nickelodeon shows, on Blu-ray on Tuesday, November 17, 2020! The title is available to pre-order now on Target.com (priced $13.29 USD) and Craft & Vinyl ($19.99 USD). The Nickelodeon documentary will also be released on on-demand services the same day.

Update (10/9) - The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story is available to pre-order on iTunes now for $12.99.



THE ORANGE YEARS: THE NICKELODEON STORY SYNOPSIS:

"For millions of children and adults, the Nickelodeon Network is synonymous with growing up. In just a few years, the channel grew from a small local channel to an international phenomenon that helped shape a generation. Led by trailblazing visionary Geraldine Laybourne and her commitment to putting kids first, a group of unconventional heroes turned an underdog channel into an $8 billion dollar juggernaut as the golden standard for children’s programming. The Orange Years chronicles the rise of Nickelodeon, with the actors, writers, and creators from all the golden age Nickelodeon shows that shaped your lives. It’s wild. It’s crazy. It changed the world"



Using their combined skills in journalism and filmmaking as well as their mutual love for classic Nickelodeon, directors Adam Sweeney (part of the team behind The Prequels Strike Back: A Fan's Journey) and Scott Barber set out to make the documentary film Nickelodeon fans deserve. The childhood friends from The Woodlands grew up watching their beloved shows together and now share a new perspective on Nickelodeon.

The Orange Years journeys behind the scenes of the “kids first” phenomenal programming to chronicle the improbable and unprecedented success of Nickelodeon, straight from the mouths of those who brought the classic shows to fans as children. Filled with interviews from the actors, writers, animators, and creators from all your favorite golden age Nick shows, the film highlights the work of visionary Geraldine Laybourne, who was largely responsible for the network’s success in the early days.


The documentary has been been a labor of love for the filmmakers, who have interviewed some of the most famous and recognizable names from the channel's history, all the way back to its unlikely origins as Pinwheel in Columbus, Ohio.

The film has an all-star Nickelodeon cast including Kenan Thompson (All That, Kenan & Kel, Good Burger, Saturday Night Live), Kel Mitchell (All That, Kenan & Kel, Good Burger, Game Shakers), Alisa Reyes (All That), Marc Summers (Double Dare), Larisa Oleynik (The Secret World of Alex Mack), Phil Moore (Nick Arcade), Kirk Fogg (Legends of the Hidden Temple), Venus DeMilo (Salute Your Shorts), Michael Bower (Salute Your Shorts), and Danny Cooksey (Salute Your Shorts), Fred Keller (Hey Dude) and Christine McGlade (You Can’t Do That on Television).

Not that The Orange Years concentrates only on Nick's live-action output. The filmmakers also talked to talents from the groundbreaking animated division, like writer Mitchell Kriegman (Rugrats, Clarissa Explains it All), and the king of cartoon voice work, Tom Kenny (Rocko's Modern Life and SpongeBob SquarePants).

More than just a history lesson or a “where are they now?” special, the documentary explores the network’s revolutionary approach to storytelling, the impact it had on a generation of youth, and aims to find out of why these shows have stayed in the hearts of so many people.

Adam F. Goldberg (The Goldbergs) serves as an executive producer on the documentary.

Gravitas Ventures recently released Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story, a documentary chronicling the rise of The Ren & Stimpy Show in North America.

The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story made its world debut during a panel at the ninth annual DOC NYC festival in November 2018, which was attended by directors Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney; and '90s Nickelodeon stars Danny Tambarelli and Michael C. Maronna from The Adventures of Pete & Pete. Lee Leshen will served as the panels moderator.

THE ORANGE YEARS: THE NICKELODEON STORY

You Can’t Do That on Television, Clarissa Explains It All, Double Dare, The Adventures of Pete & Pete, Doug, Rugrats… If you recognize any of these titles, you probably grew up watching Nickelodeon, the cable-television network devoted to kids that launched almost 40 years ago. Beginning as a small local channel, visionary leadership led to its rapid growth into a global phenomenon. The Orange Years is a nostalgic and entertaining look back at the early years of the youth-oriented network that broke all the rules to let kids enjoy being kids.

Official Site: http://www.theorangeyears.com
On Twitter: theorangeyears
On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theorangeyears/
Support on: Indiegogo

Running Time: 98
Language: English
Country: USA
Year: 2018

Credits:

Director: Scott Barber, Adam Sweeney

Producer: EP Adam F. Goldberg (The Goldbergs), EP Lee Leshen, Producer Bill Parks, Producer Scott Barber, Producer Shawn Cauthen, Producer Alisa Reyes, Producer Adam Sweeney, Producer Brian MacGillivray, Producer Lance Paul

Cinematographer: Shawn Cauthen

Editor: Bradford Thomason, Scott Barber, Shawn Cauthen

Music: Daron Beck

WRITERS: Scott Barber Adam Sweeney

CAST: Christine Taylor, Larisa Oleynik, Melissa Joan Hart, Kenan Thompson, Danny Cooksey, Drake Bell
Trailer:



Sneak Peek:


The Adventures of Pete & Pete star Danny Temberelli features in this clip, as he explains how series director Katherine Dieckmann had previously worked on the music videos “Shiny Happy People” and “Stand” for the band REM. That’s how they landed the band’s frontman Michael Stipe for a guest role, and that opened the door to have all sorts of cool guest stars.

From Rolling Stone:

Watch Trailer for New Doc on Nickelodeon’s Glory Days, ‘The Orange Years’

Film features interviews with famed alumni including Kenan Thompson, Kel Mitchell and the voice of Spongebob, Tom Kenny

A new documentary, The Orange Years, will chronicle the rise of Nickelodeon and how the networked reshaped children’s television and effectively helped raise a generation of kids. The film will be available on on-demand services on November 17th.

The new trailer for The Orange Years opens with one of the network’s most high-profile alums, Kenan Thompson, explaining the driving force behind Nickelodeon’s success: “If you want to know about it, it’s a kid-owned environment.” That’s not to say actual kids were running things, but as the trailer goes on to explore, the network didn’t try to pander to kids, but rather gave them shows that felt real and, most importantly, made them laugh.

At the end of the trailer, Geraldine Laybourne, who led Nickelodeon for many years, explained what made the network such a potent force during its mid-Nineties rise: “Mothers were going to work for the first time, divorce rates were high, kids were either coming home alone or in after school programs — they needed a place where they could just be kids. They wanted childhood, let’s give it to them.”

The Orange Years was directed by Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney. Along with Thompson, it will feature interviews with other famous Nickelodeon figures, including Kel Mitchell, Melissa Joan Hart, Christine Taylor and Tom Kenny (a.k.a. the voice of Spongebob Squarepants).

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From MovieWeb:

The Orange Years Documentary Trailer Explores Nickelodeon's Glory Days


Gravitas Ventures has released a new trailer for The Orange Years, which chronicles the glory days of Nickelodeon.

We have a new trailer for The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story, which should appeal to just about anyone who had cable and grew up in the 90s. The documentary, as the title suggests, chronicles the rise of Nickelodeon to prominence within the pop culture landscape. This initial look at the movie should serve as a huge boost of nostalgia for those who watched these shows growing up, but it also looks to provide a better understanding of how all of these shows came to be.

The trailer kicks off with a couple of the biggest stars from the network's glory days explaining what it was like behind the scenes. We then see someone getting slimed, something any fans of the Nick in the 90s will be familiar with. Described as the "anti-Disney," we are offered a window into what was going on behind the scenes that helped make the network what it became. As the voice of Spongebob Tom Kenny says, "The inmates were very much running the asylum."

Plenty of classic shows are represented in the trailer, such as Guts, Clarissa Explains It All, Double Dare, All That, The Secret World of Alex Mack, Salute Your Shorts, Rugrats and more.

The documentary is directed by Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney. Adam F. Goldberg, of The Goldbergs fame, also serves as an executive producer. Kenan Thompson (All That, Kenan & Kel), Kel Mitchell (All That, Kenan & Kel), Alisa Reyes (All That), Marc Summers (Double Dare), Larisa Oleynik (The Secret World of Alex Mack), Phil Moore (Nick Arcade), Kirk Fogg (Legends of the Hidden Temple), Venus DeMilo (Salute Your Shorts), Michael Bower (Salute Your Shorts), Danny Cooksey (Salute Your Shorts), Fred Keller (Hey Dude) and Christine McGlade (You Can't Do That on Television) are featured. Mitchell Kriegman (Rugrats) and Tom Kenny (SpongeBob SquarePants) also were interviewed for the doc.

The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story tells the tale of the Nickelodeon Network. In just a few years, the channel grew from a small local channel to an international phenomenon that helped shape an entire generation. Geraldine Laybourne led the way and through her commitment to putting kids first, a group of unconventional heroes turned a small channel into an $8 billion media behemoth that became the gold standard for children's programming. It chronicles the rise of the network with the actors, writers and creators from all the golden age Nickelodeon shows that shaped a generation.

Nickelodeon launched nationwide in 1979 but didn't truly become the version of it we all know until roughly two decades later. It is now available in nearly 90 million households in the U.S. alone. The documentary originally debuted at the Doc NYC Festival in November 2018. It isn't clear how much has changed since the movie debuted but, for whatever reason, it took some time to secure distribution. But this would seem to be a case of better late than never. The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story arrives on demand on November 17 from Gravitas Ventures. Be sure to check out the new trailer for yourself.

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New Trailer for 'The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story' Doc Film

"You can't. Do that. on TV." Gravitas has released an official trailer for the documentary titled The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story, which has been in the works for years. We first featured a teaser trailer for this back in 2017, after it was successfully funded on Indiegogo in 2016, but it has taken another three years for it to finally get a release. The Orange Years chronicles the rise of Nickelodeon, with the actors, writers, and creators from all the golden age Nickelodeon shows that shaped your lives. It's wild. It’s crazy. It changed the world. The film profiles Geraldine Laybourne, the visionary who turned the company into an $8 billion success, focusing on her "kids first" strategy. "More than just a history lesson or a 'where are they now?' special, the doc explores the network's revolutionary approach to storytelling, the impact it had on a generation of youth, and [tries] to find out of why these shows have stayed in the hearts of so many people."

Official trailer for Barber & Sweeney's doc The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story, on YouTube [above]

For millions of children and adults, the Nickelodeon Network is synonymous with growing up. In just a few years, the channel grew from a small local channel to an international phenomenon that helped shape a generation. Led by trailblazing visionary Geraldine Laybourne and her commitment to putting kids first, a group of unconventional heroes turned an underdog channel into an $8 billion dollar juggernaut as the golden standard for children's programming. The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story is co-directed by filmmakers Scott Barber & Adam Sweeney, both making their directorial debut after various industry work previously. The project was successfully funded on Indiegogo in 2016. It hasn't premiered at any festivals or elsewhere, as far as we know. Gravitas will debut The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story direct-to-VOD starting on November 17th this fall. For more info, visit the film's official website. Curious?

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From Mic:

The Nickelodeon documentary looks like nostalgic, slime-filled perfection


Get ready for a nostalgia trip. A new documentary, The Orange Years, is charting the rise of Nickelodeon in the 1990s and celebrating a network that shaped youth culture as significantly as MTV changed music in the 1980s. With its profusion of green slime and gently subversive programming, Nickelodeon in its heyday was required after-school viewing for many millennials. As actress Larisa Oleynik (The Secret World of Alex Mack) puts it in the trailer: “It didn’t feel like the version of what an adult was telling a kid to watch. It felt, like, really what kids were into.”

The Orange Years features reminiscences from tons of former (and current) Nickelodeon stars, including Kenan and Kel Thompson, Melissa Joan Hart, and the guy who voices Spongebob Squarepants (Tom Kenny). It also looks like it’ll be full of nostalgia-stoking clips of old shows like Rugrats, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and All That.

“Nickelodeon, if you want to know about it, it’s a kid-owned environment,” Kenan Thompson notes in the trailer. To that point, it seems like the documentary will celebrate Nickelodeon’s naughty side. It’s stuffed with soundbites from former network executives and showrunners, who gleefully reminisce about the “insane” stuff they “got away with” at “the anti-Disney.”

As the trailer goes on to point out, Nickelodeon’s popularity in the mid-90s stemmed from its refusal to pander to kids. The goal was to give them entertainment that felt true-to-life and made them laugh. The rise of the network also coincided with significant cultural shifts in America: “Mothers were going to work for the first time, divorce rates were high, kids were either coming home alone or in after school programs — they needed a place where they could just be kids,” Nickelodeon’s longtime chief, Geraldine Laybourne, explains in the film.

Those once-young viewers are now dealing with the trials and tribulations of adulthood. But The Orange Years seems like a welcome throwback to the halcyon days of the 90s. You better bet we’ll have Dunkaroos and Squeezit on hand when the documentary hits on-demand services on November 17.

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From ComicBook:

Nickelodeon Documentary The Orange Years Gets Official Trailer

Children of a certain generation were blessed with a life growing up when Nickelodeon was in its heyday. Live-action shows like All That, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and Salute Your Shorts; demented game shows like Double Dare, Wild & Crazy Kids, and Guts; and absurd cartoons like The Ren & Stimpy Show and Rocko's Modern Life were on frequent rotation and made exclusively for young minds, who absorbed it like a sponge. A new documentary about how this type of programming was able to make it onto the air and even thrive is on the way with Gravitas Ventures revealed the full trailer for The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story which you can find below.

Set to be released on November 17, the film is directed by Scott Barber & Adam Sweeney and features interviews with former Nickelodeon actors including Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell (All That, Kenan & Kel, Good Burger), Danny Tamberelli and Mike Maronna (The Adventures of Pete & Pete), Michael Bower (Salute Your Shorts), Phil Moore (Nick Arcade), Kirk Fogg (Legends of the Hidden Temple), Melissa Joan Hart (Clarissa Explains It All), Christine McGlade (You Can’t Do That on Television), Christine Taylor (Hey Dude), Marc Summers (Double Dare), and Tom Kenny (SpongeBob SquarePants, Rocko's Modern Life).

The official synopsis for the film reads: "For millions of children and adults, the Nickelodeon Network is synonymous with growing up. In just a few years, the channel grew from a small local channel to an international phenomenon that helped shape a generation. Led by trailblazing visionary Geraldine Laybourne and her commitment to putting kids first, a group of unconventional heroes turned an underdog channel into an $8 billion dollar juggernaut as the golden standard for children’s programming."

"The Orange Years chronicles the rise of Nickelodeon, with the actors, writers, and creators from all the golden age Nickelodeon shows that shaped your lives. It’s wild. It’s crazy. It changed the world."

In a post on their IndieGoGo campaign for the film, which has been steadily updated for years at this point, directors Scott Barber & Adam Sweeney wrote: "It's unbelievably relieving and rewarding to finally announce this release to the world, and your support means more to us than we could ever possibly express. So thank you for all you've done to encourage us and help tell this story."

Are you planning to check out The Orange Years when it's released? Sound off with your favorite classic Nickelodeon show in the comments below.

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New Documentary The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story Tunes in to the Channel That Changed TV

Shorts, Dudes, and Good Burgers

(Courtesy of The Orange Years)

What's your favorite Nickelodeon memory? Is it the raw surrealism of Rocko's Modern Life? The utter chaos of Double Dare? Wishing you could spend your summers at Camp Anawanna? Gak?

For Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney, it's that the pioneering cable channel for kids kept their friendship together at a low point in their lives. Sweeney remembers it clearly: They were school kids having a sleepover at Barber's place, and it was such fun that he called his mom to ask if they could do it again that night. "I got off the phone and had a really sad look on my face. Scott's like, 'What, it didn't work? That's OK, we can hang out next week.' I was like, yeah, I can't spend the night, but also my family's getting a divorce today. I'm moving. Immediately." Before social media, he noted, just moving 30 minutes from your old life was like moving to Siberia. "The way we stayed friends was that we would watch Nickelodeon together and call each other."

Fast-forward to 2016, and both men – still lifelong friends, even with Barber in Conroe and Sweeney in Austin – were working in the Texas film industry. Barber proposed doing a documentary together, and they both immediately went to their shared love of Nickelodeon. Sweeney said, "We really started doing the research, and that's when we found the story."

That story is contained in their new documentary, The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story, about how an educational kids' shows called Pinwheel, on an innovative interactive cable network in Ohio called QUBE, became a phenomenon that reshaped kids' television and pop culture. It focuses most especially on what Sweeney called "the Geraldine Laybourne years." Nickelodeon launched in 1979, and Laybourne joined the team as programming manager in 1980 as one of only five employees. By 1984, she was network president, and when she left in 1996 Nick was an $8 billion global TV titan.

But what really mattered with Laybourne was not revenue, and finding her impact was what convinced the pair that this was the film they wanted to make. "From the very beginning," Barber said, "we were very adamant about not just making a nostalgia piece." Instead, The Orange Years became about how Laybourne and her team threw out the rule book on kids' TV. "All you have to do is watch The Mickey Mouse Club and Salute Your Shorts, and it's night and day."

The documentary is filled with interviews, and even household names like Clarissa Explains It All star Melissa Joan Hart or behind-the-camera forces Hey Dude writers and future TV producers Lisa Melamed (Scoundrels, The 4400) and Graham Yost (Justified) signed up to talk about the channel that changed their lives. Barber said, "Everyone was excited to do this, which shows how powerful it was, not just in our lives, but in their careers as well."

Of course, the re­search process meant that Barber and Sweeney also got to watch, and hunt for, a huge amount of old shows. Sweeney said, "Scott would be messaging random people on YouTube," looking for the highest resolution source footage available. They even found a cache of those distinctive lurid orange VHS tapes on the shelves of Vulcan Video, including old episodes of The Adventures of Pete & Pete and Are You Afraid of the Dark? that had seemingly never been digitized. "That speaks to the power of physical media," said Sweeney.

In the process, they uncovered an incredible archive of forgotten moments, like the Nick News Special Edition when basketball legend Magic Johnson explained his HIV diagnosis to a group of kids, or when Saturday Night Live legend Chris Farley dropped by sketch show All That and did a scene with future SNL MVP Kenan Thompson. "That was a cool scene to put in," said Barber.

Kenan Thompson in The Orange Years (Courtesy of The Orange Years)

Sweeney described that sequence as both a joy to find and a memorable part of filming. "If you want to talk about someone who basked in the messiness and the noise, that was Chris Farley. He's the master of the pratfall, he's the master of slapstick, and [you're] getting to see Kenan Thompson learning as he went. ... You could tell, when Kenan spoke to us, that he had so much reverence for Chris."

But what really came out of that research was uncovering the programming philosophy that Laybourne set out. She got into TV because she was concerned about what her kids were watching, and she always worked from one principle: Don't tell kids what they want, but listen to what they tell you they need. Because of that ethos, the network would take wild risks. Take their animation division: The network rejected buying in animated shows based on toys and instead developed in-house projects that reflected their programming aesthetic. End result? Their first three shows were Doug, Ren and Stimpy, and Rugrats, all game-changing in their own way and emulated to this day in shows like Steven Universe and Adventure Time. For the Nick creatives and executives, Barber said, "The goal was to make something awesome, as opposed to the goal ... to just sell toys."

As Sweeney explained, the programming did the same for kids' TV as Blumhouse has done for independent horror: "They allow their creators to take risks." (Moreover, much like Blumhouse, the programs were often diverse without making a huge deal of it.) He described those three cartoons as busting the tropes of animated TV at the time – of 22 minutes of explosions, reused footage, and a clumsy moral at the end, all built around commercial breaks. "Take a look at Doug," he said. "He has antagonists, he gets bullied a bit by Roger, but more or less he lives a pretty normal life, which is what a lot of kids can relate to."

For Barber, it was always about explaining the method to the madness and that none of this would have happened if it wasn't for Laybourne deciding to push the envelope at every turn. So while viewers may tune in for the slime (and that's never in short supply), it's also a tribute to the team that thought slime made for great TV. Barber said, "Most people, if you go, 'Hey, do you remember Hey Dude, do you remember Salute Your Shorts, do you remember Double Dare?' they go, 'Oh, yeah, I love those shows.' But if you say, 'What do you think about the work of Geraldine Laybourne?' they might go, 'I'm not familiar.' So that was our goal, to highlight the behind-the-scenes."

The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story splats into your life on Blu-ray, DVD, and VOD on Nov. 17.

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More Nick:Nickelodeon to Bring 'Rugrats' Back for the Next Generation of Kids!

Originally published: Saturday, August 29, 2020.

Additional source: MovieWeb

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Nickelodeon Brazil Announces 'Dia de Brincar' 2020

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Nickelodeon Brazil (Brasil) has announced that it will be hosting its fifth annual Dia de Brincar, Nickelodeon Brasil's local version of Nickelodeon's Worldwide Day of Play, on Saturday 5th December 2020!


Due to the ongoing COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, this year's Dia de Brincar will be a bit different than previous years: instead of being held outside, Dia de Brincar 2020 will take place online and on TV for the first time, making it more interactive than ever!

Dia de Brincar 2020 will commence at 14:00 on Nickelodeon's social media channels (Facebook, Instagram  Twitter and YouTube) and from 15:00 on the linear Nickelodeon channel in Brazil.

This year's Dia de Brincar will have the theme "Imagination Without Borders" ("Imaginação Sem Fronteiras"). The goal of Dia de Brincar 2020 is to encourage children to jump, dance, invent, dream, create and have fun with the power of their imagination. The day will incorporate different styles and customs of playing inspired by how children in the different regions of the country, from North to South.


The celebration of play will also have presenters, special guests as well activities. This team will be responsible for all the challenges, educational and social games that can be played at home. Children will also be able to interact, simultaneously, through social networks. The activities will be inspired by some of Nickelodeon's most beloved and iconic characters.

Since 2016, Dia de Brincar has welcomed everyone who wishes to enjoy a fun day in the company of the channel's popular characters, with the aim of promoting and increasing the bond between families and friends and creating good memories. The free event has always been a success - more than 60,000 thousand people attended last years event at Parque Villa-Lobos in São Paulo, which provided visitors with hundreds of activities for the whole family.

This year, the celebration of play will be produced in a totally redesigned format, following all safety and hygiene standards established by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Dia de Brincar is a Nickelodeon project produced by ViacomCBS Digital Studios International (VDSI (ViacomCBS Digital Studios International) in partnership with Snack, and is sponsored by Acrilex and Samsung.


Nickelodeon confirma quinta edição do Dia de Brincar

A Nickelodeon confirma a quinta edição do Dia de Brincar. Neste ano, a celebração será, pela primeira vez, multiplataforma e mais interativa. O Dia de Brincar vai acontecer no dia 28 de novembro, a partir das 14h, nas redes sociais da Nickelodeon (Facebook, Instagram , Twitter e Youtube), e a partir das 15h, com entradas ao vivo para TV, simultaneamente.

Repleto de novidades, o Dia de Brincar deste ano terá o tema "Imaginação Sem Fronteiras". O objetivo é estimular que as crianças pulem, dancem, inventem, sonhem, criem e se divirtam com o poder da imaginação. Os diferentes tipos de brincadeiras vão abordar regionalidades, costumes brasileiros e elementos que são parte da infância de crianças do Norte ao Sul do país.

A celebração também vai contar com apresentadores, além de convidados especiais que serão anunciados posteriormente, assim como todas as atividades. Esse time ficará responsável por todos os desafios, jogos educativos e sociais que poderão ser reproduzidos em casa, enquanto são apresentados no evento. As crianças também poderão interagir, simultaneamente, por meio das redes sociais. As atividades serão inspiradas em alguns dos personagens mais queridos e icônicos da Nickelodeon.

Desde 2016, o Dia de Brincar recebe todos que desejam aproveitar o dia na companhia dos principais personagens do canal, com o objetivo de promover e aumentar o vínculo entre famílias e amigos e criar boas lembranças. O evento gratuito sempre foi um sucesso – a última edição recebeu mais de 60 mil pessoas no Parque Villa-Lobos com centenas de atividades para toda família.

Neste ano, a celebração será produzida em formato totalmente reformulado, seguindo todos os padrões de segurança e higienização estabelecidos pela Organização Mundial da Saúde (OMS).

Dia de Brincar, um projeto da Nickelodeon realizado pelo VDSI (ViacomCBS Digital Studios International) em parceria com a Snack, conta com patrocínio de Acrilex e Samsung.

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Música: Tema do Dia de Brincar 2020 | Nickelodeon Brasil



Bibi Tatto, Enaldinho e Mateus Pain vão apresentar o Dia de Brincar 2020

5ª edição acontece dia 5 de dezembro na TV e nas redes sociais da Nick!


O Dia de Brincar 2020 está chegando e cada novidade nos deixa ainda mais animados para viver essa experiência com nossa família e amigos. Dessa vez, a Nickelodeon anunciou os apresentadores da quinta edição do evento, que acontece no dia 5 de dezembro.

O comando da festa será de Bibi Tatto, Enaldinho e Mateus Pain. Eles serão responsáveis por todos os desafios, jogos educativos e sociais que irão ser reproduzidos em casa. Algumas atividades serão inspiradas nos personagens mais queridos da Nick.

O tema desse ano é Imaginação Sem Fronteiras. O objetivo é estimular que as crianças pulem, dancem, inventem, sonhem, criem e se divirtam com esse superpoder que é a imaginação. 

As brincadeiras vão abordar regionalismos e costumes brasileiros, além de recordar elementos que fazem parte da infância em todos os cantos do país, do Norte ao Sul.

Essa é a primeira vez que o evento será multiplataforma e está mais interativo do que nunca. Você vai poder acompanhar tudo no dia 5 de dezembro, a partir das 14h, nas redes sociais da Nickelodeon (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter e Youtube), e a partir das 15h, no canal, simultaneamente.

Vamos conhecer um pouco mais sobre os hosts do Dia de Brincar?

Bibi Tatto

A paulista Bibi Tatto é influencer, yotuber, escritora e cantora. Já lançou três livros: “Um Novo Mundo”, “Isolados, o Enigma” e “O Diário de Bibi” e tem mais de 8 milhões de inscritos em seu canal no Youtube.

E a garota não para! Nesse ano ainda foi co-host do Meus Prêmios Nick 2020, que pela primeira vez na história foi ao vivo, ao lado de Any Gabrielly e Bruno Gagliasso. 

"Fiquei muito feliz em ser chamada para participar do Dia De Brincar da Nickelodeon. Eu estou muito ansiosa para voltar ao palco ao lado de todo mundo da Nick, e tenho certeza de que todo mundo que assistir vai amar!"

Enaldinho

Ele é mineiro e tem mais de 15 milhões de inscritos em seu canal do Youtube. Fala o que quer, faz pegadinhas e ri dos próprios desafios.

Enaldinho ganhou os fãs e já levou pra casa o troféu de Canal de Youtube do Ano no Meus Prêmios Nick 2020.

Tô muito feliz em apresentar o Dia de Brincar. Amei muito! É um sonho realizado. Até agora parece que eu ainda estou sonhando”

Mateus Pain

Ele é de Belo Horizonte e também conquistou seu espaço como influenciador e youtuber brasileiro com mais de 7 milhões de inscritos em seu canal. 

Mateus Pain foi convidado pela Nickelodeon em 2018 para fazer uma viagem a Miami conhecer os estúdios da série musical Club 57. Virou estrela de grandes marcas e conquista fãs por onde passa.

Seus vídeos descontraídos contam um pouco do seu dia a dia e fazem todo mundo rir.

Ser apresentador do Dia de Brincar será uma experiência incrível. É um sonho participar disso junto com a Nickelodeon e é um prazer imenso. Vai ser uma das maiores experiências que eu já vivenciei e a causa é muito linda. Estou muito feliz”

Vai ter mais!

E se você pensa que acabou, tem mais! Em breve a Nick deve anunciar convidados e atividades especiais para o dia. Então fica de olho no @trendybynickbr que vamos te informar de tudo!


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Originally published: Friday, October 16, 2020.

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'The Astronauts' Stars Promise Exciting Adventures In New Series | Access

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'The Astronauts' Stars Promise Exciting Adventures In New Series | Access


Miya Cech, Keith L. Williams, Kayden Grace Swan and Ben Daon are ready for take-off! The young stars chatted with Access Hollywood about their exciting new series The Astronauts, which is set to premiere on Nov. 13 on Nickelodeon. The stars explained that the series will follow a group of young astronauts embarking on a journey on a malfunctioning spaceship. Miya, Keith, Kayden Grace and Ben all promised that their new show will be perfect to watch with the family!

The Astronauts premieres Friday, November 13 at 7p/6c, only on Nickelodeon! Click here for more info!

Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more The Astronauts and follow the series on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

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Plano, TX Native Bryce Gheisar Stars in Nickelodeon's 'The Astronauts'

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This Friday, Nov. 13, The Astronauts premieres on Nickelodeon in a special hourlong event. It’s a new live-action series about a group of kids who mistakenly launch into space while they’re exploring a spacecraft. Plano, Texas native Bryce Gheisar plays Elliot Combs, a character whose father owns the spaceship the kids accidentally ride off in.


Bryce was born and raised in Plano, and decided to pursue acting at age eight. Before working on The Astronauts, he also acted in the Disney series Walk the Prank for three seasons as well as the movies A Dog’s Purpose, Wonder, and Clint Eastwood’s The 15:17 to Paris.

“[The Astronauts] has been an amazing experience. I loved working with the stunt coordinator on the anti-gravity scenes,” Bryce shared with the Plano Magazine. “I wasn’t able to work on the wires this season, so I’m hoping I can do it in a possible season two.”

Bryce Gheisar // courtesy the actor

Bryce’s character Elliot has always sought to gain the approval of his billionaire father. To do this, he convinces four other kids to sneak onto a spaceship with him. Things don’t go as planned, and the kids are forced to take on the responsibilities of astronauts in order to survive.

The premiere episodes of The Astronauts were directed by Directors Guild of America award nominee Dean Israelite (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Power Rangers movie, Project Almanac).


When Bryce isn’t filming, the 15-year-old lives at home in the Dallas area. “I love being close to friends and family. All of my grandparents live nearby,” he said. Formerly a competitive gymnast who took lessons here in Plano, he says he hopes to continue working as an actor, and would like to eventually try his hand at directing one day.

If you’d like to see Bryce in action, tune in to Nickelodeon this Friday, Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. (ET/PT). Click here for more info.

Bryce and his family // courtesy the actor

Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more The Astronauts and follow the series on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.


Plano teen stars in new Nickelodeon series ‘The Astronauts’

Bryce Gheisar, 15, has been acting since age 8.

Plano native Bryce Gheisar, 15, is starring in Nickelodeon’s new show, The Astronauts, which premieres Friday.

“['The Astronauts'] has been an amazing experience,” Gheisar told Plano Magazine. “I loved working with the stunt coordinator on the anti-gravity scenes. I wasn’t able to work on the wires this season, so I’m hoping I can do it in a possible season two.”

An actor since age 8, Gheisar also appeared in the Disney series Walk the Prank, for three seasons. His other credits include the films A Dog’s Purpose, Wonder, and The 15:17 to Paris.

In the series' hour-long premiere, Gheisar’s character, Elliott, and four other young people use their parents' security clearances to sneak onto an empty spacecraft, Odyssey II, according to Nickelodeon’s website.

Unexpectedly, the spacecraft launches into orbit and the kids must decide on their own how to become astronauts and survive. Meanwhile, their parents rush to bring the kids safely back to Earth.

“The Astronauts” is Nickelodeon’s first production with Imagine Kids+Family. Imagine is known for its space adventure stories such as the Academy Award-winning film Apollo 13 the hybrid docuseries “Mars” for NatGeo, as well as the Emmy Award-winning series “From The Earth To The Moon” for HBO.

Imagine Kids+Family was formed in 2019 by Imagine Entertainment chairmen Brian Grazer and Ron Howard, according to Nickelodeon. It focuses on developing and producing kids and family entertainment.

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Local teen having a blast on set of Nickelodeon show

Bryce Gheisar, left, plays Elliot Combs on the Nickelodeon show “Astronauts.” Also pictured is Miya Cech, who plays Samantha Sawyer-Wei. Courtesy of Michael Courtney/Nickelodeon

Bryce Gheisar, a Plano native, is one of the stars of the new Nickelodeon series “Astronauts.” 

Gheisar, 15, plays Elliot Combs, the teen who encourages the other characters to enter a spaceship that is accidentally launched into space. “Astronauts” premiers on Nickelodeon on Nov. 13. 

“This is a show about five kids who go onto a spaceship that blasts off,” Gheisar said. “I convince the other kids to go on the ship. My dad in the show is a billionaire, so I wanted to prove myself. My character did not think that it would go into space. So it is a big adventure.” 

Gheisar did not always want to be in television and movies. When he was younger he studied gymnastics and competed in competitions. 

“I was born in Plano and did my gymnastics there. I moved to Frisco, but I was always in Plano because of my gymnastics and because my grandparents live there in Plano as well.  I really love it there,” Gheisar said. 

“I went to school in Allen,” Gheisar said. “I went to Lovejoy, and I lived near there. I decided to try something different, and my friend told me about an acting school. I never knew you could be an actor. I thought it was outside of what I thought it was possible. I went to an acting class and it was like a dream come true. I loved my first class so much so I kept going. It took over my gymnastics. That proved to my parents that I actually really wanted to act. I went to an acting school in Lewisville called Catherine Sullivan’s Acting for Film. It was she and all the other teachers who made me fall in love with it.” 

Gheisar has always been a driven child, first in gymnastics and then in acting. 

“If children really love something, continue with it,” Gheisar said. “Only pursue what you love, really think about what you love and work hard at it.  These things can take over your life.” 

“This show has been a dream come true,” Gheisar said. “I have never been on a science fiction set before. I have been able to use my gymnastics skills to know how to move my body and flexibility when we are filming the zero gravity scenes. Gymnastics always helps me on shows.  It all finds a way of finding a way into the acting that I am doing. Being on this set and learning from the directors has been so great. I have been able to notice all sorts of things during this filming that I am learning. I really want to be a director and it is so cool to see all of that during the filming of this show.” 

Gheisar has big plans for the future.

“I really want to be in an action movie and do my own stunts,” Gheisar said.  “I want to be a director and do a variety of things in the industry. I have goals outside of film, but I have those goals for my career. It would be amazing to be in an action movie.” 

While Gheisar loves his work in the television and movie industry, he says he misses seeing his grandparents the most. 

“I miss my family and friends,” Ghiesar said. “I will come back to Plano at the end of this shoot and visit my grandparents. My grandparents are from Iran, and they make Persian food. The dishes are so good, and that is what I grew up on. I am deprived of that right now. There is something about eating it in your grandparents’ house that makes it taste even better,” Gheisar said. 

Previous to the filming of this series Gheisar appeared in “The 15:17 to Paris,” where he played a younger version of the lead character, in “Wonder,” where he played the antagonist Julian, and in “A Dog’s Purpose.” 

His next feature film is “James the Second.” The release date for this film is not yet announced. 

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More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

Originally published: Wednesday, November 11, 2020 as 00:11 GMT.

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Keith L. Williams and Kayden Grace Swan Discuss 'The Astronauts' on CBS Sacramento

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CBS Sacramento recently chatted with actors Keith L. Williams and Kayden Grace Swan about their brand new Nickelodeon show, The Astronauts!


The Astronauts premieres Friday, November 13 at 7p/6c, only on Nickelodeon! Click here for more info!

Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more The Astronauts and follow the series on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

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Walmart Releases Taste Beauty x Funko Rugrats 'Angelica Eyeshadow Palette'

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Walmart Quietly Released a Rugrats Makeup Collection, and the Products Are Beyond Cute

As if you needed yet another reason to ignore all of your 'sponserbileries for the day and spend some time online shopping, Walmart has just released a lineup of products that's about to make you want to fill up your cart immediately.


The megaretailer is now selling a special collection of beauty products inspired by Rugrats in honour of the show's 30th anniversary. The collection, which is a product of a partnership between Nickelodeon, Funko, and indie beauty brand Taste Beauty, quietly became available online earlier this week.

The special-edition Taste Beauty x Funko Rugrats "Angelica Eyeshadow Palette" collection comes with three products inspired by the show's most notable characters: Tommy, Chuckie, and Angelica. In it, customers will find a special six-colour eyeshadow palette consisting of neutral colours and a gold matte, and two high-shine lip glosses, one a frosty shade and one red. As its an "Angelica Eyeshadow Palette", the case is in the shape of Angelica (stylized as a Funko figure). with all the shades named aspects of the character: "Sassy", "Not Sorry", "Spoiled", "Bold", "Sweet", and "Pretty Princess". Perfect for your face - or Cynthia doll!

Everything included currently retails for less than $15, and they're all currently available on Walmart.com. Check out the products and shop them ahead.





Original source: POPSUGAR.

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'Avatar The Last Airbender' Intro With Dinosaurs Weirdly Works

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Arturo Garcia uploads a stunning new video paying homage to the iconic Avatar: The Last Airbender intro, where dinosaurs replace the benders.


A stunning new video redoes the iconic Avatar: The Last Airbender intro...but with dinosaurs. The beloved Nickelodeon animated series debuted in 2005 and centers around the story of 12-year-old Aang, who comes into his own as the Avatar with the help of Katara, Sokka, and Toph. The show also focuses on exiled Fire Nation Prince Zuko, as well as his sister Azula. The show became a critical and commercial success and is widely referred to as one of the best animated series ever created.

The Avatar intro is one of the show's most recognizable components. The opening sequence introduces audience members to the show's premise, including the conflict with the Fire Nation and Aang's ultimate goal of mastering each of the elements. To that end, the credits show four different benders with their respective elements. The Waterbender and Firebender are Master Pakku and Azula; while it's more difficult to identify the Earthbender and Airbender, they are most likely Sud and Gyatso.

Arturo Garcia has recreated the famous Avatar intro, although he's replaced the benders with dinosaurs. The short, fifteen-second video shows four different dinosaurs, each wielding their own elements. The video's description explains that Garcia has included a Spinosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Dakotaraptor, and Azdarchid. You can check out Garcia's incredible homage to Avatar: The Last Airbender below:


This isn't the first time that talented creators have put their own spin on the Avatar opening. In fact, another animator reimagined the intro with different Pokémon, which led to Squirtle, Sandshrew, Charmander, and Pidgey all making an unexpected -- but welcome -- appearance. Another fan remade characters from the show using Animal Crossing.

Perhaps these creations speak to Avatar's enduring popularity and cultural significance. Although the series ended back in 2008, it's looked back on fondly and clearly still means a lot to fans.


That being said, Avatar is getting a live-action Netflix adaptation. Yet after the disastrous 2010 M. Night Shyamalan The Last Airbender film, fans are wary to say the least. To make matters even more complicated, Avatar creators Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko had originally signed on to work on the Netflix series. However, the pair announced their departure from the project earlier this year after alluding to creative differences. As a result, many Avatar enthusiasts are concerned about both a murky plotline and character whitewashing, both of which were significant issues in the Shyamalan movie. To that end, it's unclear if the Avatar: The Last Airbender Netflix series will be as successful as the Nickelodeon version. No matter what, though, the live-action should strive to capture the magic of the animated series, from the incredible story to the breathtaking intro sequence.

Watch Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra on CBS All Access and Netflix!

Subscribe to the NEW official Avatar: The Last Airbender YouTube channel!: https://at.nick.com/AvatarSubscribe

More Nick:Toph Beifong to Feature in Her Own Standalone 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' Graphic Novel!

Originally source: ScreenRant.

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FUNNY Q&A Game w/ The Cast Of Nickelodeon's THE ASTRONAUTS! | Instinct Culture by Denise Salcedo

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FUNNY Q&A Game w/ The Cast Of Nickelodeon's THE ASTRONAUTS! | Instinct Culture by Denise Salcedo


Nickelodeon is introducing a brand new live action series, The Astronauts that premieres on Friday, November 13th on Nickelodeon!

In this video I chat with the cast including:

Samantha “Samy” Sawyer-Wei, played by Miya Cech (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Always Be My Maybe); Martin Taylor, played by Keith L. Williams (Good Boys, The Last Man on Earth); Doria Taylor, played by Kayden Grace Swan (A Black Lady Sketch Show); and Will Rivers, played by Ben Daon (Child’s Play).  

VIDEO CONTENTS

0:00- Intro & Interviews
4:00- Q&A Game Begins 
8:17- Outro 

In the first portion of the video they talk about what their favorite scenes and moments of shooting the Astronauts was and in the second portion they each answer 10 silly and random questions about themselves in our lightning round game. 

About Nickelodeon's The Astronauts

The brand-new live-action series follows a group of kids who embark on the adventure of a lifetime when they are mistakenly launched into space.

In the hour-long premiere of The Astronauts, the spacecraft Odyssey II is set to launch on a mission to retrieve a foreign object that could potentially save mankind.  The plan quickly goes awry when five untrained kids use their parents’ security clearances to sneak onto the empty ship.  Soon after they board, the onboard AI system triggers the launch sequence.  Unable to stop the ship from blasting off, the kids must assume their new role as astronauts and brave harrowing tasks, as their parents rush to find a way to take control of the situation.

The Astronauts premieres Friday, November 13 at 7p/6c, only on Nickelodeon! Click here for more info!

Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more The Astronauts and follow the series on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

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Chris Paul to Fool the School in New Episode of 'The Substitute', Premiering Saturday, November 14 on Nickelodeon

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Chris Paul is set to fool the school in the brand new episode of The Substitute, premiering Saturday, November 14 at 9:00 p.m. (ET/PT), following all new Danger Force and Side Hustle at 8 and 8:30, respectively, only on Nickelodeon! Meet Brisket the Emotional Support Dog in the PAWsome sneak peek below!:


In the all new episode of The Substitute, basketball star Chris Paul goes astro-nuts, becomes a piece of art, and slam dunks as The Substitute! (#203)



Originally published: Friday, November 13, 2020.

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Nickelodeon Unwraps Holiday Programming Guide

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NICKELODEON CELEBRATES “NICKMAS” 
WITH OVER 100 HOURS OF SEASONAL CONTENT, 
FEATURING 21 HOLLY JOLLY PREMIERES 
BEGINNING THURSDAY, NOV. 19

Holiday-Themed Lineup Includes Season Two Premiere of Original Competition Series Top Elf and Brand-New Star-Studded Special The All-Star Nickmas Spectacular Featuring Gabriel Iglesias, Jay Pharoah, Tisha Campbell, Trevor Noah and Young Dylan with Musical Performances by JoJo Siwa, That Girl Lay Lay and Ne-Yo

Net to Also Air All-New Festive Premieres of Hit Series PAW Patrol, Santiago of the Seas
Blue’s Clues & You!, The Casagrandes, The Substitute, All That, Danger Force and More


Share it: @Nickelodeon #TopElf #Nickmas

HOLLYWOOD, Calif.–Nov. 12, 2020–It’s beginning to look a lot like “Nickmas”! Nickelodeon is welcoming in the holiday with over 100 hours of seasonal content, featuring 21 holly jolly premieres of its live-action, animation and preschool series beginning Thursday, Nov. 19. Viewers will be treated to a joyous lineup including the season two premiere of original festive competition series, Top Elf; the brand-new star-studded special The All-Star Nickmas Spectacular; and all-new episodes of the net’s hit series PAW Patrol, Santiago of the Seas, Blue’s Clues & You!, The Casagrandes, The Substitute, All That, Danger Force, and more, plus classic fan-favorite holiday episodes of Rugrats, SpongeBob SquarePants and The Loud House.

In the second season of Top Elf, premiering on Thursday, Nov. 19, at 7:30 p.m. (ET/PT), Santa (Tommy Snider) and Ms. Jingles (Samantha Turret) invite seven talented “Elf-testants” to the North Pole to compete in a series of holiday-themed challenges for the title of “Top Elf” and $25,000 to a charity on their Wish List. Each “Elf-testant” is paired with one of Santa’s elves who are excited to help bring their holiday vision to life. The season will feature even bigger and messier challenges, including building a life size countdown calendar, designing sweet treat carts for the North Pole street fair, reimagining Santa’s style for a high-tech makeover, creating a scenic 3D pop-up experience and producing and starring in their very own holiday-themed music video. 

Each episode of Top Elf features a celebrity guest judge to help decide who will make it on to Santa’s list and continue on in the competition. Joining as judges for season two are social media star Addison Rae, Nickelodeon’s Unfiltered host Jay Pharoah, singer-songwriter Tori Kelly, social media sensation Guava Juice (SpongeBob SmartyPants) and global superstar JoJo Siwa. Top Elf will air regularly Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. (ET/PT) through Dec. 17 on Nickelodeon.

On Saturday, Nov. 28, Nickelodeon will celebrate the holidays with a brand-new star-studded special, The All-Star Nickmas Spectacular, premiering at 9 p.m. (ET/PT). Hosted by Nickelodeon’s Lex Lumpkin, the hour-long variety show will include musical performances by JoJo Siwa, That Girl Lay Lay and Ne-Yo, along with appearances by Gabriel Iglesias, Jay Pharoah, Tisha Campbell, Trevor Noah (Kid of the Year) and Young Dylan. The special will also feature comedy sketches from the casts of All That, The Astronauts, Danger Force, Group Chat and Nickelodeon’s Unfiltered—including Darci Lynne with Petunia—as well as special messages from animated stars SpongeBob SquarePants, Lincoln and Lucy from The Loud House, and Ronnie Anne from The Casagrandes.

A complete rundown of the net’s “Nickmas” premieres can be found below. All airings are ET/PT on Nickelodeon, unless otherwise noted. Art can be viewed below:

Top Elf“‘Tis the Season to be Top Elf” (season premiere) – Thursday, Nov. 19, at 7:30pm, with new episodes airing on Thursdays at 7:30pm through Dec. 17

Santa invites seven extraordinary Elf-testants to the North Pole to compete for the title of Top Elf. Social media star Addison Rae joins Santa and Ms. Jingles to judge life-sized countdown calendars.

PAW Patrol“Pups Save a Bah Humdinger!” (30-minute special) – Friday, Nov. 20, at 12pm

Mayor Humdinger is being very naughty on Christmas Eve, and it’s up to the PAW Patrol to help Santa and save Christmas.

Santiago of the Seas“A Pirate Christmas” (30-minute special) – Friday, Nov. 20, at 12:30pm

Santiago and his crew must help Santa save Christmas. Guest Star: Alfred Molina

The Adventures of Paddington“The Lost Letter” (30-minute special) – Friday, Nov. 27, at 8:30pm (Nick Jr. Channel)

Paddington has accidentally sent Jonathan’s Santa letter to Peru by mistake. When he sends Pigeonton to the North Pole with a new list, he goes missing.

The All-Star Nickmas Spectacular– Saturday, Nov. 28, at 9pm

Nickelodeon brings cheer this holiday with star-studded guests and musical performances by JoJo Siwa, That Girl Lay Lay and Ne-Yo as Nickelodeon star Lex Lumpkin journeys to the North Pole to meet Santa Claus before the biggest show of the year. Special appearances by Gabriel Iglesias, Jay Pharoah, Tisha Campbell, Trevor Noah, Young Dylan and the casts of All That, The Astronauts, Danger Force, Group Chat and Nickelodeon’s Unfiltered, including Darci Lynne with Petunia. Special messages from animated stars SpongeBob SquarePants, Lincoln & Lucy from The Loud House, and Ronnie Anne from The Casagrandes

Blue’s Clues & You!“Blue’s Night Before Christmas” – Friday, Dec. 4, at 11am

It’s the night before Christmas and Josh and Blue play Blue’s Clues to figure out what Blue wants for Christmas, decorate with Steve, help Joe wrap presents, and celebrate a night full of holiday traditions. Guest Stars: Steve Burns and Donovan Patton

Ryan’s Mystery Playdate“Ryan’s Christmas Time Special!” – Friday, Dec. 4, at 11:30am

Ryan and his family spend Christmas remembering their messiest memories, coolest challenges and most magical playdates.

Bubble Guppies“The Guppies Save Christmas!” – Friday, Dec. 4, at 12pm

On Christmas Eve, Molly, Gil, and Bubble Puppy discover Santa's lost list in the snow. To return the list safely to the North Pole, they have to keep it out of the hands of the Christmas-hating Humbug.

It’s Pony“Bramley Holiday” – Saturday, Dec. 5, at 11:30am

The Bramleys need to find a way to celebrate their traditions and be together for the holidays. 

The Casagrandes“A Very Casagrandes Christmas” – Saturday, Dec. 5, at 7pm

Ronnie Anne is excited for the perfect Christmas, but visits from the neighbors put her dream Nochebuena on hold.

The Loud House“Season’s Cheating/A Flipmas Carol” – Saturday, Dec. 5, at 7:30pm

Lincoln tries to rig the family gift swap and ends up learning a valuable lesson. Then, a Scrooge-like Flip is visited by three ghosts in a special take on “A Christmas Carol.”

• Abby Hatcher “A Very Fuzzly Christmas” – Sunday, Dec. 6, at 10am (Nick Jr. Channel)

Abby is determined to bring her holiday traditions to the neighborhood when a snowstorm closes the hotel on Christmas Eve.

The Substitute“Gabriel Iglesias” – Thursday, Dec. 10, at 8:30pm

Comedian and actor Gabriel “Fluffy” Iglesias (Unleashed, All That) brings kids on a hilarious journey to uncover the “true” history and traditions of the holidays.

PAW Patrol“Pups Save the Marooned Mayors/Pups Save the Game Show” – Friday, Dec. 11, at 12pm

While ice fishing in the North Country, Mayor Goodway and Mayor Humdinger get stuck in an ice crevasse. Then, Cowgirl Beryl hosts a game show at the Wingnuts’ farm.

Baby Shark’s Big Show!“Baby Shark’s Big Fishmas Special” (series premiere) – Friday, Dec. 11, at 12:30pm

With Fishmas just around the corner, the season’s hottest toy--Burpin’ Bubbz--is at the top of Baby’s and William’s wish lists and when Santa Jaws goes missing, it’s up to them to save the holiday.

Danger Force“Down Goes Santa: Part 1” – Saturday, Dec. 12, at 8pm

Danger Force learns the real story of Christmas. When Santa’s sleigh comes crashing down, an ancient spell is broken and the fate of Christmas hangs in the balance.  

Side Hustle“Friendiversary” – Saturday, Dec. 12, at 8:30pm

Every year Lex and Presley celebrate their Friendiversary by giving each other a thoughtful gift, but this year a blizzard threatens to derail their tradition. The girls venture into the storm, making for a Friendiversary they'll never forget. 

All That“1134” – Thursday, Dec. 17, at 8:30pm

Hit ‘Em With Spanish returns for a holiday edition, Nathan cancels candy canes, All That presents The Remote: A Horror Trailer, and Denzel shows up at a department store to spread unwelcomed holiday cheer advice. Performance by: Pentatonix

ALVINNN!!! and the Chipmunks“A Very Merry Chipmas” – Saturday, Dec. 19, at 11am

Theodore is mistaken for an elf and whisked off to the North Pole to help build toys in Santa’s workshop. 

LEGO City Adventures“Arrest Ye Merry Gentlemen” – Saturday, Dec. 19, at 11:30am

When Fendrich threatens to ruin Sinclair’s holiday gala, Duke intervenes to save both the party and the holidays.

Danger Force“Down Goes Santa: Part 2” – Saturday, Dec. 19, at 8pm

The fight to save the holidays rages on! Danger Force is forced to square off with Krampus on his own turf to try and save Christmas.

Below is the rundown of Nickelodeon’s “Nickmas” classic holiday episodes, airing (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon, unless otherwise noted.

PAW Patrol“Pups Save Christmas” – Tuesday, Dec. 1, at 8am; Friday, Dec. 4, at 10am

When Santa’s sleigh crashes and the reindeer run off, Ryder and the PAW Patrol have to help Santa finish delivering presents and save Christmas.

The Loud House“11 Louds a Leapin’” Saturday, Dec. 5, at 6:30pm; Saturday, Dec. 12, at 10:30am; Tuesday, Dec. 22, at 1pm

The Louds are getting ready for Christmas when the unthinkable happens to Lincoln - his sled goes in their neighbor’s yard! Lincoln and Clyde attempt to pull off a sled rescue mission and end up finding out secrets about Mr. Grouse.

SpongeBob SquarePants“It’s A SpongeBob Christmas!” – Saturday, Dec. 5, at 11am; Saturday, Dec. 12, at 12pm; Monday, Dec. 21, at 1pm

SpongeBob inadvertently helps Plankton enact his plot to put all of Bikini Bottom on Santa’s naughty list, and now has to stop Plankton before he gets his Christmas wish—the Krabby Patty secret formula.

SpongeBob SquarePants“Patchy the Pirate Presents the SpongeBob SquarePants Christmas Special” – Sunday, Dec. 6, at 1pm; Saturday, Dec. 12, at 10am; Monday, Dec. 21, at 1:30pm

Nobody in Bikini Bottom has ever heard of Christmas or Santa Claus until Sandy lets them in on this surface tradition. SpongeBob wants to bring Christmas to Bikini Bottom this year and his enthusiasm is infectious.  Everyone gets into the spirit, waiting for Santa to arrive on the big day, except Squidward, who has scoffed at SpongeBob the whole time.

Rugrats“Rugrats Chanukkah” – Thursday, Dec. 10 – Thursday, Dec. 17, at 10pm

Tommy leads the babies into another adventure to save Grandpa Boris from the "Meany of Chanukah"- Grandpa’s childhood rival, Schlomo.  While the Rugrats learn about Chanukah from the Seniors' play entitled "The Meaning of Chanukah," Angelica is determined to find a TV to watch the "Cynthia Christmas Special."

Fans can head to the Nick and Nick Jr. apps, and NickJr.com to view holiday-themed episodes and short-form content. Noggin, Nickelodeon’s interactive learning service for preschoolers, will continue to spread cheer this season with a holiday hub featuring over 50 pieces of festive long and short-form content, including: holiday-themed shorts; full-length episodes of hit series PAW Patrol, Bubble Guppies, Peppa Pig and more; games; play-along videos; and e-books. 

Top Elf’s original concept was created by Mike Duffy and Tim Duffy of Ugly Brother Studios, who executive produce the series along with Jimmy Fox of Main Event Media, an All3Media America company.  Lisa Fletcher (The Titan Games, Project Runway) serves as executive producer and showrunner.  Nickelodeon’s Unscripted Content executives Rob Bagshaw, Paul J Medford, Mandel Ilagan and Stacey Carr also serve as executive producers.  The season is directed by Gary Shaffer (Jim Henson's Creature Shop Challenge, The X Factor). 

The All-Star Nickmas Spectacular is produced by Jesse Collins Entertainment (BET Awards, The New Edition Story, Black Girls Rock!). Jesse Collins, Jeannae Rouzan-Clay and Dionne Harmon serve as executive producers along with Heath Seifert and Kevin Kopelow (All That, Austin & Ally), who also serve as showrunners and head writers. Nickelodeon’s Unscripted Content executives Rob Bagshaw and Paul J Medford are also executive producers. The special is directed by Sandy Restrepo (Grammy Awards, American Music Awards).

Production of Nickelodeon’s Top Elf and The All-Star Nickmas Spectacular is overseen by Rob Bagshaw, Executive Vice President, Unscripted Content.

Nickelodeon, now in its 41st 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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More Nick:Nickelodeon Updates Icons, Sets New Characters for 2021 | Next-Gen Nick!

Originally published: Friday, October 30, 2020 at 18:19 GMT.

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

'The Astronauts' Suits Up for Hour-Long Launch Event, Friday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon

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NICKELODEON SUITS UP FOR THE ASTRONAUTS HOUR-LONG
PREMIERE EVENT, FRIDAY, NOV. 13, AT 7 P.M. (ET/PT)

The Astronauts Marks the First Production From Brian Grazer and Ron Howard’s Imagine Kids+Family Division


Share it: @Nickelodeon @TheAstronauts (TikTok) #TheAstronauts

HOLLYWOOD, Calif.--Oct. 9, 2020--Nickelodeon enters orbit for an epic hour-long premiere event of The Astronauts, the network’s first co-production with Imagine Kids+Family.  The brand-new live-action series follows a group of kids who embark on the adventure of a lifetime when they are mistakenly launched into space.  The Astronauts is executive produced by Imagine Entertainment Executive Chairmen Brian Grazer and Ron Howard, and Imagine Kids+Family President Stephanie Sperber.  The series is created by Daniel Knauf (Carnivàle, The Blacklist), who also serves as writer and executive producer.  The first two episodes of The Astronauts premiere back-to-back commercial on Friday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon.

In the hour-long premiere of The Astronauts, the spacecraft Odyssey II is set to launch on a mission to retrieve a foreign object that could potentially save mankind.  The plan quickly goes awry when five untrained kids use their parents’ security clearances to sneak onto the empty ship.  Soon after they board, the onboard AI system triggers the launch sequence.  Unable to stop the ship from blasting off, the kids must assume their new role as astronauts and brave harrowing tasks, as their parents rush to find a way to take control of the situation.


The group traveling together through space are: Samantha “Samy” Sawyer-Wei, played by Miya Cech (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Always Be My Maybe); Elliott Combs, played by Bryce Gheisar (Wonder, A Dog’s Purpose); Martin Taylor, played by Keith L. Williams (Good Boys, The Last Man on Earth); Doria Taylor, played by Kayden Grace Swan (A Black Lady Sketch Show); and Will Rivers, played by Ben Daon (Child’s Play).  Matilda, the ship’s onboard AI system, is voiced by Paige Howard (The Employer, Adventureland).

The premiere episodes of The Astronauts are directed by DGA Award nominee Dean Israelite (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Power Rangers movie, Project Almanac), who also serves as executive producer. The series is also directed by Jonathan Frakes (Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, The Orville), and Marcus Stokes (Criminal Minds, The Flash, 911). Will Davis served as creative executive for Imagine Kids+Family.


Production of The Astronauts for Nickelodeon is overseen by Shauna Phelan, Senior Vice President, Live Action Scripted Content; and Zack Olin, Senior Vice President, Live Action.  Brian Banks serves as Nickelodeon’s Executive in Charge of Production for the series.


The Astronauts is the first production to hail from Imagine Kids+Family.  Imagine has a rich history telling stories rooted in space adventure, including the multiple Academy Award-winning film Apollo 13 (celebrating its 25th anniversary this year), the hybrid docuseries Mars for NatGeo, and the Emmy Award-winning series From The Earth To The Moon for HBO.


About Imagine Kids+Family

Imagine Kids+Family was formed in 2019 by Imagine Entertainment Chairmen Brian Grazer and Ron Howard with a focus on developing and producing premium kids and family entertainment with capabilities in consumer products and franchise building. Imagine Kids+Family is run by President Stephanie Sperber, a veteran kids entertainment executive with a successful career in building kids and family businesses, IP, and franchises. IKF recently acquired an equity stake in popular The Tiny Chef Show to develop the original short-form stop-motion animation Tiny Chef character across all platforms including short-form, tv series, and digital, and is part of a strategic global franchise plan. Currently, IKF is producing its first live-action series The Astronauts for Nickelodeon; Kalamata’s Kitchen; Breyer Hollow; The Trail; and Going Vintage to name a few. IKF is also producing Max Einstein under its partnership with James Patterson’s’ kid imprint Jimmy Books, and has a first-look partnership with Academy Award-winning animation company Lion Forge (Hair Love) around its existing IP of both licensed and original ideas, starting with Chippy Hood, Bug Tron, Puerto Rico Strong, and Unt. Black Comic Anthology.


About Nickelodeon

Nickelodeon, now in its 41st 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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Update (11/12) - The Astronauts season one will have 10 episodes.









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Meet the Astronauts, taking off Nov 13 🚀

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Only a true Astronaut can ace this taste test 🤢

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The Astronauts | Friday at 7PM!! | Episodes "Countdown"& "Day 1" | All New to Nickelodeon!!



The Astronauts | NEW Series Premieres Friday at 7PM with an Hour Long Premiere!!





Plano Native Bryce Gheisar Stars in Nickelodeon’s “The Astronauts”


Launching his father’s spaceship, the Odyssey 2, was an accident. Elliot Combs, the sensitive and proud son of the Odyssey’s billionaire owner, had convinced his four friends to sneak on board with him. He called it “a once in a lifetime deal.”

Then the countdown to launch began. 

Now, Elliot has to prove that he is the leader that he knows he can be and learn how to work together with his friends, not only to show his worth to his dad and to himself but also to bring them safely home to their parents, who are watching from Earth. 

But they are not alone in space. 

“The Astronauts” is a new Nickelodeon series starring Plano native Bryce Gheisar, Keith L. Williams, Kayden Grace Swan, and Ben Daon. Dean Israelite directs and serves as executive producer along with Marcus Stokes, Jonathan Frakes, and Daniel Knauf who is also the creator, writer, and showrunner. It premiers at 7 p.m. Nov. 13. 

“Elliot comes across as confident and rude but is actually more sensitive,” says Bryce, who is 15. “The cool thing about it is that I was actually auditioning for Will, but looked older than the other kids. [So I auditioned] for Elliot and it fit better, more in tune with what they wanted.” 

Born in 2004 in Plano, Bryce was a rising star in competitive gymnastics when he first discovered his love for acting. At 8 years old, he didn’t know that you could become an actor. “At first it was very different than I was used to,” he says. “Gymnastics were very sporty and required like practice three hours every day. Very tough. Acting felt like less of a hassle and something fun. Then after a certain amount of time, I realized it could be a career path.”   

Bryce enrolled at Cathryn Sullivan’s Acting for Film school in Lewisville. Cathryn “Cathy” Sullivan has been teaching actors and actresses for decades in the Dallas area. Her older son Chad had starred in several films, including 1994’s Frank & Jesse, 1995’s Past the Bleachers, and 1998’s Still Holding On: The Legend of Cadillac Jack, before his untimely death in 2011. Her younger son Cody Linley played Jack Ryan on Miley Cyrus’s Hannah Montana show. 

Cathy offers a variety of acting classes for kids, teens, and adults such as Acting for Camera for 6 to 9-year-old kids and film classes for 10-year-old and up, even until they hit college. Sullivan’s Hall of Fame includes a variety of successful artists, including Demi Lovato, Selena Gomez, and Thomas Mann.

As Devin Way from “Grey’s Anatomy” wrote in a testimonial included on Cathy’s website for her acting school: “The beautiful thing about my experience at Cathryn’s was as much as I knew she cared about my acting, she cared about me more. She cares about her students. Authentically. Then from a place of love and trust, reaches in and transforms their acting ability from the inside out. Once you’re one of Cathy’s kids, you’re hers for life.”

Cathy’s school transformed Bryce, who was originally interested in the comedic side of acting. He loves comedies, but as he grew older, he fell in love with the dramatic side of acting. “And that was one of the things that Cathy helped me discover how to do the emotional state in different scenes,” he says.

For about five years, Bryce took classes from Cathy, reaching the master level before leaving at the age of 13 or 14. In his early days of acting, like many beginning actors, he shot quite a few commercials. In 2015, he landed a short role as Elijah Gutnick in The Bus Stop. A year later, he appeared as Herman in Walk the Prank, and then transitioned into film. 

His first feature was A Dog’s Purpose in 2017, starring Dennis Quad, Josh Grad, and several other well known actors. Directed by Lasse Hallstrom, it was based on the 2010 novel by W. Bruce Cameron and told the story of a devoted dog searching for a rightful purpose. Bryce played Ethan Montogermy, a kind-hearted boy who adopts the dog. 

From there, he appeared in Wonder with Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson, and Clint Eastwood’s The 15:17 to Paris, starring Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler, and Alek Skarlatos. Bryce played a young Alek in the biographical film, based on the autobiography The 15:17 to Paris: The True Story of a Terrorist, a Train, and Three American Heroes.

“It was really surreal being on set [with Clint Eastwood],” Bryce says. “He is kind of like a guy who sits and instead of calling action says, ‘Go ahead.’ He’s very quiet and [wants it] calm on set.”

Bryce offers this piece of advice for aspiring actors, though it could also apply to other artists such as musicians and writers:

“You have to love it because there is a lot of rejection. I do hundreds of auditions and don’t hear back on almost all of them. You really have to focus and if you don’t, it’s very hard, and don’t take things personally. Just keep at it.”  

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Young Bowen Island actor takes flight in new space series

New Vancouver-shot series stars local actor Ben Daon.

Bowen Island’s Ben Daon’s first really big acting break was a two-part exercise.

Ben Daon got to sleep in his own bed at night when he played Will Rivers in the new Vancouver-shot Nickelodeon series The Astronauts. PHOTO BY HANDOUT /PNG

While the 15-year-old West Vancouver Secondary School student was shooting the newNickelodeon series The Astronauts in Vancouver, the COVID-19 pandemic hit and forced the production, like the other 50 or so TV/film productions shooting here, to put a pin in it and shut down.

What happens when a group of kids accidentally get shot into space? Find out when Nickelodeon's new Vancouver-shot series The Astronauts premieres on Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. Seen here is the cast of kids from l-r: Kayden Grace Swan, Bryce Gheisar, Miya Cech, Keith L. Williams and Vancouver's Ben Daon.

What happens when a group of kids accidentally get shot into space? Find out when Nickelodeon’s new Vancouver-shot series The Astronauts premieres on Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. Seen here is the cast of kids from left: Kayden Grace Swan, Bryce Gheisar, Miya Cech, Keith L. Williams and Vancouver’s Ben Daon. PHOTO BY COURTESY OF NICKELODEON /PNG

Daon went back across the water and waited at home for things to resume on the biggest acting job he has had since booking his first commercial at age 11.

Finally, after a handful of months the $3-billion B.C. film and TV business began to ramp back up. The Astronauts’ cast and crew went back to work and again like everyone else the production had to follow strict COVID-19 health and safety protocols — including increased cleanings, face coverings, social distancing and limited people on set — as they shot the last six episodes of the series.

“It was kind of sad not to be able to high-five and hug your friends, but I would rather not be able to do that and still get to be part of this project,” said Daon over the phone from his home. “It was a necessary sacrifice in order to keep filming.”

Daon said the return to production took a bit of getting used to. Aside from not being able to warmly greet people, the cast and crew had to get used to the new normal. But, as Daon explains, the new normal isn’t that normal for an outgoing kid.

“It was pretty crazy because no one was used to wearing face masks or face covering. Now it has become the normal. It was pretty alien for some people,” said Daon. “It was weird because you couldn’t really see people’s faces. You feel a bit cut off and I love meeting people and talking to everyone and that’s something you couldn’t do once COVID hit. Other than that they had done such a good job of keeping it COVID safe. We didn’t have one case. Everything was done impeccably well. We had COVID tests every 72 hours and it worked out really well.”

In The Astronauts, which premieres on Nickelodeon on Nov. 13 at 7 p.m., five kids (played by Kayden Grace Swan, Bryce Gheisar, Miya Cech, Keith L. Williams and Daon) are accidentally launched into space. What ensues is a huge adventure as the group has to work together to get back home. The kids are all there because, according to Daon, they’re all connected to someone connected to the launch. In his case his mother is an investigative journalist who is on a story.

“There’s initial shock but once that wears off we realize we’re in a lot of danger because we are five untrained children on a lethal spacecraft on a mission to an asteroid,” said Daon, explaining the conceit of the show. “We as a team need to learn how to grow and go from strangers who have never met to build emotional connections and become a family and keep each other alive. In that journey it’s really, really important that each and every one of us is present and participates because we all bring something different to the table but that’s exactly why we succeed.”

What Daon’s character Will Rivers brings is levity. He says Daon is the spaceship clown.

“Will is definitely the glue of the group. He is the comic relief and he will always be able to find the light and the joke in everything,” said Daon. “He really helps to keep the group sane up there.”

Daon says he and Will share a love of cracking wise. For Daon that pull toward a punch line was something that he developed to help him get through some tough times.

“Being able to crack a smile and find the light in something is something I have been taught from a very young age,” said Daon. “I dealt with some bullying and my dad has always told me that there is always something to smile about, you just have to look for it and that’s what I do and I brought that to Will.”

Vancouver actor Ben Daon is seen here as the character Will Rivers in the new Nickelodeon Vancouver-shot series The Astronauts.

Vancouver actor Ben Daon is seen here as the character Will Rivers in the new Nickelodeon Vancouver-shot series The Astronauts. PHOTO BY COURTESY OF NICKELODEON /PNG

What he also brought was some serious stunt skills thanks to seven years of competitive gymnastics that included three all-around provincial championships to his name.

“I was really lucky to be cast as Will because Will does the most flying,” said Daon, who added he did every stunt that production would let him do. “I was quick to learn, I mean it was a weird feeling to learn, but it was such a cool experience. I definitely brought some of the stuff from gymnastics, like how to activate my core.”

To look weightless Daon said the one instruction he got that really helped him was to imagine two balloons were sitting right under his armpits.

“It was really, really cool. I felt proud that I was able to do my stunts and act at the same time,” said Daon. “It proved to myself I am capable to do that and that made me happy because I want to do the best work that I can.”

The Astronauts, like many TV series, has multiple directors. In this case three of them. One of those at the helm was happy to highlight Daon’s eagerness and work ethic.

“Ben has great commitment to every scene he’s a part of. He understands the nuances of the script and his character in every moment, and makes bold, smart choices. He’s not afraid to take risks,” said director Dean Israelite in an email. “As with this whole cast, it was rewarding to see him evolve as an actor and as a kid throughout the show.”

The new series comes with some impressive backing in the form of Ron Howard’s and Brian Grazer’s Imagine Kids+Family production company. Not a bad start for a child.

“This was my first big anything,” said Daon. “Everything just clicked. I met four awesome kids. I love all of them. They are all so cool and I got to do this in my hometown, Vancouver. I got to still see my friends and family which wasn’t a privilege the other kids enjoyed.”

Right now Daon is busy doing online auditions and going to school. School these days means he’s in a cohort of 15-20 kids and will be for the year.

He said school is OK for him because he had a bit of leg-up, some extra training if you will, heading into this unusual fall.

“I heard a lot of complaints about masks. I didn’t feel the same way because there wasn’t a choice for me. I couldn’t not wear it while working,” said Daon. “It didn’t bother me too much. I had that pre-school training for mask-wearing.”

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From POPSUGAR:

Why Parents Will Actually Enjoy Watching Nickelodeon's The Astronauts With Their Kids

We partnered with Nickelodeon to gear up for the launch of their new show, The Astronauts, premiering Nov. 13.

Houston, we have a problem. Parents today are 24/7 caretakers, babysitters, teachers, and so much more. With all this added responsibility, managing screen time has basically gone out the window — TV time has turned into family time, and finding a show that's both educational for kids and entertaining for parents can take a bit of digging.

That's why Nickelodeon's brand-new show, The Astronauts, should be at the top of your queue. It's an ambitious story filled with space adventures and valuable life lessons, which follows a group of kids who sneak onto a spacecraft called the ODYSSEY II and mistakenly get launched into space. From the relatable character dynamics to the hyperrealistic graphics, there's something for every member of the family to enjoy. Keep reading to learn why The Astronauts is bound to become a family favorite.

The Show Promotes Women in STEM

Samy Sawyer-Wei is the daughter of the ODYSSEY II's commander. Ever since she could remember, Samy has followed in her mother's footsteps, studying her space training. Samy's curiosity and courageousness make her the natural-born leader of the group, guiding the crew through the ups and downs of space travel.

Doria Taylor, another astronaut on board, has always been interested in medicine and dreams of becoming a neurologist. Her ambition is infectious and demonstrates that kids can achieve any goals they set.

It Showcases Relatable Family Dynamics

Doria and her brother, Martin, are polar opposites; she's outgoing and creative, while he's more reserved and detail oriented. As the older brother, Martin is fiercely protective of Doria — sometimes more than she'd like. And although their differences can cause arguments, their bond always remains strong.

On the other hand, Elliot Combs is the only child of the spacecraft's billionaire owner. Throughout his life, Elliot has lived in his father's shadow, seeking his approval. Elliot sees his time on board the ODYSSEY II as an opportunity to finally prove his worth to his father.

The Visuals Are Out of This World

The Astronauts includes all of the classic space thriller elements: the mystery of outer space, possible alien life, fear of survival, and of course, stunning visual effects. With its action-packed plot, this show is the perfect weekly watch that won't have parents counting down until bedtime.

The Astronauts premieres Friday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. ET/6 p.m. CT on Nickelodeon.




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From BSCkids:

Keith L. Williams Talks Role On Nickelodeon Series The Astronauts – Exclusive Interview

We have been eagerly anticipating hour-long premiere event of The Astronauts on Nickelodeon Friday, November 13th and we were lucky enough to get a chance to talk with Keith L. Williams.

In The Astronauts, the spaceship Odyssey II is set to launch to investigate a mysterious asteroid passing by Earth. Keith leads the ensemble cast who gather to watch the lift-off and sneak onto the empty ship with their parent’s security clearance before the event, accidentally initiating the launch sequence.

BSCKids: Tell us a bit about your character Martin on the upcoming Nickelodeon series, The Astronauts?

Keith L. Williams: Martin Taylor is the fun-loving and protective big brother to Doria. He brings a healthy dose of common sense, heart, and loyalty to the group.

Do you feel like you have anything in common with your character? Would you sneak on to an empty ship?

I feel like I have a lot in common with my character Martin. We both like gardening and are protective of our family. I would definitely sneak on a ship, as long as it didn’t launch into space.

So how technical are you? Do you feel like you could pull this off in real life?

I would say I’m very technical. I love fixing and building things and with the right team I could definitely pull this off.

Last summer, Keith was the breakout in Universal’s #1 comedy film, Good Boys, earning rave reviews from critics, including Deadline praising his performance as “…the real scene stealer here is the irresistible Williams, who not only is the one with common sense, but also an actor who already has mastered perfect comic timing and line delivery.”

What are two things you would not want to go to space without?

I would not want to go into space without my pet gecko Leo, and my mom.

What would you say the hardest part about filming was and do you have any fun behind the scenes stories you can share?

The hardest thing about filming was leaving my family behind and due to COVID-19, we had to be very careful. Everyone involved in the production of our show made safety the number one priority on set. One of my favorite stories was when I had to wear my spacesuit outside the ship and pretend to run when the ship was in trouble. I didn’t think I would ever catch my breath.

Tell us something people would be surprised to learn about you?

I am very passionate about antibullying and civil rights.

Best known to television audiences for his memorable role as Jasper on FOX’s The Last Man on Earth; other notable credits include Jason Reitman’s celebrity-filled The Princess Bride reboot for Quibi, TV Land’s Teachers, Showtime’s Kidding, and ABC’s Selfie and The Goldbergs, among others.

If you could guest star on any Nickelodeon show past or present which one would it be and why?

It would definitely be Game Shakers because I would get to learn how to code.

Why should everyone tune in to The Astronauts on November 13th?

Everyone should tune in because it’s an exhilarating show for all ages and is nothing like you’ve seen on Nickelodeon. With Ron Howard and Brian Grazer as executive producers, you know it will be an incredible series. I can’t wait for everyone to see it!

So looking forward to this show and grateful for the opportunity to speak with Keith L. Williams about his role!

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Paige Howard has a special role in new Nickelodeon show ‘The Astronauts’


Actress Paige Howard is used to being in front of the camera — but it’s her voice that takes a co-starring role on Nickelodeon’s new series “The Astronauts.”

Howard, 35, plays Matilda, the AI-powered onboard computer interacting with five teens accidentally launched into outer space. The 10-episode live-action series premieres Friday at 7 p.m.

“It’s a different ballgame and an exciting field to dive into,” Howard says of her role as Matilda. “I’ve really fallen in love with voiceover work … and would love to continue with this.”

“The Astronauts” centers around Samy (Miya Cech), Elliott (Bryce Gheisar), Martin (Keith L. Williams), Doria (Kayden Grace Swan) and Will (Ben Daon) — who are trying to navigate their new world aboard the Odyssey II spacecraft and are undecided whether the robotic-sounding Matilda is a friend or adversary.


Daniel Knauf (“Carnivale,” “The Blacklist”) created and wrote and the series. He’s also an executive-producer, along with Imagine Entertainment — run by Paige’s father, Ron Howard, and Brian Grazer — and Imagine Kids+.

“They sent along a little character breakdown [for Matilda], which was very similar to what they would have sent if she was an onscreen character,” says Howard. “That was really helpful, and then they gave me a couple of scenes and I auditioned on-camera. It was a very typical auditioning process.

“Matilda was described as being assertive and Alexa-like, but open to growth and evolution,” she says, alluding to Amazon’s ubiquitous interactive virtual assistant. “Initially she’s a little cooler [in her tone] but, as the series progresses, we see more of her colors … and she starts to shift pretty quickly.

“That’s the vibe.”

Howard says the industrywide shutdown impacted the way in which she recorded her role.

“I was hired at the start [of production] and when I came online they had gone to Canada and filmed four episodes,” she says. “I literally got a call that they were going to bring me into the studio to start work … and that same week everything went down with COVID and quarantining.

“Nickelodeon and the Imagine production teams got super-creative and innovative and together they managed to set up a pretty fantastic recording studio in my little New York City closet,” she says. “I got some of the footage from the first episode and then over the next few episodes it was me…recording it at home… with the director over Zoom.


“I was laying down lines, and then they would see how they fit into the episode and would come back and ask me to do it again,” she says. “Then we’d move on.”

Howard says that, due to this recording process, she has yet to meet her five co-stars — at least in-person.

“Even when you’re making a film you go to the premiere and it’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, you’re in this movie too!’ If you don’t have scenes together or a big chunk of screen time together it’s like ships passing in the night,” she says. “I’ve been fan-girling them like crazy all over Instagram. They’re all so talented and impressive and intelligent.

“They were on my mind a lot — and a little part of me feels like I know them already.”

She says that getting the role of Matilda wasn’t a lock — despite the involvement of her father’s company.

“I’ve been auditioning for a while and I’ve auditioned for Imagine and Nickelodeon before,” she says. “It’s one of those things where if it fits, it fits. If it doesn’t, no one is going to stretch it for me…and this one was a really good fit.

“Honestly, I don’t know if my Dad got involved with [the series] at all,” she says. “One thing that we’re really good at in our family is having strong boundaries between work and what happens in our family life. Of course we’re really supportive of each other, like ‘Give it your best shot,’ but we don’t get involved [in each other’s careers] beyond that.”

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Imagine That: Ron Howard Lifts Off for Nickelodeon With The Astronauts

The Astronauts, the debut series from Ron Howard and Brian Grazer’s Imagine Kids & Family, is slated to blast off on Nickelodeon Friday, November 13 at 7p. The action follows a group of kids who sneak onto a spaceship and accidentally initiate a launch sequence—with no adults onboard. Imagine co-founder Ron Howard spoke with Cynopsis about the live-action show’s aesthetic—think Apollo 13, not SpongeBob—what it’s been like creating during Covid, and other projects percolating at Imagine.

Cynopsis: The Astronauts doesn’t look like anything I’ve seen in children’s television.

Ron Howard: It really exceeded my wildest hopes for what it could be. The whole notion of these kids going on this particular kind of adventure… it captured everyone’s imagination who was involved in the show. I think they wanted it to compare to these real big-screen adventures, and they made it happen.

This seems to be another project that spiraled from your fascination with space. What was the genesis of project? It definitely isn’t just a show for kids.

It isn’t, by design. It was really a collaboration between Nickelodeon and Imagine. This is our first project for Imagine Kids & Family and I have to say, it was one of those ideas that immediately made sense and you wonder why it hasn’t been done already. At this point there’s been enough done about space adventure that you could flip the script, and that was part of the fun of it. You’ve seen these scenes in other films in a different way, but you’ve never seen it this way. And it’s just infectious and fun. It deals with the thematics of not underestimating kids and their own ability to learn to cooperate. It’s not always a pretty picture, but they get it done. It’s a wishful for kids, but I also hope empowering.

Definitely empowering. There’s a line in the second episode where the commander says, “They’re not kids, they’re astronauts.” And their parents have to trust them.

As a parent and now a grandparent, that’s a hard one. Grownups are going to want to watch this show. In our household, we’ve all gathered around. There is a message: Don’t underestimate those kids. This is really them throwing themselves in the deep end.

Family viewing seems to be top of mind here. What made Nickelodeon the right outlet for the show?

I have to give Nickelodeon credit, because they brought us the notion. They were saying to us, “We’ve always wondered if this could work.” That’s all they had, that sentence, but they said, “Ron you’ve done a lot in this world of space, you and Brian and Imagine.” And we started brainstorming, and [creator/exec producer] Daniel Knauf came in. He’s a very sophisticated writer and producer and he threw himself into this as a full-on, real-world adventure story. A realistic sci-fi. And I think that’s been the key. From the beginning our ambition has always been not to make a kids show, and therefore cut corners and believe it will all be good enough. That wasn’t in our production manual. It was, We’re competing with From the Earth to the Moon or Mars or Apollo 13 or The Martian. We do want it to be that kind of experience that sure, speaks to kids first and foremost, but really is watchable, and takes them as a sophisticated audience.

Is that the aesthetic we can expect from Imagine Kids going forward? Can you share anything about other projects you’re working on?

There are many projects we are working on, and they all take on the voice of our collaborators, the subjects. We have animated projects, we have projects with animals involved, and some are very whimsical and very fantastical and some are very much grounded in reality. All we care about is excellence. That’s what Brian and I have always tried to achieve, whether it was the Grinch or Parenthood or Liar, Liar or Apollo 13 or 8 Mile or A Beautiful Mind. It’s about, How do we best serve that story an the audience its most intended for?

You’ve got your hands in so many other projects right now. What has it been like creating during lockdown?

Of course it’s been an adjustment, and psychologically its’ been challenging at times. But we’ve had a huge advantage in that so many projects have been ongoing. Astronauts was actually our first physical production that restarted, and of course here we have a show with a lot of kids and we felt an unbelievable burden of responsibility to do this safely. We may have gone a little further than the guidelines that most productions are using, given the age of our cast, but the cooperation was there. We didn’t have a single misstep and we made it through, breathed a huge sigh of relief and helped set some examples for other shows. Now Imagine has other projects back underway.

For me personally, it has given me some creative focus because I don’t have the option of jumping on an airplane and going around. My days are… it’s almost like I’m in school. I have a certain amount of time to devote to projects, but it’s extremely dedicated time and I’ve been able to find that this remote communication is working. It’s not what I would choose, but it’s effective. Whether it’s Hillbilly Elegy, which I have that comes out on Netflix at the end of November, or finishing up Astronauts or some of our documentary projects or finishing up scripts or preproduction… we’ve been able to do all of it.

I was just reading about Imagine Impact and the new app you launched to help cultivate industry talent. Can you talk a little bit about that?

It began with my partner at Imagine, Brian Grazer. He observed these start-up accelerator programs, one in particular called Y Combinator in Silicon Valley. We’d always talked about ways, and experimented with ways, to give writers more power and develop more projects faster and more efficiently, but at the end of the day trying to empower writers and their creativity. And he saw in this, that the entrepreneurs were a lot like screenwriters. Every project is a startup. And we began to use some of their theories and put together our own version of an eight-week boot camp. We were able to get financing to do it and now we’ve taken on partners and now there is an app which is allowing us to not only begin to communicate with writers but the entire entertainment community and let people feed in their availabilities. Eventually over the next year or so we plan to roll it out and make it kind of a LinkedIn for entertainment people. On the creative side and also below the line on the technical side. We really think it’s a way to bring filmmaking teams and television-making teams together faster with more transparency, cutting out the middleman.

Sounds like a way to bring democratization to the business.

That’s the plan. And we’re seeing the evidence of that already. I’m thrilled to be a part of it.

###

From moms:

Nickelodeon’s ‘The Astronauts’ Is The Ultimate In TV For Kids & Tweens

THE ASTRONAUTS: Episode 101: Martin Taylor (Keith L Williams), Will Rivers (Ben Andrusco-Daon), Doria Taylor (Kayden Swan), Samantha Sawyer (Miya Cech) and Elliott Combs (Bryce Gheiser) in THE ASTRONAUTS on Nickelodeon. Photo: Michael Courtney/Nickelodeon (c) Viacom Internation Inc.

Nickelodeon's new show 'The Astronauts' is set to premiere on November 13, 2020 at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon.

In the new Nickelodeon series, The Astronauts, a spacecraft that is set to travel to outer space on a mission, launches prematurely when five curious middle school tweens sneak onboard the space ship using their parents’ security clearances. Unbeknownst to them, the space craft is controlled by highly-sensitive voice-activated Artificial Intelligence that employs face recognition and beyond.

It is all intriguing, exciting and fun until a member of the tween crew, Elliot Combs, mistakenly triggers the premature launch by saying a code word. By the time that the adults and Aeronautics professionals realize what is actually happening, it is too late. The Artificial Intelligence that is programmed to assist the spacecraft arguably has a mind of its own. Though only tweens, the youth must summon the courage to survive in their newfound responsibility as accidental astronauts while the adults try to figure out a solution.

THE ASTRONAUTS: Episode 102: Samantha Sawyer (Miya Cech) and Martin Taylor (Keith L Williams) in THE ASTRONAUTS on Nickelodeon. Photo: Ricardo Hubbs/Nickelodeon ©2020 Viacom, International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Helmed by showrunner, writer, and executive producer Daniel Knauf, this new Nickelodeon series provides many powerful lessons while showcasing the power of technology, the resilience of children, the intersection of humanity and AI, and so much more.

Produced in partnership with Imagine Kids +Family’s Ron Howard (Apollo 13), Stephanie Sperber, and Brian Grazer, ‘The Astronauts’ does not succumb to expected stereotypical tropes about reckless teenagers and tweens who know nothing about life. On the contrary, in this series it is the adults who learn a thing or two from the tweens about: bravery, teamwork and trusting your own instincts.

THE ASTRONAUTS: Episode 102: Samantha Sawyer (Miya Cech) and Martin Taylor (Keith L Williams) in THE ASTRONAUTS on Nickelodeon. Photo: Ricardo Hubbs/Nickelodeon ©2020 Viacom, International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

It is evident from the very beginning that this group of friends are not your typical set of middle school friends. This group of zealous, curious and bright minds are the offspring of smart professionals in the science world respectively.

The writing in this series is very strong, and there are many powerful lessons embedded within the plot of each episode. Oftentimes, adults like to assume that they alone are the ones sent to teach, and that it is their job as the ‘adults’ to keep everything under control. In each episode, it’s quite interesting to see what happens when parents and adults get out of their own heads, and allow their kids to trust themselves.

THE ASTRONAUTS: Episode 102: Samantha Sawyer (Miya Cech) and Martin Taylor (Keith L Williams) in THE ASTRONAUTS on Nickelodeon. Photo: Ricardo Hubbs/Nickelodeon ©2020 Viacom, International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

With this series, viewers also get to witness how evident it is that kids really absorb what their parents give emotionally and socially. This series really shows the many benefits that come along with having parents that are smart and intuitive doers who are out making a difference in their respective professions and in the world. While not all of the parents in the series are science geniuses, they are all actively involved in the world of science in their own unique way.

With casting by Sheryl Levine, this series is inclusive and showcases a unique cast. Not only is the cast culturally and ethnically diverse, there are many valuable nuances that really show the great attention to detail when preparing to bring this script to life. With the deliberate casting choices, it is more than evident that the casting and production teams were sensitive to the social and cultural narratives and shifts happening currently as it pertain to representation onscreen that reflects humanity-- and their choices worked beautifully.

It is to be noted that these are not your average tween television casting choices, and the character development of these tween characters is to be noted. Samantha ‘Samy’ Sawyer-Wei (Miya Cech), Elliot (Bryce Gheisar), Ben Doan (Will Rivers), Martin Taylor (Keith L. Williams) and Doria Taylor (Kayden Grace Swan) all make for a power-packed, believable tween ensemble.

Miya Cech (Marvelous and the Black Hole, Are You Afraid of the Dark?) in her role as Samy does not depict the perfect Asian child or student. She brings depth and nuance to the role as an academic genius and natural leader. It’s refreshing to see a tween protagonist depicted as Afro-Asian in this series. Not only does she have a Black mother, Rebecca Sawyer (Bethany Brown) who possesses style and grace as a high-ranking professional in her field, their on-screen relationship also denotes the impact that successful mothers can have on their daughters as well as some of the drawbacks to being highly successful in a parent-child dynamic.

Bryce Gheisar (Wonder, A Dog’s Purpose) as Elliot Combs truly personifies what it means to have privilege coupled with vulnerability. Ben Daon (A Child's Play) as Will Rivers is the perfect personification of youthful zeal coupled with child-like wonder. In one scene, when the crew of friends are literally being thrust into outer space, he enthusiastically yells out, “We’re actually blasting off in space!” As Will, Daon has a natural joy and zeal that truly translates onscreen.

His character’s ability to live in the moment despite the circumstances clearly denotes the beauty in having a child’s imagination and zeal for life. Keith L. Williams (Good Boys, The Princess Bride) in his role as Martin Taylor is quite intriguing to watch. Williams’ ability to be both comedic and astute definitely shows off his range. It is to be noted that Martin as a tween Black boy does not fall into the negative trope of playing sports, but rather he’s a lover of mathematics and solving equations.

Kayden Grace Swan (Queen Sugar, A Black Lady Sketch Show) as Doria Taylor, younger sister to Martin, is perfectly cast as Doria. From her natural hair, neatly styled in bedazzled Afro puffs to her love of fashion and her need to get the perfect shot is just loads of fun to watch. However, she's so much more than a fashionista. She's an aspiring neurologist. In a very interesting scene in one of the first episodes, she perfectly depicts the current generation's co-dependence on cellphones and the need to find the perfect picture for social media. The hair and make-up departments did a fabulous job styling the cast's hair, and Doria's hair jewelry is everything.

The costume design team does a wonderful job of styling the modern and chic tweens authentically, and each have their own unique styles of dress. The production and set design are very detailed, and truly reflect some of the genuine nuances of places like Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral Florida and California Science Center amongst others. The visuals are stunning.

The series music is quite fitting, and the cinematography and CGI are awesome. Overall, this series is really interesting, action-packed and definitely provides positive representation onscreen in various ways. There are no negative stereotypes depicted, and the narrative themes presented lend themselves towards encouraging tweens to aim for higher intelligence, being a team player and being courageous even when circumstances seem insurmountable.

While this series is definitely a great watch for the youth, there are some lasting lessons carved into the narrative for adults as well. One major takeaway for adults is the notion that it’s dangerous to underestimate the intelligence and inner strength of kids. While the adult actors cast are a superb lot, the tweens and teenagers cast in this movie far outshine the adults.

The Astronauts series is a definite must see for kids, tweens, science-loving teenagers and parents too. Besides, nothing beats seeing a group of tweens pontificate about gravity and shifting weight in outer space in order to survive. Cheers to resilient children and teens, and content that encourages the next generation to embrace intelligence and the ability to endure when under pressure.

The Astronauts will premiere on Nickelodeon on November 13, 2020 at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon.

Creator & Showrunner: Daniel Knauf Executive Producers: Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Stephanie Sperber, Daniel Knauf and Dean Isrealite Stars: Miya Cech, Bryce Gheisar, Keith L. Williams, Kayden Grace Swan , Ben Daon and Paige Howard

###


Ron Howard Returns To Space With The Astronauts For Nickelodeon

Nickelodeon's new live action space series, The Astronauts, comes from executive producer Ron Howard, who spoke to us about why telling stories about exploration is so important to him.

Since its inception in 1979, Nickelodeon has been forward thinking with its programming. Yet it took over 41 years for the network to go after the final frontier, a live action space travel show for kids. To make an ambitious show like that happen, they needed the right co-pilot, landing the director of Apollo 13, Ron Howard. 

Howard serves as executive producer for The Astronauts, a new live-action kids series coming to Nickelodeon on Nov. 13. It’s the first kids series to come from Howard and Brian Grazer’s production company, Imagine Entertainment, which launched a new division in 2019 called Imagine Kids+Family, headed up by Stephanie Sperber. In early meetings between the network and production company, the prospect of doing a space show for kids was exciting to both parties.

“They said, ‘We don’t know quite how to do it, but maybe you guys do because you seem to like space, but we think kids and space would be interesting.’ We took that and ran with it because immediately I felt there was an opportunity, especially if we could do it realistically,” Howard tells Den of Geek. “If we could give you a real sense of adventure, there was a way to flip the script on the conventions of many shows, many movies that we’ve seen, some of which we’ve done as a company.” 

The Astronauts is likely as close to a traditional drama as Nickelodeon can get. Howard was quick to use the term “cinematic” to describe the look of the series, but anyone with even a passing knowledge of Nickelodeon’s past live action series will be surprised to see that the footage looks like it belongs on premium cable or a streamer. The series, which is written and executive produced by Daniel Knauf (Carnivàle, The Blacklist), follows a group of kids who “embark on the adventure of a lifetime when they are mistakenly launched into space.” 

“We wanted to make it plausible, wanted to make you believe it could happen, and that it would be all the more empowering and all the more fun to watch if kids were looking at this and saying, ‘Yeah, I guess this is kind of how this might go down,’” Howard says, “So that became our mantra and Nickelodeon supported that.”

In meetings with Nickelodeon, network execs often referenced Howard’s Apollo 13, as well as a more recent Imagine Entertainment project, the National Geographic docu-drama series Mars, as touch points. 

“We learned a lot with our Mars series about how to create space in a very realistic, connected way,” he says, “I mean, it had to be as authentic as we could make it look and that carried over.” 

The experience on Mars helped the production company learn new visual techniques to capture the realism of space travel. Howard’s filmmaking experience on Apollo 13 also proved invaluable for the cast and creatives behind The Astronauts. 

“We did some real weightlessness [on Apollo 13], which we don’t have to do [for The Astronauts]. We wouldn’t do real weightlessness today probably if we were making Apollo 13. Too risky, too difficult, and too many question marks. But I was able to talk about some of the things that Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, and Bill Paxton learned and I was able to give those tips to [director] Dean Israelite who passed it along to the actors, again, to try to make the audience connect with what they’re going through to make it really visceral.” 

Howard hopes that realism attracts both kids and their parents to The Astronauts. 

“The show has really exceeded my wildest hopes in terms of the way it could entertain and who we could entertain because I know when I looked at a cut, the grownups in my family wanted to watch it too. It’s not just the kids, they want to watch it with me.”

This year marks the silver anniversary of Apollo 13, which earned nine Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. Howard says he returned to a space project for the younger generation because of his belief in exploration.

“I think it’s ingrained in the human spirit. I think it stimulates the human consciousness,” Howard says. “I think it makes us perform at our best. I think that society benefits from everything that is learned, not just the tangibles of actually getting to space, but all the knowledge that comes from it.” 

In the first episode of The Astronauts, a spacecraft called Odyssey II is set to launch on a mission to retrieve a foreign object that could potentially save humanity. When five untrained kids swipe their parents’ security clearances to sneak on board, they accidentally get launched into space and assume their parents’ mission. To Howard, that sense of exploring the unknown is an important pillar for a kids’ series. 

“Human beings also need the adventure. They need to know there is a frontier. They need to believe in the possibility of Star Trek and a journey, a horizon to reach. That’s been part of the human experience from the beginning when you understand the way the species spread out and traveled. I think it’s among the noblest of undertakings that human beings can engage in and I love celebrating it.”

The Astronauts premieres with an hour-long event on Friday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon.

###

From io9:

Nickelodeon's Astronauts Takes Us Inside the Kids' Stolen Spaceship

None of us are heading into space anytime soon (except maybe Tom Cruise), so it looks like space is coming to us. io9 has an exclusive first look inside the set of Nickelodeon’s The Astronauts, a sci-fi series about kids who find themselves on the unexpected journey of a lifetime.

In this video tour, director and producer Dean Israelite ventures inside the set of The Astronauts, a co-production with Imagine Kids+Family. In the series, a group of kids who’ve gathered to watch the launch of the spaceship Odyssey II end up sneaking inside the abandoned vessel, only to accidentally initiate the launch sequence. They end up trapped, forced to work together to survive and find their way home. As you can see in the video tour, there are a lot of places (and details) the kids have to manage.

In an interview with io9, Israelite said the ship’s design was partially inspired by The Martian, Interstellar, and the International Space Station. However, they wanted to make sure it was unique: “While there is a familiarity to an aesthetic grounded in existing technology, [production designer] Geoff Wallace and I endeavored to make the ship look unlike anything that has come before.”

There was one detail they made sure wasn’t skimped on: Making sure the ship wasn’t kid-sized. Even though they were working with younger actors, the idea was that they were using a ship that didn’t belong to them. As a result, everything is just a bit bigger than they are. “Nothing was designed to be kid-size,” he said. “Our guiding principle was to throw the kids into a realistic adult world, and framed by this design, literally and figuratively, illustrate their coming of age.”

The series stars Miya Cech (Are You Afraid of the Dark?) as Samantha “Samy” Sawyer-Wei, Bryce Gheisar (A Dog’s Purpose) as Elliott Combs, Keith L. Williams (The Last Man on Earth) as Martin Taylor, Kayden Grace Swan (A Black Lady Sketch Show) as Doria Taylor, and Ben Daon (Child’s Play) as Will Rivers.

The Astronauts debuts with the first two episodes on November 13.

###

From CBR.com:

The Astronauts Cast Talk Their Characters in Upcoming Nickelodeon Sci-FI Series

During an exclusive interview with CBR, the cast of the upcoming Nickelodeon series The Astronauts talked about the ambitious show.

Nickelodeon's Astronauts centers around five young preteens-- Samy, Elliott, Martin, Doria and Will. The children of the crew of an upcoming shuttle flight, the group inadvertently ends up within the rocket instead as it launches early -- forcing the five to put aside their differences and work together if they want any chance of successfully navigating the ship safely back to Earth.

During an exclusive interview with CBR, the cast of The Astronauts spoke about what brought them to the series and what it was like to take on such an ambitious project.

Miya Cech plays Samy in the series, the daughter of the ship's chief astronaut, and something of a leader among the kids who are trapped aboard the shuttle. Cech described her character, saiying, "I personally really feel a connection to Samy because we're very similar in ways, such as like we can both be very stubborn, very tough, very strong. I'm also in love with space myself, so it was really exciting to finally get to be this super smart, tough, into space, girl.

"When we started filming, when I realized that Samy had to take that leadership role, it was interesting because I personally have never really been," Cech continued. "I've been more of a follower in my friend groups. I've always been the one that follows all the trends. I've never really been one to really lead the group. So to get to be a leader was super amazing."

"I was really excited," Cech continued. "I heard about the series when I was filming another Nickelodeon series called Are You Afraid of the Dark? [...] I heard that Ron Howard was behind it, I heard a bunch of other people who were behind it: Dean Israelite, who I worked with on Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Marcus Stokes, who did 911, and Jonathan Frakes -- who did Star Trek: Discovery and Picard. So I was really intrigued by it. Personally, I love anything having to do with space. I was so excited to do it."

For Ben Daon (who plays the jokester and outsider within the group, Will), the series appeared on his radar in a much more unexpected fashion.  "It was like just one of my auditions," Daon said. "I got it, and I fell in love with the character. I feel a really strong connection with it because [Will and I] have so much in common. We're both very excitable and nerdy and geeky, and so just being able to really portray that made it easier to be natural. And I ended up getting the role and once I got here it was like, I didn't think it could get any better, and it did. All the props and the flying, it's just so, so, so cool."

Bryce Gheisar plays the haughty Elliot, and his attraction to the show came out of a natural desire to see how the story would play out. "It was whenever I first read the script for the first episode," Gheisar explained. "I was pretty blown away. It seemed more like a movie script, like the first act of a movie script and ...[Daniel Knauf wrote it], he's done a lot of other TV shows and he's amazing. Just being in space overall, I wanted to see how that kind of show would work. So that's what gravitated me towards the show, I guess."

The cast is rounded out by the sibling's Martin and Doira, played by Keith L. Williams and Kayden Grace Swan respectively. Both of them found themselves drawn to the project for the chance to experience sci-fi settings in their early careers -- and to the chance to play characters they inherently related to. "What attracted me to the show was that it was taking place in space," Swan explained, "and the fact that the character I auditioned for was just so much like me. So much like me, I fell in love with her instantly."

Williams agreed, pointing out that "like what Kayden said, my character was exactly like me, supposed to be the tallest out of the friend group and ... Like, kind of scary, like really scared. Because I would definitely be really scared if I got shot into space accidentally. And I feel like the first time I saw the script, it really made me happy to be on a space show because before I found out about the script, I and my Mom were like, 'I want to be on a TV show.' And then that next month, I get the script and then I booked it and it was amazing."

As befitting a sci-fi setting, the series features some genuinely impressive stunts and action-beats. Cech and Daon were quick to talk about how much fun that part of the experience had been like. "I think it was always really exciting," Cech said. "We had the pleasure of doing our own stunts, not only did we have movement coaching to teach us how to appear weightless, but we also get to go 10, 20 feet up in the air on wires and really like embody that flying. And that's been one of my favorite [...] like my personal favorite experiences of being on set is flying through these massive sets on wires, so high up in the air. That's definitely been one of the favorites. The wire stuff is so much fun. And it's like my first time ever doing wirework like that. So it's been really, really cool to get to see the entire process behind that."

Gheisar described how "we had an amazing stunt coordinator whose name is Sluggo, a great guy. He was a professional skateboarder and we also had somebody come to the set to teach us about the physics of anti-gravity, and how we would look in anti-gravity. So we got that down and then along with each stunt coordinator. Together it was as well ... the perfect puzzle piece that was missing from the puzzle.

"I went full geek, oh yeah," Gheisar continued. "This is the first time Nickelodeon's partnering with Imagine Kids and Family, and people who are behind that are Ron Howard. And he was the director on Apollo 13, which is one of the best space movies ever created. So I did a lot of research on that and I think that's why this TV show has a very cinematic feel. There's a lot of directors behind it who have done very like larger than life, movie kind of things. So bringing that to a Nickelodeon TV show is just kind of ... it's pretty cool to see it happen."

Cech described how "just by watching the trailer, you can definitely tell that it's different than any other kids' show, let alone a Nickelodeon show, that you're going to see out there. It feels a lot like a movie, not only when watching it, but when you're filming it as well. It feels like this huge production. It feels very cinematic, which is awesome." Daon explained how "I feel like the show is going to appeal to a wider audience. It's not just going to be for the kids. It's not just going to be for the adults. I feel like everybody would be like ... if you're a family and you're watching the show, I feel like everybody's going to enjoy it because there's something in it for everybody."

Check out the trailer [above].

The Astronauts, starring Miya Cech, Bryce Gheisar, Keith L. Williams, Kayden Grace Swan, Ben Daon and Paige Howard, is set to premiere on Nov. 13 on Nickelodeon.

###


The Astronauts' Kayden Grace Swan Reveals 10 Fun Facts About Herself (Exclusive)

Kayden Grace Swan is taking over television screens in the new series The Astronauts!

The actress stars as Doria in the Nickelodeon series, which follows five kids who embark on the adventure of a lifetime when they are mistakenly launched into space.

Here’s a synopsis: The spaceship Odyssey II is set to launch to investigate a mysterious asteroid passing by Earth. When a group of kids use their parent’s security clearance to sneak onto the empty ship, the launch sequence is accidentally initiated.

Blasting off into space with no proper training, a malfunctioning onboard AI system, and their parents watching from Earth, the kids embark on a journey of survival using only their smarts and friendship as tools.

“Being cast as a lead in The Astronauts is more than just my wildest dreams coming true,” Kayden told JJJ. “It is the YES that changed my life.”

We got to know more about Kayden with an exclusive 10 Fun Facts. Check them out below!

Be sure to tune in to The Astronauts TONIGHT (November 13) at 7/6c on Nickelodeon!

1. I was born with Distichiasis (double eyelashes), a condition where you have two rows of eyelashes. People always ask me if my eyelashes are real because of the length and amount of lashes I have.
2. I’m super fascinated by celebrity birthdays.
3. I lost my teeth 3 times as a child.
4. I have been a Girl Scout since I was 6 years old and am currently working on my Silver Award.
5. I have played Lacrosse since I was 9 years old.
6. My favorite movie is the Twilight series and I’ve read every book.
7. My favorite era is the 80’s. I love the music, fashion and tv shows.
8. My biggest pet peeve is what I call “louching.” Loud chewing!!
9. My secret passion is to be the babysitter to celebrity kids!
10. I am a horror film fanatic and hope to play in a horror film one day.

###


Originally published: Friday, October 09, 2020 at 19:17 BST.

Additional source: Anime Superhero Forum /@kanc.

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

Nickelodeon Israel Orders New Drama 'Ziggy'; to Premiere on TeenNick Israel on Sunday 15th November 2020

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Nickelodeon in Israel has commissioned a new young-adult drama titled Ziggy from Tel Aviv-based global content production and distribution company ADD Content (The Missing, My Guardian Angel)!


Nickelodeon’s Ziggy

Created by Shahar Segall and Oren Yaakobi, Ziggy tells the story of 16-year-old Dori, a teenager with Vitiligo (a long-term skin condition characterised by patches of the skin losing their pigment) which has impacted his confidence so much that he hides from the world. In order to fulfil his secret dream of singing and performing on stage, he invents a charismatic and talented alter ego – Ziggy – a personality who can conquer bullies and shine through the mask he adopts as his signature costume. Dori/Ziggy will be played by newcomer, Amitai Erman, who also has Vitiligo. The show follows Dori’s journey of success and his battle to keep his true identity a secret, while he falls in love, makes friends, and discovers himself.

Nickelodeon, which is distributed by pay TV platform Hot, has commissioned 40 episodes of Ziggy, which will be produced and distributed internationally by ADD Content as a format and finished series. Emil Ben Shimon directs.

Update (1/11) - TeenNick Israel (יִשְׂרָאֵל) will premiere Ziggy (זיגי) on Sunday 15th November 2020!

Update (11/11) - Leading up to the premiere, TeenNick יִשְׂרָאֵל will digitally premiere the first episode on their YouTube channel on Thursday 12th November 2020!

זיגי: בקרוב תכירו את דורי | טין ניק



זיגי | סדרה חדשה | בקרוב מאוד בערוץ טין ניק

זיגי: בקרוב תכירו את תמוז | טין ניק

ערוץ טין ניק



זיגי | סדרה חדשה | בקרוב מאוד בערוץ טין ניק

#טיןניק #זיגי

זיגי: בקרוב תדעו מי זה | סדרה חדשה בערוץ טין ניק



זיגי | סדרה חדשה | בקרוב מאוד בערוץ טין ניק













זיגי | בקרוב בערוץ טין ניק



זיגי | סדרה חדשה | בקרוב מאוד בערוץ טין ניק



עומר חזן הוא ניב | זיגי | בקרוב בערוץ טין ניק



זיגי | סדרה חדשה | בקרוב מאוד בערוץ טין ניק

קווין רובין הוא סיוון | זיגי | בקרוב בערוץ טין ניק



זיגי | סדרה חדשה | בקרוב מאוד בערוץ טין ניק

אנה זק היא שיקמה | זיגי | 15.11 בערוץ טין ניק

זיגי | סדרה חדשה | 15.11 בערוץ טין ניק



זיגי: הפתיח הרשמי | טין ניק



זיגי: פרק מאחורי הקלעים | טין ניק



פרק מאחורי הקלעים | קווין רובין לוקח את הצופים להיכרות ראשונה עם הדמויות והעלילה של הסדרה זיגי
זיגי | פרק הבכורה ב-15/11 בערוץ טין ניק לילדי הוט

זיגי: מי אוכל צ׳יפס בלי רוטב צ׳ילי? | הצצה לפרק הבכורה❗️ | טין ניק



הצצה לפרק הבכורה של זיגי | הפרק המלא ביום שישי 12/11 ביוטיוב שלנו ב-15/11 בערוץ טין ניק לילדי הוט

זיגי: המרדף | הצצה לפרק הבכורה❗️ | טין ניק



הצצה לפרק הבכורה של זיגי | ימים א׳-ד׳ בערוץ טין ניק

זיגי: פרק הבכורה הכפול | טין ניק



פרק הבכורה הכפול | בפרק הפתיחה דורי ואחותו תמוז עוברים לכפר אלון. דורי, שחושש מהתגובות למראה שלו, מסתגר, בזמן שתמוז פוגשת חברים חדשים. האודישנים למופע מתקרבים. סיוון מגלה שאביו יצא לחופשה מהכלא ודורי נתקל בבריונים. זיגי | ימים א׳-ד׳ בערוץ טין ניק

זיגי: יורים מילים - השיר של דורי | מתוך פרק הבכורה | טין ניק


אמיתי הרמן - יורים מילים
מילים ולחן: דורון מדלי
עיבוד והפקה מוסיקלית: רן אביב
מתוך פרק הבכורה של זיגי | ימים א׳-ד׳ בערוץ טין ניק
פרק הבכורה הכפול

Hadas Mozes-Lichtenstein, co-Founder and Head of International at ADD Content said: “This show is a really important story in a time where we as a society, and particularly our teenagers, are more and more image conscious. We’re excited to bring this fun, relatable coming-of-age series to life on Nickelodeon and can’t wait to introduce the hugely talented Amitai to audiences.”

Orly Atlas-Katz, CEO of Ananey Communications Groups adds: “All of us here at Nickelodeon Hot, the leading channel for meaningful, quality children and teen’s content, are happy and honoured to be a part of this important and moving show. A story focusing on the triumph of the human spirit, the courage to be different and the importance of believing in yourself.”

More Nick:Nutz Productions Set to Shoot 'Sky', a New Adventure Tween Drama Series; to Air on TeenNick Israel!

Originally published: Wednesday, March 25, 2020.

Sources: C21 Media, Señal News.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Israel and Ziggy News and Highlights!

Sharon, Lois & Bram's Elephant Show | Nick Knacks Episode #064

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Sharon, Lois & Bram's Elephant Show - Nick Knacks Episode #064


"Just a few months shy of the premiere of Nick Jr, Nickelodeon imported their best preschool program yet. Join Sharon, Lois and Bram as they sing non-stop and let the whims decide where the episode is going to go."

Black Lives Matter

Protest Charities: https://lectureinprogress.com/journal/resources-for-supporting-black-lives-matter-movement

Community Bail Funds: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/bail_funds_george_floyd

It's October, of course Sample Platter is going to talk about Are You Afraid of the Dark. Today, Nick Knacks focusses on a season one story that's about murdering children, and why that was important for the franchise.

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 Nick Pluto TV, NickHits on Amazon Prime Video Channels and Nick on CBS All Access!

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/

More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!
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Filming a TV Show in a Pandemic | Lizzy Greene

'The Silva Switch' | Power Rangers Beast Morphers Sneak Peek | Nickelodeon

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Time to take down some bad guys 💥💪 Catch the brand new Power Rangers Beast Morphers Season 2 episode "The Silva Switch", premiering Saturday, November 14 at 8:30 a.m. (ET/PT), only on Nickelodeon! Check out a super sneak peek below!:


The Silva Switch: Following an accident, Nate and Steel accidentally swap bodies. Meanwhile, Robo-Blaze and Robo-Roxy enter an arms race to continue proving their usefulness to Evox. (#1016)

It's a Power Rangers Musical! | Episode Preview | Beast Morphers Season 2 | Power Rangers Official


Check out this awesome sneak peek of the latest episode from Power Rangers Beast Morphers Season 2, Episode 16, The Silva Switch!!!!

Nate and Steel accidentally swap bodies!

For more on Power Rangers, please visit www.powerrangers.com and follow Power Rangers on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

More Nick:Hasbro Unveils 'Power Rangers Dino Fury' Sneak Peek at Hasbro PulseCon!


Originally published: Friday, November 13, 2020 at 02:18 GMT.

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

Nickelodeon India to Premiere 'Shiva The Rise of Technosapiens' on Saturday 14th November 2020

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Nickelodeon India will premiere the brand new Shiva movie, Shiva The Rise of Technosapiens on Saturday 14th November 2020 at 12:30pm! The movie, as part of the network's Diwali programming highlights, will also debut on Voot Kids the same day at 12:00pm.

Ab duniya ka fate Shiva ke haath mein hai. Kya voh tech revolution se bacha payega duniya ko? To find out, watch 'Shiva The Rise Of Technosapiens' on 14th Nov at 11:30am, only on Nick India!


More Nick:Nickelodeon India Premieres 'Pinaki & Happy: Bhoot Bandhus' on Sonic!
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Prepare to Launch | 'The Astronauts' Takes Off Tonight at 7p/6c, Only on Nickelodeon

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Prepare for launch 🚀 The Astronauts takes off tonight at 7p/6c, only on Nickelodeon! Click here for more info!


Blast off with the crew of the ODYSSEY II as they navigate space, relying only on themselves to survive! The Astronauts launches Friday, November 13 at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT), only on Nickelodeon! It's an adventure like nothing on earth. Click here for more info!

Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more The Astronauts and follow the adventure on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.


Nickelodeon's 'The Astronauts' premieres tonight


Nickelodeon enters orbit for an epic hour-long premiere event of The Astronauts, the network’s first co-production with Imagine Kids+Family. The brand-new live-action series follows a group of kids who embark on the adventure of a lifetime when they are mistakenly launched into space. The Astronauts is executive produced by Imagine Entertainment Executive Chairmen Brian Grazer and Ron Howard, and Imagine Kids+Family President Stephanie Sperber. The series is created by Daniel Knauf (Carnivàle, The Blacklist), who also serves as writer and executive producer. The first two episodes of The Astronauts premiere back-to-back on Friday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon.

In the hour-long premiere of The Astronauts, the spacecraft Odyssey II is set to launch on a mission to retrieve a foreign object that could potentially save mankind. The plan quickly goes awry when five untrained kids use their parents’ security clearances to sneak onto the empty ship. Soon after they board, the onboard AI system triggers the launch sequence. Unable to stop the ship from blasting off, the kids must assume their new role as astronauts and brave harrowing tasks, as their parents rush to find a way to take control of the situation.

The group traveling together through space are: Samantha “Samy” Sawyer-Wei, played by Miya Cech (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Always Be My Maybe); Elliott Combs, played by Bryce Gheisar (Wonder, A Dog’s Purpose); Martin Taylor, played by Keith L. Williams (Good Boys, The Last Man on Earth); Doria Taylor, played by Kayden Grace Swan (A Black Lady Sketch Show); and Will Rivers, played by Ben Daon (Child’s Play). Matilda, the ship’s onboard AI system, is voiced by Paige Howard (The Employer, Adventureland).

The premiere episodes of The Astronauts are directed by DGA Award nominee Dean Israelite (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Power Rangers movie, Project Almanac), who also serves as executive producer. The series is also directed by Jonathan Frakes (Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, The Orville), and Marcus Stokes (Criminal Minds, The Flash, 911). Will Davis served as creative executive for Imagine Kids+Family.

Production of The Astronauts for Nickelodeon is overseen by Shauna Phelan, Senior Vice President, Live Action Scripted Content; and Zack Olin, Senior Vice President, Live Action. Brian Banks serves as Nickelodeon’s Executive in Charge of Production for the series.

This article was written by Nickelodeon. The statements in this article don’t necessarily represent the positions, strategies, or opinions of AT&T.

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More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

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

Daniel Knauf Discusses Finding Success After Switching Careers and New Series ‘The Astronauts’

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Producer and screenwriter Daniel Knauf discusses finding success after switching careers and new series ‘The Astronauts’


Daniel Knauf has been the mastermind behind a number of television shows and has always loved writing and creating. He earned his bachelor’s degree in English at California State University Los Angeles. However, one might be surprised to hear that he had a career as an employee benefits consultant before getting into the writing world.

“I was on that track as a kid, I was very creative,” Knauf told amNY. “I majored in art and English in college, but the career in insurance happened when I got married at 22 and I wanted to be able to feed everybody. It seemed like I had to set aside childhood things.”

Though he found a lot of success as an employee benefits consultant, by the time he was 27-28 years old Knauf felt the itch to start writing again.

Photo: Chris Cuffaro

“I’ve found that creative people are like sharks — you have to keep swimming or else you can’t breathe,” said Knauf. “Once the kids went to bed, I would spend a couple of hours a night learning the screenwriting process. I kept that up for years and years and focused on getting better at it.”

For years, Knauf wrote from his home and by the time he reached his 40s he figured it was time to try and sell something. His first major project was when he sold Carnivàle to HBO. Part of the reason Knauf believes the show sold was because he was able to hone in on his craft before working in the industry.

“I think that I had forced myself to sit on the launchpad for as long as I did so I could understand my craft before I launched a career,” said Knauf. “Many writers who start out in the business are learning as they are working — I don’t think that working on staff on a show is a great place to be learning. There’s too much pressure there. But I have the luxury of having a well-paying job so I could really take my time.”

Knauf signed on as the Creator/Executive Producer of the series, which ran on HBO from 2005-2007. The series focused on a traveling carnival in a bleak American landscape of the Great Depression. 

For Knauf, landing a job on HBO was like going from zero to 100 right off the bat.

“It was completely terrifying. I was suddenly in this weird bubble that is Hollywood,” said Knauf. “There’s a completely different language spoken there. In Hollywood, there were these specific things that you needed to do and on Carnivàle I made every single possible mistake you could make from the standpoint of office politics. I usually only made them once — I had run my own business for 22 years and brought a skillset that most showrunners don’t have. But we were making a really terrific show, to this day people say that Carnivàle was the beginning of what we think of when it comes to contemporary serialized television. It was a great experience overall.”

Knauf has since gone on to write and produce many shows, including producing and writing on the hit STARZ series Spartacus: Blood and Sand, serving as the writer-Showrunner on Dracula for NBC, and working as a writer and Executive Producer on the NBC series The Blacklist, just to name a few. While he’s used to working on darker subject matter, Knauf’s latest project comes in the form of a new live-action series on Nickelodeon entitled The Astronauts.

THE ASTRONAUTS: Episode 101: Doria Taylor (Kayden Swan), Elliott Combs (Bryce Gheiser), Samantha Sawyer (Miya Cech), Will Rivers (Ben Andrusco-Daon) and Martin Taylor (Keith L Williams) in THE ASTRONAUTS on Nickelodeon. Photo: Michael Courtney/Nickelodeon (c) Viacom Internation Inc.

Produced in partnership with Imagine Kids+Family’s Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, and Stephanie Sperber, The Astronauts centers around five children whose parents work in the aeronautic industry. While they all know of each other, they aren’t the best of friends. The kids manage to check out a spacecraft but ultimately end up getting launched into space together. The kids and their parents have to work together to get the kids back down to Earth safely.

“I’ve been in really dark material up until The Astronauts, so this was a huge change of pace for me. I’ve been wanting to do this for a while, I was getting kind of burned out on stuff that was so edgy,” said Knauf. “When my parents were alive, we would watch TV and they would be afraid to go outside because some stuff was so grim and horrendous. The world isn’t really like that. I wanted to make something that people ages 7-70 can enjoy together and not feel worse about the world than they did when they sit down.”

THE ASTRONAUTS: Episode 101: Doria Taylor (Kayden Swan), Elliott Combs (Bryce Gheiser), Samantha Sawyer (Miya Cech), Will Rivers (Ben Andrusco-Daon) and Martin Taylor (Keith L Williams) in THE ASTRONAUTS on Nickelodeon. Photo: Michael Courtney/Nickelodeon (c) Viacom Internation Inc.

Working on The Astronauts gave Knauf a chance to write through the eyes of children, which wasn’t particularly prominent in the work he was doing. Knauf says that while adults usually have their public perception figured out by the time they are in their mid-20s, kids are still under construction.

“There’s not a lot of subtext with kids, they are a little more emotionally honest. Kids kind of have lousy poker faces,” said Knauf. “You might have to write a lot of scene work for adults to get to the truth in a situation, but with children, it’s usually right out there.”

Though it is technically children’s programming, Knauf says that The Astronauts explores some bleak material, essentially if Apollo 13 happened with children. The show itself is one of the most ambitious and cinematic projects Nickelodeon has brought to television, with Knauf saying that the space world that is created is incredible to look at, and the network is exploring this new kind of programming that could appeal to a broader audience.


Knauf hopes that families who watch The Astronauts together are able to find some hope in the world around them.

“I think it’s a show that celebrates a hopeful future. It’s about people working together to find a common goal,” said Knauf. “It’s a hard road they’re on, but at the end of the day, it’s hopeful. These days when a hotspot is on what separates us, The Astronauts celebrates what brings us together. I’ve never been more proud of something I’ve done. The team has been phenomenal. Every day is like Christmas morning to see the final cuts. I’m not a pushover, but this one is something special.”


The Astronauts premieres Friday, November 13 at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon. Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more information and follow the series on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.

Photos from The Astronauts season one episodes #101 and #102; Credits: Michael Courtney, Ricardo Hubbs, Nickelodeon, (c) Viacom Internation Inc.


‘THE ASTRONAUTS’ — NICKELODEON SHOW BREAKS THE MOLD & SOARS HIGH


The Astronauts, Nickelodeon’s newest live-action series, premiers November 13, 2020. But, if you’re expecting a typical kids’ show featuring pre-teen hijinx, slapstick humor, and a laugh track—think again. Nickelodeon has made an active move to entertain the whole family with this series, not just the youngest members. Along with Imagine Kids+Family’s Ron Howard (Apollo 13), Brian Grazer (A Beautiful Mind), and Stephanie Sperber executive producing, the network has launched an ambitious out-of-this-world show unlike anything else on TV right now.

Check out the latest trailer, then meet the man who has created this new ground-breaking series.


Meet “The Captain”

The Astronauts depicts the drama that ensues when five untrained adolescents are accidentally launched into space. With survival their only option, the kids must assume their new roles as astronauts and brave harrowing tasks, as their parents rush to find a way to take control of the situation.

Daniel Knauf is the series creator, writer, and executive producer.  Knauf has written and produced a host of other well-known movies and series, most notably HBO’s Carnivale. While adolescents in space seems a bit of a stretch from the supernatural and dark themes depicted in Carnivale, Knauf didn’t necessarily feel that way.

“It was something that I really wanted to do,” he tells Parentology. “I really wanted to tackle something that you could have multi-generations sitting on the sofa and enjoying it. Something that spoke to what we have in common as human beings regardless of race, sexual orientation, age—anything.”

The show focuses on the struggle and uncertainty faced by both the young astronauts and their parents trying to guide them home. Knauf is able to tackle the solemn situation while allowing the natural humor to shine through. He credits the focus on the young protagonists.

“There’s the aspect of kids where you’re putting fresh eyes on problems,” he explains. “Kids are going to have different solutions to problems than anything an adult would come up with.”

Real Struggles from Real Life

The Astronauts depicts the trials and triumphs of both the kids and their parents in a real, multi-faceted way. It also depicts children growing up into their own identities. Knauf cites his own experiences as a parent of five children as a creative influence on the show, and his goal to make it different from others on TV.


“When depicting family these days, there’s such an emphasis on dysfunction — and there’s a reason for that. It’s built-in conflict and often it’s just comedy gold,” he notes. “But I kind of wanted to take a step back and say, in reality, I don’t know many families actively are rooting for other people in their family to fail.”

The Astrounauts also gave Knauf a great opportunity to dramatize something seldom seen on television: “That whole process from the parents’ point of view and the kids’ of individuation. It’s a painful process.” This is something that resonates with viewers of all ages, not just kids coming of age. “It’s geared toward human beings and what we all share,” Knauf says.

The show also depicts a diverse group of children and parents. Knauf says that is both intentional and organic, created through the show’s diverse group of writers offering many different points of view. While that diversity is celebrated, Knauf also wanted to utilize the premise of the show to focus on how people can come together, no matter what their background.

“In a perilous situation, the things that separate you from the people that you’re relying on take a distant back seat to what you’ve got in common,” he says. “We share an ocean in common. We all admire courage. We all admire sacrifice. This transcends religion, it transcends race. One of the things I felt we could do with this show is to celebrate what we have in common.”

The Astronauts is one of Nickelodeon’s first endeavors to move toward programming that viewers of all ages can truly enjoy. Knauf believes that what he’s created will be just that. “Everybody has brought their best,” he says. “It’s been a really great experience—we’re doing something really special here.”

The Astronauts begins with a one-hour premiere on Nickelodeon, Friday November 13, 2020.

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From Space.com:


Exclusive: Inside Nickelodeon's 'The Astronauts' space adventure with showrunner Daniel Knauf

Five kids sneak on a spaceship bound for a mysterious asteroid. What could go wrong?


Award-winning writer/producer Daniel Knauf is best known for creating an eclectic body of work that leans into darker, adult material like HBO's acclaimed supernatural saga, "Carnivàle," NBC's "Dracula" starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Starz'"Spartacus: Blood and Sand," and NBC's Emmy-winning police procedural "The Blacklist."

Now he's taking his sterling reputation and talents into outer space with Nickelodeon's "The Astronauts," a new family-friendly sci-fi series from Ron Howard and Brian Grazer's Imagine Entertainment. This refreshing adventure show airs its first two episodes on Friday, Nov. 13 and surrounds a group of whiz kids who sneak onto the spaceship Odyssey II and are accidentally launched into space toward a mysterious asteroid while the craft's AI system malfunctions.

The series is directed by DGA Award nominee Dean Israelite ("Are You Afraid of the Dark?,""Power Rangers") who also serves as an executive producer, Jonathan Frakes ("Star Trek: Discovery,""Star Trek: Picard"), and Marcus Stokes ("Criminal Minds,""The Flash").

Nickelodeon's 'The Astronauts' got tips on space from real NASA astronaut

Knauf not only penned the show's 10 episodes, but also acts as "The Astronauts" executive producer and showrunner. We connected with him to learn about how this throwback project originated, the challenges of working on a big special effects shoot, dealing with issues of weightlessness, and how the design for the Odyssey II was created on a restaurant napkin.

How did you get on board Nickelodeon's hopeful, kid-centric project?

As an artist I'd been wanting to do something for a long time that multiple generations could sit on a sofa and enjoy. There's so much darkness on TV and I don't think it reflects reality. I don't believe familial relationships on TV reflect reality either as so many of them are dysfunctional. So I thought let's do something that makes people feel good about being human. Plus, you always want to do something different. I've done a Western, I've done "Carnivàle," I've done the epic, I've done "Dracula,""Spartacus," and with "The Blacklist" I've done the procedural thing. Now let's see what I can do here. 

Can you describe the pitch to Imagine and what narrative themes did you wish to explore?

From the get-go, meeting with Imagine, I told them this was not going to be "Kids Shot Into Space And Hijinks Ensue." I wouldn't do that show. What's of interest to me is doing what would happen in reality if five untrained children were inadvertently launched into space. It would be fraught with danger and tension and these kids trying to get along. 

They all come from different backgrounds and they're all finding their way and they're going to have solutions that would never occur to adults since they're obviously putting fresh eyes on every problem. The humor would come from character, not jokes. I don't write joke-driven stuff because in reality, life isn't joke-driven. 

This show in many ways is sort of a throwback to the kinds of shows they were making in the '50s and '60s. Things like courage are valuable attributes in any homo sapiens. There are no stupid parents on this show. We don't have kids disobeying their parents without a fallout. 

Since these kids are millions of kilometers away from their parents, we get to really do a deep dive when it comes to the process of individuation. And what that painful moment is like where you realize maybe my parents are wrong. For the parents, it's seeing that child go away forever to become an adult. It's this essential process of growth and I think every episode features that. 

What was the inspiration for the Odyssey II design and how was it working with a big special effects team?

I've never done a space show before so I was sort of a babe in the woods. I had this super embarrassing moment when I saw my first set of effects shots. I was horrified. I told them it looked like a toy. There's no directional lighting! Where's the ambient lighting? It's practically a wireframe! [laughs] Our special effects guy very patiently said not to worry and that this was just placement in the frame and was very early in the process. As a showrunner I've gotten an education in the special effects arena and it's been really neat to see these shots evolve. You're basically painting on a blank canvas. It's wholly fabricated on the computer in photoreality.

When Netflix's "Away" came on, I'd be watching it with great interest and think, "Oh, our launch is better than their launch." [laughs]. Our launchpad is on an island in the middle of a bay and I wanted to see the shockwave across the water.

And the weightlessness thing is very difficult to do on a television schedule because it's very time consuming. Wire rig removal and those kinds of things were all new to me. Your heart's in your throat when you've got a twelve-year-old dangling thirty feet above the floor of the set. 

Nickelodeon's "The Astronauts" sends an intrepid kid crew into the final frontier.

With Imagine on board, because they've got such a legacy in space dramas, there were no compromises made as far as the science goes. When I first came in I didn't want to deal with weightlessness on the show because it's going to be impossible. I thought I'd just go with the Ridley Scott thing of having an announcement, "Artificial Gravity Engaged." 

But our production designer and Dean Israelite, my AP director and colleague, said we'd do it with various configurations that would allow for centrifugal gravity. We literally worked it out on a napkin at the Black Angus restaurant. I thought we'd make it like a tri-lobal, face-on design. That way we could have two-story, almost bus-like outriggers. It's like no spaceship that I've seen on TV. I was pleased with the fact that we really stuck with the science. 

Stephen Petranek has been the consultant on almost all of Imagine's space projects and we'd be able to run scripts past him and make sure we had the science right.

Was there a specific aesthetic you wanted to capture for the spaceship to distinguish it from other fictional sci-fi craft in movies and TV?

I wanted there to be a consumer design ethos, especially in the crew quarters, that would make the ship look more like a yacht or a private aircraft. There would be pseudo industrial design cues combined with exotic materials like carbon fiber. It's not as swoopy as the "Star Trek" world but it wasn't going to look like "Apollo 13" anymore either. 

I'd say it would look like the first class cabin in an Emirates airplane. There's a lot of Bird's Eye maple and they're very understated. And that's what we brought to the party. Then when you get into the cockpit and the work areas, these are places we don't visit as consumers.

Nickelodeon's "The Astronauts" sends an intrepid kid crew into the final frontier.

What do you hope audiences take away most from this new Nickelodeon series?

What's really a kick about "The Astronauts," is that there's 10 half-hour episodes, so you get like 10 pounds of coffee in a 5-lb. can. There's really a lot going on. I got to use all these screenwriting techniques I picked up on "The Blacklist," another incident driven show. Like how to cram a lot of narrative into a very small container. The episodes fly by and there's no mid-season slump on this show. Every chapter is a three-ring circus. The last three episodes make the first two episodes look boring!

Everybody who's been involved in the show, from the tippy top of Nickelodeon, all the way down to the PAs, everyone involved in building this pyramid feels like this is special. This is one I'm going to remember and be proud of. And that's my job as a showrunner, to encourage that sort of ethic. 

I hope people watch the show and feel that ecstasy of recognition when you see things you haven't seen before done quite that way, but they've experienced something like that emotionally. My job description is to move people. I think everybody's relationship with their TV is trying to make sense out of their own journey. 

By dramatizing journeys with various characters, whether they're FBI agents or freaks or vampires or gladiators is to dramatize those things that are universal in a way it hasn't been dramatized so often that it becomes cliche. To find that untilled patch of soil, turn it over and have the audience go, "Oh Goodness!"

"The Astronauts" premieres on Nickelodeon at 7 p.m. EST on Friday, Nov. 13.


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Creator Daniel Knauf Interview: The Astronauts

Daniel Knauf, creator of Carnivàle and the new Nickelodeon sci-fi series, The Astronauts, discusses his ongoing odyssey through the world of TV.

Typically, writers in Hollywood work their way up from the bottom, eventually getting the opportunity to create a television project of their own. For Daniel Knauf, things didn't work out that way. After a made-for-TV "blind gunslinger" film, and a couple of other projects, he found himself as creator and executive producer of the HBO original series, Carnivàle. Though the series was unceremoniously cancelled after only two seasons (of a planned six), its layered storytelling and Lynchian sensibilities made Carnivàle into a cult classic whose popularity persists to this day. After years working on shows as varied as The Blacklist, Dracula, and Supernatural, Knauf is back with a brand new show, and Imagine Entertainment's The Astronauts marks something of a departure for the writer.

Unlike all of his previous projects, The Astronauts is a family show on Nickelodeon, targeting that network's tween audience. The science fiction series follows a group of children who are accidentally sent into outer space. As their parents look on from the mission control center, the kids have to survive and handle a variety of crises as they pop up. The Astronauts is a family program that doesn't talk down to the children and aims to thoughtful and engaging to parents, as well as younger viewers.

While promoting the release of The Astronauts, Daniel Knauf spoke to Screen Rant about his work on the series, as well as his life in the television industry. He talks about how TV was always his passion, but not his initial career choice, as he spent many years working a finance office job to pay the bills before finally turning to his one true destiny. He discusses The Astronauts and how important it was for him to make a show that appealed to both children and adults on different levels, so that two groups of people could watch the same episode and come away with important lessons and understanding of themselves, and their family. He also shares his satisfaction with working alongside the producers at Imagine Entertainment, Ron Howard's production company, and how he was pleasantly surprised when they brought the show to him to develop.

The Astronauts airs Fridays on Nickelodeon.

You've had such an interesting, atypical trajectory in the biz. Do you mind if we talk about that for a bit?

My weird career (Laughs).

I know a lot of people in jobs that are really tough, and they're doing what they can to get by, and I know a lot of rich young people who are artists, because one way to look at it is, pursuing art is a luxury that most can't afford. From what I understand, your story was, "Man, I want to be an artist, a writer, but I should probably get rich first."

(Laughs) Well, I got married really early. I was, like, 22 when I got married. And I had kids soon after that! It was like following the path of least resistance. When you're growing up, the hardest part about being an artist is... Well, artists are born. It's like a birth defect, you know? The hardest thing about it, and every artist I've talked to, it's true: the people who are closest to you, who love you the most, who really want to protect you, i.e. your parents, your family, they know it's a hard road. You really need a backup. Saying you want to be an artist is like saying you want to be the President of the United States. It's one of those things you want to be when you draw a picture of it in the first grade, know what I mean?

Yeah, sure!

Concern is a reasonable, responsible adult choice. And it's out of pure love. They're not trying to discourage you. I like to put it this way: you bring home a picture you drew at school when you were five years old, you get a pat on the head, mom puts it on the refrigerator door, and you're really proud of it. But then, around when you're 16 or 17, and you're still bringing pictures home, they start getting really nervous. (Laughs) Like, "Uhh, maybe we patted him on the head too many times. Maybe we knocked something loose!" So what happened was, I bought into that whole thing. I said, "Well, okay, I've studied English. I was a Creative Writing major in college, but that's just a no-go." My father had this business, a family business, so I decided to move into that. It really only took me about five years to go completely mad. I realized this was not for me. I put on the suit every day, and the tie, and it felt like a costume. I did the job, and I was good at the job, but it wasn't... I wanted to do this other thing.

You knew what your calling was.

I started taking one or two days a week where, after the kids would get put to bed, I would drive to the office because back in the early 1980s, it was the only place where you had a computer. I would just sit there and work on screenplays. I would go to the AFI alumni association, that was one of many writer workshop groups that was active in LA at the time. I'd go to that and take some classes at UCLA extension. I was basically... I was like, I want to learn this, and I want to learn how to do it really well. So I was focused on my craft in a vacuum, for almost 20 years! At a certain point, I thought, "Maybe it's about time to try and sell one of these things."

Was that your first TV show?

I had a sale back in the 1990s for a Western I did, that was released as Blind Justice, which was basically just a Western version of the Zatoichi movies. A blind gunslinger, you know? But then there was nothing. I sold something, and then nothing happened. I come from a really long line of sore losers. (Laughs) We're the people who flip the Monopoly board and throw the tennis rackets. So I thought, okay, well, I built websites for my business, let me build one for this. So I built a website in the late 1990s and posted the first acts of everything I had ever done. Somehow, the pilot for Carnivàle, and this guy, Robert Keyghobad, who was an assistant for Scott Winant, had gotten orders from his boss, that he was tired of cops, doctors, and lawyers, and he wanted something different. And he found this. Nowadays, you'll find spec screenplays all over the internet, but back then, there weren't that many. I got the call, I went in, and it became Carnivàle. My first real TV gig, I was the executive producer and creator of an HBO series.

Starting at the top!

And I've been working my way down ever since! (Laughs) No, it was really weird, though. I came out of nowhere. I hadn't done any TV, and nobody really knew who I was. Once Carnivàle went... We did really well with it, won some awards, and created an amazing, beautiful show, and once I came off of that, everybody was like... There was a rumor going around that I didn't exist, that I was a pseudonym for David Lynch. Which is really flattering, but bad for the brand, you know? (Laughs)

Oh, that's funny.

So I had to almost start out again, coming off of Carnivàle. The first gig I did after was, I did a freelance script for Supernatural. And then I started getting jobs on staff on various shows. Meanwhile, I was creating shows. I was basically doing all the stuff I did on Carnivàle, putting together spec pilots and spec bibles, all that stuff, going around and pitching stuff... My career's kinda funny, it's backwards, in a way. So I spent the last 20 years becoming a known quantity in the television community, and working with a lot of really good people. I didn't run another show until I did Dracula for NBC. I did a stint on Spartacus: Blood and Sand with Steve DeKnight, and The Blacklist. This is the first show I've created and run since Carnivàle.

It's the obvious successor. They're practically the same show.

Yeah, clearly! (Laughs) I've written in every genre there is. Most of it's been dark, adult stuff, and supernatural stuff with horror and so forth. Even The Blacklist is an adult procedural, I have no idea why Imagine called me and said, "We'd like to talk to you about this idea we have." It was the one thing I hadn't done, a family show. And it was the one thing I really kinda wanted to do! I've got five kids. I've raised a lot of children. I've raised children to adulthood, and it's a pretty bleak landscape out there, these days, for intelligent family drama. I thought, you don't have to go completely brainless just because you're doing a show for kids. Kids are pretty smart. I was a pretty smart kid, and my kids were pretty smart. I wanted to do something that a child, mom and dad, and grandpa can sit down on the sofa together and watch and enjoy, and enjoy for different reasons, and not feel ambushed. We're not going to be really snarky and attack some core value you have. You know, where you have to have that talk afterwards, with, "I know Belinda gets really sassy with her dad and it seems sassy on the show, but it really isn't funny at home." That kind of talk.

You nailed it right at the very beginning, when you described it as a family show, and not as a kids' show. That's such an important distinction that a lot of, quote-unquote, "people at the top," don't always understand.

Because of my delayed liftoff in this business... I was a consumer of this product for over 40 years before I turned into Walter White and started making the product myself. As a consumer of the product, I understand the relationship people have with their television sets. That's something a lot of people who come into the business right out of film school don't really know, and a lot of executives don't seem to know that. Fortunately, the people at Imagine, they do. They understand that it's all about the characters. Kids are the same as adults. Writing for kids is not that different than writing for adults. You don't dumb anything down. We take some really deep dives on this show.

And you got people like Dean Israelite and Jonathan Frakes to direct. I imagine they're not going to phone it in because many of the viewers aren't in high school yet, right?

These guys make their decisions off of the scripts. When I wrote the pilot, it was, like... I think they responded to the quality of the story and characters. We have a lot of people who came in, other directors of a pretty high profile, before we decided on Dean. I was actually very flattered by how many people were vying for the spot to direct this thing. I think it's a ridiculous cliche, but the truth is, it all starts with the script. I think we developed a really good script. That's what drew the talent in. Plus, they knew, with Imagine, they've got such a stellar reputation. They're such nice people over there! A lot of it, too, is "What am I working on, and who am I working with?" Their reputation is very artist-friendly.

At Imagine, you mean?

You walk into the Imagine offices, and there's a whole wall that's papered with pages from scripts. To me, that says a lot about that organization.They understand the foundation, that everything comes from the written page.

I love the way your work... Wait, let me figure out how to phrase this... It's set in the world of storytelling, not the world we're stuck in.

There's a little bit of world building going on here, but the world... It's almost like composing something for a string quartet. The world is inside that tin can of a spaceship, and mission control. It's the parents down on Earth, and the kids up in space. So it's a very compressed kind of world, you know? You don't know what's going on outside of mission control. You don't know what kind of issues society's dealing with outside of it. We don't go outside of mission control, and outside the ship. We're just dealing with this situation. One thing that really appealed to me about the concept is, I always wanted to do... Something you don't see too often is this process of individuation that everybody goes through, and how painful it is, not just for the child, but for the parent as well. And these kids are literally millions of miles away from their parents. We get to dramatize a bit of that, too. Like, "Dad's telling me to do this, but I know he's wrong, and we need to do that instead, but I have to disobey him to do that." In a lot of kids' dramas, that's short-handed as, "Wee! We're just gonna do what our parents told us not to do!" You know what I mean?

Totally.

Whereas, our kids really struggle with this, you know? Because the stakes are so high. And we really wanted to ground it in reality. I think, whether a child decides to go out for a space walk against his parents' wishes, or deciding to not go out for football this year against his parents' wishes, those are gut-wringers, those decisions. It was a nice opportunity to be able to dramatize that.

The Astronauts airs Fridays on Nickelodeon.

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“It’s a show that celebrates a hopeful future”

Daniel Knauf has been the mastermind behind a number of television shows and has always loved writing and creating. He earned his bachelor’s degree in English at California State University Los Angeles. However, one might be surprised to hear that he had a career as an employee benefits consultant before getting into the writing world.

“I was on that track as a kid, I was very creative,” said Knauf. “I majored in art and English in college, but the career in insurance happened when I got married at 22 and I wanted to be able to feed everybody. It seemed like I had to set aside childhood things.”

Though he found a lot of success as an employee benefits consultant, by the time he was 27-28 years old Knauf felt the itch to start writing again.

“I’ve found that creative people are like sharks — you have to keep swimming or else you can’t breathe,” said Knauf. “Once the kids went to bed, I would spend a couple of hours a night learning the screenwriting process. I kept that up for years and years and focused on getting better at it.”

For years, Knauf wrote from his home and by the time he reached his 40s he figured it was time to try and sell something. His first major project was when he sold “Carnivàle” to HBO. Part of the reason Knauf believes the show sold was because he was able to hone in on his craft before working in the industry.

“I think that I had forced myself to sit on the launchpad for as long as I did so I could understand my craft before I launched a career,” said Knauf. “Many writers who start out in the business are learning as they are working — I don’t think that working on staff on a show is a great place to be learning. There’s too much pressure there. But I have the luxury of having a well-paying job so I could really take my time.”

Knauf signed on as the Creator/Executive Producer of the series, which ran on HBO from 2005-2007. The series focused on a traveling carnival in a bleak American landscape of the Great Depression.

For Knauf, landing a job on HBO was like going from zero to 100 right off the bat.

“It was completely terrifying. I was suddenly in this weird bubble that is Hollywood,” said Knauf. “There’s a completely different language spoken there. In Hollywood, there were these specific things that you needed to do and on ‘Carnivàle’ I made every single possible mistake you could make from the standpoint of office politics. I usually only made them once — I had run my own business for 22 years and brought a skillset that most showrunners don’t have. But we were making a really terrific show, to this day people say that  ‘Carnivàle’ was the beginning of what we think of when it comes to contemporary serialized television. It was a great experience overall.”

Knauf has since gone on to write and produce many shows, including producing and writing on the hit STARZ series “Spartacus: Blood and Sand,” serving as the writer-Showrunner on “Dracula” for NBC, and working as a writer and Executive Producer on the NBC series “The Blacklist,” just to name a few. While he’s used to working on darker subject matter, Knauf’s latest project comes in the form of a new live-action series on Nickelodeon entitled “The Astronauts.”

Produced in partnership with Imagine Kids+Family’s Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, and Stephanie Sperber, “The Astronauts” centers around five children whose parents work in the aeronautic industry. While they all know of each other, they aren’t the best of friends. The kids manage to check out a spacecraft but ultimately end up getting launched into space together. The kids and their parents have to work together to get the kids back down to Earth safely.

“I’ve been in really dark material up until ‘The Astronauts,’ so this was a huge change of pace for me. I’ve been wanting to do this for a while, I was getting kind of burned out on stuff that was so edgy,” said Knauf. “When my parents were alive, we would watch TV and they would be afraid to go outside because some stuff was so grim and horrendous. The world isn’t really like that. I wanted to make something that people ages 7-70 can enjoy together and not feel worse about the world than they did when they sit down.”

Working on “The Astronauts” gave Knauf a chance to write through the eyes of children, which wasn’t particularly prominent in the work he was doing. Knauf says that while adults usually have their public perception figured out by the time they are in their mid-20s, kids are still under construction.

“There’s not a lot of subtext with kids, they are a little more emotionally honest. Kids kind of have lousy poker faces,” said Knauf. “You might have to write a lot of scene work for adults to get to the truth in a situation, but with children, it’s usually right out there.”

Though it is technically children’s programming, Knauf says that “The Astronauts” explores some bleak material, essentially if “Apollo 13” happened with children. The show itself is one of the most ambitious and cinematic projects Nickelodeon will bring to television, with Knauf saying that the space world that is created is incredible to look at, and the network is exploring this new kind of programming that could appeal to a broader audience.

Knauf hopes that families who watch “The Astronauts” together are able to find some hope in the world around them.

“I think it’s a show that celebrates a hopeful future. It’s about people working together to find a common goal,” said Knauf. “It’s a hard road they’re on, but at the end of the day, it’s hopeful. These days when a hotspot is on what separates us, ‘The Astronauts’ celebrates what brings us together. I’ve never been more proud of something I’ve done. The team has been phenomenal. Every day is like Christmas morning to see the final cuts. I’m not a pushover, but this one is something special.”

“The Astronauts” premieres on Nickelodeon on Nov. 13.

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More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

Originally published: Tuesday, November 10, 2020.

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Nickelodeon's 'The Astronauts' Got Tips from a Real NASA Astronaut

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The cast of Nickelodeon's The Astronauts needed to learn how to act while in space.

In "The Astronauts" on Nickelodeon stars (from left to right): Keith L. Williams, Miya Cech, Bryce Gheisar, Ben Daon and Kayden Grace Swan as a group of kids who launch to space. (Nickelodeon)

Fortunately, unlike the characters they play — a group of kids who sneak onto a rocket and accidentally initiate the launch sequence — they had a real astronaut to help them get ready.

"We got to talk to him about what it's like in zero gravity," Miya Cech said of her and her castmates' conversation with NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy. "We got to talk to him about when we push out for something what happens or when we're just floating there, how should we be moving and what should we be doing?"

Cech plays Samantha "Samy" Sawyer-Wei, the daughter of an astronaut, in the new live action series. She is joined on board the Odyssey II by Bryce Gheisar ("Elliott Combs," the son of the spaceship's billionaire owner), Keith L. Williams ("Martin Taylor," the son of a flight controller), Kayden Grace Swan ("Doria Taylor," Martin's younger sister) and Ben Daon ("Will Rivers," the son of a journalist who is investigating Elliott's father).

Cassidy, a former Chief Astronaut and Navy SEAL, was preparing for his own launch to the International Space Station when he spoke to the cast of The Astronauts. He has since returned to Earth after 196 days off the planet, bringing his total time in space after three missions to more than a year.

NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, seen here aboard the International Space Station in September 2020, offered tips to the cast of Nickelodeon's "The Astronauts" about how to act as if they were in space, as their characters are in the live action series. (NASA)

"We also talked about the launching scenes, like when we're first taking off," Cech said in an interview with collectSPACE. "He told us you're really shaking and your eyes start to water. He told us about body language, what our faces should look like and stuff like that."

"He gave us a way better understanding of how serious it is," added Daon.

"You experience up to five Gs [five times the force of gravity] and with that strain and pressure, he [Cassidy] said, somebody will almost always vomit going up, which fortunately none of us did in the show," Daon said with a smile. "It just made it feel so much more real, the fact that they cared enough to give us the proper education to portray it."

Adding to that sense of realism were the spacecraft sets created for the show. The Astronauts is Nickelodeon's first collaboration with executive producers Brian Grazer and Ron Howard and the Kids and Family division of their company, Imagine Entertainment. Grazer and Howard's earlier credits include the 1995 feature film Apollo 13 and the 2016 National Geographic docudrama Mars.

"Getting into the command module and strapping into those seats for the first time was super surreal because when we do all the controls and stuff for the takeoff, it personally was so exciting and I felt like I was in it, especially when filming, [but] when you're watching it, too. It just feels so cinematic both ways," said Cech. "It feels like you're actually in it and you're actually launching in a spaceship and you're going through these crazy adventures with all of your friends. For me, that was really awesome."

The cast-turned-crew took Cassidy's advice to heart for the scenes showing them floating in the weightless environment of space.

Blasting off into space with no proper training, a malfunctioning onboard AI system, and their parents watching from Earth, the kids in Nickelodeon's "The Astronauts" embark on a journey of survival using only their smarts and friendship as tools. (Nickelodeon)

"There actually is a lot of real physics that applies to it. The ship spins in a way that has a centrifugal force, where we can all stand, but then whenever you're in different parts of the ship, you are in anti-gravity," Gheisar told collectSPACE. "[To appear like we were floating] we used wires and the parallelogram, which is this thing that lifts you up."

"It has a weight on the back of it and you strap your legs to it," added Williams. "And basically, they only show your upper body and edit the legs."

After getting a taste of playing an astronaut, most of The Astronauts said they would like to fly into space for real someday.

"I live near Houston in Texas, so I've been to [NASA's Johnson Space Center] before. And, I watched all the documentaries and I've seen Apollo 13, so it is pretty surreal being on this kind of a set," said Gheisar. "[SpaceX's] Elon Musk is kind of living my dream right now. He said he wants to retire on Mars and that's something that I would definitely, definitely want to do."

But not everyone was up for the one-way trip. Unlike on the show, Swan wanted her return ticket booked in advance.

"I would love to go to space, as long as it was planned and I knew I would be coming home. I would be fine with that," she said. "I wouldn't want to stay there."

The Astronauts premieres with back-to-back episodes on Friday (Nov. 13) at 7 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon. Click here for more info.

Visit https://www.astronautsonnick.com for more information and follow the series on TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@theastronauts.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces All-New Midnight Society for 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Season Two!

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Garfield Wilson Talks About His Role on Nickelodeon's 'The Astronauts' | The ManCave Chronicles

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Garfield Wilson talks about his role on Nickelodeon's "The Astronauts" | The ManCave Chronicles


Garfield Wilson joins host Elias on the podcast. Garfield stars as Niles Taylor on Nickelodeon's The Astronauts which premieres on Nov 13th. The Astronauts is directed by Star Trek franchise veteran Jonathan Frakes, and Dean Israelie (Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Power Rangers movie).  The new drama series for Nickelodeon marks a pivot for the platform in terms of content in an effort to compete with the edgier streaming platforms.

His other acting credits include: STOLEN BY MY MOTHER: THE KAMIYAH MOBLEY STORY opposite Niecy Nash, and COME TO DADDY, VENDETTA, with a myriad of television roles including the likes of: TNT’s SNOWPIERCER, ARROW, Once Upon A Time, Bates Motel, The 100, Continuum, iZombie, Zoo, Netflix’s Travelers, Van Helsing, The Good Doctor, The Man in the High Castle, Batwoman, and J.J. Abrams’ Almost Human, amongst others.

You can find Garfield on Twitter @GarfieldWilson & Instagram garfieldawilson

Follow us on Instagram @themccpodcast Twitter @themccpodcast& Facebook @themccpodcast and if you can leave a review on Apple Podcasts and subscribe

Thanks for Listening!



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