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#rugrats pre school daze
maslosstuff · 5 months
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Rugrats preschool daze redesigns
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bluescluesposting · 11 months
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I read a former deviant-artist named Brainstormer623 (he deactivated his account, like, 3 years ago) say that the only good thing that came out of Blue's Room was breaking the ice for making the first good show formula for a non-Blue's Clues show. At least the 2nd season.
Something about how the farm animal checklist, the keys treasure map, the missing shapes, finding all of these things and doing interactive puzzles to solve these problems was a great way to make a Blue's Clues formula without the clues themselves.
And considering the next show they made afterwards was Umizoomi; which took that concept and rolled with it for 4 whole seasons, Brain kinda had a point.
I don't know, maybe it's because I didn't grow up with Blue's Room like I did with the original (Blue's Room began in 2004; I wasn't actively watching Nick Jr. at that point), but I just always saw Blue's Room as a failed attempt to keep the franchise going when the popularity was waning. But at least it did a better job than say...Rugrats Pre-School Daze. No offense to any Blue's Room fans; there was just something empty and kinda cash-grabby about it. That's why I don't post much Blue's Room on here- I love Sprinkles and I think he's adorable but the show itself is just.....eh. And this is a blog for loving Blue's Clues and not for disliking Blue's Room. It's a happy place.
As for Team Umizoomi...I was in high school when it came out so I kind of have zero knowledge of it besides the fact that some of the Blue's Clues staff worked on it.
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save90snick · 5 years
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Rugrats' First Planned Spinoff WASN'T All Grown Up
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sidetable-drawer · 3 years
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Saw the preview for the Rugrats reboot....overall, I’m really “meh” toward it.
I love the original series; it might have been THE first cartoon I watched and really loved. That being said, when the reboot was first announced I wasn’t too excited...the original ran for over 100 episodes and started going downhill around 2001 (and the spinoffs weren’t that great- All Grown Up was pretty good in the first season, but went downhill in S2 when it lost the feel the original had. The less about Pre-School Daze the better, and those weird Tales from the Crib DTV movies felt like soulless cash grabs). I like that the new version is getting back as much of the original cast as possible, and from what we’ve seen so far the writing seems on the same level as the “classic” era (the original 1991-1994 run). From the looks of it, Susie’s also going to have a bigger role than she did in the original, and I’m really happy about that because she’s one of my favorite characters. My main issue is the animation- the CGI looks really...off. It’s not as bad looking as I thought it would be, but it has that “PS2 cutscene” look Kamp Koral has, the animation looks a little too stiff, and the way the characters’ hair is rendered looks awkward. I don’t think the style for Rugrats was ever really suited for CGI; why not just keep it 2D?
I will say this- it looks better than Kamp Koral. But otherwise I’m just “eh...” overall to it. I’m good with the original Rugrats. I’m sure the reboot’s target audience will enjoy this one, too. Unless later preview clips win me over, I’m probably gonna sit this one out. I don’t think it’s terrible, but there’s not much winning me over, either. It’s for today’s kids.
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lovely-big-sibling · 4 years
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A masterlist of fun cartoon shows to watch while self-quarantining/social distancing
Note: if you message me directly asking for a place to watch these/watch for free, I can provide it, otherwise I won’t be linking any sites directly.
-101 Dalmatian Street
-101 Dalmatians: the Series
-64 Zoo Lane
-A Pup Named Scooby-Doo
-Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog
-Aladdin (yes, there was a series based on the movie)
-All Grown Up!
-Allegra’s Window
-Animaniacs
-Arthur
-Baby Looney Tunes
-Barney and Friends
-Blue’s Clues
-Boohbah
-Bubble Guppies
-Butterbean’s Cafe
-Buzz Lightyear of Star Command
-Caillou
-Captain Planet
-Care Bears and Cousins
-Care Bears: Adventures in Care-a-Lot
-Care Bears: Welcome to Care-a-Lot
-Carmen Sandiego
-CatDog
-ChalkZone
-Chip N Dale Rescue Rangers
-Clifford the Big Red Dog
-Codename: Kids Next Door
-Curious George
-Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood
-Darkwing Duck
-Descendants: Wicked World
-Dinosaur Train
-Disney Sing-Along-Songs
-Disney Tsum Tsum
-Disney’s Adventures of the Gummi Bears
-Disney’s House of Mouse
-Doc McStuffins
-Dora the Explorer
-Dragon Tales
-Ducktales 
-Elena of Avalor
-Ever After High
-Fancy Nancy
-Felix the Cat
-Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends
-Franklin
-Garfield and Friends
-Go, Diego, Go!
-Good Morning, Mickey!
-Gullah Gullah Island
-Harold and the Purple Crayon 
-Hello Kitty’s Furry Tale Theater
-Hello Kitty’s Paradise
-Hercules (again, yes, there’s a series based off the movie)
-If You Give a Mouse a Cookie
-KaBlam!
-Kipper
-Lalaloopsy
-Legend of the Three Caballeros
-Lilo & Stitch: the Series
-Little Bear
-Little Einsteins
-Littlest Pet Shop
-LoliRock (I know what it sounds like from the title, but it’s innocent0
-Maisy
-Make Way for Noddy
-Martha Speaks
-Max & Ruby
-Mickey Mouse Clubhouse
-Muppet Babies
-Nella the Princess Knight
-Ni Hao, Kai-Lan
-Oh Yeah! Cartoons
-Paw Patrol
-PB&J Otter
-Peppa Pig
-Pink Panther and Pals
-Rainbow Brite
-Random! Cartoons
-Rocket Power
-Rolie Polie Olie 
-Rugrats
-Rugrats Pre-School Daze
-Sing Me a Story With Belle
-Sky Dancers
-Sofia the First
-Special Agent Oso
-Strawberry Shortcake
-Strawberry Shortcake’s Berry Bitty Adventures
-Team Umizoomi
-Teletubbies
-The Book of Pooh
-The Care Bears
-The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That!
-The Fairly OddParents
-The Garfield Show
-The Little Mermaid
-The Mr. Men Show
-The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
-The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss
-Tiny Toon Adventures
-Unikitty
-Whatever Happened to Robot Jones?
-Word World
-Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!
-Yo Gabba Gabba
Again, if you need help finding a place to watch ANY of these, just drop me a message through chat or send me an ask off-anon (so I can answer privately). Happy watching!
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ramajmedia · 5 years
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Rugrats: What Happened To The Babies When They Grew Up
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Rugrats was all about a group of toddlers and their daily adventures, but the spinoff series All Grown Up! showed the babies as teens – and some changed a lot. Rugrats was created by Arlene Klasky, Gábor Csupó, and Paul Germain, and premiered on Nickelodeon in 1991. The series was a big hit and spawned three films (The Rugrats Movie, Rugrats in Paris, and Rugrats Go Wild, a crossover with The Wild Thornberrys) and two spin-off series: Rugrats Pre-School Daze and All Grown Up!.
To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the series, Nickelodeon aired the TV special All Growed Up, which followed Tommy and his childhood friends as teens. The special was so well received that the network decided to turn it into a series, with the special now serving as pilot. All Grown Up! also marked the end of the main series as Nickelodeon wanted to focus only on the spinoff. The series aired from 2003 until 2008, with a total of five seasons.
Related: Rugrats' First Planned Spinoff WASN'T All Grown Up
All Grown Up! featured the gang from the main series (Tommy, Dil, Angelica, Chuckie, Kimi, Phil, Lil, and Susie) and their families, as well as new characters that served as friends, enemies, and love interests. While most of their personality traits stayed the same, the characters’ behavior and mentality obviously changed, and viewers also learned some of their life aspirations and other details. Here’s what happened to the babies when they grew up.
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The “leader” of the Rugrats group and the voice of reason on many occasions, Tommy Pickles served as the main series’ protagonist, although the rest had their own episodes sometimes. He’s Didi and Stu’s first born, and his best friends were Chuckie and his dog Spike. Tommy was brave, with a strong sense of justice, and always up for adventures. He was constantly encouraging Chuckie to join their different adventures and to defeat his (many) fears, and also defended his friends from his bully cousin, Angelica.
As a baby, Tommy was mostly bald, with just a few hairs on his head, toothless, and wore a light blue shirt, a diaper, and no shoes. Tommy has the most radical change in terms of looks in All Grown Up!: straight white teeth, spiky purple hair (like his dad’s), and finally wears pants and shoes. Tommy continues to be the voice of reason and the one his friends go to for advice, but contrary to when he was a baby, he now focuses more on his own problems than on his friends’ – but he’s always willing to help, if necessary. Tommy is very interested in filmmaking and is also seen inventing stuff sometimes, just like his dad.
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Dil Pickles is Tommy’s baby brother and was introduced in The Rugrats Movie. As the youngest baby, he didn’t do much in Rugrats, and he was often seen crying or babbling… or being used by Angelica to trick the babies and sometimes the adults as well. Even though they can’t really understand each other and their relationship was not good at the beginning, Dil and Tommy eventually became close, and Tommy was very caring with Dil.
Related: Rugrats' Disturbing Angelica Theory Explained
In All Grown Up!, Dil is by far the one with the most eccentric personality, wearing bizarre outfits (like a hat with plastic dentures attached to it), contorting in weird ways, talking in code, and looking to make contact with aliens. In the episode “Truth or Consequences”, Principal Pangborn attempts to psychoanalyze him, with Phil and Lil later wondering if he would be different had they not dropped him on his head. Whatever the reason, Dil is not afraid to be himself, and his friends and family accept him as he is.
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Angelica Pickles is Tommy and Dil’s cousin and the main antagonist of Rugrats. She’s the only child of Charlotte and Drew, and as such was really spoiled and always looking to be the center of attention. She constantly threatened the babies verbally and physically, although she was seen standing up for them a couple of times. She had a “frenemy” relationship with Susie, Tommy’s neighbor and friend, who was her complete opposite.
Angelica’s personality doesn’t change much in All Grown Up! as she’s still spoiled and bossy, looking to have all the latest fashion trends and become very popular. She’s still manipulative and takes advantage of others, especially his friend Harold. Her relationship with Susie improves, and even asks her for advice a couple of times, and her new “frenemy” is Savannah, the leader of the popular group who constantly looks down on her while she tries (a bit too hard) to fit in.
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Chuckie Finster is Tommy’s best friend and that one character that was always afraid and worrying over everything. He had orange, messy hair, freckles, glasses, and his shoelaces were always untied. He lived with his dad Chas, stepmother Kira (who his father married in Rugrats in Paris), and stepsister Kimi. He struggled with a number of fears, both rational and irrational, but proved to have the courage to face them.
Related: Rugrats' Mother's Day Is The Saddest Episode Of Kid's TV 
Physically, Chuckie doesn’t change much in All Grown Up!. His hair is still orange and messy, he still wears glasses, and now also braces. He’s still shy but takes more risks than when he was a baby, and continues to be a support for his friends. He becomes an even more overprotective brother, which creates some minor conflicts with Kimi (and at some point with his best friend Tommy as well, when he finds the initials “TP+KF” carved in the wall). He definitely plays the “big brother” part more prominently in this series than in Rugrats.
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Tommy’s neighbors and the only twins in Rugrats, Phil and Lil DeVille are a very special pair. They loved dirt, bugs, and argued very often, calling each other by their full name. Adults often mistook them as they are pretty much identical, and the pair even played with this by exchanging Lil’s bow. They were always up for all kinds of adventures, but the messier the better.
Naturally, they were pretty close, but in All Grown Up! the dynamic between them goes through some changes. They grow more independent of each other and no longer share a room (nor do they dress the same). At some point, Lil is pressured by her “friends” to demand her independence and get her own room, but it’s all because they think Phil is gross – which he kinda is. Phil is still into “gross stuff” while Lil becomes more of a superstitious type. They both have romantic interests, with an attraction between Lil and Chuckie being implied and Phil going out with Wally Ramone, a girl on his soccer team and one of Lil’s best friends.
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Kimi Watanabe-Finster was introduced in Rugrats in Paris along with her mother, Kira, and later became part of Rugrats. She was adventurous, had a big imagination, and was always smiling, but she was also a bit too naive, making Chuckie feel like he had to protect her all the time. She was more of an “act first, think later” type, which was the complete opposite to her brother, but they cared a lot about each other and had a really strong bond.
Related: The Secret History Of Nickelodeon Cartoons
As a teen, Kimi is a free-thinking, independent girl. She has a very peculiar fashion sense and embraces her Japanese heritage, likes “weird” music, and develops a crush on “bad guy” Z, although it’s later revealed that she also has a crush on Tommy. Her relationship with Chuckie continues to be very close, with her offering him support whenever he needs it, and while she appreciates his overprotectiveness, she finds it annoying sometimes. In All Grown Up! it is revealed that Kimi has been keeping in touch with her father, and even comes to visit her in the episode “Trading Places”, along with her step-mother and half-sister.
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Susie Carmichael was Tommy’s neighbor and Angelica’s rival throughout Rugrats, although she made a conscious effort to get along with her. She was polite, kind, adventurous, and had a very active imagination, but she also had a very mean side that could easily compete with Angelica’s, although this side of her wasn’t seen often. She was also very supportive, especially to Chuckie, very intelligent, and had a better understanding of adults and the world in general than the rest of the gang.
Susie doesn’t change much in All Grown Up!, as she’s still the more mature character from the bunch and keeps a close relationship with everyone. She has a natural talent for singing and is also shown to know 10 languages. Her relationship with Angelica changes for the better, and the two often help each other. Just like her mother, Susie is a girl of many talents, and often keeps herself busy with multiple activities.
Next: Why Did Rugrats End? Solving Nicktoons Biggest Mystery
source https://screenrant.com/rugrats-characters-what-happened-grow-up/
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thebunnyremix · 6 years
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What I Learned From Nicktoons...
Doug: Don’t freak out over trivial things. People don’t give as big of a shit as you think they do.
Rugrats: WATCH YOUR FUCKING KIDS, YOU IRRESPONSIBLE MANIACS!!!
The Ren & Stimpy Show: Just because it’s a cartoon, doesn’t mean it belongs on a kids’ network.
Rocko’s Modern Life: Everyone is weird to some degree.
Aaahh!!! Real Monsters: Sometimes your teacher is full of shit, and sometimes they’re completely right. It’s up to you as a student to decide which lessons work best for you.
KaBlam!: Art has many different forms.
Hey Arnold!: It is possible to be mature and immature at the same time.
The Angry Beavers: Sometimes you and your sibling are gonna fight, and sometimes you’re each other’s best friend. It will never be one consistent mood, but that’s not a bad thing.
CatDog: Love yourself; because the world is gonna hate you for being different anyway.
Oh Yeah! Cartoons: It doesn’t matter how good your idea is. It may still be rejected for budget reasons.
The Wild Thornberrys: Being weird might save your ass one day.
SpongeBob SquarePants: Life is a wacky adventure that goes on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and oh my god why is it still going!? Let me die!! Can’t you see that I crave death!?
Rocket Power: When in doubt, make up your own slang and pretend to be cool.
Pelswick: Some ideas won’t be appreciated when they first come out. At that point, hope and pray for a cult following.
As Told by Ginger: Teenagers are annoying. Especially you.
The Fairly OddParents: Life sucks. But if you make the right kind of friends, it sucks a bit less.
Invader Zim: A hero is only as incompetent as his villain.
ChalkZone: Artist’s block always happens at the worst possible time, but can be overcome with enough thought and patience. If that fails, use the adrenaline of a looming deadline to your advantage.
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius: Smart people can be just as annoying as dumb people.
All Grown Up!: If it looks like a pilot in disguise, it probably is.
My Life as a Teenage Robot: Even if you’re a total badass, some people will still shit on you for stupid reasons. But you’re still a badass, so whatever, right?
Danny Phantom: You’re never too young to discuss the subject of death.
Avatar: The Last Airbender: Kids can follow deep storytelling better than you think.
Catscratch: Most problems are caused by rich idiots with too much free time.
Mr. Meaty: Part of growing up is accepting that the world is gonna give you things you didn’t ask for. (Thankfully, some of these things will go away on their own.)
Rugrats Pre-School Daze: See above.
Fanboy & Chum Chum: A bad show will never be cancelled fast enough.
Planet Sheen: Some characters are only funny based on how other characters react to them, and therefore work better as a side character and should never be given a fucking spin-off.
T.U.F.F. Puppy: Two out of three ain’t bad.
The Legend of Korra: The best way to resolve a love triangle is with a bisexual twist ending.
Breadwinners: Even the worst ideas will be greenlit, because some people think effort is just an option. Keep that in mind and see how well you sleep tonight as you look over all the awesome ideas that never got a chance to shine because of bullshit like this.
(insp)
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dateagirlwhosweird · 6 years
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Date a girl who just finished binge watching every episode of Rugrats Pre-School Daze.
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Animations lots of males and females liked through the 1990’s.
9. Beavis and Butt-head
Production Period: 1993-1997
Channel: MTV
First airing as a short film consisted of on Liquid Television, Beavis and Butt-head are a pair of teenagers who invest their days with sarcastic talks, bad concepts, and (brutally) critiquing music videos. Beavis and Butt-head lasted 7 seasons and put out 1 movement photo. It is thought about a classic piece of 90’s youth society and the MTV Generation.8.
Rugrats
Production Period: 1991-2004
Channel: Nickelodeon
Following the life of a group of kids, Tommy, Chuckie, Phil, Lil, and Angelica, and later Dill this is the longest running series on Nickelodeon with 14 years, and has made a star on the Hollywood stroll of popularity. It has really spawned 2 various series, All Grown Up, and Angelica and Susie’s Pre-School Daze; and 3 movies, The Rugrats Movies, Rugrats in Paris, and Rugrats Go Wild.7.
The Animaniacs
Production Period: 1993-1995
Channel: Children WB
Starring the Warner siblings, Yakko, Wakko, and Dot, the Animaniacs was a range show style animation normally including anywhere from 1 to 3 sectors. Though the most noteworthy are the Warner brother or sisters, there was a variety of characters with each set or set acting in its own plot.Due to a substantial audience of adults, making up over 20 %of the audiences, The Animaniacs resulted in among the very first Internet-based fandom cultures. The program lasted 99 episodes, put out the motion picture Wakko’s Huge Dream, and spawned one more reliable cartoon Pinky and the Brain.6. Ren and Stimpy (great program)Production Duration
: 1991-1996, later 2003 Channel: Nickelodeon, later on Spike TV This series follows the duo of the unstable signs of asthma hound Chihuahua Ren, and simple minded Manx cat Stimpy as they get caught in nonsensical experiences. The show’s violence and scatological humor, along with slow-moving production times, led initial developer John Kricfalusi to be fired in 1992. Games Animation took control of in 1993 with a”lighter, intestinal tract amusing sort of program”instead of “really frightening “episodes. In 2003 Kricfalusi re-launched the series as Rend and Stimpy” Adult Party Cartoon” on Spike-TV. This new design had a look at more adult styles, consisting of a more plainly homosexual relationship between the 2 main characters, and produced just 3 of 9 ensured episodes prior to being removed.5. SWAT Kats Production Period: 1993-1995 Channel: Animation Network Embed in Megakat City, Opportunity”T-Bone”Furlong and Jake”Razor”Clawson are members of a paramilitary police called the
Enforcers, that due to objecting orders have actually been required to guard a city salvage yard. Concealing their recognition and utilizing homemade automobiles so they do not get in issue with the Enforcers, they come to be vigilantes and secure the city. There were 2 periods, airing 25 episodes. It was gradually canceled with 3 insufficient episodes, due to its violence.4. Hey Arnold!Manufacturing Duration: 1996-2004 Channel: Nickelodeon Arnold is a fourth-grader who copes with his Granny and Granddad in a boarding house in the fiction city of Hillwood (which extremely looks like New york city).
Arnold is regularly captured up in a situation, or helping a school mate with an individual concern. Initially a comic started in 1986, a claymation episode got it got by Nickelodeon, where it was formed into cel-animation and had 5 periods and 100 episodes. In 2003 they launched a flick called”Hey Arnold!: The Film” 3. Doug Production Period: 1991-1994, in the future 1996-1999 Channel: Nickelodeon, later on ABC”Doug” follows the log entries of Doug Funnie, who covers his daily misadventures with his pet dog Porkchop, friend Skeeter, and the extra characters from the town of Bluffington. After 4 seasons and 52 episodes on Nickelodeon, he expose was gotten
in 1996 by Disney, and aired on ABC. Releasing it as “The Brand name Spanking New! Doug “, and later” Disney’s Doug “, the show lots of identifiable adjustments, and was far less prominent with old audiences. Disney produced 3 seasons, and 64 episodes. A film was also spawned by Disney, entitled “Dougs First Movie “.1 Rocko’s Modern Life Rocko Production Period: 1993-1996 Channel: Nickelodeon Following the wallaby Rocko, and his surreal life in the city of O-Town, the cartoon was laced with double entendres, sexual innuendo, and composed by a person who had little to no experience with cartoons or kids.
The programs success primarily stemmed from the truth that it was planned at kids and their moms and dads, and every story was”funny
“and”strong “. The animation was extremely unique, without any parallel lines, hand painted backgrounds, odd color design, and strangely shaped anthropomorphic family pet characters. The preliminary author and developer Joe Murray might no longer continue the consistent work and handed the display to somebody else after the 3rd duration, but still taken a look at every episode. Despite the fact that Murray promoted the program to continue, they stopped after the 4th duration, with 52 episodes behind it.1. X-Men Production Period: 1992-1997 Channel: Fox Children Staring the original very early 90’s comic cast drawn my Jim Lee, the animations follows the precise same story line as the comics. Along with loosely replicating renowned story lines and plots of the preliminary series, it also produced episodes that dealt openly with mature social problems, nevertheless usually in subtext. This is one of the longest long lasting programs on Fox
Kids running 5 periods and 76 episodes, second just to Batman, and is also one of Americas most viewed and biggest ranked early morning programs in history. Animation is typically a real ardour of mine. I delight in anything about it. come and pay a visit to us at AnimatorsForHire.com We can assist you with all of your animation requirements. Commercials, much shorter films, web films, motion pictures, music movies, t.v. pilots, whatever you require animated.Thanks for reading this short post on animations. We enjoy animation and love to make animated media. Employ us for your next project, animators for hire pixabay
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sidetable-drawer · 6 years
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There have been plenty of awful Nicktoon spinoffs, on and off Nickelodeon itself (Planet Sheen, Ren and Stimpy: Adult Party Cartoon, and technically Angela Anaconda), but even they don’t reach the horror that was Rugrats Pre-School Daze:
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It only lasted four episodes, debuted direct-to-video in the US in 2005-2006 and didn’t air until late 2008 in an early morning timeslot out of Nick’s embarrassment, and looks like it came from the deepest depths of the uncanny valley.
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sidetable-drawer · 6 years
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Nicktoons on Nickelodeon by year
*this list will not include already-ended Nicktoons playing in repeats that year or cartoons produced by other companies. All numbers reflect how many Nicktoons were running by the end of that year*
1991: 3 (Doug, Rugrats, and The Ren & Stimpy Show premiere)
1992: 3
1993: 4 (Rocko's Modern Life premieres)
1994: 4 (Aaahh!!! Real Monsters premieres; Doug's Nickelodeon run ends)
1995: 3 (Rugrats initially ends)
1996: 4 (Hey Arnold! and KaBlam! premiere; Rugrats is uncancelled; The Ren & Stimpy Show and Rocko's Modern Life end)
1997: 4 (The Angry Beavers premieres; Aaahh!!! Real Monsters ends)
1998: 7 (CatDog, Oh Yeah! Cartoons, and The Wild Thornberrys premiere)
1999: 9 (SpongeBob Squarepants and Rocket Power premiere)
2000: 9 (As Told By Ginger premieres; KaBlam! ends)
2001: 9 (The Fairly OddParents and Invader Zim premiere; The Angry Beavers and Oh Yeah! Cartoons end)
2002: 9 (ChalkZone and The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius premiere; Invader Zim ends and all further episodes will premiere on Nicktoons in 2006; CatDog will air remaining episodes on Nicktoons in 2004-2005)
2003: 11 (My Life As A Teenage Robot and All Grown Up! premiere)
2004: 6 (Danny Phantom premieres; Rugrats, Hey Arnold!, The Wild Thornberrys, and Rocket Power end; SpongeBob Squarepants initially ends; As Told By Ginger moves to Nicktoons at the end of the year and airs some new episodes there in late 2004 and 2006, some on TeenNick in 2016, and some still unaired in the US as of 4/18)
2005: 9 (Avatar: The Last Airbender, Catscratch, and The Xs premiere; SpongeBob Squarepants is uncancelled; ChalkZone is removed from the schedule and will air it's remaining episodes in 2008)
2006: 5 (The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and The Xs end; The Fairly OddParents initially ends; My Life as a Teenage Robot moves to Nicktoons and will air the remaining episodes over 2008-2009)
2007: 6 (El Tigre: The Adventures Of Manny Rivera, Tak and the Power of Juju, and Back at the Barnyard premiere; Danny Phantom and Catscratch end)
2008: 5 (The Mighty B! premieres; The Fairly OddParents is uncancelled; All Grown Up!, Avatar: The Last Airbender, and El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera end; Rugrats Pre-School Daze premiered and ended after all four episodes aired in two months. Originally debuted direct-to-video in-between 2005-2006 in the US and premiered in the UK first in 2005)
2009: 6 (The Penguins of Madagascar and Fanboy & Chum premiere: Tak and the Power of Juju ends)
2010: 6 (T.U.F.F. Puppy and Planet Sheen premiere; Back at the Barnyard and The Mighty B! are moved to Nicktoons and will air new episodes there until 2011)
2011: 6 (Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness premieres; Planet Sheen is moved to Nicktoons and will air its' remaining episodes over 2012-2013)
2012: 8 (The Legend of Korra, Robot and Monster, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles premiere; Fanboy & Chum Chum is moved to Nicktoons and will air its' remaining episode there in 2014)
2013: 8 (Monsters vs. Aliens, Sanjay and Craig, and Rabbids Invasion premiere; The Penguins of Madagascar, T.U.F.F. Puppy, and Robot and Monster are moved to Nicktoons and will air their remaining episodes over 2013-2015)
2014: 6 (Breadwinners premieres; Monsters vs. Aliens and The Legend of Korra end; Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness is moved to Nicktoons and will air the remainder of its' episodes in 2016)
2015: 8 (Harvey Beaks and Pig Goat Banana Cricket premiere)
2016: 6 (The Loud House premieres; Sanjay and Craig ends; Breadwinners is moved to Nicktoons where it will air its' remaining episodes over the course of the year, Pig Goat Banana Cricket also moves to Nicktoons where it is still airing new episodes)
2017: 3 (Bunsen is a Beast! and Welcome to the Wayne premiere; Rabbids Invasion and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles end; The Fairly OddParents and Harvey Beaks are moved to Nicktoons where it will air their remaining episodes over the course of the year, Bunsen is a Beast! will follow suit later that year and air its' remaining episodes over 2017-2018)
2018 [as of April]: 4 (The Adventures of Kid Danger premieres but is currently on hiatus)
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