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Doug (TV series)

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Doug
File:Doug Cartoon Title Card.jpg
Title Card
GenreComedy
Created byJim Jinkins
Developed byJim Jinkins and Joe Aaron
Written byJim Jinkins
Directed byKen Kimmelman
Carol Millican
Yvette Kaplan
Adam Pennington
Voices ofFred Newman
Constance Shulman
Becca Lish
Alice Playten
Doug Preis
Greg Lee
Narrated byBilly West (1991-1994)
Tom McHugh (1996-1999)
Theme music composerFred Newman
ComposerFred Newman
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons7
No. of episodes117 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersJim Jinkins
David Campbell
David Martin
Christine Martin
ProducerJoEllyn Marlow
EditorsBruce Knapp
Alysha Cohen
Meredith Jeffrey
Running time24 minutes
Production companiesJumbo Pictures (1991-1999)
Nickelodeon Animation Studios (1991-1994)
Ellipse Programmé (1991-1999)
Walt Disney Television Animation (1996-1999)
Original release
NetworkNickelodeon (1991-1994)
ABC (1996-1999)
ReleaseAugust 11, 1991 –
June 26, 1999

Doug is an American animated sitcom that was created by Jim Jinkins and produced by Jumbo Pictures for the Nickelodeon network, as the first of their successful line of Nicktoons. Later on, the series was then produced for Disney for airing on ABC's One Saturday Morning block. Doug stars sixth grader Douglas Yancey Funnie.

Plot

The series takes place in the fictitious town of Bluffington (where Doug Funnie and his family had moved from Bloatsburg) and deals with the life of the title character, grade-schooler and diarist Doug Funnie.

Nickelodeon's Doug (1991-1994)

Doug premiered on Nickelodeon on August 11, 1991, where it continued until December 16, 1994 and in reruns until 2002, being the first Nicktoon. As of 2009, Nickelodeon's Doug airs reruns on MTV Tr3́s affiliates KBEH and KMOH-TV (as a E/I program) in the USA and on Nicktoonsters in the UK.

In the pilot episode, Douglas Yancey Funnie and his family (Phil, Theda and sister Judy), come to a new town called Bluffington after moving away from their former residence in Bloatsburg. There he meets Skeeter, Patti, Roger and Beebe, and his new life in a new town begins.

Disney's Doug (1996–1999)

In 1996 Disney ordered new episodes of Doug to be produced (renamed Brand Spanking New! Doug and then later Disney's Doug) which was in production from 1996–1999.

Several differences between the original and Disney versions exist. The Disney episodes featured a new theme song and added a younger sister, named Cleopatra Dirtbike Funnie, into the Funnie family. Perhaps to account for time, Doug's age was changed to 12½ years old. Several other minor character changes were added, including a new haircut and a darkened skin tone for Patti Mayonnaise, and Connie Benge changed from a fat to a thin character. Less noticeable than Patti's new hairdo was the change in Doug's haircut, due to trademark considerations. The original Doug has eight hairs; Disney's Doug has nine. Other changes include Roger Klotz becoming rich, having lived poorly in a trailer park previously, the closing of the Honker Burger (this would, however, be replaced by Swirly's), Mrs. Dink becoming the mayor, and the Beets breaking up. Skeeter's clothing changed, too - the lightning bolt on his shirt became a zero, and the colors of his clothes changed. Plus the often mentioned but never seen Skunky Beaumont becomes a prominent character.

On March 15, 1999, Disney premiered a new musical stage show, "Doug: Live!" at Disney's Hollywood Studios (at the time known as Disney-MGM Studios) at the Walt Disney World Resort. The show ran until May 12, 2001. Additionally, a theatrical feature-length film, Doug's 1st Movie was released on March 26, 1999 before production on the television show ceased.

During the course of the show, Doug was nominated for at least two Daytime Emmy Awards.[1][2]

In the Disney version, every episode was a full-length episode of about 22 minutes, split into three segments. In the Nick version, most episodes were composed of two 11-minute segments. The only exceptions are the pilot, Christmas, and Halloween episodes, which were full-length episodes split into two segments.

Creation

Created by former Nickelodeon artist Jim Jinkins in September 1990, and produced through Jinkins' production company, Jumbo Pictures, Inc. Originating with an unpublished book Doug Got a New Pair of Shoes by artist and series creator Jim Jinkins and writer Joe Aaron, the 1991 animated series Doug emerged on the Nickelodeon TV. The creator of the show, Jim Jinkins, named the main character Doug after his godson, Doug Eckhardt, currently an art history major at the University of Pennsylvania. The idea for "Quailman," an imaginary superhero which the main character Doug often pretends to be in the cartoon, was inspired by a similar superhero invented by the creator of the show, Jim Jinkins, when he was younger.

Characters

Also noteworthy are the several fictitious and alter-egos of Doug Funnie in the series (ex Quailman and Jack Bandit).

Episodes

Nickelodeon's Doug (52 episodes; 4 seasons) featured two 11-minute stories with a commercial break in between. Disney's Doug (65 episodes; 3 seasons) had a single story spanning the length of each episode. Disney also produced a feature film called Doug's 1st Movie.

Airings

The original version aired on Nickelodeon from 1991 - 1994 and re-runs from 1994 - 2003. Re-runs of the original version of the show also aired on Noggin from 1999 - 2002, on Nicktoons Network from 2002 - 2005 and on MTV Tr3́s affiliates KBEH and KMOH-TV (as a E/I program) from September 2007 - present.[3] These seasons were produced between 1991 and 1994. In 1996 Disney produced new episodes. The Disney version aired Saturday mornings on ABC from 1996-1997.[4] In September 1997, ABC started a new Saturday morning cartoon block called Disney's One Saturday Morning Doug aired on this from 1997-1999, and re-runs from 1999-2001.[5] Re-runs of the Disney version of the show also aired on The Disney Afternoon from 1998-1999, on UPN's Disney's One Too block from 1999 - 2000,[6] Disney Channel from 2001 - 2002 and Toon Disney from 2001 - 2004.

Doug has retained a cult following due to its nostalgic quality to young adults who grew up in the 1990s. In an episode of Robot Chicken, a guy recognizes Doug next to him in a bar. He asks him what he's been up to and Doug says "nothing" as he takes a sip of his drink. [7]

The melody for the "Doug" theme song was incorporated into the Suburban Legends song "Da Bomb", and is used by the band Muke in their song "Dreamsickle".

The alternative rock group Black Tie Bombers wrote a song entitled "Meet Me At The Honker Burger (Bangin' on a Trash Can)", which is a reference to both the Honker Burger restaurant from the show and the song "Banging On A Trash Can" that was performed by Doug in a dream sequence. American rapper, Asher Roth, named Doug Funnie as his favourite cartoon character and a "cool guy" on BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge.[8]

The punk rock group Sexy Heroes wrote a song titled "Bluffington Diaries", with the content of the song chronicling events in the show. Many events, people, and places are referred to.

Media release

United States

United Kingdom

Brazil

DVD and digital releases

Nick DVD name Release date Discs Episodes
Season 1 (1991) August 29, 2008 3 13
Season 2 (1992) August 29, 2008 3 13
Season 3 (1993) December 8, 2009 3 13
The Best of Season 4 (1993-94) December 22, 2009 3 13

In 2008 Nickelodeon partnered with Amazon.com to allow new and old programming to be made available on DVD through CreateSpace. As part of the deal Amazon.com is responsible for producing the discs. (on one time burnable media) on-demand as well as cover and disc art.[9]Seasons 3 and 4 of Nickelodeon's Doug were released on DVD on December 8, 2009 and December 22, 2009 respectively. Disney's Doug is not yet available on Disney DVD.

Season 4 was supposed to be released as a complete season, like its previous editions, but Nickelodeon was unable to locate two episodes from the final Nickelodeon season of the show, and opted to rename the DVD release "Doug: The Best of Season 4." [1]

Nickelodeon episodes are available from video on demand services such as iTunes Store (Seasons 1 and 2) and Zune Marketplace (Season 1 only).

References

  1. ^ "Daytime Emmy Awards 1999". IMDb. Retrieved 2009-06-19.
  2. ^ "Daytime Emmy Awards 2000". IMDb. Retrieved 2009-06-19.
  3. ^ KidVid Public Access Search the call signs "KMOH" or "KBEH" for the filing periods of "2007 Q3" and "2010 Q1"
  4. ^ KidVid Public Access Search the call sign "WABC" for the filing period of "1997 Q1"
  5. ^ KidVid Public Access Search the call sign "WABC" for the filing periods of "1997 Q4" and "2001 Q3"
  6. ^ KidVid Public Access Search the call sign "WWOR" for the filing periods of "1999 Q4" and "2000 Q3"
  7. ^ http://video.adultswim.com/robot-chicken/doug-at-a-bar.html
  8. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/livelounge/artist/090512_asherroth.shtml
  9. ^ "Amazon and Nickelodeon/Paramount Strike Deal for Burn-on-Demand Titles". Site News. August 21, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-24.

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