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10901 – Happy Smurfday!!

Smurfs mark 50th birthday in Belgium
BRUSSELS, Belgium – The Smurfs ó led by Papa Smurf and Smurfette ó kicked off a year of 50th birthday celebrations Monday with Smurfberry cake and sasparilla juice.
The late cartoonist Pierre Culliford ó best known by his pen name, “Peyo” ó first introduced the tiny blue figures in a comic strip in October 1958. He called them Schtroumpf; they became known worldwide as the Smurfs.
The Smurfs, forest dwellers who live in little white-capped mushroom homes, developed their own “Smurf” language in which nouns and verbs were interchanged.
Their debut on U.S. television in 1981 launched their global rise to stardom and made the Smurfs a household name. A Smurf is a Pitufo in Spanish, a Schlumpf in German, Nam Ching Ling to the Chinese, a Sumafa in Japan and Dardassim in Hebrew.
“I think that if he could see all that has been done with his characters since his death and the success and interest that the Smurfs still attract, he would be very, very, very, very happy and very proud,” said Peyo’s son, Thierry Culliford.
To mark 50 years of Smurfdom, organizers are planning everything from a 3-D animation feature film expected to be released next year to new comic book collections and a remastered release of the popular 1980s television animated series, Peyo’s family said.
Peyo’s widow and two children will help kick off a European birthday tour in Brussels. The Smurfs celebration will continue in Paris and Berlin.
The Smurfs also will team up with the UNICEF to promote children’s rights and education worldwide, said Yves Willemont of UNICEF Belgium.
“The Smurfs and UNICEF have a lot of values in common ó values about joy, happiness and respect,” Willemont said. “We also have in common the fact that we are dedicated to the cause of children and to the promotion of every child and the right of every child to survive.”
UNICEF and the Smurfs joined forces two years ago to raise the plight of ex-child soldiers in Africa.
Born in Brussels, Peyo worked as a movie projectionist before entering the world of comic strip drawing.
The Smurfs appeared as a supporting cast of characters in Peyo’s 1958 “Johan and Pirlouit” cartoon, which was set in the Middle Ages.
The Smurfs quickly grew in popularity and by 1960, the Smurfs had their own comic strip series and. With the help of the Hanna-Barbera Productions, the Smurfs became an animated cartoon in 1981.
Thierry Culliford said the Smurfs promote love and friendship. He said many who grew up watching the Smurfs on TV during the 1980s and 1990s now are parents and want to introduce the Smurfs to their children.
Demand for Smurf stories continues, said Hendrik Coysman, managing director of IMPS, which controls the rights of the Smurf brand worldwide.
“Thousands of fans are asking for more stories and these will be based of course on the fantastic asset that Peyo has left us,” Coysman said.
Peyo, who died 15 years ago, “would be very happy if he were here today” to see Papa Smurf, Smurfette, Handy, Jokey and the troop of 96 others celebrate 50 years of Smurfmania, daughter Veronique Culliford said.

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Cartoons

This sounds cool, but I already have all of the DVD sets!

Family Guy doesn’t wait for complete set
Many shows have been putting out complete series box sets lately. But Family Guy has got to be the first show to do it while the show is still on the air. While this box set is going to be instantly obsolete. It’s still a really interesting package.
The new box set, entitled the Family Guy Freakin’ Party Pack comes with all the DVDs from the first Five Volumes of Family Guy along with the straight to video DVD Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story. An 18th DVD is included with special features including deleted scenes a recording booth featurette, interviews and more.
The thing that makes this a “party pack” is what’s included aside from the DVDs. The large box also contains Family Guy themed ping pong equipment and 100 poker chips and playing cards.
The set arrives on October 30th, a busy day for DVD with a suggested retail price of $149.98.

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Cartoons

10200 – Cool, guys!

Sandler’s ‘Gay Robot’ May Get Animated
Comedy Central is reportedly considering reimagining Adam Sandler’s “Gay Robot” pilot as a potential animated series.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, Comedy Central is giving thought to redeveloping the property after clips of “Gay Robot” acquired a cult following on sites including MySpace and YouTube.
Sony Pictures Television and Sandler and Jack Giarraputo’s Happy Madision Productions did “Gay Robot,” based on a Sandler skit, in live action form for Comedy Central back in 2005.
The cable network opted not to pick up the pilot, which featured the voice of Nick Swardson, who also co-wrote the pilot with Tom Gianas and originated the character on Sander’s comedy album “Shhh… Don’t Tell.”
“Gay Robot” tells the story of a robot who turns out gay after his designer accidentally spilled a wine cooler on his circuits. In the pilot, the rainbox-festooned title character was prone to hanging out with a group of frat boys who try to get him a date to the homecoming dance.
Gay Robot has 32,000-plus MySpace friends and the clips on YouTube have tens of thousands of page views.

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Cartoons

Sweet!!

Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour, The – More Gold coming this November
In this 4-disc set are 60 more of the most looneytic Looney Tunes cartoons ever conceived! Each disc is devoted to a theme or character that features fan favorites plus some rarities.
Disc 1 showcases the long-eared star extraordin-hare with 15 Bugs Bunny cartoons, including 1958’s Oscar-winning Best Cartoon Short Subject Knighty Knight Bugs.
Disc 2 (Porky Pig) celebrates animation legend Frank Tashlin, who brought a filmmaker’s eye for angles, editing and style to his creations.
Disc 3 zips along pronto with fast-acting Speedy Gonzales and includes Tabasco Road, Mexicali Shmoes and Pied Piper of Guadalupe, all of which were nominated for Academy Awards. And cats may have 9 lives but they also have 15 cartoons in Disc 4’s batch of feline follies. The fur’s gonna fly.
The 4 disc set will include 60 classic shorts, fully remastered and uncut. Special features will include documentaries, “Behind the Tunes” featurettes, commentaries, music only tracks, selections from the vault and other rare shorts. The set will cost $64.92 when it’s released on November 14.
Warner Bros will also release the “Spotlight Collection Volume 4” on the same day. This 2 disc set will contain 28 classic cartoons and carries a $26.99 suggested retail price.
November 14 will also see the release of “Bah Humduck,” a new take on an old classic:
In a hilarious take on the holiday classic, “A Christmas Carol,” “A Looney Tunes Christmas” follows the exploits of Daffy Duck, the “Scrooge-like” proprietor of the “Lucky Duck” mega-mart. To take financial advantage of last minute shoppers, Daffy demands that his employees, including his long suffering manager, Porky Pig, work on Christmas Day instead of spending the holiday with their families. Its up to Bugs Bunny and the ghosts of Christmas past (Tweety and Granny), present (Yosemite Sam) and future (Taz) to make sure that Daffy realizes the error of his ways and saves Christmas for the Looney Tunes gang.

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Cartoons

Awesome!!!!!!!

“Futurama” Pulls a “Family Guy”
Comedy Central is going back to the Futurama.
Three years after the show last aired on prime time, the cable net has signed a deal to resurrect the former Fox animated series for a minimum 13-episode run.
Comedy Central will start airing the new shows in 2008.
“We are thrilled that Matt Groening and 20th Century Fox Television have decided to produce new episodes of Futurama and that Comedy Central will be the first to air them,” said David Bernath, the cable net’s senior VP.
The new episode order is part of a larger deal Comedy Central made with the production company last year, when they bought the syndicated rights to Futurama’s 72-episode library.
“There is a deep and passionate fan base for this intelligent and very funny show that matches perfectly with our audience, and it is great that we can offer them not just the existing library but something they’ve never seen as well,” Bernath told the Hollywood Reporter.
The offbeat show was the brainchild of The Simpsons mastermind Groening and writer David X. Cohen and debuted on Fox in March 1999. The series revolved around Fry, a pizza delivery boy who is accidentally frozen for a thousand years. When he wakes up in the year 3000, he befriends a sassy one-eyed pilot, Leela, and a cranky robot, Bender, who both work for an intergalactic delivery service run by a distant nephew of Fry’s.
In August 2003, after five seasons and three Emmys, including the 2002 award for Best Animated Series, Futurama was canceled due to low ratings.
Reruns of the show, however, were picked up by Cartoon Network, and just like cable home did with Family Guy before it, the move paved the way for a Futurama revival.
Both shows aired on the Cartoon Network and quickly built up unexpectedly robust ratings.
In 2004, Stewie & Co. were resuscitated by to Fox thanks to staggering DVD sales–the show ranks as the fourth-biggest TV series seller ever–and its proliferation in reruns.
In January of this year, 20th Century Fox began talks with Comedy Central to revive the long-gone Futurama as well, thanks to its resurgence in popularity courtesy of its second life in reruns and high–though not Family Guy high–DVD sales.
The cable net has already re-signed voice stars Billy West, Katey Sagal and John DiMaggio to reprise their animated roles.
In the meantime, new Futurama plots can already be had in comic book form, with Groening’s Bongo Comics releasing the stories.

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Cartoons

Enjoy it…again!

The Christmas classic that almost wasn’t
When CBS bigwigs saw a rough cut of A Charlie Brown Christmas in November 1965, they hated it.
“They said it was slow,” executive producer Lee Mendelson remembers with a laugh. There were concerns that the show was almost defiantly different: There was no laugh track, real children provided the voices, and there was a swinging score by jazz pianist Vince Guaraldi.
Mendelson and animator Bill Melendez fretted about the insistence by Peanuts creator Charles Schulz that his first-ever TV spinoff end with a reading of the Christmas story from the Gospel of Luke by a lisping little boy named Linus.
“We told Schulz, ‘Look, you can’t read from the Bible on network television,’ ” Mendelson says. “When we finished the show and watched it, Melendez and I looked at each other and I said, ‘We’ve ruined Charlie Brown.’ ”
Good grief, were they wrong. The first broadcast was watched by almost 50% of the nation’s viewers. “When I started reading the reviews, I was absolutely shocked,” says Melendez, 89. “They actually liked it!”
And when the program airs Tuesday night at 8 p.m. ET on ABC, it will mark its 40th anniversary ó a run that has made it a staple of family holiday traditions and an icon of American pop culture. The show won an Emmy and a Peabody award and began a string of more than two dozen Peanuts specials.
Last year, 13.6 million people watched it, making it the 18th-most-popular show on television the week it aired; CSI was first. One advertiser on the show, financial services giant MetLife, has contracted to use Peanuts characters in its advertising since 1985 and will continue through at least 2012.
Schulz, who died in 2000, never doubted the power of his tale of Charlie Brown’s quest for the true meaning of Christmas amid the garish trappings of a commercialized holiday. “It comes across in the voice of a child,” says Jeannie Schulz, the wife of the cartoonist, whose friends called him Sparky. “Sparky used to say there will always be a market for innocence.”
Peter Robbins, now 49, was the voice of Charlie Brown. “This show poses a question that I don’t think had been asked before on television: Does anybody know the meaning of Christmas?”
Parents like Molly Kremidas, 39, who grew up adoring A Charlie Brown Christmas, watch it with their kids. “It’s the values in the story,” says Kremidas, of Winston-Salem, N.C. She’ll watch tonight with daughter Sofia, 6. “Would there be any programs for children on today that could get away with talking about the real meaning of Christmas? I don’t think so.”
Erin Kane, 36, is eager for her 3-year-old son Tommy to watch the program for the first time tonight in their Boston home. “The Christmas season doesn’t start,” Kane says, “until Charlie Brown is on.”
Hip but wholesome
On paper, the show’s bare-bones script would seem to offer few clues to its enduring popularity. Mendelson says the show was written in several weeks, after Coca-Cola called him just six months before the program aired to ask if Schulz could come up with a Peanuts Christmas special.
Charlie Brown, depressed as always, can’t seem to get into the Christmas spirit. His friend and nemesis Lucy suggests that he direct the gang’s Christmas play. But the Peanuts crew is focused on how many presents they’re going to get, not on putting on a show.
“Just send money. How about tens and twenties?” says Charlie’s sister Sally as she dictates a letter to Santa Claus.
Charlie goes to find a Christmas tree to set the mood. He returns with a scrawny specimen that prompts his cohorts to mock him as a blockhead. In desperation, Charlie asks if anyone can explain to him what Christmas is all about.
“Sure, I can,” says his friend Linus, who proceeds to recite the story of the birth of Jesus from the book of Luke in the King James Version of the Bible. “And suddenly, there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, ‘Glory to God in the Highest, and on Earth peace, and goodwill toward men,’ ” Linus says. “And that’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”
Scholars of pop culture say that shining through the program’s skeletal plot is the quirky and sophisticated genius that fueled the phenomenal popularity of Schulz’s work, still carried by 2,400 newspapers worldwide even though it’s repeating old comic strips.
The Christmas special epitomizes the nostalgic appeal of holiday television classics for baby boomers raised as that medium gained prominence, says Robert Thompson, a professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University.
Thompson notes that other Christmas specials made during the same era ó such as Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Frosty The Snowman Рalso air each year to strong ratings.
“This is the only time in the year when TV programs from the LBJ years play on network television and do very, very well,” he says. “For millions of baby boomers, these things became as much a holiday tradition as hanging a stocking or putting up a tree.”
What makes A Charlie Brown Christmas the “gold standard” in Thompson’s view is that it somehow manages to convey an old-fashioned, overtly religious holiday theme that’s coupled with Schulz’s trademark sardonic, even hip, sense of humor.
While Schulz centers the piece on verses from the Bible, laced throughout are biting references to the modern materialism of the Christmas season. Lucy complains to Charlie that she never gets wants she really wants. “What is it you want?” Charlie asks. “Real estate,” she answers.
“A key element in all of Schulz’s work is his sense of man’s place in the scheme of things in a theological sense as well as a psychological sense,” says Thomas Inge, an English and humanities professor at Randolph-Macon College who edited a series of interviews with Schulz released in 2000. “Then there’s this slightly cynical attitude that makes everything work.”
Parents say the combination of humor and bedrock values is what draws them and their children to the show. “It does provide a balance, but it’s a balance that we as a society have forgotten about,” says Patrick Lemp, 43, of West Hartford, Conn. He’ll watch tonight with son Brendan, 13.
“This is one of the last shows that actually comes out and talks about the meaning of Christmas. As a society, we’re taking religion out of a lot of the trappings of the holiday. This one is different.”
A cultural footprint
Much about A Charlie Brown Christmas was revolutionary for network TV, even beyond its religious themes.
The voices of children had not been used before in animation, a technique Mendelson, Melendez and Schulz all wanted to try.
“Lee didn’t want to use Hollywood kids. He wanted the sound of kids who didn’t have training,” says Sally Dryer, 48, who did the voice of Violet √≥ the little girl who mocks Charlie Brown for not getting any Christmas cards. In later specials, she was Lucy’s voice.
Mendelson sent tape recorders home with all his employees in Burlingame, Calif. Dryer, then 8, was chosen because her sister worked for the Mendelson crew. Robbins and Christopher Shea, the voice of Linus, were the only children with professional acting experience in the cast.
The show was also novel in that it used no laugh track, an omnipresent device in animated and live-action comedies of the era. Schulz strongly believed that his audience could figure out when to laugh.
Perhaps the most enduring aspect of the show has been its score √≥ a piano-driven jazz suite that was absolutely unheard-of for children’s programming in 1965.
Guaraldi, the composer and pianist, was best known for a 1962 hit called Cast Your Fate To the Wind. Mendelson liked it so much that he hired Guaraldi to score a documentary about Schulz that never aired. When the Christmas program was sold, parts of that music were incorporated.
The driving tune that the Peanuts children keep dancing to in the special, called Linus and Lucy, has become a pop staple that’s been recorded countless time in the intervening decades.
A new version of the soundtrack was released last month for the 40th anniversary. It features Vanessa Williams, Christian McBride, David Benoit and others.
The song that opens the program, Christmas Time is Here, was written only for piano by Guaraldi, but Mendelson decided to add words to appease other network concerns. When he found his songwriter friends in California were all tied up, Mendelson wrote the words himself on the back of an envelope.
“So now it’s a standard,” says Mendelson, now 72. “Who knew? I tell people that I’m old and I’m lucky.”
Jazz pianist George Winston, recorded a 1996 tribute album to Guaraldi, who died in 1976. He says that when he plays Guaraldi tunes at concerts, young children come up later and say, “Hey, that’s the Peanuts music!”
Says Winston: “Vince made a stamp on our popular culture that will never go away. For an artist, that’s the ultimate tribute.”
A sweet memory
The Christmas special has become a key part of the Peanuts marketing empire, which racks up $1.2 billion in annual retail sales, $350 million of which come in the USA. Millions of VCR tapes and DVDs of the program are in circulation worldwide.
The 40th anniversary has spawned a long list of spinoff products, including a “Charlie Brown Christmas Tree” at Urban Outfitters and a paperback version of a book Mendelson wrote, The Making of a Tradition: A Charlie Brown Christmas. And the Charles Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, Calif., where Schulz lived, plans a special commemoration on Dec. 17 with Mendelson and several cast members. The museum also has an exhibit on the Christmas show that runs through Jan. 9.
“It’s a tradition, along with White Christmas, A Christmas Carol and It’s a Wonderful Life,” says Marion Hull, 77, who toured the exhibit on Friday. “It’s simple, it tells a simple story, and it’s something that both adults and children can get something out of.”
For those who worked to make the program √≥ as well as fans who watch it √≥ its material success seems ancillary. The word that keeps coming up is “sweet.”
Robbins, who is single, has no children and manages an apartment building in Encino, Calif., loves that kids of friends squeal with delight each Christmas that “Uncle Pete used to be Charlie Brown.”
Jeannie Schulz, who was the artist’s second wife when they married in 1973, says their five children, 25 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren see the show as a holiday tradition as well.
“The reason it’s endured is because of its simplicity and its very basic honesty to real life,” she says. “Who would have thought this would last 40 years? How did that happen?”
For many viewers, it is the speech by Linus from Luke near the end that packs the biggest emotional wallop.
Christopher Shea was just 7 when he did the part and credits Melendez’s coaching and his mom’s doctorate in 17th-century British literature for Linus’ lilting eloquence with a Biblical text.
Shea, who now lives in Eureka, Calif., with two daughters, 11 and 16, answers quickly when asked why the special has proved so enduring. “It’s the words,” he says.
Shea says that for years, in his teens and 20s, he didn’t quite understand his soliloquy’s impact.
“People kept coming up to me and saying, ‘Every time I watch that, I cry,’ ” he says. “But as I got older, I understood the words more, and I understood the power of what was going on. Now I cry, too.”

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Cartoons

“He lives in a pineapple under the sea…”

BOB SQUAD
The Krusty Krab is re-opening for business.
The fourth season of Nickelodeon’s “SpongeBob SquarePants” premieres Friday, May 6 – the first time in a year-and-a-half that new episodes will air on a regular basis.
Nickelodeon had been parceling out new episodes sporadically, in part to avoid over-saturation with last fall’s big-screen release of “The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie.”
“They were getting down to the bottom of the vault, and nobody was sure if there were going to be new episodes for a while,” says Tom Kenny, who is the voice of SpongeBob.
“It’s fun to be back in the saddle and to be doing SpongeBob again,” he says. “I always kind of miss him when I don’t do him for a while.”
The 20 new half-hour episodes, airing every Friday (8:30 p.m.), bring back all the “SpongeBob” regulars: Patrick, Mr. Krabs, Squidward, Sandy Cheeks, Plankton and the rest of the Bikini Bottom gang.
The first episode, “Fear of a Krabby Patty”/”Shell of a Man,” finds SpongeBob smack-dab in the middle of two different dilemmas.
In “Fear,” the trouble starts when Mr. Krabs decides to keep SpongeBob’s beloved workplace, The Krusty Krab, open 24/7 – to one-up Plankton’s Chum Bucket across the street (which is open 23 hours a day).
What Mr. Krabs doesn’t realize is that it’s all a ruse on Plankton’s part – he hopes SpongeBob will get so bleary from his long hours working the grill that he’ll finally surrender the super-secret Krabby Patty recipe.
In “Shell of a Man,” Mr. Krabs, who’s packed on a few pounds, molts and loses his shell – just as he’s about to attend a reunion of his old service buddies.
Fearing he’ll be ridiculed, Krabs sends SpongeBob, who’s now wearing Krabs’ shell, in his place – and learns a valuable lesson about honesty.
“SpongeBob,” which premiered in 1999, has been the top-rated kid’s show (broadcast and cable) for the last three years – and has reaped millions in the merchandising arena.
“He’s just an unflaggingly positive, high-energy sponge who works very passionately for minimum wage in a fast-food restaurant,” Kenny says when asked to describe SpongeBob.
“And he has a circle of friends who are also oddballs and misfits in their own way.”

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Cartoons

Are you kidding me?!?!?!

Bugs Bunny and pals get makeover
The WB network will take the famed Looney Tunes characters as models for a new children’s series, Loonatics, that will air Saturday mornings starting this fall. The characters’ descendants – Buzz Bunny and the like – will be superhero action figures for the cartoon set in the year 2772.
The network’s animators have reimagined Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Wile E. Coyote as sleek new figures for a modern age.
“We all flipped for it,” David Janollari, president of the Kids’ WB, said this week.
“We just said: ‘Wow, what a great way to take the classic Looney Tunes franchise that has been huge with audiences for decades and bring it into the new millennium.”‘
Janollari said both boys and girls enjoyed the new action figures in test runs of the show. Their parents may be a little surprised, however. and his pals are being updated for the future – way in the future.
“I think the legacy is intact,” he said.
“If anything, it’s an homage to the legacy, instead of a destruction of the legacy.”

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Cartoons

SpongeBob is fun!

‘SpongeBob’ an absorbing role for Kenny
MONTREAL (CP) – Tom Kenny never expected to be soaking up the adulation of fans for so long as the voice of cartoon icon SpongeBob SquarePants.
He admits he didn’t really expect the cheerful little yellow sponge be so successful he’d go from household item to household name. “No one did,” Kenny said in a telephone interview as he battled gridlock on a freeway in Los Angeles. “That was a complete, flukish crazy happenstance.
“It definitely was not designed with that in mind and in fact Steve Hillenburg, the creator, is I think a little ambivalent about how huge it’s become.
“Most people are waiting for that day where something they’ve created is on lunch boxes and sheets and he is flattered by it to some degree but feels a little bit like Dr. Frankenstein on the other hand.”
SpongeBob, who has cleaned up with the cartoon set and a hefty number of adults and teens, jumped to the movie screen from the TV screen earlier this month.
In the big screen adventure, SpongeBob and his pal Patrick the starfish – “the time-honoured doofus,” as Kenny describes him – set out to recover King Neptune’s purloined crown and save the good folk of Bikini Bottom from the nefarious plans of the villanous Plankton.
SpongeBob SquarePants: The Movie is an absorbing, goofy romp that boasts an impressive voice cast including Alec Baldwin and Scarlett Johansson and a hilarious send-up of Baywatch legend David Hasselhoff.
“It’s definitely weird, strange, which is part of the goal,” said Kenny of the movie with a laugh. “To make a kids movie that was as odd and crazy and stuff as Willy Wonka and stuff like that, that blew our minds when we were kids, that fascinated and somewhat traumatized us at the same time.”
He acknowledged that SpongeBob’s animation style is a nod to the surrealistic Fleischer cartoons of the 1930s and 1940s, which boasted such characters as Popeye, Betty Boop and an art-deco looking Superman.
“I think it has a lot of laughs in it,” Kenny said of the SpongeBob movie, comparing SpongeBob and Patrick’s adventure to the old road movies by comedians Bob Hope and Bing Crosby. “It really was fun to play something in that genre.”
Kenny, an accomplished voice actor and standup comedian who has played at Montreal’s Just for Laughs comedy festival, was the immediate choice of creator Hillenburg to give SpongeBob his trademark voice.
“He heard me do this voice as the voice of a very obscure character in the background of a crowd scene on a different animated series and remembered it,” Kenny said.
“I had totally forgotten the voice. It was something I did once and never really went back to it. I had to look at the show again.”
Then came the tweaking to get the voice perfect.
“He was such a distinctive looking character and the character design was so evocative, we wanted a voice that did the drawing justice and seemed to believably come out of the mouth of this drawing.”
He said he was also chosen because Hillenburg seemed to see “some SpongeBobian characteristics” in him – like being an enthusiastic, hyperactive, hard worker.
“I never complain,” Kenny said. “I’m like SpongeBob. I’m just happy to have a job. SpongeBob and I have that in common. We can’t believe we’re actually employed doing something that we enjoy, which seems to be a rare situation these days for people.”
Kenny said SpongeBob’s success likely stems from the fact there’s something in each character everyone can identify with. As well, there’s SpongeBob’s unbridled sunny disposition.
“He just has this incredible, deep beatific energy,” Kenny said. “He’s just raring to go all the time and life is great and he loves whatever the day throws at him for the most part.
“He wakes up every morning convinced that it’s going to be the best morning ever and works hard despite the fact that he’s underappreciated and underpaid, which I think is a situation most people can identify with.”
Kenny, who like all the people on the show gets a certain amount of inspiration for plots from their own kids, said the show and movie were not crafted with any sort of particular message in mind, saying they’ll leave that to PBS.
“I guess if SpongeBob has anything at all to offer children I think (it’s) the message that it’s OK to be a square peg, it’s OK to not really fit the mould.
“SpongeBob is a complete oddball in his world but pretty much everyone likes him, he likes himself, he embraces his inner Goofy Goober.
“That’s even underscored more in the movie, that ‘OK, I’m a dork, so what? I like being a dork and being a dork is sort of fun and a lot of dorks wind up doing pretty well in life’.”

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Cartoons

I love cartoons, I mean “animated” films!

11 Films ‘Toon Up for Oscar
A family of superheroes is vying for Oscar glory. And we’re not talking about the Justice League.
Disney-Pixar’s buzz-heavy ‘toon The Incredibles, which opens Friday, tops this year’s slate of eligible contenders for this year’s Best Animated Feature Film Oscar unveiled by the folks at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
But giving the superheroes a run for their money will be DreamWorks’ megahit sequel Shrek 2 and undersea adventure Shark Tale (which happens to feature a lead character named Oscar), along with Nickelodeon’s upcoming The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie and director Robert Zemeckis’ The Polar Express, featuring Tom Hanks in six animated parts.
Thursday’s announcement means Zemeckis can exhale: the Oscar-winning director had feared his film might not qualify in the animation category because it uses a brand new technique called performance capture, for which Hanks and costars acted out their roles in live action, while technicians later converted the performances to CGI.
Other films qualifying include Disney’s Home on the Range and Teacher’s Pet; DreamWorks’ cyberpunk anime thriller by Mamoru Oshii, Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence; and Warner Bros.’ Clifford’s Really Big Movie. Sky Blue and The Legend of Buddha round out the list of contenders.
With 11 deemed eligible, the Best Animated Feature category will be activated for the fourth year in a row. The Academy’s 40-member governing board will now whittle the list down to three finalists by Dec. 14.
According to Academy criteria, if more than eight but fewer than 16 flicks qualify, three films will be nominated in that category. If more than 16 qualify, then five films can be nominated. Last year, for instance, because there were fewer eligible films, only three ‘toons made the grade: Brother Bear, The Triplets of Belleville and the winner, Finding Nemo.
This year’s troika will be announced with the rest of the Academy Award nominations on Jan. 25.
The Academy decided to launch the Animated Feature category in 2000. The first new Oscar category in 20 years, which was created at the behest of animators who felt slighted, aims to honor those ‘toons that were shut out of the Best Picture competition and/or were too long for the Animated Short category.
To qualify for Best Animated Feature, a film must be a minimum of 70 minutes, contain more than 75 percent animation and utilize one of three styles: traditional cel drawing, stop-motion or computer-generated animation. They must also open theatrically in Los Angeles prior to Dec. 31.