Description
Spongebob Squarepants was far from a sure thing when animator Stephen Hillenburg pitched him to Nickelodeon executives, but the program quickly became a gigantic hit that transformed the network, the children's television landscape, and the millions of kids who watched the show religiously. Combining well-defined characters with absurdist humor, vaudevillian gags, and a surreal reality, Spongebob inspired and enchanted a legion of children and adults.
Ryan was never really swept up in the Spongebob fandom, so he brought on Rachel and Riley to discuss how the show impacted them so deeply. Several core stories from Spongebob's first three seasons are discussed alongside an overview of the program's development and creative process. Discussion topics include Spongebob's connection to early Nicktoon Rocko's Modern Life, its spiritual debts to the Golden Age of Theatrical Animation, how perceptions of characters like Squidward and Patrick can change as one grows older, and why the first three seasons of Spongebob are far more revered than what came afterwards.
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This is the second film adaptation of Sheila Burnford's classic children's novel, but the first where the trio of animal protagonists have their thoughts conveyed to us through celebrity voice actors (Michael J. Fox, Sally Field, and Don Ameche). Like in the book and in the 1963 movie, we center...
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Filmed on a shoestring budget and released with modest expectations for box office success, A Hard Day's Night is a fluffy, goofy, and deeply unserious film that happened to capture one of the 20th century's most beloved cultural institutions at the apex of their popularity. The movie's...
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