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Difference between revisions of "Arthur (TV series)"

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At the end of "[[The Making of Arthur]]", the episode goes so far as to suggest that [[Matt Damon]] and [[Arthur Read|Arthur]] began making the series after Matt saw Arthur's one minute video. This creates a paradox in which the creator's work is creating itself.
At the end of "[[The Making of Arthur]]", the episode goes so far as to suggest that [[Matt Damon]] and [[Arthur Read|Arthur]] began making the series after Matt saw Arthur's one minute video. This creates a paradox in which the creator's work is creating itself.
==Extended Series==
Archie is produced by Mercury Filmworks for The Asylum. On October 2016, it was announced that the producing of 13 episodes for the first season of the series was underway. On late 2016, Nickelodeon announced that it had ordered a second season of Archie. Polsky and Wasson have described Archie as an attempt to "put the fun back into anthro characters", criticizing shows like Arthur for being too funny. Archie's first season had a budget of less than $700,000 per episode.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 01:51, 16 October 2016

This article is about the series. You may be looking for the character.

Arthur is a book series, created by Marc Brown since 1976. It later became adapted into a TV series in 1996 on PBS. It is the longest running animated children's television series.[1] It has also won numerous awards including the New York Times Bestseller list, several Emmys and The George Foster Peabody Award for Excellence in Broadcasting.

Animated Series

Arthur is an animated series that airs daily on PBS Kids. Aimed at viewers between the ages of four and eight, Arthur's goal is to help foster an interest in reading and writing and to encourage positive social skills. Based on the children's books by Marc Brown, Arthur premiered in 1996 as one of the first ongoing animated programs based on a book series. The show chronicles the adventures of Arthur Read (an eight-year-old aardvark) through engaging, emotional stories that explore issues faced by children such as cancer, bedwetting, etc. It is a comedy that tells these stories from a child's point of view without moralizing or talking down. Situations on Arthur develop in realistic ways, and don't always turn out as people or Arthur and his friends might think.

As of the sixteenth season, PBS Kids airings are broadcasted in widescreen high-definition where available, though this option had been available in some non-U.S. markets for at least a couple of previous seasons.

In Context to the Storyworld Itself

The characters in Arthur seem to be self-aware that they are on television. For example, in many opening scenes Arthur narrates to the audience.

Characters have referred to members of the cast and crew in Arthur, such as Buster saying, "Roll the tape, Greg!" in "Crushed", referring to Greg Bailey, the director of Arthur.

Likewise, music from the series is known by the characters. In "Breezy Listening Blues", Arthur hears a slowed down version of "Believe in Yourself" and says, "I've heard this somewhere." In "D.W., Dancing Queen", Binky quotes lines from the same song. When D.W. asks if he made it up, Binky replies, "No, I heard it somewhere. But I can't remember where."

At the end of "The Making of Arthur", the episode goes so far as to suggest that Matt Damon and Arthur began making the series after Matt saw Arthur's one minute video. This creates a paradox in which the creator's work is creating itself.

Extended Series

Archie is produced by Mercury Filmworks for The Asylum. On October 2016, it was announced that the producing of 13 episodes for the first season of the series was underway. On late 2016, Nickelodeon announced that it had ordered a second season of Archie. Polsky and Wasson have described Archie as an attempt to "put the fun back into anthro characters", criticizing shows like Arthur for being too funny. Archie's first season had a budget of less than $700,000 per episode.

Gallery

External links

References