The Last Airbender (TV Series)
Another Nicktoon makes its debut in 2005:
Nah.What are the chance that newt gingrich becomes president in 2008 and blame the demcoarts for the late 2000 reccesion(depsite 12 years of republican rule) and refuse to cooperate with a democrats controled. Newts barley gets any down do to his uncooperite nature. This lead reccord number of proggreive by 2014 and remaing repubics are higly moderate.
ABC
This year, Raven Symone headlines her own animated series produced by Hanna-Barbera: That's So Raven.
CBS
The Super Duper Sumos
Columbia-Tristar Television and Screen Gems' attempt at competing with the Ren and Stimpy reboot.
NBC
Lilo and Stitch: The Series is the newest addition to a heavily stacked lineup on NBC, where Saturday Mornings are "Nuthin' But Cool!"
The Hub
What's with Andy? enters its third season with highs and lows. Halfway through production of season 3, original production company CineGroupe went bust, threatening to put the show to a screeching halt. In stepped Revolution Studios, who bought the series outright after acquiring the rights to produce a live action film last year. This year, to get the troubled series back on track, Revolution fired Ian James Corlett and replaced him with Seann William Scott as the voice of lead character Andy.
Funky Cops
Imported to North America by Ruby-Spears and Grand Diamond
Featuring Billy Dee Williams as the voice of Ace Anderson
Kids WB
This year, the Winx Club, imported from Italy, is Kids WB's biggest draw.
UPN
Mighty X joins the UPN lineup, based on the popular Mighty the Armadillo video game series.
Former Nickelodeon executives Geraldine Layborne and Vanessa Coffey each plead guilty to accepting bribes from the former Trump Manhattan studio.
- Reuters
CBS to air recently unearthed interview with Walt Disney on 60 Minutes this spring.
- The Hollywood Reporter
Geffen Records confirms Backstreet Boys' new album for summer 2005 release.
- MTV News
Showbiz Pizza's big comeback raises Disney's stock price.
- The Wall Street Journal
In February of 2005, Disney released Pooh's Heffalump Movie. This project ultimately turned out to be the last appearance of John Fiedler as the voice of Piglet. Fiedler passed away about four months after the film's release. Paul Winchell, the previous voice of Tigger, passed away the same week that Fiedler died. Up to this point, Disney's Winnie the Pooh adaptations have been roughly the same as OTL.
Directed by Eric Goldberg and Daniel Abbott
Screenplay by Brian Hohlfeld
Based on the characters created by AA Milne
Voices:
Narration by Ian MacDiarmid
Jim Cummings as Pooh and Tigger
David Ogden Stiers as Owl
Tom Kenny as Rabbit
Gregg Berger as Eeyore
Christine Ebersole as Kanga
Tara Strong as Roo
John Fiedler as Piglet
Thomas Brodie-Sangster as Christopher Robin
Kyle Stanger as Lumpy the Heffalump
These are some fine changes for an otherwise bad Pooh film. Yeah, I said it, and I'm proud of it! Plus, if the other Pooh adaptations are the same as IOTL, then it makes this update much better to see.
My Friends Tigger and Pooh will launch on NBC's Saturday morning lineup in the fall of 2007. That show will be Disney's first Pooh adaptation to be presented in High Definition and with Dolby 5.1 sound. Also, the voice cast should be pretty much the same as in the Heffalump movie.
Well, if that show will be on Saturdays, then is it earlier in the morning for the preschool audience, or is the overall writing for all audiences?
It'll be geared for all ages.
So, does that also mean that any Pooh fan, young or old, can enjoy the show compared to its OTL counterpart?
Definitely.