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| SpongeBob SquarePants | |
|---|---|
Clockwise from top left: Sandy Cheeks, SpongeBob SquarePants, Patrick Star, Mr. Krabs (Eugene H. Krabs), Squidward Tentacles, and Plankton (Sheldon J. Plankton) |
|
| Format | Animated comedy |
| Created by | Stephen Hillenburg |
| Starring | Tom Kenny Bill Fagerbakke Rodger Bumpass Carolyn Lawrence Clancy Brown Lori Alan Mary Jo Catlett Doug Lawrence Dee Bradley Baker Sirena Irwin Jill Talley |
| Country of origin | United States |
| No. of seasons | 6 |
| No. of episodes | 104½ [1] (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Running time | Typically about 11 minutes per cartoon (occasionally longer or shorter) |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | Nickelodeon |
| Original run | May 1, 1999 – present |
| External links | |
| Official website | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
| Common rating | |
|---|---|
| Australia | G |
| Canada | G (some in Season 1 & 2 rated C on YTV) |
| Germany | o. A. |
| Japan | U |
| New Zealand | G |
| Philippines | G |
| United States | TV-Y7 (DVD: Not Rated) |
SpongeBob SquarePants is an Emmy-nominated American animated television series and media franchise. It is one of Nickelodeon's Nicktoons and is currently the most watched show on the channel. In 2007, it was named by TIME as one of the greatest television shows of all time.[2] Although its original network is Nickelodeon, SpongeBob is now broadcast across the world. It was created by artist, animator, and former marine biologist, Stephen Hillenburg, and is produced through his production company, United Plankton Pictures, Inc.
The series is set in the Pacific Ocean, in the city of Bikini Bottom and on the surrounding lagoon floor. The pilot episode first aired in the United States on Nickelodeon after the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards on May 1, 1999. The "official" series premiere followed on July 17, 1999 with the second episode, "Bubblestand/Ripped Pants."
Contents |
SpongeBob SquarePants is a sea sponge who lives in a pineapple under the sea, while his squid neighbor, Squidward Tentacles, lives in a moai. SpongeBob's other neighbor and best friend is a pink starfish named Patrick Star, who lives under a rock. SpongeBob and Patrick live on either side of Squidward Tentacles, much to Squidward's despair. Squidward is constantly annoyed by SpongeBob and Patrick's antics.
SpongeBob and his friends live in the underwater city of Bikini Bottom. Bikini Bottom is like a regular city with a downtown, suburbs, coastal areas, its own airport, bus system, and fair park. Stephen Hillenburg said once that Bikini Bottom was loosely based on Seattle, Washington.[citation needed] A good example of this statement is in the episode "Pre-Hibernation Week". Sandy and SpongeBob were fighting on a tall structure called the Sea Needle, referring to the Space Needle, a tall structure in Seattle. Hillenburg has said that he wants to leave the location of Bikini Bottom to the imagination, claiming that the Baywatch scene was just a reference to his favorite show of all time.
SpongeBob's house-pet is a snail named Gary, whose "meow" is similar to a cat. Although Gary only speaks in a few episodes, the characters have shown an ability to understand him. In addition to this, underwater worms bark exactly like dogs, and are kept on chains. Jellyfish are the equivalent of bees; buzzing, stinging with poison (although it appears as an electric shock), and producing delicious "jelly", mocking the name "jellyfish", while still referring to a bee's honey. Fish act as the citizens of the community but, as a rule, are not important characters.
SpongeBob, who is absorbent, yellow, and porous (according to the title song), works as a fry cook at the Krusty Krab, a fast-food restaurant, with Squidward as the cashier. The Krusty Krab is owned by Eugene H. Krabs (Mr. Krabs). Sheldon J. Plankton (commonly referred to as "Plankton") is Mr. Krabs's arch enemy who owns a low-rank fast-food restaurant called the Chum Bucket across the street from the Krusty Krab. The Chum Bucket has almost never had a customer, and Plankton spends most of his time plotting to steal the recipe for Mr. Krabs's popular Krabby Patty burgers. Only in the movie does he succeed; the formula is never actually revealed to the audience. Plankton's computer wife, Karen, alternately helps him in his schemes or bickers with him.
Sandy Cheeks is another friend of SpongeBob. She is a squirrel that lives in an underwater dome in Bikini Bottom. She was sent there by her bosses, chimpanzees, according to the episode, "Chimps Ahoy". Sandy is from Texas, and speaks with a Texan accent. Sometimes she gets a little home-sick and sings a little song. When not inside her tree-dome, she wears an astronaut-like suit because she cannot breathe in water. Sandy, just like a normal squirrel, hibernates once a year, as seen in a few episodes such as "Pre-Hibernation Week" and "Survival of the Idiots". She likes SpongeBob as much as SpongeBob likes her.
Instead of cars, the residents of Bikini Bottom drive boats. SpongeBob is still in boating school after failing the driving test over seventy-two times. Once, during an episode set in a wilderness area, Patrick questions how a camp fire is possible on the lagoon bottom. As soon as the question is asked, the fire is immediately extinguished with a sizzle. A flurry of bubbles accompanies actions in many of the episodes to remind the viewer that the setting is underwater. Ironically, when there is a separate body of water underwater, such as a swimming pool or lagoon, a non-car boat must be used to cross it because both SpongeBob and Patrick cannot swim, they must be taught by Larry the Lobster. In the episode "Snowball Effect" (Episode 46 Season 3) it snows in Bikini Bottom. The show also frequently ignores its underwater setting when dealing with water in other uses; Bikini Bottom has functional baths, pools, and toilets.
The Krusty Krab, owned by Mr. Eugene H. Krabs, is the most popular restaurant in Bikini Bottom. It usually has two employees: SpongeBob SquarePants, the restaurant's fry cook, and Squidward Tentacles, the restaurant's cashier. Both employees have difficulties with working together: Squidward hates SpongeBob, and SpongeBob in turn exacerbates the situation by remaining completely naive toward Squidward's spiteful attitude. Originally there was a frycook called Jim who left on account of Mr. Krab's small salary. In one episode when Squidward and SpongeBob go on strike, they are temporarily replaced by three teenagers (though seemingly they looked more like children). The restaurant's menu consists of the usual fast-food products, with its specialty being Krabby Patties, similar to hamburgers in appearance. Plankton, the owner of the Krusty Krab's rival restaurant, The Chum Bucket, is always trying to find out the mystery ingredients for the Krabby patty formula.
Like many buildings in the show, the Krusty Krab does not have a specific floor plan. In most episodes, however, the restaurant includes the main dining room with doors leading to Mr. Krabs' office, a kitchen, and a restroom. The building's design is based on a New England lobster trap. In the front, the Krusty Krab has a parking area, even though cars are usually not seen in it. In the back of the Krusty Krab, a dumpster is seen in most episodes. The Krusty Krab is open most days from 8:00 am until 8:00 pm, and is closed on Sunday.
The food served at the Krusty Krab consists of its specialty, the world-famous Krabby Patty burgers, as well as a host of other meals off the Galley Grub, with food ranging from Kelp Fries to Coral Bits to Dr Kelp (derived from the Dr Pepper soft drink) and more, including Silly Meals. This is enough evidence that the menu is similar to that of Checkers Drive-In, McDonald's, Burger King or its Australian counterpart, Hungry Jack's. They have also sold Krusty Krab pizzas in "Pizza Delivery."[3]
SpongeBob SquarePants is the only cartoon to consistently make the Top 10 list in the Nielsen ratings, and is the first "low budget" Nickelodeon cartoon, according to the network, to become extremely popular. Low-budget cartoons had not garnered as much esteem as higher-rated (and higher-budgeted) shows, such as Rugrats, although when SpongeBob SquarePants aired in 1999, it had gained a significant enough number of viewers in the ratings to be considered popular, eventually becoming more popular than Rugrats had ever been. SpongeBob follows other Nickelodeon shows that have attracted "older" followers: The Ren & Stimpy Show, Rocko's Modern Life, the Kablam! skits, Action League Now! and The Angry Beavers. Other shows have followed in this trend as well: Invader Zim and The Fairly OddParents won a similar fan base when they aired in 2001, and the latter is now second only to SpongeBob in popularity, while the former was cancelled despite gaining a cult following. The show debuted in 1999, and during that time, DragonBall Z and Pokémon were still the biggest crazes. SpongeBob did not gain its popularity until around 2000, and it has remained popular since then. It has achieved the "Great" rating on tv.com, with a 8.7 rating, the third best rating in Nickelodeon, the first being Avatar: The Last Airbender with a rating of 9.3 and the second being The Fairly OddParents with a rating of 8.8.
SpongeBob is one in a long line of cartoons that is designed to appeal to adults as well as children. This has a lot to do with the absurd way underwater life and situations are represented, and with the situations, references, and words used, which younger viewers might not understand. Certain innuendos also are intended to go over younger viewers' heads.[4] For example, SpongeBob tried to show his grandma that he was a mature adult by wearing sideburns and a derby, and listening to 'free form jazz' or when Squidward tricked SpongeBob and Patrick into thinking he was a ghost, a coral reef sculpted like Toulouse-Lautrec's can-can girls stands in the background (leading to a pun by Squidward), are jokes most children would not understand. Numerous marine biology in-jokes are woven into the show. There are also often complex ironic scenarios that need close attention.
While many newer cartoons revolve around pre-adolescents with strange lives and feature many pop-culture references (e.g. The Fairly OddParents), SpongeBob chooses to go for a formula that was used in highly successful older Nick cartoons such as Ren and Stimpy and Rocko's Modern Life, with non-human young adults in crazy, unrealistic situations, with minimal pop culture references.
Part of the show's appeal has to do with the childlike nature of SpongeBob and his best friend, Patrick Star, both of whom are adults but display an innocence typical of human children. However, the characters are not immune from more adult avocations, including rock musicianship in a stadium performance, reminiscent of a hard rock concert, or Patrick turning to SpongeBob after they had nurtured a baby scallop, holding his arms out saying "Lets have another".
Unlike the Nickelodeon network, SpongeBob features well-known independent musicians who contribute to its soundtrack. Alternative rock bands such as Wilco, The Shins, The Flaming Lips and Ween (who have contributed two original songs to the show and their 1997 song "Ocean Man" to the movie soundtrack), as well as metal bands Pantera, Motörhead and Twisted Sister have made appearances on the show and movies soundtracks, and heavy metal group Metallica even released a T-shirt featuring cartoon versions of themselves playing live with the characters SpongeBob and Patrick. British rock singer David Bowie was a special guest on the SpongeBob SquarePants episode Atlantis SquarePantis, which aired on November 12, 2007.[5] The episode drew total 8.8 million viewers, the biggest audience in the show's eight-year history.[5]
The TV movie Atlantis SquarePantis referenced numerous other movies or stories. David Bowie's character Lord Royal Highness (with his upper class accent) and the locals looked remarkably like the Blue Meanies (Yellow Submarine) - quite fitting for an underwater adventure. When the characters arrived at his habitat, he fell down as he proceeded down the red carpet (as Willy Wonka did in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, before leading them on a tour. A case can also be made for the yellow road used in the tour and a reference to The Wizard of Oz - along with the movie being a musical.
The show became so popular with adolescents and adults that the series was broadcast on MTV and featured on Spike TV. A quote by Patrick ("It's gonna rock!" from the episode Mid-Life Crustacean) has been used as a promotional tag-line for rock stations. Ren and Stimpy, among others, had followed a similar path. The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, released on November 19, 2004, features a cameo appearance by actor David Hasselhoff, in a parody of his role from the Baywatch TV series.
Merchandise based on the show ranges from Kraft Macaroni & Cheese, Go-Gurt, Kellogg's cereal, and video games to boxer shorts, flip-flops, pajamas, t-shirts, slippers and radios.
The show also spawned a large and popular merchandise line at Hot Topic, Claire's, Waldenbooks, Borders Books, Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, RadioShack, Target, KB Toys, Big Lots, Wal-Mart, Shopko, Meijer, Kmart, Sears, JCPenney, Kohl's, Lowe's, T.J. Maxx, Toys "R" Us and Ames stores in the United States as well as the Zellers, Wal-Mart Canada and Toys "R" Us stores in Canada, and a limited selection of merchandise in Australia at Kmart Australia and Target Australia.
There have been kids meal tie-ins at Wendy's for SpongeBob's House Party Special in 2002 and at Burger King restaurants in 2001, 2003, and for the movie in 2004. In 2006, another kids meal tie-in for Burger King was introduced for the Lost in Time special, and in 2007 for the "Friend or Foe" special featuring containers for BK Chicken Fries designed to look like SpongeBob. In November 2007, a Burger King Kids Meal was released to tie-in with the new episode Atlantis SquarePantis. The most recent tie-in kids meal for Burger King features Pest of the West toys.
A McDonald's Happy Meal tie-in with SpongeBob-themed Happy Meal boxes and toys has not been released in North America yet, but will be in 2008 and has already been released in Europe in the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy and also in Australia in early 2007 at about the same time a Catscratch Happy Meal was released in the United States and Canada.[6] In Australia, the advertisement for the McDonald's SpongeBob Happy Meal won the Pester Power Award for the fact that the ads are enticing young children to want its food because of the free toy.[7]
In Japan, they had a kids meal tie-in with KFC which featured different toys based on the TV series.[8][dead link]
SpongeBob was also featured on VH1's I Love the 90s: Part Deux: I Love 1999: Part Deux as part of a commentary by Michael Ian Black and "Weird Al" Yankovic among other celebrities.
A tie-in beverage for the SpongeBob SquarePants Movie in 2004 at 7-Eleven convenience stores has been created, a pineapple-flavored Slurpee, which has already been discontinued as of 2005.
Events in the past with the SpongeBob SquarePants theme include an exhibit at Underwater Adventures Aquarium in the Mall of America called SeaCrits of Bikini Bottom during the summer of 2003. In October 2004, a NASCAR Busch Series race was named The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie 300, presented by Lowe's and broadcast on TNT featuring Jimmie Johnson's #48 Lowe's stock car and Kyle Busch's #5 stock car painted for the race with the SpongeBob Movie paint schemes. There were contests tied in with the movie where fans could win SpongeBob-related items or a trip to the Cayman Islands.
The motion simulator/interactive movie ride "Escape from Dino-Island 3D" at Six Flags Over Texas was turned into "SpongeBob SquarePants 4-D", with water squirts, real bubbles, and other sensory enhancements. The SpongeBob SquarePants 4-D ride opened at the Noah's Ark Dive-In Theater located at Noah's Ark Waterpark in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin in the summer of 2007. LEGO received license to produce SpongeBob SquarePants building sets, which are available in stores now. SpongeBob appears at the Mall of America's new Nickelodeon theme park re-branded from the Mall of America's Park at MOA (formerly Camp Snoopy) to Nickelodeon Universe in the Minneapolis-St. Paul suburb of Bloomington, Minnesota. The new theme park features a SpongeBob-themed Gerstlauer Euro-Fighter custom roller coaster, the SpongeBob SquarePants Rock Bottom Plunge, which has replaced the Mystery Mine Ride and Olde Time Photo store on the west end of the theme park next to the Dora the Explorer ferris wheel and across from the Pepsi Orange Streak. The theme park opened March 15, 2008. The SpongeBob Rock Bottom plunge features a statue of SpongeBob and Patrick riding a bus down a 90° angle holding a giant rubber glove.
In 2007, some new high-end SpongeBob-themed electronics have been introduced by Imation Electronics Products under the Npower brand, such as MP3 players, digital cameras, a DVD player, and a flatscreen television.[9]
Other items featuring SpongeBob include a special edition Monopoly board game, Life and Operation board game as well as a SpongeBob SquarePants edition of Ants in the Pants and Yahtzee. SEGA Corporation introduced a ticket redemption game based on the show that has become popular with most video arcades.[10][dead link – history]
The SpongeBob SquarePants market saturation has become something of a joke. In the comic strip "Sherman's Lagoon", Hawthorne the crab is showing off a small nuclear (Junior) reactor, and Herman the shark says "Boy, that SpongeBob will endorse anything!"
When the complete first season of SpongeBob SquarePants was released in the United Kingdom, it included some heavy editing (though not to the cartoons themselves). The audio commentaries were cut out, and only two extras were left in, possibly to avoid a 12 rating. A similar approach was taken with the second season; it included no audio commentaries and only one extra, Around the World with SpongeBob SquarePants.
SpongeBob's history can be traced back to 1993 when Rocko's Modern Life first aired. One of the producers was Stephen Hillenburg, a cartoon worker/marine biologist who loved both his careers. When Rocko's Modern Life was canceled in 1996, Hillenburg began working on SpongeBob (although sketches trace back to 1987). He teamed up with creative director Derek Drymon, who had worked on shows such as Doug, Action League Now!, and Hey Arnold!. Drymon had worked with Hillenburg on Rocko's Modern Life as well, as did many SpongeBob crew members, including writer-directors Sherm Cohen and Dan Povenmire, writer Tim Hill, voice actors Tom Kenny and Doug Lawrence (aka "Mr. Lawrence"), actor-writer Martin Olson and animation director Alan Smart. Another crew member with previous Nickelodeon cartoon experience was former Angry Beavers story editor Merriwether Williams, who worked on that show for its first few seasons and switched to SpongeBob in July 1999.
During production of the show, Bobson provided a concept of short comics with the same style of the show, but the characters looked different. SpongeBob used to be named SpongeBoy,[11] and used to wear a red hat with a green base and a white business shirt with a tie. The name "SpongeBoy" did not make it into the show since the name was already officially trademarked by Bob Burden, creator of Flaming Carrot. Hillenburg later chose the alternative name "SpongeBob". The original name was once referenced in the show by Mr. Krabs' line, "SpongeBoy, me Bob!." The Krusty Krab was originally spelled with the letter C rather than K, but Stephen Hillenburg thought Ks were funnier and it would fit his Ukrainian heritage.
SpongeBob aired its first episode, "Help Wanted/Reef Blower/Tea at the Treedome", after the 1999 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards. At this time, Rugrats was the most popular show on Nickelodeon and had already outlived dozens of other lower-budget cartoons. SpongeBob, with its generally lower-class animation and humor style more rooted in clever word-play and culture-references unlike the potty humor that made Rugrats so popular, was expected to be just another one of those shows. Following early struggles, its ratings soared, and a year after release, it surpassed Rugrats as Nickelodeon's highest rated show. SpongeBob's signature voice (provided by Tom Kenny) and humorous style was enjoyable to both younger and older audiences.
The show began its second season in 2000 with more high-quality animation and even more popular episodes. By then it was clear to the world that SpongeBob had opened the door to many other cartoons to use more "adult" senses of humor and come from smaller companies. In 2001, The Fairly OddParents aired from the then-small Frederator company. It focused on a sense of humor similar to SpongeBob’s, only more realistic, slightly crazier (and more suggestive to "adult" topics), and with more pop culture references; this show managed to become a hit as well and currently ranks behind SpongeBob as Nick's second most popular show. That same year, Invader Zim aired, created by comic book writer Jhonen Vasquez; it had a dark but silly sense of humor (similar to Vasquez's other comic books) that managed to attract a very loyal cult following consisting more of teens and adults than young children (Though also containing a moderate amount of preteens). SpongeBob, however, was the leader of all these shows and had by this time started its now famous merchandise line.
The first part of 2002 saw SpongeBob at its peak. The beginning of the third season produced many of classic episodes and focused on the same style and animation concepts as the second season.
Unfortunately, things changed late in the year. Due to rumors of a movie, there was high speculation that the show would be canceled and that 2002 would feature the last season of new episodes. Fans were devastated and online petitions were widely distributed to convince Nickelodeon to produce more episodes by showing continuing fan support. "SpongeBob Meets The Strangler/Pranks A Lot" was the last episode of this season, and aired in October 2004. It was also released on DVD at the end of 2003. Following this, the movie was released in November 2004.
A hiatus from 2003 to 2005 challenged viewer loyalty. This was before the program's lowest ratings with Survival of the Idiots on March 5, 2001 aired, causing speculation that the show might even be cancelled after the movie's release.
The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie earned over $85,000,000 in revenue in the United States, considered to be under-expectations. It was announced late in 2004 that SpongeBob would be continuing with a new season due in 2005. Hillenburg, despite the rumors, did not actually leave the show but has resigned from his position as the show's executive producer (this job now belongs to Derek Drymon, with Paul Tibbitt taking over Drymon's job as creative director.
TV advertisements for SpongeBob's fourth season first aired publicly during the 2005 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards. The new episodes began airing on May 6, 2005. The first new episode of Season 4 was "Fear of a Krabby Patty"/"Shell of a Man". After airing three new episodes on Fridays from May 6 – May 20, Nickelodeon showed no new episodes until September 2005.
For the first time in the series' run, Nickelodeon began airing 11-minute segments of new episodes separately, spread over two weeks. This practice began with the airing of the episode "Selling Out" on September 23; its companion episode, "Funny Pants," premiered the following week.
The Star Online eCentral reported in December 2005 that Nickelodeon had ordered 20 more episodes, bringing the show’s total to 100.[12]
In December 2006, SpongeBob SquarePants was approved for a sixth season, which consisted of thirteen episodes, unlike the usual twenty.[13]
Nickelodeon aired the special "Have You Seen This Snail?" in November 2005. However, it was not until February 2006 that new episodes resumed, starting with "Dunces and Dragons" and continuing until June 2, 2006. Further new episodes appeared during September 2006 ("New Leaf" and "Once Bitten"), October ("Wigstruck"), and November ("The Best Day Ever" — drawing 6.7 million viewers — the Best Day Ever was a 25-hour 100-episode SpongeBob TV event ending with the SpongeBob SquarePants Movie although the Nickelodeon narrator made a goof about the marathon being 24 hours instead of the actual 25 hours. Fans voted for Karate Island as the most popular SpongeBob episode.
The new episodes in 2007 started airing on January 15, showing three new episodes back to back on February 19, 2007, officially beginning the airing of the fifth season which featured more potty humor than previously shown. On July 23, 2007 Nickelodeon aired a special event, called the "SpongeBob New-New-New-New-New Week" in which from Monday to Friday, a new episode of season five (except for Squid Wood, from season four) would air. This continued until the end of the second week.
On November 12, 2007 SpongeBob's first TV movie, "Atlantis SquarePantis" premiered, after a SpongeBob marathon. A behind the scenes feature aired after the movie. Also, on November 23, 2007, there was another SpongeBob marathon including a rerun of Atlantis SquarePantis and four new episodes as part of a Nickelodeon Thanksgiving event. The event also named the "Sweet Victory" scene in "Band Geeks" as the greatest moment in Nicktoons history. Season Six officially premiered with five new 11-minute episodes airing in a marathon from March 3 to March 7, 2008. There is still an episode from the fifth production season which has yet to air.
On March 13, 2008, it was announced that SpongeBob SquarePants will have an additional thirty-nine episodes, which includes the remaining episodes of season six, and a season seven.[14][15][16]
In April 2008, another SpongeBob special, "Pest of the West," aired after a marathon of SpongeBob episodes, chosen by voters in the previous weeks.
| Name | Position | Years |
|---|---|---|
| Steven Banks | Head Writer | 2004 – present |
| Steven Belfer | Music | |
| Mike Bell | Writer/Storyboard Director | 2005 – present |
| Peter Burns | Writer | 1999 – present |
| Nicholas Carr | Music | |
| Bradley Carow | Music | |
| Sherm Cohen | Storyboard Supervisor/Artist, Writer, Director | |
| Sean Dempsey | Animation Director | |
| Derek Drymon | Writer | 1999 – present |
| Storyboard Artist | 1999 – present | |
| Creative Director | 1999 - 2005 | |
| Story Editor | ||
| Executive Producer | 2005 - present | |
| Steven Fonti | Writer/Storyboard Director | 1999 |
| C.H. Greenblatt | Writer, Storyboard Artist, Director | 2000-present |
| Sage Guyton | Music | |
| Sam Henderson | Writer, Storyboard Director | |
| Tim Hill | Writer | |
| Stephen Hillenburg | Creator | 1999 – present |
| Executive Producer | 1999 – 2005 | |
| Writer | 1999 – present | |
| Storyboard Director | 1999 – present | |
| Kaz | Writer, Storyboard Artist | |
| Chuck Klein | Writer, Storyboard Artist & Director | |
| Doug Lawrence (a.k.a. "Mr. Lawrence") | Writer, Story Editor | |
| Jay Lender | Writer, Storyboard Artist, Director | |
| John Magness | Storyboard Artist | |
| Heather Martinez | Storyboard Artist | |
| Chris Mitchell | Writer, Storyboard Artist | 1999 |
| Caleb Muerer | Storyboard Artist | |
| Mark O'Hare | Writer, Storyboard Artist, Director | |
| Andrew Overtoom | Animation Director | |
| Andy Rheingold | Executive in Charge of Production | |
| Ted Seko | Storyboard Artist | |
| Alan Smart | Animation Director | 1999 – present |
| Aaron Springer | Writer/Storyboard Artist & Director | |
| Jimmy Stone | Animation Director | |
| Paul Tibbitt | Writer/Storyboard Director/Supervising Producer/Creative Director Co-Executive Producer |
2004 – present 2006 – present |
| Brad Vandergrift | Storyboard Artist | |
| Jeremy Wakefield | Music | |
| Vincent Waller | Writer/Storyboard Artist & Director/Technical Director (2005 – present) | |
| Frank Weiss | Animation Director | |
| Erik Wiese | Writer/Storyboard Artist | |
| David Wigforss | Special Effects (CG visual effects animator) | |
| Merriwether Williams | Story Editor/Writer | |
| Tom Yasumi | Animation Director | |
| Oliver Truby | Storyboard Artist Superviser |
| DVD Name | Ep # | Release dates | Additional Features | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
| Season 1 | 41 | October 28, 2003 | November 7, 2005 | November 30, 2006 | This three disc boxset includes the 41 episodes from Season 1. |
| Season 2 | 39 | October 19, 2004 | October 23, 2006 | November 30, 2006 | This three disc boxset includes the 39 episodes from Season 2. |
| Season 3 | 37 | September 27, 2005 | TBA | November 8, 2007 | This three disc boxset includes the 37 episodes from Season 3 as well as the pilot episode for the series. |
| Season 4 Volume 1 |
20 | September 12, 2006 | TBA | TBA | This two disc boxset includes the first 18 episodes from Season 4. |
| Season 4 Volume 2 |
20 | January 9, 2007 | TBA | TBA | This two disc boxset includes the last 20 episodes from Season 4. |
| Season 5 Volume 1 |
20 | September 4, 2007 | TBA | TBA | This two disc boxset includes the first 20 episodes from Season 5. |
| Season 5 Volume 2 |
?? | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| Year | Association | Award Category | Notes | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Music | Episodes: "Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy" and "Pickles" | Won |
| 2000 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Sound | Episode: "Karate Choppers" | Won |
| 2001 | Annie Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Female Performer in an Animated Television Production | Mary Jo Catlett as Mrs. Puff in "No Free Rides" | Nominated |
| 2001 | Annie Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Television Production | Tom Kenny as SpongeBob in "Wormy" | Nominated |
| 2001 | Annie Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievement for a Song in an Animated Production | Peter Straus and Paul Tibbitt for the song "The Very First Christmas" | Nominated |
| 2001 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Sound | Episodes: "Rock Bottom" and "Arrgh" | Won |
| 2001 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Music | Episodes: "Fools In April" and "Neptune's Spatula" | Nominated |
| 2002 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming Less Than One Hour) | Nominated | |
| 2002 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television - Animation | Episodes: "Secret Box" and "Band Geeks" | Won |
| 2002 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Music | Episodes: "Jellyfish Hunter" and "The Fry Cook Games" | Nominated |
| 2002 | Television Critics Association Awards | Outstanding Achievement in Children's Programming | Won | |
| 2003 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming Less Than One Hour) | Nominated | |
| 2003 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Music | Episodes: "Wet Painters" and "Krusty Krab Training Video" | Won |
| 2003 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation | Episodes: "Nasty Patty" and "Idiot Box" | Won |
| 2003 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Cartoon | Won | |
| 2004 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming Less Than One Hour) | Nominated | |
| 2004 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Music | Episodes: "The Great Snail Race" and "Mid-Life Crustacean". | Won |
| 2004 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television Animation — Music | Episode: "Mid-Life Crustacean". | Nominated |
| 2004 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Cartoon | Won | |
| 2005 | Annie Awards | Best Animated Television Production | Won | |
| 2005 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming Less Than One Hour) | Nominated | |
| 2005 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television: Animated | Episodes: "Pranks A Lot" and "SpongeBob Meets the Strangler" | Nominated |
| 2005 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Cartoon | Won | |
| 2005 | Satellite Awards | Best Youth DVD | Complete Second Season DVD | Nominated |
| 2005 | Television Critics Association Awards | Outstanding Achievement in Children's Programming | Nominated | |
| 2006 | Annie Awards | Best Writing in an Animated Television Production | C.H. Greenblatt, Paul Tibbitt, Mike Bell, and Tim Hill in "Fear of a Krabby Patty" | Won |
| 2006 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television: Animated | Episode: "Have You Seen This Snail?" | Nominated |
| 2006 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Cartoon | Won | |
| 2007 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming Less Than One Hour) | Nominated | |
| 2007 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Cartoon | Won | |
| 2007 | Television Critics Association Awards | Outstanding Achievement in Children's Programming | Nominated | |
| 2008 | Annie Awards | Best Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production | Tom Kenny in "Spy Buddies" | Nominated |
| 2008 | Golden Reel Award | Best Sound Editing in Television: Animated | Episode: "SpongeHenge" | Nominated |
| 2008 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Cartoon | Nominated |
Episodes:
| Season | Episodes | First Airdate | Last Airdate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Season 1 | 20 | May 1, 1999 | April 8, 2000 |
| Season 2 | 20 | October 26, 2000 | September 6, 2002 |
| Season 3 | 20 | October 5, 2001 | October 11, 2004 |
| Season 4 | 20 | May 6, 2005 | July 24, 2007 |
| Season 5 | 20 | February 19, 2007 | TBA |
| Season 6 | 20 | March 3, 2008 | TBA |
| Season 7 | 20 | TBA | TBA |
Films:
| Title | Release Date | Note |
|---|---|---|
| The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie | November 19, 2004 | Theatrical Movie |
| Atlantis SquarePantis | November 12, 2007 | TV Movie |
Shorts:
In the United Kingdom, a SpongeBob SquarePants magazine is currently being published by Titan Magazines every four weeks. It was first published on February 3, 2005. The issue published on February 1, 2007 was the second anniversary of the magazine. The magazine contains comic strips, fan letters, competitions and several features including games.
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