'Garbage Pail Kids' | |
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Developed by | Flint Dille |
Voices of | Tara Charendoff Cree Summer Noam Zylberman Michael Fantini Alyson Court |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 1 (UK) 2 (Canada) |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Producer | Bob Hathcock |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies |
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Distributor | CBS Television Distribution |
Original release | |
Release | September 26, 1987 October 29, 1988 | –
Garbage Pail Kids is an American animated series which was produced in 1987, based on the Garbage Pail Kids trading cards, produced and directed by Bob Hathcock and co-written and developed by Flint Dille. Due to controversial themes, it did not air in the United States. However, it did air in certain countries around the world, including in Europe and the Caribbean.
Synopsis[]
The series stars the characters Split Kit, Elliot Mess, Terri Cloth, Patty Putty, and Clogged Duane as gross looking kids with abilities to help others. In the first two episodes, they have normal alter-egos, which transform into their "Garbage Pail" identities; later episodes show them exclusively in their Garbage Pail looks (it is never explained how their Garbage Pail personae became permanent).
The show also features parodies of popular movies of the era like the Indiana Jones series, Superman, Conan the Barbarian, King Kong, and The Fly. It also has segments between stories, such as "Garbage Pail Groaners" (jokes) and "Would We Lie To You?" (facts).
Cast[]
Main[]
- Tara Charendoff – Patty Putty (episodes 1–13), Still Jill (episode 3), Carly Cuts (episode 5)
- Cree Summer – Clogged Duane (episodes 1–13), Trashed Tracy (episode 1), Squishy (episode 2), Plain Jane (episode 3), Heartless Hal (episode 10),
- Noam Zylberman – Split Kit (episodes 1–13), Idaho Spud (episode 3), The Sturgeon General (episode 3)
- Michael Fantini – Elliot Mess (episodes 1–13), Clint Hardwood (episode 2), Colonel Corn (episode 3)
- Alyson Court – Terri Cloth (episodes 2–5, 7–13), Belle Button (episode 2), Lois Lamebrain (episode 7), Fay Hooray (episode 8)
- Len Carlson – Announcer (episodes 1–13), Dan Rattle (episodes 1 and 4)
Other voices[]
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- Ellen-Ray Hennessey
- Randall Carpenter
- Stephen McMulkin
- Kristina Nichol
- Jeff Pustil
- Don Francks
- Louise Vallance
- Marvin Goldhar
- Gordon Masten
- Sunny Besen Thrasher
- Dorian Davis
- Joe Roncetti
- Keram Malicki-Sanchez
- Mairon Bennett
- Bonnie Brooks
- Jeremiah McCann
- Greg Morton
- Linda Sorenson
- Greg Swanson
- Sean Roberge
- Jeri Cradem
- John Stocker
- Dan Hennessey
- Nerene Virgin
- Phillip Williams
- Hadley Kay
- Andrea Swartz
- Phil Akin
- Michael Lamport
- Rob Cowan
- Victor Erdoz
- Peggy Mahon
- Paulina Gillis
- Lisa Coristine
Episodes[]
Episode # | Segments |
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Episode 1 |
Written by Flint Dille |
Episode 2 |
Written by Rowby Goren, Gordon Kent, Flint Dille |
Episode 3 |
Written by Rowby Goren, Buzz Dixon, Gordon Kent, Linda Woolverton |
Episode 4 |
Written by Flint Dille, Gordon Kent, Rowby Goren |
Episode 5 |
Written by Rowby Goren, Michael Hill, Gordon Kent |
Episode 6 |
Written by Gordon Kent, Doug Booth, Rowby Goren, Flint Dille |
Episode 7 |
Written by Gordon Kent, Marvin Wolfman, Donna Kuyper, Paul Davids, Rowby Goren |
Episode 8 |
Written by Rowby Goren, Buzz Dixon, Gordon Kent, Paul Davids |
Episode 9 |
Written by Gordon Kent, Flint Dille, Rowby Goren |
Episode 10 |
Written by Linda Woolverton, Gordon Kent, Flint Dille, Rowby Goren |
Episode 11 |
Written by Richard Mervin, Gordon Kent, Rowby Goren |
Episode 12 |
Written by Gordon Kent, Paul Dini, Michael Charles Hill, Flint Dille |
Episode 13 |
Written by Gordon Kent, Flint Dille |
DVD release[]
Paramount Home Entertainment released Garbage Pail Kids: The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1 on April 4, 2006.
Controversy[]
The CBS television network directly produced the series, and ordered an entire season, heavily promoting it in the run-up to the 1987–88 season. However, it was abruptly pulled a few days before its debut, and (just like Little Muppet Monsters) was replaced with an extra half hour of Muppet Babies, which was expanded to 90 minutes in order to fill the time-slot after Garbage Pail Kids was pulled from the schedule.
CBS removed the series from their schedule, following protests from Action for Children's Television, the National Coalition on Television Violence, and the Christian Leaders for Responsible Television (a part of the American Family Association). The reasons given were that the series ridiculed the handicapped and glorified violence, along with the claim that the program was effectively program-length ads for the toys and cards of the Garbage Pail Kids.
Some advertisers, such as Nabisco, McDonald's and Crayola also pulled out, either due to pressure from interest groups, or because they were unable to pre-screen the series from advanced tapes.
A few CBS affiliates, such as WIBW-TV in Topeka, Kansas; KOTV in Tulsa, Oklahoma and KREM-TV in Spokane, Washington made known they would not carry the series on their stations, notifying CBS of their pre-emptions weeks in advance of the debut.[1][2]
Despite not airing in the United States, the series did air in numerous other countries, including Spain, Italy, France, Germany, United Kingdom, and Canada, among others.
References[]
- ↑ "Spokane Chronicle – Google News Archive Search". News.google.com. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
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: - ↑ "WebCite query result". Geocities.com. Archived from the original on October 25, 2009. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
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External links[]
Children's programming on CBS in the 1980s | ||
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First-run animated series | The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle (1979–81) • The All New Popeye Hour (1978–82, 1983) • Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids (1972–84) • Tarzan and the Super 7 (1978–80) • The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show (1980–82) • Drak Pack (1980) • The Tarzan/Lone Ranger Adventure Hour (1980–82) (Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle • The Lone Ranger • The New Adventures of Zorro) • Blackstar (1981–83) • The Kwicky Koala Show (1981) • Trollkins (1981–82) • Gilligan's Planet (1982–83) • Pandamonium (1982–83) • Meatballs & Spaghetti (1982–83) • The Dukes (1983) • The Biskitts (1983–84, 1985) • Saturday Supercade (1983–85) • Dungeons & Dragons (1983–86) • The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show (1983–86) • The Get Along Gang (1984–85) • Muppet Babies (1984–92) • Pole Position (1984) • The Berenstain Bears (1985–87) • The Wuzzles (1985) • Hulk Hogan's Rock 'n' Wrestling (1985–87) • Wildfire (1986) • Dennis the Menace (1986–88) • Galaxy High (1986–87, 1988) • Teen Wolf (1986–88) • Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater (1987–88) • Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures (1987–89) • Popeye and Son (1987–88, 1989) • The Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Andy (1988–90) • Superman (1988) • Garfield and Friends (1988–94) • Dink, the Little Dinosaur (1989–91) • The California Raisin Show (1989–90) • Rude Dog and the Dweebs (1989–90) | |
First-run live-action series |
Captain Kangaroo (1955–84) • In the News (1971–86) • 30 Minutes (1978–82) • CBS Saturday Film Festival (1971–78; 1982–84) • Benji, Zax & the Alien Prince (1983) • Pryor's Place (1984–85) • Little Muppet Monsters (1985) • CBS Storybreak (1985–87) • Pee-wee's Playhouse (1986–91) • Hey Vern, It's Ernest! (1988–89) | |
Rebroadcasts | The Bugs Bunny Show/Road Runner Show (1975–85) • Shazam! (1980–81) • Speed Buggy (1982, 1988) • Shirt Tales (1984) • Land of the Lost (1985–86) • He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (1985) • The Transformers (1987) • Kidd Video (1987–88) | |
Related topics | Garbage Pail Kids • The Young Astronauts • Animation in the United States in the television era • Modern animation in the United States |
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