The Ren & Stimpy Show (1991-1995) - The great-granddaddy of the Grossout Show (specifically the ones that came out in the 1990s), featuring the misadventures of a psychotic chihuahua and oafish cat.The network's first flagship program, and the only Nick production to earn a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Rugrats (1991-2004) - Ever wonder what babies think about? Well, hang onto your diapeys, tropers, as Klasky-Csupo answers that question by delivering to audiences a bunch of dumb babies doing what they've gotta do, from figuring out what toilets are to causing college campus food fights.Disney would later pick up the series and order a few more seasons, as well as its first, and only, movie. Doug (1991-1994) - After moving to a new town, a Ridiculously Average Guy goes through the mundane challenges offered by middle school life with the help of his technicolor friends and a vivid imagination.The list of media pertaining to Nicktoons: Be sure to vote for your favorite Nicktoon here! Of course, the Nickelodeon Wiki has extensive coverage on the Nicktoons lineup. If you'd like to go further behind the scenes, feel free to check out Nickelodeon Animation's offical website, Facebook page, Instagram page Tumblr page, Twitter page, and YouTube page. The 2020s has brought on another wave of Nicktoons based on other things: a reboot of Rugrats, two spinoffs of SpongeBob SquarePants, and Nicktoon adaptations of preexisting properties like Star Trek, Big Nate, Monster High, and Transformers. This could best be seen when Nickelodeon left the second and third DreamWorks shows out of their otherwise-complete " 2010s in review " retrospective, which showed all of (and only) their originally-produced shows from the 2010s. As a result, Nick doesn't recognize the DreamWorks trio as part of the Nicktoons brand. While they were made by Nick Animation Studio and Paramount Global (the successor to Viacom) owns half of the copyright, DreamWorks stopped licensing their characters to Nick in 2016. Unlike the two above, these shows' status as part of the Nicktoons canon is in a gray area. Nickelodeon Animation Studio double-dipped and produced new "Nickified" versions of both shows (with some of the original creators onboard!).Īnother exception came about when Nick partnered with DreamWorks Animation to produce three spin-off shows based on DW's animated movies. That all changed when Nick's then-parent company, the almighty Viacom, bought two kids' TV franchises at the turn of the New '10s decade: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Winx Club. In other words, these Nicktoons came straight from the minds of Nick’s own artists. note The iffy Dream Works shows are explained below. Until The New '10s, the official Nicktoons were all based on homegrown characters that originated on Nickelodeon. Most of these "original animated series" are. ![]() Ever since, the Nicktoons have remained one of the most popular aspects of Nickelodeon. ![]() The first three Nicktoons premiered on August 11, 1991, essentially reinvigorating the market for creator-driven, original animated series that had all but died out in the wave of Merchandise-Driven Saturday Morning Cartoons that defined Western children's programming during The '80s. If you were looking for the channel named after the Nicktoons, see here. Nicktoons is the brand name used to describe Nickelodeon's slate of original animated series.
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