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| Rugrats | |
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| Format | Children's television series |
| Run time | approx. 0:22 (per episode) |
| Creator(s) | Arlene Klasky Gabor Csupo |
| Starring | E.G. Daily Nancy Cartwright Cheryl Chase Kath Soucie Tara Strong Dionne Quan Cree Summer Joe Alaskey Bruce Willis Melanie Chartoff Jack Riley Tress MacNeille Michael Bell Julia Kato Philip Proctor Ron Glass Hattie Winston Debbie Reynolds Amanda Bynes Andrea Martin Miriam Margolyes Stacy Keach |
| Country | USA & UK |
| Network | Nickelodeon |
| Original run | August 11, 1991 – present |
| No. of episodes | 172 |
Rugrats was an animated series, produced by Klasky-Csupo, Inc. for Nickelodeon. The series ran from 1991 to 1994, and again from 1997 to current. The show is about how babies and young children view life and perceive the events happening around them.
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The series has a very vague setting. It has been shown that the Rugrats, as it is probably assumed, live in the United States, and although the name of a specific city or state is never mentioned, an early episode shows the flag of [California] flying at a post office, so it may be assumed that the show takes place there. The best guess as to which region of the country in which the series takes place is somewhere in the southwest, since the family has taken trips to both the Grand Canyon and Las Vegas, and Stu once mentioned "driving through the desert" while returning home from a one-day trip. There have also been several scenes of desert or arid land around the area where the Rugrats live, but there was an episode which featured a snow-storm.
It is also unclear what type of community the characters live in; it could be a small city or a suburb of a larger city. This ambiguity in the setting was probably done intentionally to help give the impression of seeing the world through the naive eyes of toddlers.
One episode does however show they live somewhere in California due to the license plate shown on Grandpa's station wagon. Also in the episode Special Delivery, a post office has the state's bear flag in front of it.
Their whereabouts in California are probably in the locus of Oakland. In one episode, painters remark that black and silver, Raiders colors are awesome. Of course, the Los Angeles area is also possible, as the Raiders played there until 1994. In another episode Stu, Lou, Drew, and Howard want to watch a football game between the Dallas Cowboys and the Houston Oilers. Stu and Howard wear Cowboys t-shirts, while Lou and Drew wear Oilers attire. This implies a possible Texas setting
In another episode in the first season, Didi is shown teaching at a high school in Yucaipa, an actual town about 70 miles east of Los Angeles. It does seem to snow in the wintertime, as in the episode where the babies play in the snow and pretend to go to the north pole.
However, in The Rugrats Movie, it is implied that the family lives close to Interstate 99, so the setting could also be somewhere in central Pennsylvania. This could be a script or drawing goof, as California has a state California State Route 99 serving the east side of the San Joaquin Valley.
Rugrats was created by the then husband and wife duo of Gabor Csupo (pronounced Chew-poh) and Arlene Klasky in 1989 along with Paul Germain. They were inspired by the antics of their then infant children, which they found humourus, it was one of three pitches to popular Children's Cable Channel Nickelodeon, which was planning on commisioning their own animated series, which would later be called "Nicktoons". They produced a pilot, "Tommy Pickles And The Great White Thing", which was directed by Peter Chung, later of Aeon Flux fame. The production finished in early 1990, and was shown to an audience of children, of which the majority gave their approval. The pilot was only 6 1/2 minutes in length, and was not aired for that reason, according to Steve Mindykowski's Rugrats Online. However,this film is available on the DVD Rugrats:Decade In Diapers, and Volume 1 of the VHS, as a special feature. The series debuted on August 11, 1991, along with Doug and Ren and Stimpy. It went out of production in 1994, but after increased ratings when shown in primetime, it was revived in 1997, subsequently leading to 3 movies: The Rugrats Movie (1998), which became the first non-Disney animated movie to earn $100 million in the US, Rugrats in Paris (2000), and Rugrats Go Wild! (2003), a crossover with The Wild Thornberrys.
In 2001, the show celebrated its 10th anniversary by making a special one-hour episode about what the Rugrats would be like 10 years older. After the special had aired, Klasky-Csupo said that they had no plans to make a series about it. The special became one of the highest rated episodes in Nick's history. Nick eventually commissioned a full series, All Grown Up!, which started its regular run in November 2003 (a sneak peek full episode named Coup DeVille had aired earlier in April). Many fans feel that AGU has taken a step in the right direction, while others feel that it takes away from the show's original premise, and reduces it to something that, at best, vaguely resembles the show that many people grew to love in the 1990s, and pales in comparison to the writing, acting, artwork, and even music of the original show. Still, it is considered the best cartoon Klasky-Csupo has made since 1998. Meanwhile, production on the Rugrats series (along with that of most of the other Klasky-Csupo shows) was eventually shut down, and the last new episode ("Hurricane Alice") aired on August 1, 2004.
In 2005, Klasky-Csupo announced that they were reviving the original Rugrats as a series of DVDs based on classic fairy tales. The first were based on Snow White and Jack and the Beanstalk.
The first three or four seasons of Rugrats were (and remain) exceedingly popular. Despite the crude animation style, the early episodes boasted effective but subtle references to popular culture and occasionally but rarely then-current events (for example, in "Tommy And The Secret Club" Angelica worries about Saddam Hussein breaking into her club; there were also references to Clarence Thomas, Anita Hill and George H.W. Bush, these references were used to keep parents interested in the show while their children watched, at different points in the series). Despite the occasional "gross-out"/potty humor, the early episodes were more reliant on amusing dialogue and imagery than juvenile jokes.
After the show's revival in 1997 (and especially after the first movie), the show, though still making occasional culture references, began relying on more bizarre and outlandish plots, and more reliant on gross-out/toilet humor, especially with the addition of Dil to the cast. The show also seemed to have changed its animation to a much brighter style. Two things which many of the show's older fans also found annoying in particular were the show's increased use of baby talk (such as "diapey" for "diaper", for the most obvious example) and repetitive plots (the babies hear an adult's conversation and misinterperet their words). The fans also noticed that the show had lost its creative innovation and seemed to be a lot lighter in tone. This is clearly due to the departure of all of the show's writers and producers and the incoming of brand new ones. The death of Grandpa's voice, David Doyle, and his replacement by Joe Alaskey, also created a negative reaction from many fans, as did the replacement of Christine Cavanaugh as Chuckie with Nancy Cartwright in 2002. The characters of Kimi and her family were met with a mixed reaction at best, while the character Taffy (voiced by Amanda Bynes) was universally disliked among fans. Due to this, many fans believe that this was the moment when Rugrats jumped the shark.
Many Nickelodeon viewers remain fans of the original seasons of the show (1991-1994), but many feel the newer episodes (1997-2004) should have never been made as they feel like two completely different shows. This shift in tone and creativity can be looked at in contrast to another popular Nickelodeon show, Doug, which was cancelled in 1994 as well, went on hiatus and was brought back to ABC in 1996 (thanks to getting bought by Disney) with a much different (and often criticized) style.
Despite these criticisms, the show has waned in popularity among adults and older children through the years, though it still remains relatively popular with younger children.
Besides All Grown Up! there were plans for two other spinoffs that never made it to air:
However, the Rugrats as babies live on in the direct-to-DVD feature animation series Rugrats: Tales From The Crib.