The Amazing World Of Gumball Full Episodes Season 1 Episode 1

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Jamie Swearengin

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Aug 4, 2024, 8:48:19 PM8/4/24
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Thefirst season premiered in the US on May 3, 2011 and ended March 13, 2012 almost a year later. The world premier of the show was on May 2, 2011 in the UK with the episode "The Mystery". Unlike the following four seasons, this season only had 36 episodes due to 4 being scrapped for various reasons, Season 6 was later given 4 extra episodes to make up for this.

A sixth season was green-lit on June 22, 2016[6]. It premiered on January 5, 2018 and wrapped up on June 24, 2019. Unlike Seasons 2-5 it had 44 episodes. [7] This was to make up for Season 1 only having 36.


Darwin's Yearbook is a spinoff mini-series based on The Amazing World of Gumball. It contains six episodes, each focusing on a different character related to Elmore Junior High. The mini-series primarily consists of excerpts from already existing episodes of Gumball. The series takes place sometime after the events of "The Inquisition."


The Gumball Chronicles is an eight episode spinoff mini-series based on The Amazing World of Gumball, written and directed by voice director and picture editor Richard Overall. The series predominantly consists of clips recycled from previous episodes but features some new content. It premiered on October 5th, 2020 in US, and finished just over half a year later on June 20, 2021.


The Amazing World of Gumball: The Movie! is the working title for a British animated television film based on the Cartoon Network animated television series The Amazing World of Gumball. It was officially announced to be in development on February 17th, 2021. The movie will act as a conclusion to the original series, as well as establishing its continuation in Season 7.


A new Gumball series was officially announced alongside a movie on September 21, 2021[8]. It was later clarified to be Season 7 rather than a reboot by series producer Emma Fernando on her Linkedin account[9]


Cartoon Network renewed the series for a sixth season.[2] On September 6, 2016, series creator Ben Bocquelet announced that he would be departing production of Gumball upon completing the sixth season,[3] but production will continue without him.[4] However, on October 7, 2018, he retweeted a tweet with an article saying that the sixth season is the final season.[5][6] A follow up article clarifyed that there could still be more seasons.[7] In November 2018, it was revealed that Ben Bocquelet had finished the show and that the production of the series was completed.[8]


A six-episode special called Darwin's Yearbook aired on Cartoon Network in December 2019. The miniseries features Darwin attempting to complete Elmore Junior High's yearbook by examining who he thinks should fill up the best spot. The miniseries is essentially a collection of clip show episodes.[9]


In honor of the thirtieth-anniversary of Cartoon Network, I reviewed several episodes of Gumball, stringing along several odd thoughts, and commentary on what makes this show stand through several points of life.


This was my first re-watch in this list, and I was immediately struck by how much faster the jokes hit. The crude humor got quite a few chuckles out of me. This episode stuck out to me most as a kid, as gross out humor was not typically my thing back then. However, I can appreciate the action in this episode a lot more, somewhat superseding the gross concept. I can also appreciate the pop-culture nod to The Blob through Kenneth, with his humanoid form growing in size as he eats people; to some extent, that facet could also apply to Spirited Away. That aspect highlights how many pop-culture references are commonplace in the world of Elmore.


Overall, this episode is fantastic. It is full of emotional beats and actions, veering away from the often whimsical, comedic tone the episode takes. But, like most Gumball episodes, humor is still peppered in with the fourth wall breaks, which were cranked up to one-hundred in this episode.


The series follows the Wattersons, a family of two parents, two kids, and one fish that grew legs that was adopted in proper. The titular character, eldest son Gumball, attends school and generally gets in wacky shenanigans with his fish brother Darwin, and occasionally with his genius little sister Anais (pronounced An-eye-ease). His goal obsessed mother Nicole and slob of a dad Richard also tend to get dragged into these adventures, or have their own in little episodes that focus more on them or on the entire family. Episode premises run from exaggerated slice of life with the bizarre residents of Elmore, California, to ridiculous grand adventures born from absurd happenings, usually poking fun at different aspects of western culture and subcultures with a surprising amount of knowledge (Rocky talking about different types of metal is the most accurate thing I have ever heard). Overall, the series would just be a good comedy, but the season two had two episodes that changed everything significantly.


Season three includes plot lines revolving around living toast clones, a joy zombie outbreak, Gumball almost being completely rewritten by another character that uses his birth name, a spoof of redneck horror films, Darwin getting a sneeze with the power of a warhead, a house haunting, the entire town becoming a Mad Max wasteland when the character who does all the service jobs quits all of them, and other such wackiness. It also established continuity beyond production jokes, with Gumball and Penny finally becoming an item, and Penny also being revealed as a powerful, shape shifting creature, retaining this form for the rest of the series.


The best Amazing World of Gumball episodes contain a mixture of kid and adult humor that makes the series a modern classic. The Amazing World of Gumball is part of a group of classic Cartoon Network shows with humor that appeal to kids and parents. It's not shocking the adventures of Gumball and his adopted brother Darwin lasted six captivating seasons, all the way up until its polarizing cliffhanger. Even though the series is consistently solid, some episodes were better than others.


The Amazing World of Gumball maintains a legacy as one of the best Cartoon Network shows of the 2010s. Viewers who grew up on excellent animated series from the '90s and early 2000s like Dexter's Laboratory and Courage the Cowardly Dog are fond of the dry wit and surprisingly genuine nature of Gumball. Gumball's showrunners knew when to call it quits, ending it in 2019, but there are plenty of hilarious and wholesome moments among the best Amazing World of Gumball episodes.


The season 3 episode of The Amazing World of Gumball brought Mrs. Simian to the forefront. When Gumball and Darwin show up at school unusually happy, Mrs. Simian decides this means something is wrong with them. This leads to her running tests on the boys against the nurse's recommendation, and the results are as disastrous as expected. There was something wrong, and the Joy virus spread through the school.


This Gumball episode remains very entertaining and inventive, as it is a play on the zombie apocalypse, but with joy among otherwise miserable school students instead of the brainless walking dead. It has some disturbing moments, but it's all deranged happiness rather than horrific violence. While it isn't key to the overall story of the series, it works well as a standalone episode that shows how creative the people behind the show can get.


"The Night" is a season 4 Amazing World of Gumball episode that brings the show a nightmarish atmosphere. In the episode, the Moon decides to look at the town's residents and see what they are dreaming about. This includes some dreams - but it is mostly nightmares in some of the most disturbing imagery Gumball produced in its six seasons on Cartoon Network.


What starts with Gumball dreaming he is falling (from space), things get weirder when Banana Joe dreams he is split in half, Richard dreams he is dough being rolled into a bun, and Anais dreams Daisy the Donkey is alive and is torturing her. This remains one of the best Gumball episodes, as it focuses on several characters, including side characters not normally seen, and the dreams offer a fun look inside the heads of the town.


The first season of the British-American animated comedy children's television series The Amazing World of Gumball originally aired from May 3, 2011, to March 13, 2012, on Cartoon Network, and was produced by Cartoon Network Development Studio Europe, in association with Boulder Media and Dandelion Studios. Consisting of 36 episodes, the season premiered with the episode "The DVD" and concluded with the episode "The Fight". The season premiere was watched by 2.120 million viewers in the United States.


The season focuses on the misadventures of Gumball Watterson, a blue 12-year-old cat, along with his adopted brother, Darwin, a 10-year-old goldfish. Together, they cause mischief among their family, as well as with the wide array of students at Elmore Junior High, where they attend middle school. In a behind-the-scenes video documenting the production of the second season, creator Ben Bocquelet expanded on the development of some of the characters, and how they are based on interactions from his childhood.[2]


Episodes for this season were written by Bocquelet, Jon Foster, James Lamont, Andrew Brenner, Mic Graves, Sam Ward, David Cadji-Newby, and Tommy Panays, and storyboarded by Ben Marsaud, Celine Gobinet, George Gendi, Dave Smith, Philip Warner, Chuck Klein, Chris Garbutt, Aurelie Charbonnier, Amandine Pcharman, Rob Latimer, Kent Osborne, Darren Vandenburg, Jacques Gauthier, Dave Needham, Tom Parkison, and Michael Gendi. Two episodes, entitled "The Mom" and "The Pizza", were written for this season, but never produced.[3] However, the concept of the former was reused in the show's third season's episode "The Mothers"; and the concept of the latter was reused in the show's second season's episode "The Job" but then, it became an episode of the show's third season with the same name "The Pizza" and the second was later produced (but with some changes) in the show's third season.[citation needed] Two episodes more never produced like the aforementioned, but their plots and titles are still unknown.[3]

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