Ifyou answered correctly with "SpongeBob SquarePants!" you've likely heard of the square, sponge cartoon who made his TV debut 25 years ago on May 1, 1999 (before the official series launch in July 1999).
SpongeBob SquarePants creator Stephen Hillenburg attended Humboldt University majoring in marine science with a minor in art. After graduating in 1984, Hillenburg eventually began working at the Ocean Institute in Dana Point, Calif. While working as a marine science educator there, Hillenburg illustrated the flora and fauna of tidal pools in the form of an educational comic book called The Intertidal Zone. And the narrator of the comic book may look familiar: a sea sponge with sunglasses and a round face named "Bob the Sponge."
In 1989, Hillenburg enrolled in the California Institute of Art's Experimental Animation program. After completing the program, he gained more animation experience. Eventually, he was hired as a director on the Nickelodeon cartoon Rocko's Modern Life, which aired from 1993 to 1996. While working on the show, he was encouraged to turn The Intertidal Zone into an animated format, something he could pitch to Nickelodeon.
He described the moment of inspiration: "It wasn't until I drew a square sponge, like a sink sponge, that it really seemed to fit that character that I was looking for, that innocent, squeaky-clean I guess you could say, the square peg in the round hole."
SpongeBob SquarePants first aired as a preview after Nickelodeon's Kids' Choice Awards on May 1, 1999. The first segment of this preview, titled "Help Wanted," is only eight minutes long, yet it introduces a robust coterie of residents in the fictional, underwater town of Bikini Bottom.
From SpongeBob's best friend, a starfish named Patrick (voiced by Bill Fagerbakke); to Mr. Krabs, a greedy, red crab voiced by veteran character actor Clancy Brown; to a grumpy octopus named Squidward (voiced by Roger Bumpass); to two characters voiced by Tom Kenny: Gary, a meowing pet sea snail, and of course, the optimistic and overzealous kitchen sponge and titular character, SpongeBob SquarePants.
Tom Kenny, who worked with Hillenburg on Rocko's Modern Life, took a unique approach to developing the voice for SpongeBob. Speaking with Fresh Air's Terry Gross in 2004 about the process, Kenny said:
"When it came time to come up with a voice, it was just a matter of finding a voice that was childlike and maybe childish, but not a child, non-age specific, enthusiastic and just kind of weird. And we finally settled on this elfish helium voice that SpongeBob wound up being."
The first episode preview contained two more segments: "Reef Blowers" and "Tea At The Treedome"; the latter of which introduced a scientific squirrel who lives in a biodome named Sandy Cheeks, voiced by Carolyn Lawrence.
SpongeBob SquarePants only grew in popularity. By 2002, the show had almost 56 million total viewers, with almost a third aged 18 to 49, the St. Petersburg Times reported that year. In 2004, its first theatrical release, The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, grossed $141 million worldwide.
The Emmy award-winning series is in the midst of its 14th season. And the franchise has expanded to include another theatrical release in 2020, two spinoff television series, more than two dozen video games and even theme park rides.
A musical based on the underwater sponge and his friends took to Broadway in 2017 and had over 300 performances before closing in 2018. The New York Times reported the franchise had generated $13 billionin retail merchandise sales by 2017.
In 2017, Hillenburg announced that he had been diagnosed with ALS, a progressive neurodegenerative disease. He died a year later. As a tribute to Hillenburg, more than one million fans signed a petition for the show's characters to perform at the 2019 Super Bowl halftime show.
"Steve Hillenburg definitely is the big kahuna and, a lot of times, just has every vocal nuance and eye blink and twitch mapped out to the nanosecond in his mind," he said. "And then other times, he'll just take you off the leash and go, 'You know, I don't know where this is going. Just take it where it feels funny.' So you never know whether you're going to be doing math or jazz. It's kind of cool."
This Spongebob Years Later Birthday Banner is the perfect way to make a birthday celebration extra special. Celebrate your favorite Spongebob character while showing off a modern image. The banner with the years later theme is an excellent way to decorate any special occasion.
This new spin off of the original SpongeBob series, SpongeBob 5 years later, takes place 5 years after the first SpongeBob Movie, in the five years between the movie and the new show a lot will happen as explained in the pilot.
In the pilot SpongeBob explains what has happened in the past five years, first the Krusty Krab 2 had to be shut down due to funding (also demoting SpongeBob back to fry cook at the first krusty krab), also the Chum Bucket has been completely destroyed, also in the five years Mermaid Man has passed away, but the biggest change was that Squidward moved away to focus on his music career. This also means that Mr. Krabs now works the cash register. So now it's just SpongeBob and Mr. Krabs and that is when the rest of the series will begin with new adventures for SpongeBob and his friends.
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