The Amazing World of Gumball
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The Amazing World of Gumball
Genre Fantasy
Surreal comedy
Slapstick
Created by Ben Bocquelet
Written by Ben Bocquelet
James Lamont
Jon Foster
Directed by Mic Graves
Antoine Perez (season
5–present)
Voices of ● Logan Grove
(2011–14)
● Kwesi Boakye
(2011–14)
● Jacob Hopkins
(2014–17)
● Terrell Ransom Jr.
(2014–17)
● Nicolas Cantu
(2017–present)[1]
● Donielle T. Hansley Jr.
(2017–18)[1]
● Christian J. Simon
(2018–present)
● Kyla Rae Kowalewski
● Teresa Gallagher
● Kerry Shale
● Dan Russell
Composer(s) ● Ben Locket
● Additional Music:
● Neil Myers (season 1)
● Willie Dowling
(seasons 1–4)
Country of United Kingdom
origin United States
Original English
language(s)
No. of seasons 6
No. of 240 (list of episodes)
episodes
Production
Executive ● Ben Bocquelet
producer(s)
● Michael Carrington
(seasons 1–2)
● Daniel Lennard
(seasons 1–3)
● Sarah Fell (season
4–present)
● Patricia Hidalgo
(seasons 4–6)
Producer(s) ● Joanna Beresford
(season 1)
● Ellen Collins (season
4–present)
● Sarah Fell (season
2–present)
● Daniel Lennard
(creative producer,
season 4–present)
Running time 11 minutes[2]
Production Cartoon Network Studios
company(s) Europe
Studio SOI
Boulder Media Limited (season
1)
Dandelion Studios (season 1)
Distributor Warner Bros. Television
Distribution
Release
Original Cartoon Network
network
Picture format 1080p (16:9 HDTV)
480i (4:3 SDTV) [3]
Original May 3, 2011 –
release present
External links
Website
The Amazing World of Gumball (TAWOG or simply Gumball) is a British-American surreal comedy
animated television series created by Ben Bocquelet for Cartoon Network.[4] Produced primarily by
Cartoon Network Studios Europe, it first aired on May 3, 2011.[5] The series revolves around the lives
of 12-year-old Gumball Watterson, a blue cat and his goldfish best friend—adoptive brother
10-year-old Darwin, who attend middle school in the fictional city of Elmore. They frequently find
themselves involved in various shenanigans around the city, during which time they interact with
fellow family members—younger sister Anais, mother Nicole and father Richard—and an extended
supporting cast of characters. As of 2020, the series is the 2nd longest-running Cartoon Network
show.
Bocquelet based several of the series' characters on rejected characters from his previous
commercial work and making its premise a mixture of "family shows and school shows", which
Cartoon Network was heavily interested in. He pitched The Amazing World of Gumball to the network
and Turner Broadcasting executive Daniel Lennard subsequently greenlit production of the series. It
is the first series to be produced by Cartoon Network Studios Europe, and is currently co-produced
with Studio SOI in Germany and Great Marlborough Productions Limited.
One unique feature of the series is its lack of stylistic unity. Characters are designed, filmed, and
animated using multiple styles and techniques (stylised traditional animation, puppetry, CGI, stop
motion, Flash animation, live-action, etc.)[6]
The series has made multiple stylistic changes throughout its production, specifically in the
transition between its first and second seasons. Such changes include character redesigns, an
increase in the use of VFX, higher quality animation, and a shift towards a much darker, more
satirical comedic style.
Bocquelet later stated on September 6, 2016 that the sixth season would be his last time working on
the show, but production could continue without him. However, 2 years later on October 7, 2018, he
retweeted an article stating that the sixth season will be the last, though the author of the article
made a follow-up article saying that more seasons are still possible.[7] A six-episode miniseries titled
Darwin's Yearbook was announced for the series in November.[8]
Contents
● 1Production
● 2Premise
● 3Episodes
○ 3.1Crossovers
○ 3.2Waiting For Gumball
○ 3.3Darwin's Yearbook
● 4Broadcast
● 5Reception
○ 5.1Critical reception
● 6Ratings
○ 6.1Awards and nominations
● 7Possible film(s)
● 8Comic books
● 9Home media
● 10References
● 11External links
Production
When Cartoon Network Studios Europe was created in 2007, Ben Bocquelet was hired to help people
pitch their projects to the network. However, when the studio decided to have its employees all pitch
their own ideas,[9] he decided to take some rejected characters he had created for commercials and
put them together in one series set in a school.[10] Daniel Lennard, vice president of Original Series
and Development at Turner Broadcasting System Europe, was impressed by the premise and
approved production of the series.[11] The first series to be produced by Cartoon Network Studios
Europe,[12] thirty-six episodes were produced for its first season in collaboration with Studio SOI,
Dublin-based Boulder Media Limited,[13][14] and Dandelion Studios.[15]
Premise
Further information: List of The Amazing World of Gumball characters
The series revolves around the life of a 12-year-old cat named Gumball Watterson (Logan Grove,
seasons 1–2 and season 3 episode: "The Kids"; Jacob Hopkins, remainder of season 3 to season 5
episode "The Copycats"; Nicolas Cantu took over from him) and his frequent shenanigans in the
fictional American city of Elmore, accompanied by his adopted goldfish brother and best friend
Darwin (Kwesi Boakye, season 1–2 and season 3 episode: "The Kids"; Terrell Ransom Jr., remainder
of season 3 to season 5 episode "The Copycats"; Donielle T. Hansley Jr., remainder of season 5 to
season 6 episode “The Cage”; Christian J. Simon, onward). Gumball's other family members—his
intellectual sister Anais (Kyla Rae Kowalewski) and stay-at-home father Richard (Dan Russell), both
rabbits, and workaholic mother Nicole (Teresa Gallagher), a cat - often find themselves involved in
Gumball's exploits. Gumball attends school with his siblings at Elmore Junior High, where
throughout the series he interacts with his various middle school classmates, most prominently his
love interest Penny Fitzgerald (also Gallagher).
One prominent feature of the series since its third season is "The Void", a dimension inside of Elmore
where all the universe's mistakes reside. This includes references to aspects of reality as well as
in-series elements. Rob (Charles Phillip, David Warner for episodes "The Nemesis" to "The Disaster")
is a background character from the first two seasons who became trapped in The Void after
becoming "irrelevant". He later escapes in Season 3, after which he becomes Gumball's nemesis and
main antagonist. He is shown to be aware of his fictional existence in the Season 4 episode "The
Disaster", and his hatred towards Gumball is a result of his role as the protagonist.[16]
Episodes
Main article: List of The Amazing World of Gumball episodes
Crossovers
On September 17, 2015, series creator Ben Bocquelet announced on his Twitter page that a
crossover episode with an unknown show would air as part of the fifth season. This turned out to be
the episode, The Copycats.[17]
The Boredom featured characters from Clarence, Regular Show, and Uncle Grandpa making cameo
appearances.[18]
Gumball had a cameo appearance on the Uncle Grandpa episode "Pizza Eve", along with other
Cartoon Network characters from currently running and ended cartoons.[19]
Gumball also had a cameo appearance on the OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes episode and Cartoon Network
special "Crossover Nexus", along with other Cartoon Network characters from currently running and
ended cartoons.
Waiting For Gumball
Waiting For Gumball is a series of thirteen shorts based on The Amazing World of Gumball, or more
specifically, "The Puppets."[20]
Darwin's Yearbook
A six-episode special called Darwin's Yearbook aired on Cartoon Network from December 14 to
December 28, 2019. The miniseries features Darwin attempting to complete Elmore Junior High's
yearbook by examining who he thinks should fill up the best spot.[21]
Broadcast
The first two seasons were released on Cartoon Network channels in over 126 countries, with the
third season rolling out through 2014.[22]
The series debuted on Cartoon Network UK on May 2, 2011, one day before the US premiere.
On December 1, 2014, The Amazing World of Gumball began airing on Boomerang in the United
States, alongside its broadcasts on Cartoon Network, but as of April 3, 2017, reruns have been
removed.[23]
Reception
Critical reception
The Amazing World of Gumball has received mostly positive reviews from critics. In a favorable
review, Brian Lowry of Variety described the series as "mostly a really clever spin on domestic chaos"
and "first-rate silliness."[24] Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly was also positive, writing: "There are
few examples of mainstream children's programming as wildly imaginative, as visually and
narratively daring, as The Amazing World of Gumball."[25] Reviews from the Daily Mail praised The
Amazing World of ball as a "gloriously surreal chunk of fast and funny telly"[26] and "the kind of clever
children's comedy that parents can also enjoy."[27]
The A.V. Club's Noel Murray graded the DVD release of the series' first 12 episodes a B+, writing that
"what sets [The Amazing World of Gumball] apart from the many other super-silly, semi-anarchic
cartoons on cable these days is that it features such a well-developed world, where even with the
eclectic character designs, there are recognisable traits and tendencies."[28] Wired writer Z noted that
the series "manages to have genuine heart even as the plots themselves transition from well-worn
TV tropes to all out madness."[29]
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