Phineas and Ferb is an American animatedmusical-comedy television series created by Dan Povenmire and Jeff "Swampy" Marsh for Disney Channel and Disney XD. The series originally aired on the networks for four seasons between 2007 and 2015 and is scheduled to return for two additional seasons beginning in 2025. The series follows stepbrothers Phineas Flynn and Ferb Fletcher during summer vacation. Every day, the boys construct a grand project or embark on a spectacular adventure to make the most of their time on vacation. This annoys their controlling older sister, Candace, who frequently tries to expose their schemes to her and Phineas's mother. The series follows a standard plot system; running gags occur every episode.
Povenmire and Marsh conceived the characters while working together on animated programs The Simpsons and Rocko's Modern Life in the 1990s, and were inspired by the summers of their own childhoods. They developed the series together and pitched it to networks for 16 years before successfully selling it to The Walt Disney Company. Phineas and Ferb is produced by Disney Television Animation, and was originally broadcast as a one-episode preview on August 17, 2007, following the premiere of the made-for-television film High School Musical 2. It again previewed on September 28, 2007, and officially premiered on Disney Channel on February 1, 2008. The series originally concluded on June 12, 2015, before two new seasons were ordered in January 2023, the first of which is scheduled to premiere on Disney Channel and the streaming service Disney+ in 2025.[3]
The series follows the adventures of stepbrothers Phineas Flynn and Ferb Fletcher.[4][5] They live in the fictional city of Danville in an unspecified tri-state area, as they seek ways to occupy their time during their "104 days of summer vacation". Often these adventures involve elaborate, life-sized, and ostensibly dangerous construction projects, which are usually unrealistic in scale given the protagonists' ages (and sometimes physically impossible). Phineas's older sister Candace has two obsessions: unveiling Phineas and Ferb's schemes and ideas, and winning the attention of a boy named Jeremy.[6]
The subplot almost always features Phineas and Ferb's pet platypusPerry, who works as a secret agent for an all-animal government organization named O.W.C.A. ("Organization Without a Cool Acronym").[7][8] His usual objective is to defeat the latest scheme of Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz, a mad scientist driven largely by a need to assert his evilness, whose own ineptitude often defeats him.[9] The two plots intersect at the end of each episode, erasing all traces of the boys' project just before a dismayed Candace can show it to their mother and destroying Doofenshmirtz's evil contraption; either occurrence usually indirectly leads to the other's in some way.
Most of the episodes premiered in pairs of two 11-minute stories, while others were released on their own. Disney Television Animation produced the episodes in two variants: they were primarily paired in 22-minute shows but also produced as individual episodes. Thus, a credits scene was made for each quarter-hour episode, while for the packaged variant, only the credits from the second "segment" would be used.
Nowadays, the series is aired in the 22-minute format, with the separate variants being occasionally shown as fillers. Digital and streaming releases, like on iTunes and Disney+, have the episodes in pairs.
The series' main characters live in a blended family, a premise that the creators considered underused in children's programming and that reflected Marsh's own upbringing. Marsh considers explaining the family background "not important to the kids' lives. They are a great blended family and that's all we need to know."[11] The choice of a platypus as the boys' pet was similarly inspired by media underuse, as well as the animal's striking appearance.[10] Povenmire and Marsh wanted an uncommon species, an animal that kids could not "pick out at a pet store and beg [their parents] for."[12] The platypus also gave them freedom to "make stuff up" since "no one knows very much about them",[11] and allowed them to own that "mental real estate", so that if someone thinks of the word "platypus", they will associate it with Agent P, just as an ogre is now commonly associated with Shrek.[13] Marsh called the characters "cool, edgy and clever without ... being mean-spirited." Animation director Rob Hughes is said to have noted that "in all the other shows every character is either stupid or a jerk, but there are no stupid characters or jerks in this one."[6]
Development
Early inspirations
Dan Povenmire attributes the show's genesis to his childhood in Mobile, Alabama, where his mother told him to never waste a day of summer. To occupy himself, Povenmire undertook projects such as hole-digging and home movie-making. Povenmire recalled, "My mom let me drape black material all the way across one end of our living room to use as a space field. I would hang little models of spaceships for these little movies I made with a Super 8 camera."[4][14][15] He was an artistic prodigy and displayed his very detailed drawings at art shows.[16] Marsh was raised in a large, blended family.[17] As with Povenmire, Marsh spent his summers exploring and taking part in various activities to have fun.[6]
Conception
While attending the University of Southern California, Povenmire started a daily comic strip called Life Is a Fish, and received money from the sale of its related merchandise. He eventually dropped out and started drawing people on street corners to make a living, until he was finally called by Tommy Chong to work on a short bit of animation in the film Far Out Man. Povenmire began to take up animation professionally, working on shows such as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.[16] Marsh had become a vice president of sales and marketing for a computer company until he "freaked out" and decided to quit. His friend helped him put together a portfolio and enter the animation business.[17]
Povenmire and Marsh started working across from each other as layout artists on The Simpsons. The two bonded over mutual tastes in humor and music, becoming fast friends. They continued their working relationship as a writing team on the Nickelodeon series Rocko's Modern Life,[4] where they conceived the idea for their own series.[4] While eating dinner at a Wild Thyme restaurant in South Pasadena, Povenmire drew a quick sketch of a "triangle kid" on butcher paper.[18] He tore it out and called Marsh that night to report, "Hey, I think we have our show."[10] The triangle doodle sparked rapid development of characters and designs.[18] Povenmire decided that his sketch "looked like a Phineas," and named Ferb after a friend who "owns more tools than anyone in the world."[19] The creators based their character designs on angular shapes in homage to Tex Avery, an animator and director for MGM and Warner Bros., adding geometric shapes to the backgrounds for continuity.[18]
Pitching and pickup
The writing duo's early attempts to pitch the show failed and, though they remained committed to the concept, Povenmire and Marsh began to drift apart after their work on Rocko's. Marsh moved to London and worked on shows including Postman Pat and Bounty Hamster. Povenmire began working on the primetime Fox series Family Guy[4] and the Nickelodeon series SpongeBob SquarePants, always carrying a Phineas and Ferb portfolio[10] for convenient pitching to networks such as Cartoon Network and Fox Kids. The networks passed on the show, believing the series' premise was too complex to succeed.[4]
Povenmire persisted and again pitched the series to Nickelodeon, where it was considered by high-level executives but rejected once more as overly complicated.[4] Then, after 16 years of trying, Povenmire landed a pitch with Disney. The network did not immediately accept the show but told Povenmire that it would keep the packet. Povenmire assumed that this had meant an end to negotiations, aware that the phrase usually "means they throw it in the trash later." Disney then surprised him by accepting.[16] Said Povenmire, "Disney was the first to say, 'Let's see if you can do it in 11 minutes.' We did it in the pilot and they said, 'Let's see if you can do it for 26 episodes.'"[6]
Povenmire was initially worried that his work on Family Guy (an adult show known for its lowbrow humor) would concern Disney, which markets its fare primarily to families. However, Disney Channel senior vice president of original series Adam Bonnett was a Family Guy fan who appreciated Povenmire's connection to the show and received his pitch well.[6]
In 2006, after the Disney Channel had accepted the show, Povenmire and Marsh turned their attention to the company's overseas executives. Instead of penning a normal script, the two drew out storyboards and played them in a reel. Povenmire voiced over the reel with his dialogue and added sound effects. This novel approach secured the executives' support.[14]
Production
Writing style
The show uses four main writers to devise story ideas according to "strict guidelines", such as that the boys' schemes never appear to be "magical". Stories are reviewed at weekly sessions on a Monday, then simultaneously scripted and storyboarded. A very rough design is built before the storyboard, featuring little more than suggested scenes and dialogue, is drafted; the writers then gather for a "play-by-play" walkthrough of the storyboard in front of the whole crew, whose reactions to the jokes are assessed before rewrites are made.[20] The writers also include running gags in every episode, which are generally lines spoken by characters.[4][21] Almost every episode is split into two 11-minute segments.[22] Dan Povenmire admitted that the "a-plot" of each episode, the one following Phineas and Ferb's inventions, is not actually a plot, but instead the setting, with the actual plot being Candace, Perry and Dr. Doofenshmirtz's story, "The essence of story is that the characters are changed by what happens to them. Nothing ever changes the boys, they never learn anything, there's never any obstacles they have to overcome, everything just works out for them."[23]
Much of the series' humor relies on running gags used in almost every episode, with slight variation.[24]
Certain aspects of the show's humor are aimed at adults,[17] including its frequent pop-culture references.[25] Co-creator Dan Povenmire, who had previously worked on Family Guy, sought to create a less raunchy show that would make similar use of comic timing, metahumor, humorous blank stares, wordplay and breaking the fourth wall.[18] Povenmire describes the show as a combination of Family Guy and SpongeBob SquarePants.[26] Co-creator Jeff "Swampy" Marsh has said that the show was not created exclusively for children; he simply did not exclude them as an audience.[17]
Visual aspects and animation
Rough Draft Studios in South Korea, Wang Film Productions in Taiwan, Morning Sun Animation and Synergy Animation in Shanghai and Hong Ying Animation and Hong Guang Animation in Suzhou animate the series in 2D Animation using the software package Toon Boom.[27] Povenmire would undertake the bulk of production direction, along with Zac Moncrief and Robert F. Hughes.[28] The series adopts artistic features from animator Tex Avery, such as geometric shapes integrated into characters, objects, and backgrounds. Povenmire says of this inclusion, "There's a little bit of Tex Avery in there-he had that very graphic style [in his later cartoons]."[18] Triangles are featured as an easter egg in the background of every episode, sometimes in trees or buildings.[17]
Bright colors are also a prominent element of the animation. Marsh elaborates, "The idea at the end of the day was candy. One of the things that I think works so well is that the characters are so bright and candy-colored and our backgrounds are a much more realistic depiction of the world: the soft green of the grass, the natural woods for the fence. In order for all the stuff that they do to work, their world needs to be grounded in reality." The designers sought to keep their characters visually simple so that kids "would easily be able to draw [them] themselves." Characters were also crafted to be recognizable from a distance, a technique that the creators say is based on Matt Groening's goal of making characters recognizable by silhouette.[17]
Cast
Phineas and Ferb are voiced by Vincent Martella and Thomas Sangster (seasons 1–4) and David Errigo Jr. (season 5–present),[2] respectively.[29] Sangster was one of many British actors cast, as Marsh lived in the United Kingdom for seven years and developed a fondness for the British.[30] The rest of the cast includes Ashley Tisdale as their sister Candace; Bobby Gaylor as Buford van Stomm, who has a tendency to bully but is kept distracted by being included in the adventures; Maulik Pancholy as Baljeet Tjinder, a very intelligent boy who avoids being Buford's main victim by their participation in the adventures; Dee Bradley Baker as Perry the Platypus; Caroline Rhea as Linda Flynn-Fletcher, Phineas and Candace's mother and stepmother to Ferb;[29]Richard O'Brien as Lawrence Fletcher, Ferb's father and Phineas and Candace's stepfather;[31]Jack McBrayer as Irving, who admires Phineas and Ferb, and is the creator of the Phineas and Ferb fansite; Kelly Hu as Candace's best friend Stacy;[30] Povenmire as Dr. Doofenshmirtz; Marsh as Major Monogram; Olivia Olson as Dr. Doofenshmirtz's daughter Vanessa; Tyler Mann as Carl, Major Monogram's goofy super genius intern; Alyson Stoner as neighbor Isabella Garcia-Shapiro, a sweet Mexican/Jewish girl with a crush on Phineas; Mitchel Musso as Jeremy, Candace's crush and later her boyfriend; and Madison Pettis as Adyson Sweetwater, a member of Isabella's Fireside Girls troop.
The show's casting organization is responsible for selecting most of the voice actors and actresses, choosing actors such as Martella and Musso for major roles based on perceived popularity with target demographics. Povenmire and Marsh select guest stars, casting people that they "really want to work with." They also solicit guest roles from actors whom they feel would lend an interesting presence to the show.[19]
The series is known for its original songs that appear in almost every episode since the first season episode "Flop Starz". Disney's executives particularly enjoyed the episode's song "Gitchee, Gitchee Goo" and requested that a song appear in each subsequent episode.[6] The music earned the series a total of four Emmy nominations: two Primetime Creative Arts nominations in 2008 (for the main title theme and for the song "I Ain't Got Rhythm" from the episode "Dude, We're Getting the Band Back Together") [34] and two Daytime Creative Arts nominations in 2010 (for the song "Come Home Perry" from the episode "Oh, There You Are, Perry" and the original score by Danny Jacob).
"Phineas and Ferb gave us a chance to write a song for every single episode, starting with the second episode, Flop Starz. [...] Every episode since then has a song in it. It's not always the characters singing onscreen – they don't break into song just to advance the plot. The music doesn't come out of nowhere, sometimes it's just a montage over action. We've done every genre known to man: ABBA, Broadway show tunes, 16th-century madrigals"
Phineas and Ferb follows structural conventions that Povenmire and Marsh developed while writing Rocko's Modern Life, whereby each episode features "a song or a musical number, plus a big action/chase scene."[6] Both creators had musical backgrounds, as Povenmire performed rock and roll in his college years[16] and Marsh's grandfather was the bandleader Les Brown.[17]
The series' songs span many genres, from 16th-century madrigals to Broadwayshow tunes.[6] Each is written in an intensive session during episode production; a concept, score and lyrics are developed quickly.[35] Together, Marsh and Povenmire could "write a song about almost anything" in an hour.[11] After they finished their songs, Povenmire and Marsh sang them over the answering machine of series composer Danny Jacob on Friday nights. By the following Monday, the song would be fully produced.[36]
The title sequence song "Today is Gonna Be a Great Day", performed by the American group Bowling for Soup, was nominated for an Emmy award in 2008.[9][34] The creators originally wrote a slower number more in keeping with a "classic Disney song", but the network felt that changes were needed to especially appeal to children and commissioned the rock version that made the final cut.[14]
A clip show titled "Phineas and Ferb's Musical Cliptastic Countdown" was broadcast as part of season two in October 2009. The show focuses on the series' music, featuring a viewer-voted list of its top ten songs.[37] This clip show spawned a sequel, "Phineas and Ferb Musical Cliptastic Countdown Hosted by Kelly Osbourne", which aired on June 28, 2013. Osbourne hosted the special in live form, while Dr. Doofenshmirtz and Major Monogram appeared as animated.[38]
Conclusion and revival
Phineas and Ferb was renewed for a fourth season in August 2011.[39] Announced at the time to be the series' final season, it concluded with an hour-long episode, "Last Day of Summer", on June 12, 2015. Povenmire and Marsh remained with the network and together created a new series, Milo Murphy's Law, which aired from 2016 to 2019.[40]
On January 13, 2023, during the winter press tour for the Television Critics Association, Disney Branded Television announced that 40 new episodes of Phineas and Ferb were ordered, to be split across two seasons, with Povenmire returning as executive producer. The deal also included a second-season renewal for Povenmire's series Hamster & Gretel.[41] On the same day, the official Twitter account for the streaming service Disney+ confirmed that the revival will be releasing on the service.[42] In March 2023, it was revealed that Marsh would also return as executive producer and voice director for the revival.[43] In April 2023, a press release commemorating the 40th anniversary of Disney Channel confirmed that the revival will air on the network.[44] Writing for the revival began in May, and voice recording began by September. It was affected by neither the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike nor the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike.[45][46] The revival was originally expected to be released in 2024,[47] but was later announced to be releasing the following year in 2025 instead.
At Disney Television Animation's presentation during the Annecy International Animation Film Festival in June 2024, Povenmire and Marsh made an appearance to promote the series and give details on the production.[48] They specified the revival was being treated as the fifth season of the series, and that it would take place a year after the events of the first four seasons, during a new summer vacation.[49] Povenmire and Marsh admitted their concerns that they would have trouble coming up with new ideas for the revival, but explained those concerns were alleviated due to their confidence in the writers' room, which contained both returning and new writers. They cited seven episodes in particular as standouts which they felt would appeal most to the returning audience. The duo previewed a musical animatic which introduces the first episode.[48]
Reception
Critical response
The show has received generally positive reviews. The New York Times commented favorably, describing the show as "Family Guy with an espionage subplot and a big dose of magical realism." It considered the pop-culture references ubiquitous "but [placed] with such skill that it seems smart, not cheap."[25]Whitney Matheson wrote in her USA Today blog Pop Candy that the series was an achievement in children's programming, applauding the writing and calling the show "an animated version of Parker Lewis Can't Lose."[50] Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media praised the show's humor and plot, giving it four out of five stars.[51]The Seattle Times wrote that the story of the show was "valiant" and that the main characters are "young heroes".[52]
Variety noted the show's appeal to all ages with its "sense of wit and irreverence."[53] Similar reviews have emphasized the series' popularity with adults; Rebecca Wright of Elastic Pops wrote, "As an adult, I really enjoyed watching this Phineas and Ferb DVD, and I think it is one that the whole family can enjoy." Wright also called the series' "irreverent style" reminiscent of The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle.[54]Wired's Matt Blum has stated in reviews of the series that he "can stand to watch just about anything with [his] kids, but [he] actually look[s] forward to watching Phineas and Ferb with them."[24] Notable celebrities identified as fans of the series include Bob Eubanks, Anthony LaPaglia, Ben Stiller, Chaka Khan, Jeff Sullivan and Jake Gyllenhaal.[55][56][57]
Among the negative reviews is one that charges the series with a lack of originality. Maxie Zeus of Toon Zone argues that the show is "derivative, but obviously so, and shorn of even the best features of what has been stolen." Zeus takes issue with the writing, feeling that certain jokes and conventions were "ripped-off" from other shows.[58] Kevin McDonough of Sun Coast Today criticized the show for its plot complexity, constant action and "characters [that] can do just about anything." McDonough stated that "it's never clear whether P&F are intended to entertain children or are merely a reflection of grown-up animators engaged in a juvenile lark."[59] Marylin Moss of The Hollywood Reporter described Phineas and Ferb as "Pretty mindless but kids of all ages might find a humorous moment in it." Moss called the plot lines redundant but praised the music styles and guest stars.[60]
Alan Sepinwall and Matt Zoller Seitz gave a positive assessment in their 2016 book TV (The Book), stating that "In television, formula often seems to come from a lack of imagination. ... Phineas and Ferb though, managed at the same time to be wildly imaginative and slavishly formulaic, using its repetitive structure not as a crutch, but as a sturdy framework on which it could hang all kinds of fantastic new ideas." They further added that "the characters' awareness of that formula, and any deviations from it, quickly became one of the show's most fertile sources of humor."[61]
Ratings
The first episode, "Rollercoaster", garnered a total of 10.8 million viewers when aired as a preview on August 17, 2007, holding onto more than half of the record-setting audience of its lead-in, High School Musical 2.[62] When Phineas and Ferb officially debuted in February the next year, it proved to be cable's number-one watched animated series premiere by tweens. Throughout the quarter that followed, it peaked as the top-rated animated series for ages 6–10 and 9–14, also becoming the number-three animated series on cable television for viewers aged 6–10.[29] By the time the second season was announced in May 2008, the series had become a top-rated program in the 6–11 and 9–14 age groups.[63]
The Disney Channel airing of "Phineas and Ferb Get Busted!" was watched by 3.7 million viewers.[64] The episodes "Perry Lays an Egg" and "Gaming the System" achieved the most views by ages 6–11 and 9–14 of any channel in that night's time slot. This achievement made the series the number-one animated telecast that week for its target demographics.[65] On June 7, 2009, Disney announced that the show had become the number-one primetime animated show for the 6–10 and 9–14 groups.[10]
The premiere of "Phineas and Ferb Christmas Vacation" garnered 2.62 million viewers during its debut on Disney XD, the most watched telecast in the channel's history (including Toon Disney) and the number-three program of the night across all demographics. It received 5.2 million viewers for its debut on Disney Channel and was the highest-rated episode of the series to date and fifth-highest for the week.[66][67][68]
The premiere of "Phineas and Ferb: Summer Belongs to You!" garnered 3.862 million viewers and was watched by 22% of children 2–11, 13% of teens, 5% of households and 3% of adults 18–49, also ranking as the number-one program for that night and as 25th for the week.[69][70] On Disney XD, the episode ranked among the channel's top three telecasts of the year with 1.32 million viewers, including 365,000 among boys 6–11, with a 2.9 rating. The hour-long telecast on August 2, 2010, was the series' number-two telecast of all time on Disney XD in total viewers, behind only December 2009's "Phineas and Ferb Christmas Vacation".[71]
Awards and nominations
List of awards and nominations received by Phineas and Ferb
Dan Povenmire, Jeff "Swampy" Marsh, Jon Colton Barry, Jim Bernstein, Joshua Pruett, Kate Kondell, Jeffrey M. Howard and Bob Bowen (for Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe)
Outstanding Writing Team for a Daytime Animated Program
1.^A The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences announced that it would not present the award to either nominee in the category. As an area award, nominees had to garner 50% approval to win the award. None of the nominees met the benchmark, and no award was given.[103]
On March 3, 2010, a Disney press release announced a made-for-television film based on the series, entitled Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension, which aired on the Disney Channel on August 5, 2011. The film depicts Phineas and Ferb accidentally helping Dr. Doofenshmirtz with an invention that takes them to a parallel dimension, where Perry reveals his double life as a secret agent to them, and, to save their friends from a devious alternative Dr. Doofenshmirtz, they team up with their alternate-dimension selves to stop him.[104]
In January 2011, Gary Marsh, the president of Disney Channels Worldwide announced that early development on a theatrical feature film adaptation of Phineas and Ferb had commenced. Sean Bailey, head of production at Walt Disney Pictures, led the development, which would combine live-action and animation.[105] By July, Povenmire and Marsh were in the early stages of writing the film's script; Michael Arndt, the writer of Little Miss Sunshine and Toy Story 3, was hired to write a further draft of the screenplay.[106][107] The film was to be produced by Mandeville Films, and was originally scheduled for release on July 26, 2013.[107][108] In October 2012, Disney moved the release date to 2014, and in August 2013, the film was removed from its schedule.[109][110]
On April 11, 2019, it was announced that a film, titled Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, would be released on Disney+ within a year of its launch; it would eventually premiere on August 28, 2020.[111] Most of the series' cast reprised their roles, with the exception of Thomas Sangster as Ferb, who was replaced by David Errigo Jr., who had previously voiced Ferb on Milo Murphy's Law.[112][113][114][115] According to writer Jim Bernstein, the film is unrelated to the previously shelved theatrical Phineas and Ferb film.[116][117]
Crossovers and short series
Disney produced Take Two with Phineas and Ferb, a live-action talk show in which the two characters (as cartoons) interviewed celebrities, similarly to Space Ghost Coast to Coast, which began aired from December 2010 to November 25, 2011 as a two-minute talk-show format featuring real-life celebrities.[118] Several other local guests have appeared in countries outside the United States.
Povenmire has stated that he would like to do a crossover with his and Marsh's follow-up show, Milo Murphy's Law, which takes place in the same universe as Phineas and Ferb.[123] The crossover eventually took place in Milo Murphy's Law's second season premiere, titled "The Phineas and Ferb Effect". The entire Phineas and Ferb cast reprised their roles for the episode, with the exception of Thomas Sangster, the original voice of Ferb, who was instead voiced by David Errigo, Jr.[124] Before the crossover aired, Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz cameoed at the end of the episode "Fungus Among Us"; following the crossover, the characters Dr. Doofenshmirtz, Perry, Major Monogram and Carl joined the cast of Milo Murphy's Law in a recurring capacity.
Video games
In 2009, Disney licensed a Nintendo DS video game titled Phineas and Ferb. The game's story follows the title characters as they try to build a roller coaster. The player controls Phineas, Ferb and occasionally Perry the Platypus. Phineas scavenges for spare parts for the roller coaster while Ferb fixes various objects around town, gaining access to new areas as a result. Ferb can also construct new parts of the coaster and its vehicle-themed carts. Each activity features a short mini-game.[125][126][127] The game was well-received and garners a 76.67% on GameRankings.[128] A sequel entitled Phineas and Ferb: Ride Again was released on September 14, 2010.[129] Another game, Phineas and Ferb: Across the 2nd Dimension, was released for the Wii and PlayStation 3 platforms in 2011.[130]
In 2012, Walt Disney World opened an interactive game based on the series at Epcot, titled Agent P's World Showcase Adventure, which centered around Perry and Dr. Doofenshmirtz, based on the previous attraction Kim Possible World Showcase Adventure.[131]
Phineas and Agent P appear as playable characters in all the video games of the Disney Infinity series. As with the other playable characters in the games, tie-in figures for them were also released.[135]
Live tour
Phineas and Ferb: The Best LIVE Tour Ever was a touring two-act adaptation of the TV show. A projection system played video in the same style as the TV show on the rear of the stage; the characters were first introduced there in their cartoon forms, but then used a backyard slide that continued into a physical slide, out of which the live cast members emerged into the real world. The performers wore prosthetics to make their characters resemble their cartoon counterparts—mostly head pieces, but a full body suit in the cases of Buford and Perry.[136] The 2011–2012 season of the tour began on August 21, 2011, in Lakeland, Florida and ended on April 22, 2012, in East Rutherford, New Jersey.[137] The 2012–2013 season began on August 23, 2012, in Wheeling, West Virginia and ran until February 18, 2013, in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Merchandise
Disney has licensed a number of products from the show, including figures and plush toys of characters Perry, Ferb, Phineas and Candace.[138] As with the other playable characters in the Disney Infinity games, tie-in figures for Phineas and Agent P were also released.[135] Disney released several T-shirts for the show and launched a "Make your own T-shirt" program on its website.[139]
Two Season 1 DVDs, entitled The Fast and the Phineas and The Daze of Summer, have been released; the discs include episodes never previously broadcast in the U.S.[140][141] A third DVD was released on October 5, 2010, called A Very Perry Christmas. Some reviewers were displeased that the discs covered selected episodes rather than the entire series, but noted that Disney does not generally release full-season DVD sets.[140] Authors have novelized several episodes.[142]
Notes
^Marsh is credited as a co-executive producer for the first two seasons
^Aired new episodes simultaneously with Disney Channel since 2009.
References
^Holz, Jo (August 23, 2017). Kids' TV Grows Up: The Path from Howdy Doody to SpongeBob. McFarland. ISBN9781476630601. Archived from the original on January 14, 2023. Retrieved November 19, 2020. Phineas and Ferb included frequent pop-culture references, clever wordplay and other forms of surreal adult humour. The New York Times described the show as "Family Guy with an espionage subplot and big dose of magical realism.
^Sepinwall, Alan; Seitz, Matt Zoller (September 6, 2016). TV (The Book): Two Experts Pick the Greatest American Shows of All Time. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN978-1455588190.
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2008 TC3 2008 TC3 (sebutan sementara Catalina Sky Survey 8TA9D69) adalah meteoroid yang memiliki diameter 2 hingga 5 meter yang memasuki atmosfer Bumi pada tanggal 7 Oktober 2008 pada pukul 02:46 UTC dan terbakar sebelum sempat melakukan kontak fisik dengan tanah.[1] Referensi ^ Plait, Phil (2008-10-06). Incoming!!!. Bad Astronomy. Diakses tanggal 2008-10-08. Pranala luar Wikimedia Commons memiliki media mengenai 2008 TC3. Gambar pada pranala luar An image of 2008 TC3 Animation ...
Jayapura beralih ke halaman ini. Untuk kabupaten bernama sama, lihat Kabupaten Jayapura. Untuk kegunaan lain, lihat Jayapura (disambiguasi). Koordinat: 2°32′13.0158″S 140°42′49.2294″E / 2.536948833°S 140.713674833°E / -2.536948833; 140.713674833 Kota JayapuraIbu kota provinsiKota Jayapura pada malam hari LambangJulukan: Kota Seribu PinangMotto: Hen Tecahi Yo Onomi, T'mar Ni Hanased(Teluk Jayapura) Satu Hati Membangun Kota untuk Kemuliaan...
Lambang Peta Data dasar Bundesland: Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Ibu kota: Demmin Wilayah: 1.921 km² Penduduk: 87.200 (30 September 2005) Kepadatan penduduk: 45 jiwa per km² Nomor pelat kendaraan bermotor: DM Pembagian administratif: 70 Gemeinden Alamat balai kabupaten: Adolf-Pompe-Str. 12-1517109 Demmin Bupati: Frieder Jelen (CDU) Peta Wilayah Landkreis ini pada tahun 1905 Demmin adalah sebuah Landkreis di Bundesland Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Jerman. lbsMecklenburg-VorpommernLandkreise (Distrik)B...
باري إم. أوسبورن معلومات شخصية الميلاد 7 فبراير 1944 (80 سنة)[1] نيويورك مواطنة الولايات المتحدة الحياة العملية المدرسة الأم كلية كارلتون (التخصص:علم الاجتماع) (الشهادة:بكالوريوس)ثانوية نيو روتشيلي [لغات أخرى] المهنة منتج أفلام، ومخرج أفلام، ...
2007 single by DJ Felli Fel featuring Diddy, Akon, Ludacris and Lil JonGet Buck in HereSingle by DJ Felli Fel featuring Diddy, Akon, Ludacris and Lil JonReleasedOctober 4, 2007Recorded2007GenreHip hop, crunkLength3:49LabelSo So Def, Island Def Jam, Rock HillSongwriter(s)James CorrineLeroy WatkinsAliaune ThiamSean CombsChris BridgesJonathan SmithProducer(s)DJ Felli FelDJ Felli Fel singles chronology Get Buck in Here (2007) Finer Things (2008) Diddy singles chronology Through the Pain (...
Estonian military personnel (born 1972) Ilmar Tamm during a meeting in 2022 Ilmar Tamm (born on 4 May 1972, Tartu) is an Estonian military officer (Major General[1]).[2] In 1994, he graduated from the Finnish Military Academy.[3] 2008–2012, he was the head of Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence. Since 2020, he was the head of Baltic Defence College.[3] In 2004, he was awarded by Order of the Cross of the Eagle, V Class.[2] References ^ Cont...
Islam by countryWorld percentage of Muslims by country Africa Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Eswatini Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Ivory Coast Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Morocco Western Sahara Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Réunion Rwanda São Tom...
Kalender Swedia Februari 1712 Dalam kalender Gregorian, Februari terdiri dari 28 atau 29 hari. Tetapi tiga kali dalam sejarah, terjadi kejadian di mana di beberapa negara, bulan tersebut mempunyai 30 hari. Wilayah Swedia (yang saat itu termasuk Finlandia) berencana untuk mengganti kalender Julian menjadi kalender Gregorian mulai tahun 1700 dengan menghapuskan hari kabisat selama 40 tahun ke depan. Oleh karenanya, 1700 bukan merupakan tahun kabisat di Swedia, tetapi tahun 1704 dan 1708 adalah ...
Force of non-professional soldiers For other uses, see Militia (disambiguation). Citizen soldier redirects here. For other uses, see Citizen Soldier (disambiguation). Mustering in the Hempstead Rifles, Arkansas Volunteers, at Arkadelphia, Arkansas, in 1861. A militia (/mɪˈlɪʃə/)[1] is generally an army or some other fighting organization of non-professional and/or part-time soldiers; citizens of a country, or subjects of a state, who may perform military service during a time of ...
Los Lagos Región de Chile Desde arriba, de izquierda a derecha: Catedral San Mateo de Osorno • Palafitos de Castro • Puente Rio Puelo • Cerro Tronador, punto más alto de la región • Zorro culpeo BanderaEscudo Ubicación de la región de Los Lagos en Chile Coordenadas 41°28′18″S 72°56′12″O / -41.471666666667, -72.936666666667Capital Puerto Montt • Población 245 902Idioma oficial Español (de facto) • Otros idiomas Alemán, mapudungúnEn...
Statue outside Pride Park Stadium of Derby County's 1972 Football League-winning manager Brian Clough and his assistant Peter Taylor, who also managed the club Derby County is an English association football club based in Derby, Derbyshire. The club was formed in 1884 but didn't appoint a full-time manager until 1896; prior to this the team for each match was selected by committee, a common practice in the early days of professional football. This chronological list comprises all those who h...
Canadian philosopher of science (born 1940) Michael Escott RuseBorn (1940-06-21) 21 June 1940 (age 84)Birmingham, EnglandEraContemporary philosophyRegionWestern PhilosophySchoolAnalytic philosophyInstitutionsFlorida State University (2000–present)University of Guelph (1965–2000)Main interestsPhilosophy of biologyPhilosophy of scienceNotable ideasOrthogenesis as the view that evolution has a kind of momentum of its own that carries organisms along certain tracks[1] Michael Rus...