AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
Rubble paw patrol real life11/6/2023 There’s the aforementioned police dog, Chase, who is a German shepherd a bulldog named Rubble, who does construction a chocolate lab and water rescuer named Zuma Rocky, a mutt who specializes in recycling (to be discussed later this is one of the show’s selectively tossed bones to the values of the adult world) Marshall, the clumsy fire dog (Dalmatian, of course) and Skye, the first (and, until later episodes, only) female member of the team, a cockapoo and aviation expert who cruises around in a pink helicopter. The last of these locales is inhabited by the Paw Patrol Pups, an emergency-response team of six sentient dogs, each with their own distinctive personality, skill set, colour-coded uniform, and vehicle. Paw Patrol is largely set in the fictional city of Adventure Bay, a bucolic waterside burg ringed by mountains, with key locations and landmarks including: City Hall, the beach, a farm, a café, Seal Island, and the Lookout. Maybe you’ve never seen a single eleven-minute segment of Paw Patrol, and if that’s the case, then a) please enjoy the bliss of your prestige-TV-filled ignorance and b) bear with me as I exhaustively describe the premise of the show. You’re probably not a child between the ages of two and five, and you may very well not be the parent of one. Few children’s shows have such a high level of recognition with adults, let alone encourage an investment in their plots and developments but, for various reasons, Paw Patrol isn’t an ordinary show. The Mer-Pups appeared midway through season two Paw Patrol is just getting started. the Pups) becomes entangled with a pack of magical underwater doppelgängers-the Mer-Pups-suggested that the show had jumped the shark. A friend of mine, after catching an episode in which the Paw Patrol team (a.k.a. A late March special, “Mission Paw: Quest for the Crown,” drew 2 million American viewers aged two to five, a series record at the time. In the United States, where it airs on Nickelodeon, it was the number-one-rated preschool kids’ show for the first quarter of 2017. There are such kids in pretty much every corner of the globe-now in its fourth season, Paw Patrol airs in 160 countries and territories around the world. It was created as a preschool show-by Toronto’s Spin Master, which started out as a toy company-but six- and seven-year-olds still watch with genuine delight. But Paw Patrol’s grip on its viewers is unusually tenacious. The passing of time is also a problem for the audiences of those shows-every child grows up at some point, leaving childish things behind, even if that’s just to make way for other childish things. It’s an occupational hazard, of course, in making a show for kids that stars real kids. The Web Aesthetic Comes to Cable Television.This New CBC Show Is an Antidote to Reality TV.The crew decides to move on to other lines they need-quickly, before Calinescu’s voice changes. If necessary, Rodrigues says, he can digitally alter the teen’s pitch to match his voice to previous scenes. ![]() “But not unusably older.” Calinescu yips some more. “He does sound older,” Rodrigues says eventually. Patton Rodrigues, who’s been the sound-recording engineer since day one of the show, monitors the levels. Stephany Seki, the voice director, presses a talkback button and says to Calinescu, who’s standing alone in the recording booth, “Max, can you bark quicker?” Calinescu does so, more or less. To the ears of the recording engineers and directors huddled in the control room, who have heard hundreds of barks in Max’s four-year career, something is just a bit off. ![]() Chase’s bark is a signature sound, an exuberant yip familiar to millions of kids and parents around the world, but the actor-baby-faced, slightly goofy Max Calinescu-is thirteen years old and maturing by the minute. I mean the actor who plays Chase, of course, and by “Chase,” I mean the police-dog squad leader on the megahit cartoon series Paw Patrol. I t’s a cool early June day, and in a sound studio in Toronto’s east end, Chase is having a little trouble barking.
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |