Class_of_3000

<i>Class of 3000</i>

Class of 3000

2006-2008 American animated musical television series for children


Class of 3000 is an American children's[1] animated music television series created by André 3000 (best known as a member of the hip hop duo Outkast) for Cartoon Network. Produced by Tom Lynch Company and Moxie Turtle for Cartoon Network Studios, the series follows superstar and music teacher Sunny Bridges (voiced by André), who teaches a group of students at Atlanta, Georgia's Westley School of Performing Arts.[2] Bridges is a jazz and blues artist who occasionally lectures in Atlanta's Little Five Points residential area. (Referencing Atlanta, both OutKast and Cartoon Network are based in Atlanta.) Twenty-eight episodes were produced.[3]

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Class of 3000 is the final Cartoon Network original series to premiere when Jim Samples was Cartoon Network's General Manager and Executive Vice President, as he later resigned following the 2007 Boston Mooninite panic. The series has never rerun.

Characters

Main

  • Sunny Bridges (voiced by André 3000) is the hometown hero of Lil' D, he is a jazz crooner who quit to be a tutor.
  • Lil' D (voiced by Sylvia "Small Fire" Hollaway) is the unofficial/bumbling leader of the Westley School's music class. He is bright, talented, confident to a fault, and is incredibly tenacious when it comes to music. His instrument is the drums.
  • Madison Spaghettini Papadopoulus (voiced by Jennifer Hale) is an extremely optimistic flower child. She is perpetually cheerful, no matter the circumstance, though she's occasionally shown to reach a breaking point. Her instruments are the violin and the cello.
  • Tamika Jones (voiced by Crystal Scales) is a student who is stubborn; the slightest misstep is grounds for a threatening fist. Her instruments are the guitar and the harp.
  • Edward "Eddie" Phillip James Lawrence III (voiced by Tom Kenny) is the richest kid in the school, being the heir to the Lawrence fortune (according to the first episode, his father is the head of the Earth division of Cola-Cola). His instruments are the trumpet and the clarinet.
  • Phillip "Philly" P. Phil (voiced by Phil LaMarr) is a brilliant and imaginative student who tends to stand out for his unusual fashion sense. He can invent useful devices on the spot, although they often end in malfunction. His instruments are the double bass and the bass guitar.
  • Kim Chin (voiced by Janice Kawaye) is Kam's twin sister and his polar opposite down to even these instruments. She and Kam are the youngest of the Westley Side School First Years. Besides being a DJ, her instrument is the xylophone, also with other percussion instruments.
  • Kam Chin (voiced by Janice Kawaye) is Kim's twin brother and her polar opposite, born in Columbus, Ohio and is of Chinese American descent. He and his sister are the youngest of the Westley Side School First Years and he is considered to be the smartest in school. His instruments are the keyboard and the piano.

Other

  • Principal Luna (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is the principal at Westley School of Performing Arts. He is of Hispanic descent and Sunny's rival.
  • Cheddar Man (voiced by Phil LaMarr) is one of Sunny's friends. He specialises in selling cheeses, fixing helicopters, doing teeth, and being a Con Artist.
  • Leela Lopez (voiced by Jennifer Hale) is a teacher at Westley. She has a crush on Sunny while Sunny has love interest in her. Leela teaches the Westley modern dance class.
  • Petunia Squatenchowder (voiced by Tom Kenny) is a lunch lady at Westley's known for serving the grossest lunches. Principal Luna has a crush on her but she has developed a crush on Sunny also.
  • Jannet "Jan" Rongeteis (voiced by Jeff Glen Bennett) is a Swedish janitor at Westley. He is a former member of Sunny Funkaneers. Jan is always the one who has to clean up all the messes.
  • Bob Sulu (voiced by Jeff Glen Bennett) is the Korean-American butler of Eddie's family mansion and is a typical "English butler". He looks slim at first, but actually has a very muscular body.
  • Bianca Moon (voiced by Jennifer Hale) is one of Sunny's friends who owns an organic food store.

Production

While on a trip to Turner Broadcasting in Atlanta to pitch projects, Thomas Lynch met with vice president of programming for Cartoon Network Mike Lazzo, an old friend of his.[4] Lynch told him he wanted to make an animated series with music, and Lazzo said he had a pilot.

While discussing ideas, the two realized their shared fondness for Outkast's album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below and contacted André 3000 to turn his The Love Below into an animated show for Adult Swim.[5] André however was uninterested in the idea and instead proposed coming up with an original concept. Wanting to avoid the show turning into Hammerman or The Jackson 5ive, André decided to become directly involved with development and not have it become "a licensing deal".[6] His only stipulation was that the show must be set in Atlanta, as no cartoon prior had been set in the city and he wanted to showcase its culture to a wider audience.[5]

Unsure of where to take the project, André and Lazzo visited André's childhood neighborhood Bankhead and then where he enrolled at Sutton Middle School on the other side of town in the wealthy Buckhead area.

André started talking about his youth ... It was two completely different worlds. His mom insisted he get a great education, so she got his transportation arranged. As I'm listening to all this I'm thinking, 'André, this is the show I want to see.'

Mike Lazzo

Development of the series lasted two and a half years.[4] 2D animation veteran Joe Horne was attached as director. As neither Lynch or André had experience in the animation industry, Lynch told Horne he would have to "teach [us]". Lynch admitted to "making every mistake anybody could make" for his first animated project.

I think my worst [mistake] was when the cut came back [from overseas animation]. I looked at it and said, Okay, I have some rewrites. They said, "Uhhh, you get some retakes." I had thought retakes meant whole scenes, but it was only moments or close-ups. That was an education right there, because in live-action I rewrite all the way through post-production, I change everything all the time.

Thomas Lynch

The main characters were inspired by people André knew as a child. He related how on one occasion he was telling stories from his childhood to Lynch, who responded "Oh, that's it! There's a character right there." Diversity was an important element from André's experience that he wanted to incorporate as well: "I'm in school with the mayors kids, my friends were East Indian, people from France. I was getting all kinds of influences and I thought it would be cool to have these different types of characters, different nationalities coming together as music." André also wanted to use the show to highlight music programs, which he lamented were being removed from schools in the United States at the time.[7] Inspiration for the series' premise came from Dead Poets Society.[5]

One of my favorite movies is Dead Poets Society, and I felt like doing that with kids. I also thought it’d be great to have this teacher teach kids in an unorthodox way, so I stepped in as the teacher, Sunny Bridges.

André 3000

Sunny Bridges' character was inspired by Sonny Rollins, who became well-known for taking a hiatus from performing live concerts to practice under the Williamsburg Bridge. By this point, the series had shifted from being "dark and sexy" to "a regular type of show" according to Lynch.[8][4] In light of this direction, Michael Ouweleen suggested moving it to a primetime slot on Cartoon Network, which they agreed to.

The series was planned to begin featuring guest musicians after several seasons, including Big Boi, Gwen Stefani, Pharrell or Snoop Dogg among others.[8][9]

Art direction

Lynch and André were familiar with Cartoon Network's other series, like Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi, and wanted to give the show "a flowy kind of look" in contrast to their more "boxy and squarey" style.[4] The pair struggled to find the right character designer, which they attributed to them being "very focused on what we want, but we didn't [speak] their language. They had to interpret what we were asking for." André wanted the characters to look "cool and original" and have "a lyricism, a movement and body style almost like musical notes." Eighteen designers in total were brought in to draw the main characters before David Colman was selected.

Valerio Ventura, who worked on visual development for Disney movies like The Rescuers Down Under, served as supervising art director.[4] Ventura was also responsible for painting the show's "jazzy spotted backgrounds" as described by Animation World Network, which, according to Lynch, "he put the (not-quite) finished art on a table, and ... literally threw paint across them Jackson Pollock-style".

Each episode of the series contains an original song with an accompanying animated music video, which André likened to "mini-Fantasias". The music videos are directed by guest animators and feature styles different from the rest of the show. Artists "were given free reign [sic]" and "staying on model was strictly optional" according to Lynch. Several artists who directed music videos include John Kricfalusi, Bill Sienkiewicz, Kyle Baker, Jorge Gutierrez, Peter Chung and Charlie Bean.[4][8]

Cast

The series features several veteran voice actors for the main cast, including Tom Kenny (Eddie), Phil LaMarr (Philly Phil), Jennifer Hale (Madison), Janice Kawaye (Kim and Kam) and Jeff Bennett (Principal Luna).[4] André described his first recording session with the other actors as "intimidat[ing]" until they helped coach him and "become a little more whimsical and magical".[8][9] The leading role of Lil' D was given to "Small Fire", a local Atlanta comedian who grew up in André's neighborhood and was "the local tomboy [who] would beat us in basketball."[4] He had her in mind for the role from the beginning and finding her was "relatively simple"; his mom went over to her mom's house and asked where she was.

Cancellation

Class of 3000 was cancelled in December 2007 partially due to budget constraints, low ratings and scheduling conflicts of André not submitting his songs for the show by the deadline.[10][11][12]

Mike Lazzo (who had left Cartoon Network to become senior executive vice president of Adult Swim after Class of 3000 was greenlit) also noted it was a victim of a regime change at Cartoon Network, which began following the resignation of Jim Samples earlier that year over the 2007 Boston Mooninite panic.[5] Because of this, Class of 3000 has not been seen in reruns nor transferred on Boomerang.

Episodes

Series overview

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Season 1 (2006–07)

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Season 2 (2007–08)

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Music

Every episode of the show features at least one original song performed by the characters, which were written to fit the story.[5]

André 3000 listed Peanuts and Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids as inspirations for the show's musical style, saying:

I watched Peanuts growing up, and the music was always strong. Vince Guaraldi, a great jazz artist, was doing all the music for Peanuts. And at the time ... Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids had music involved. So I was really looking for a vehicle to do music. I thought it'd be dope for kids to hear something different than what they hear every day. I wanted to expose them to different sounds, and instruments they might not be hearing … on the radio.

While recording a song, André would lay reference tracks by saying/singing lines meant for the children characters in the show before sending it to Cartoon Network for the actors to replace. André noted the difficulty of this, saying: "I'd have to change my voice to act like a kid, had to think like a kid, and that was the hardest learning curve musically. I knew I wanted to introduce kids to certain instruments and keep it upbeat. But it was a challenge to bring my inner kid out."

Regarding the show's background music, André wanted it to have an "Atlanta/southern vibe", and selected The B-52's member Pat Irwin to oversee it.[4]

CD track list

A CD featuring songs from the first season of the show was released on July 3, 2007 via LaFace Records.

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Broadcast and release

The series made its world premiere (previously advertised as a live premiere with performances by Chris Brown) on November 3, 2006 at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT with a one-hour special. It was Cartoon Network's highest rated premiere since Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends in 2004 and ranked #1 in all of television for boys 2-11 and boys 6-11.[13] It later premiered on Cartoon Network UK on May 28, 2007, Cartoon Network Australia/New Zealand on February 4, 2008 and Cartoon Network Asia on February 10, 2008.

Although there have been no home video releases in Region 1, the show is available on Google Play, with the exception of "The Cure" from season two.

Home media

A DVD of the first season was released on April 17, 2008, in Region 4.[14] Plus, in the UK, 3 episodes from the series were placed on a DVD.

Reception

The show received mostly positive reviews. The New York Times called it "an eclectic, speedy and fun-enough cartoon that combines styles from anime, shimmying iPod ads and the merrily slapdash work of Filmation in the 1970s."[15] Regarding André 3000's influence, they said "[his] energizing music combines funk and crunk and every other style, knows from cacophony, and the show... is kept under control with witty, pointed dialogue and kid-friendly punch lines about, say, Clay Aiken or Big Pharma." The Boston Globe also described the series as "both sweetly innocent and urban contemporary" and that it "offers music as something spiritual and celebratory and not to be made just for money".[16] Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media gave the series four out of five stars, saying: "Class of 3000 offers a rich cast of diverse characters, colorful animation, and fun (if sometimes somewhat far-fetched) storylines. ... In addition to his creative responsibilities, Benjamin also contributes original songs and music videos to each episode (a tie-in album is available) -- the entire package may just leave your kids with a renewed interest in music."[17]

"Eddie's Money" won a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation.[18]

The soundtrack is rated 4.5 stars out of 5 on Amazon.

In other media


References

  1. Heffernan, Virginia (November 2, 2006). "Hey, Kids, a Hip-Hop Star Has Savvy Advice for You". The New York Times. Retrieved March 29, 2024. This is how commercial children's television rolls right now, and it's worth a look for anyone who used to like 'Fat Albert,' just to see how things have changed.
  2. Terrace, Vincent (2014). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 Through 2010 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 191. ISBN 9780786486410.
  3. Crump, William D. (2019). Happy Holidays—Animated! A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and New Year's Cartoons on Television and Film. McFarland & Co. p. 71. ISBN 9781476672939.
  4. Strike, Joe (November 3, 2006). "Cartoon Network Enrolls in 'Class of 3000'". Animation World Network.
  5. Elfman, Doug (October 27, 2006). "OutKast singer says his TV cartoon is no 'corny' music spin-off". Chicago Sun Times.
  6. Layser, Anthony (November 3, 2006). "Andre Benjamin Previews His New 'Toon, Class of 3000". TV Guide.
  7. Nguyen, Hanh (November 3, 2006). ""Class of 3000" cartoon is all about the Benjamin". The Seattle Times.
  8. Concepcion, Mariel (December 9, 2008). "Andre 3000 Sued For 'Class' Cartoon". Billboard.
  9. Heffernan, Virginia (November 2, 2006). "Hey, Kids, a Hip-Hop Star Has Savvy Advice for You". The New York Times.
  10. Gilbert, Matthew (November 3, 2006). "Andre 3000 moves to head of class". The Boston Globe.
  11. Ashby, Emily. "Class of 3000". Common Sense Media.

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