WordGirl (lost pitch pilot of PBS Kids educational animated series; existence unconfirmed; 2005): Difference between revisions

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*[[Seven Little Monsters (found episodes of PBS Kids animated series; 2000-2004)]]
*[[Seven Little Monsters (found episodes of PBS Kids animated series; 2000-2004)]]
*[[Space Race (partially found PBS Kids web series; 2011)]]
*[[Space Race (partially found PBS Kids web series; 2011)]]
*[[Super Why! (found stop-motion Nick Jr. pilot of PBS Kids CGI animated series; 1999)]]
*[[Super Why! (lost second pitch pilot of PBS Kids CGI-animated series; 2004-2006)]]
*[[Super Why! (partially found British dub of PBS Kids CGI animated series; late 2000s-2010s)]]
*[[Super Why! (partially found British dub of PBS Kids CGI animated series; late 2000s-2010s)]]
*[[What's The Big Idea? (non-existent pitch pilot of "Sid The Science Kid" PBS Kids CGI animated series; 2007)]]
*[[What's The Big Idea? (non-existent pitch pilot of "Sid The Science Kid" PBS Kids CGI animated series; 2007)]]

Latest revision as of 05:39, 27 April 2024

Wordgirl logo.jpeg

The final show's title card.

Status: Existence Unconfirmed

WordGirl is an educational animated series created by Dorothea Gillim that ran on PBS Kids as a short series from 2006-2007 under the title The Amazing Colossal Adventures of WordGirl and as a full series from 2007-2015. The show's about a young girl named Becky who was secretly born on the fictional planet of Lexicon and was adopted into a family on Earth, she also changes into the superhero WordGirl along with her friend, a chimpanzee named Captain Huggy Face, a pilot on the planet's Air Force division. Throughout the series, the 2 use their powers to keep their adoptive home safe.

Pitch Pilot

In 2005, series animator Amy MacDonald uploaded early concept art of the characters from a promotional bible all with slightly different designs (and a detailed description of who they are) to her portfolio, she mentioned that the artwork was used to help pitch the show to PBS at a pilot stage.[1] This has speculated that an early pilot for the series was developed and pitched the show to the network.[2]

Status

So far no footage or any other material from the pilot has resurfaced as the only mention comes from the portfolio, It's unknown if MacDonald meant there was an actual animated pilot or the artwork was just made for the pitch bible. As of 2024 no other information is available.

Gallery

See Also

Bumpers

PBS

PBS Kids

References