Dora Cartoons

2020. 1. 21. 21:21카테고리 없음

Dora Cartoons

Dora the Explorer is an American educational animated TV series created by Chris Gifford, Valerie Walsh Valdes and Eric Weiner. Dora the Explorer became a regular series in 2000. The show is carried on the Nickelodeon cable television network, including the associated Nick Jr. The show aired in reruns on 'Nick on CBS' for 6 years from September 16, 2000, to September 9, 2006.

From left to right: Swiper (in background), Dora, and Boots The series centers around Dora, a seven-year-old Latina girl, with a love of embarking on quests related to an activity that she wants to partake of or a place that she wants to go to, accompanied by her talking and anthropomorphic monkey companion named Boots (named for his beloved pair of red ). Each episode is based around a series of cyclical events that occur along the way during Dora's travels, along with obstacles that she and Boots are forced to overcome or puzzles that they have to solve (with 'assistance' from the viewing audience) relating to, the Spanish language, or counting. Common rituals may involve Dora's encounters with Swiper, a, masked thieving whose theft of the possessions of others must be prevented through -breaking interaction with the viewer. To stop Swiper, Dora must say 'Swiper no swiping' three times. However, on occasions where Swiper steals the belongings of other people, the viewer is presented with the challenge of helping Boots and Dora locate the stolen items. Another obstacle involves encounters with another one of the program's antagonists; the 'Grumpy Old Troll' dwelling beneath a that Dora and Boots must cross, who challenges them with a riddle before permitting them the past that needs to be solved with the viewer's help.

Known for the constant breaking of the fourth-wall depicted in every episode, the audience is usually presented to two primary landmarks that must be passed before Dora can reach her destination, normally being challenged with games or puzzles along the way. The episode always ends with Dora successfully reaching the locale, singing the 'We Did It!' Song with Boots in triumph. On numerous occasions, television specials have been aired for the series in which the usual events of regular episodes are altered, threatened, or replaced.

Usually said specials will present Dora with a bigger, more whimsical adventure than usual or with a magical task that must be fulfilled, or perhaps even offer a series of different adventures for Boots and Dora to travel through. They might be presented with an unusual, difficult task (such as assisting Swiper in his attempts to be erased from Santa Claus's Naughty List) that normally is not featured in average episodes, or challenge Dora with a goal that must be achieved (such as the emancipation of a trapped ). Sometimes, the specials have involved the debut of new characters, such as the birth of Dora's superpowered twin baby siblings and the introduction of the enchanted anthropomorphic that accompany Dora on many of her quests. Main article: based on the 2000 television show Dora the Explorer were released. In Canada, offered a free Dora the Explorer the Game in specially marked packages. However, packages sold in would only have the French version. Dora the Explorer: Barnyard Buddies is a video game released for the in 2003 in the US, thus making it the first Dora the Explorer video game for the home consoles.

It was not released in Europe until 2005 being one of the very last games released on that platform in that territory following the PlayStation's discontinuation the following year and all production on PS1 games in 2006. Is an for the released in 2004. It was developed by Imaginengine and published. Dora the Explorer: Journey to the Purple Planet is an, developed by, published by and powered. The game was released for in on October 13, 2005, and later in PAL regions on December 16, 2005. The version was released on PAL regions on December 2, 2005, and later in North America on February 9, 2006.

The game is about Dora and Boots who finds some lost aliens from the purple planet. However, to take them home, she and Boots are required to collect keys to open the space gate, leading to the saturn planet. The game is unique in that it uses pictures and symbols to communicate rather than words.

The object of the game is to capture one of the six explorer stars. Each explorer star has a special power such as the ability to be noisy or the ability to create music. In order to capture the star, the player must complete a hide-and-seek activity. These activities include maze navigation, matching games, side-scrolling race games, a '-type game, a complete-the-pattern activity and a song playing game. Dora Puppy is a puppy where players must help Dora take care of her puppy, Perrito, and help train him for doggie. All the actions are performed by either tracing certain shapes with the stylus or calling out commands into the DS's microphone. It was developed by for the and published by in and Australia in 2009, and in in 2010.

Dora the Explorer: Dora's Cooking Club is a cooking video game for the. It was published by in 2010. In the game, players have to chop veggies, stir soups, top pizzas, and more using math skills.

They may be sorting cookies into numbered groups or counting out different amounts of ingredients. Dora the Explorer: Dora Saves the Snow Princess is a video game that was released for the PlayStation 2 and the console in 2008. Dora the Explorer: Dora Saves the Crystal Kingdom is a video game that was released for the PlayStation 2 and the Wii console in 2009. Mobile streaming On August 31, 2017, the first five seasons of the show were added to the NOGGIN app. Sequel In 2013, announced that it will have a sequel to Dora the Explorer titled as. It will star the Latina heroine Dora as a 10-year-old who goes on city adventures with the Explorer Girls, accompanied by a male pal named Pablo.

The series has been picked up for 20 episodes and aired on Nickelodeon on August 18, 2014. Live-action film adaptation On October 23, 2017, it was announced that a live-action film adaptation is in the works at and is slated for an August 2, 2019 release. It will be filmed in, Australia at directed by with the screenplay written by and Kristin Burr producing. Unlike the TV series, the film is expected to follow the title character as a teenager.

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Dora's cousin Diego is also confirmed to be a character in the film. On May 2, 2018 was announced to portray the titular character. (1990–92; 2002). Outta Here!

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Dora Cartoons Youtube

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When Nickelodeon started three shows with Latino themes over the last year, officials said they wanted to reflect the world children lived in. All the shows, the first of their kind for the cable network, have done well but the big hit features as its star a 7-year-old Hispanic girl who speaks both English and Spanish and lives in a fantasy world - that of cartoons.

In less than a year, the show, 'Dora the Explorer,' an animated series, has become the top-rated show for preschoolers, ages 2 to 5, in commercial television. The instant popularity of the show, which is shown weekday mornings on Nickelodeon and Saturday mornings on CBS, led the network, a unit of Viacom, to start a 'Dora' line of toys and apparel last month, much sooner than it usually takes to develop a market for such products. As a result, 'Dora' may become as profitable as two other Nickelodeon hit shows, 'Rugrats' and 'Blue's Clues,' each with about $1 billion in product sales a year, network executives say. 'Dora' is a rarity in television, a show with a Hispanic lead character. Her success raises the question of how much of a breakthrough Hispanic-oriented programming can make on mainstream television in the face of continued network skittishness; an industry with few Hispanic writers, producers and executives; and a push by the Spanish-language networks to capture the bilingual market. Latinos in particular have a higher proportion of young people than the overall population - 35 percent are younger than 18, compared with 26 percent for the country as a whole.

The Hispanic population grew more than 60 percent in the last decade, to 35 million, or 12.5 percent of the overall population. Last year, the major broadcast networks undertook efforts to integrate prime-time shows under pressure from minority groups, but so far have come up with few Latino characters. While television has increased the casting of black actors, a coalition of Hispanic, Asian and Native American groups recently gave the four major networks grades of C to D - for diversity in prime time. Groups like the National Council of La Raza recognize some progress - ensemble casts for new situation comedies and dramas now routinely include people of color, said Lisa Navarrete, a spokeswoman for the group. Paula Madison, NBC's vice president for diversity, says the days of all-white ensembles, like 'Friends' and 'Frasier' are over, as far as new shows are concerned. But some network officials and advertising agencies said that appealing to the Latino audience posed special challenges because it was split between viewers who spoke mostly Spanish and those who spoke mostly English. In some markets, the two Spanish-language networks, Univision Communications and Telemundo, capture more than half of Hispanic viewers.

And in trying to diversify characters without sacrificing viewers, some networks are going the route of ensemble casts that include people of color, rather than mostly black or mostly Hispanic shows. Whatever the reason, Ms. Navarrete argued, the result is a dearth of dramas and comedy programs in English that portray the Hispanic experience and that have Latino characters who are not secondary characters or cast as maids. 'Nickelodeon is breaking the myth that non-Latinos won't watch a program about Latinos,' she said.

'These are shows that are appealing to all kids.' Advertisement There is, of course, the question of how much of the success of shows intended for a cable niche audience, and a children's audience at that, could be translated to prime-time television for adults.

'Resurrection Boulevard,' a Latin-themed drama on Showtime, also a unit of Viacom, now in its second season, has had only modest ratings so far. 'There's no relationship between the two marketplaces,' said Jonathan Goldmacher, a senior vice president for the advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi. 'Kids love learning.

When things are different that's very attractive to them. It's very empowering for kids to walk around the house saying 'amigo.' ' But Nickelodeon executives attribute the general appeal of 'Dora' and the network's two other Latin-themed shows - the live-action series 'The Brothers Garcia,' a Mexican-American family drama-comedy, and 'Taina,' about a Puerto Rican teenager attending a performing arts school in Manhattan - to a formula they say should work for any programming: good characters and universal story lines. What ethnicity adds to the mix, said Herb Scannell, president of Nickelodeon, is different kinds of characters and creative sparks. 'There are great stories that haven't been told,' he said. The creators, Chris Gifford, Eric Weiner and Valerie Walsh, gave Dora no distinct nationality, so that more viewers identify with her, but she has a Hispanic look, uses Spanish words like 'vamonos' ('let's go'), and has adventures with a decidedly pan-Latin flavor. In one episode, for instance, Dora and her monkey sidekick, Boots, help a 'coqui,' a small frog from Puerto Rico, return to its native island so it can sing again.

As with 'Blue's Clues,' viewers play along by answering questions posed by the characters and helping them solve problems. The debut of 'Dora the Explorer' last August was the highest rated premiere on Nick Jr., the programming block for preschoolers, in the network's history, bolstered by her appearance online on the Nick Jr.

Dora Cartoons

Web site beforehand. The show averages about 1.2 million viewers between ages 2 to 5, about triple the audience of its closest competitor, improving ratings 20 percent over the previous year, the network said. At CBS, the Nick Jr.

Package that includes 'Dora' and has been shown on Saturday mornings since last September has increased its 2-to-5 audience 51 percent. 'Dora the Explorer' videos, the first franchise products to come out last month, have stayed on the Amazon.com video top-10 sellers' list. Other products - play sets, dolls, backpacks, T-shirts - are scheduled to appear in department stores in the fall and next year. Advertisement Nickelodeon officials said the network's other shows with Hispanic themes helped anchor their most watched programming blocks on Saturday and Sunday. Earlier this year, the Chuck E. Cheese's restaurant chain, owned by CEC Entertainment, started running a bilingual commercial during the shows, marking the first time Nickelodeon has agreed to run bilingual ads.

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Only 5 percent to 15 percent of the overall audience for the three shows is Latino. Nickelodeon officials say its other shows with multicultural casting or predominantly black and Asian casts have also attracted a broad audience. Prime time, however, provides a different landscape. An analysis of the 2000-2001 season by Children Now, a group in California that advocates the interests of children, found that despite the broadcast networks' stated commitment to diversity, the season was only slightly more diverse than in the previous years. Representation of Latinos actually decreased, the group said, and most diversity was achieved by the inclusion of nonrecurring characters.

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Even if there is a long way to go, major broadcast network executives said in interviews that they were committed to integrating television and that there would be more minorities on prime time this year. 'The focus is definitely on,' said Mitsy Wilson, senior vice president for diversity development for Fox, a unit of the News Corporation.

'How we go about it may be different but we're all marching to the same beat.' ' Some advertisers said they had made diversity an expectation for both ad agencies and the networks. 'Gradually the networks will continue to move in that direction because we are,' said Maria Molina, a spokeswoman with Procter & Gamble, which two years ago created a multicultural marketing division to step up its reach into the market. But the competition is heating up from both ends.

Trying to attract not only Spanish-speakers but also young American-born Latinos, Univision is creating a second network in January aimed at bilingual Latinos who now watch mostly television in English. Telemundo has also announced plans to restart its current cable network in September as mun2, aimed at the 13-to-34 bicultural audience. While the new networks will still be in Spanish, they are expected to have more music, sports and other programming that crosses over well. Univision has already added original bilingual and English-language programming to its cable operation, Galavision. And just as Nickelodeon accepted bilingual advertising this year, Galavision announced last month that it would welcome some advertising in English.

Dora Cartoons