Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Patricia's Jewels: Oddworld: Abe's Odyssee (April Fools Swap with James Bevan)


The following post was from yesterday in honor of the Manic Expression April Fools' Day Swap. Each person who participated had to switch to another person's style of reviewing. I got James Bevan, who reviews a video game series called Jim's Gems. I hope you enjoy me not talking about Nickelodeon stuff.

Inspired by Derek Alexander (Happy Video Game Nerd) and James Bevan (Manic Expression)

Welcome to Patricia's Jewels, a video game series where I cover my favorite games. Whether it's triple "A", indie hits, cult classics, and underrated, obscure games that I feel deserve more recognition. Hopefully, my review will let you check out the game for yourself. Today's game we're going to cover is an underrated cinematic platformer back in 1997. Back in 1994, a new indie video game company by the name of Oddworld Inhabitants was founded by Lorne Lanning and Sherry McKenna. They wanted to step right outside the box of typical platformers that were hugely popular at the time such as Super Mario 64, Spyro the Dragon, and Crash Bandicoot by introducing a rich, complex universe taking place in the planet called Oddworld. They wanted to make the kind of games that they wanted to make, not the kind of games that were gaining popularity. So begins the Oddworld Quintology, a series of 5 games that would take place in Oddworld. The first game from this Quintology was Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee which debuted on the PlayStation on September 19, 1997.



The game stars our protagonist, Abe, a creature known as a Mudokin, who works as a slave in a meat-packing industry called RuptureFarms. While working overtime, he hears a conversation from his supervisor named Molluck the Glukkon saying that their stocks are going down and are at risk of going bankrupt. He comes up with the idea of using all the Mudokin slaves and use them as food called Mudokin Pops to bring up profits while saving money on getting other creatures for food. Abe, frightened at what he heard, is determined to save all the Mudokins before it's too late. 



The game plays similar to Prince of Persia and Out of this World, in which it's a simple 2D platformer with cinematic backgrounds, tough puzzles, and atmospheric music. The game features the amount of Mudokins that you have to rescue, the amount of Mudokins you already rescued, and the amount of Mudokins remaining. The character of Abe is a very simple minded, clumsy, and humble Mudokin. Remaining as a slave the majority of his life, he learned to take orders, but seeing his people in danger gets him the courage to rescue them and help them escape RuptureFarms. He meets up with different Mudokins that are normal, blind, confused, and suicidal. He uses an ability called GameSpeak to control the Mudokins and lead them to a portal that leads them out of RuptureFarms. Along the way, you learn different abilities such as telekinetic powers that you use to control the Glukkons, clever puzzles to get rid of them, and learn stealth to avoid them in tight spots. Abe travels to different ares in the game and learns new abilities and new things about his people. 



The story has a great mixture of humor and dark moments as you begin to learn about the Mudokins from Abe's visions from Big Face, a Mudokin Shaman, and the plans of Molluck the Glukkon containing greed and selfishness, and Abe's path to freeing his people. The scenary was really ahead of its time on the PlayStation. The scenary was both bright, dark, colorful, gritty, and atmospheric from the dark, depressing RuptureFarms to the lush, green forests of Paranormia, and the deserts of Scrabania. The music fits very well with the game by being ombious or catchy.

However, the game has its share of flaws. The controls are a bit dated by today's standards with the Triangle button to jump and the X button to pull off the GameSpeak, and the Square button to trigger Abe's abilities. Also, you have to save 1 Mudokin at a time and once you lose a Mudokin, they can't come back. They're dead and stay dead and you need a certain amount of them to get the good ending. Sometimes it isn't easy since it's a huge pain to control the Mudokins to lead them to the portal, especially the blind ones. But the biggest flaw in the entire game is that there are rarely any checkpoints in the game. There are a few, but once you die, you start in a level where you lose your progress unless you create a new save state on your PlayStation memory card every time you want to save. That can be a huge problem at times. However, those problems would be fixed in the later games.



Oddworld: Abe's Odyssee was received very well by gamers and critics alike, but complained of the "ugly" characters, confusing gameplay, and lack of save states. However, it was hugely praise for its innovation for cinematic platformers with its graphics, story, and gameplay. The later games to come out would improve the gameplay, continue the story, and introduce us to new characters and abilities. However, cinematic platformers lost interest to many gamers with the increasing popularity of 3D platformers and first-person shooters and the Oddworld Quintology had been hugely forgotten. In fact, the 5th game was never released due to the poor sales of games from the last two gamesMunch's Oddysee and Stranger's Wrath. However, more people are getting introduced to it due to the games being released on OnLive, the PlayStation Network, and XBOX Live Arcade. Coming this fall will be a HD reboot of Abe's Odyssee called Abe's Odysee New & Tasty will be released in the PlayStation 3, XBOX 360, and PlayStation Vita in honor of the game's 15th anniversary of its release. 

Overall, while there are a few flaws, Abe's Oddysee is a fantastic game that has a great story, beautiful graphics, atmospheric settings, and tough puzzles to solve. There's a lot of variety in this game and for people who love platformers, you deserve to check it out! 



Thursday, March 28, 2013

Old School Lane's Top 10 Worst Nickelodeon Opening Theme Songs

Not that long ago, I did a list of my top 20 favorite Nickelodeon theme songs. If you missed it, click right here. However, I came across a lot of really bad opening theme songs. Whether these songs are annoying, forgettable, generic, or ear cringing, these are the songs that make your ears bleed when listening to it and lessens your interest in watching whatever show that theme song is presenting. Here we are with my top 10 worst Nickelodeon opening theme songs.



10. Fanboy and Chum Chum

I wasn't too crazy with this show when it first came out so I skipped out on it. Then when Kevin said that it wasn't really bad, I decided to give it another chance. What I found was a very annoying show with annoying characters and a generic plot. The opening theme was too fast paced, annoying, and sporadic. Pretty much it's the show in a nut shell. It's pretty low on this list because the theme song kinda grew on me, but still I'm not too crazy for it.


9. Fifteen

Now we go from a way too fast paced show to a really boring, generic 90's teen sitcom intro. The opening theme song to the 1991 teen series is extremely outdated by today's standards. Everything about it is so bland: the settings, the introduction to the characters, the music, etc. Fifteen is forgotten by many people mostly due to the fact that there were way better shows that came out in Nickelodeon in 1991. Plus it was a Degrassi ripoff. Click to see it right here and you'll know what I mean. Speaking of ripoffs...

8. Welcome Freshmen

Here we have another Nickelodeon show that came out in 1991 that nobody remembers. The first two seasons were about a group of freshmen from high school doing skits that had a theme. Then around season 3, they changed the formula of the show and it became a Saved by the Bell ripoff. The opening theme is a very generic rock song that is very forgettable and it looks like the opening theme to Saved by the Bell and many other Saved by the Bell ripoffs that would later on air. Click right here to see it.

7. The Nick Cannon Show

"There ain't no party like a Nick Cannon party", eh? If your parties involve awkward conversations with random people and unfunny skits, then I'll pass. This song is a very generic early 00's rap song that repeats the same thing over and over. No, Nick Cannon. There are way better parties than a Nick Cannon party and apparently, everyone else agrees because this show sucked! It's the second worse All That spinoff of all time.



6. Romeo 

When it comes to really outdated early 00's rap, you can't go any worse than Romeo! This was the first Nickelodeon show that featured a celebrity and it was bad. The show was so boring, the majority of the characters were so bland, and the music was very forgettable. The opening theme is a perfect representation of what the show was going to be: a marketable product based on a then popular singer having a TV show based on music. The opening theme is so bad that he even uses a line from 50 Cent's "Get Shorty". Yeah...


5. 100 Deeds for Eddie McDowd

We now return to 90's Nickelodeon with another show that many people have forgotten of. 100 Deeds for Eddie McDowd is about a mean kid who gets turned into a dog. To be a kid again, he has to do 100 good deeds. The opening theme song is half exposition and half song. The song from the first season was forgettable and the song from Seasons 2 and 3 was Baha Men's "Who Let the Dogs Out?" That song was pretty much everywhere in 2000, so having it as an opening theme to a show is pretty bad when your original song was replaced by it. I've already talked about this show to death in my review of 100 Deeds of Eddie McDowd and my list of the top 20 Nickelodeon shows that I want to see being remade, so check those out and find out why no one remembers 100 Deeds for Eddie McDowd. It sucks that bad. It's the second worst Nickelodeon teen series in the 90's. What's the first? Let's find out.


4. Cousin Skeeter

Oh my God! There are so many things wrong with this show, it's not even funny. The synopsis is generic, the characters are bland, the episodes are forgettable, and the main character is a mean spirited jerk. To top the cherry of this cherry of this shitty sundae is the opening theme. If you listen carefully to the lyrics, you might be surprised on how dirty and sexual it is. The girls are singing about how much they "want" Skeeter. Then again, it was done by a TLC clone girl band named 702. The song was a shorter version of "Steelo" written by Missy Elliot. Let that information soak into you for one minute. A Nickelodeon teen series with an opening theme song written by Missy Elliot. I have no comment.


3. Butt Ugly Martians

One of the worst Nicktoons of all time certainly has a terrible theme song. This theme song is basically a lie. They promise butt kicking action and adventure, but what we get is boring characters, terrible animation, and episodes that don't remember seeing 30 seconds after you finish watching it. Many people don't seem to remember Butt Ugly Martians. That's because they were too busy watching The Fairly Oddparents, SpongeBob SquarePants, and Invader Zim to notice this mediocre cartoon.


2. The Mighty B!

Oh, Amy Poehler, what made you decide to create this awful, annoying cartoon? Everything about this show is horrendous. The opening theme song, just like Fanboy and Chum Chum's, is too fast paced and annoying. The lyrics repeat over and over again, it's completely random, and the music is awful. Everything about this opening theme is terrible and the show is a reflection on that. Click right here to listen to it.

1. The Brothers Flub

This is without a doubt the worst Nicktoon that ever aired in the 90's and the worst opening theme song in Nickelodeon history. It's loud, it's obnoxious, it's annoying, and it's irritating. There are no lyrics to this song. It's such someone going "la la la la la la la flub flub flub flub flub". That's it. It makes nails on a chalkboard sound like Beethoven. It's just plain awful. Listen to it for yourselves and tell me that you don't find it to be bad. I dare you. Again, this is another Nickelodeon show that no one remembers and thank God for that. 


Those are my top 10 worst Nickelodeon opening theme songs. Which opening theme songs from Nickelodeon makes you want to put ear plugs on? Post it in the comments below. 

Hope to see you around Old School Lane soon. Sorry for damaging your ears.

-Patricia













Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Old School Lane's Nickelodeon Tribute: A Rugrats Passover

Happy Passover, everyone! While you are celebrating the day of deliverance from Egypt while eating matzo ball soup and beef brisket, it's time to review the only Passover special that Nickelodeon has ever aired. That special is the one and only A Rugrats Passover. 



The special was conceived back in 1992 when Paul Germain, Arlene Klasky, and Gabor Csupo pitched the idea of a Hanukkah special to the Nickelodeon executives. As time went on, they decided to do a Passover special that was both informative and fun. Paul Germain and Rugrats storyboard writers Peter Gaffney, Rachel Lipman, and Jonathon Greenberg wrote the script and years later, the special debuted on April 13, 1995. Is this Passover special a miraculous masterpiece or should it be passed aside with the locusts and flies? This is A Rugrats Passover.



The special starts with Stu, Didi, and Tommy driving over to Didi's parents Boris and Minka to celebrate Passover. Stu wasn't really interested in going to Passover dinner since he's not Jewish, but Didi pushes him to go. Meanwhile Drew, Charlotte, and Angelica are driving over to Boris and Minka's house as well. Angelica wants to eat cookies, but learns that she can't because she can't eat any type of baked goods with yeast. Angelica questions on why she has to celebrate Passover since Boris and Minka are Tommy's grandparents and not hers. Regardless, they head over to the house. When they head over to the house, Minka opens the door with tears in her eyes since she can't find Boris. Boris and Minka had a big argument and now Boris is gone. Next, Chaz and Chuckie come over to the house for Passover celebration and it's decided that Stu would be in charge of leading the Passover dinner.



While Stu leads the dinner, Tommy, Chuckie, and Angelica leave to wander around and end up in the attic. When Angelica opens the door, she finds Boris in the corner and urges Angelica not to close the door. However, it's too late. Boris tells them to get comfortable since the door can only be opened from the outside. Angelica doesn't see it as a big deal since she says that Passover is a boring holiday. Boris objects and decides to tell them the story of the origins of Passover.



It starts with the Pharoah, played by Angelica, in a big boat being rowed by the Jewish slaves, portrayed as babies, in the Nile River. Meanwhile, she sees something in the bushes and meets up with Moses, played by Tommy. Angelica sees Tommy as a possible assistant and Tommy accepts without knowing that he is a baby. As time went on, he interacts with the other babies and he learns that they're bossed around by Angelica. Tommy doesn't see it to be fair so he decides to talk with Angelica. When he sees an Egyptian soldier, played by a toddler, pushing around a slave, played by Chuckie, Tommy steps up and pushes him. His hat fell off revealing that he's a baby. Eventually, Tommy ran away from Egypt for a long time and later on returned to Egypt with a mission to let all the babies free from Angelica's rule. Later on, Chaz wanders into the attic looking for Chuckie and accidentally closes the door. Chaz, knowing that he's stuck, sits next to Boris and the toddlers and listens to the rest of the story.  Eventually, Tommy ran away from Egypt for a long time and later on returned to Egypt with a mission to let all the babies free from Angelica's rule. Tommy encounters Angelica and warns her to let his babies go, but she says no.



Next, Tommy conjures up many plagues such as frogs, flies, locusts, and darkness to make Angelica change her mind. With every plague, she promises to let the babies go and changes her mind just as quickly. Drew and Charlotte find out that Angelica is missing and wander themselves into the attic. But then Charlotte closes the door and find themselves stuck. So they sit down and Boris continues with the story. Tommy releases the final plague which is to get rid of all the first born Egyptians. When Angelica learns that she's a first born, she makes a promise to Tommy to free all the babies in order for her to not being taking away. Tommy agrees. Didi, Stu, and Minka find out that everyone is missing and start to look around and make it to the attic. The adults all reunite and Angelica interrupts saying that she wants to know the end of the story. Boris finishes the story when the babies begin to pack up their stuff and head over to the Promised Land. When they stop at the Red Sea, Angelica and her soldiers charge them wanting to take the babies back to Egypt. Finding themselves trapped, Tommy opens up the Red Sea and they walk the path. Afterwards, the Red Sea closes and Angelica loses her babies. Tommy and the babies celebrate with them being free from Angelica's rule.



Boris concludes the story with the celebration of Passover to remember the Hebrews being free from the Egyptians. Didi says that it's time to finish the dinner, but the wind closes the door. Boris decides to tell another story about how his parents first met.

When this special first premiered, it was praised by many critics and viewers. At the time, there were rare times in which a kids' show would celebrate a Jewish holiday. To this day, A Rugrats Passover is the highest rated show as well as the most viewed holiday special in Nickelodeon history. A Rugrats Passover was the last episode of the 3rd season before the 3 year hiatus and the eventual dismissal of Paul Germain and many of the Rugrats animators and writers. What a way to end, in my opinion, the best seasons of Rugrats. It's a beloved classic that explains the origins of Passover in a way that kids could understand while still keeping the origins of the holiday. It still holds up to this day and I highly recommend checking it out!

That's all for now! Hope to see you around Old School Lane soon. Happy Passover!

-Patricia




Saturday, March 23, 2013

Mitchell Kriegman is releasing a Clarissa Explains it All Sequel


A quick news announcement about Mitchell Kriegman, the creator of Clarissa Explains it All, saying he's going to release the long awaited sequel to Clarissa Darling's story named Things I Can't Explain in Fall 2014...in book form. Is Patricia excited about this? Let's see.


To find out more about it, click on the link below.

http://shelf-life.ew.com/2013/03/22/clarissa-explains-it-all-things-i-cant-explain/

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Old School Lane Presents: Patricia's Top 20 Nickelodeon Opening Theme Songs

Regardless if a show is good or bad, the one thing I always look forward to watching is the opening theme to a TV show. Whether the music is upbeat, slow, fast, catchy, or calm, we always get that fuzzy warm feeling whenever we hear it. It's something that gets stuck in my mind for all eternity. Sometimes it's the background of the opening that makes us remember the show when seeing the main characters doing some cool thing that you may or may not see in the actual show itself. Due to the inspiration of Manic Expression member Infamous Jak's Secret Santa gift for me in his top 9 favorite Nickelodeon opening themes, I decided to do my own list. Here we go!

20. Rocket Power

This late 90's Klasky Csupo cartoon was really good at the time with its concept of kids who loved extreme sports. Due to the huge popularity of extreme sports, the X-Games, and legends like Tony Hawk, this was the show for them. However, it's a touch outdated since extreme sports don't have that huge following anymore. Plus it was very limited, only kids who love skateboarding, surfing, rollerblading, snowboarding, or street hockey would love something like Rocket Power. Nonetheless, the opening theme fits the concept of the show perfectly and the main characters doing the sports made it so exciting to watch.


19. Are You Afraid of the Dark?

When you're a kid watching this show at night alone in the dark, hearing this creepy theme song always gave you the chills. Then you get to the nitty, gritty of it, you're frightened by the spooky stories filled with monsters, ghosts, and supernatural beings. The opening theme to Are You Afraid of the Dark? captures the mood with the heart pounding in the background, the dark images, and the creepy music. Then it concludes with that lit match and then enters in the title. 


18. Nickelodeon GUTS

This opening theme song starts with someone asking you the question: do you have it? Then afterwards, it has a very catchy rap song that simply says only 5 words: do you have it? and GUTS! That's it. But for some reason, it really got you wanting to see the show! It was very simple, but for some reason it really works!


17. Danger Mouse

In the early 80's, Nickelodeon started to acquire cartoons alongside with their educational programs. One of the most popular ones was the British cartoon Danger Mouse. The song was very short, but it was catchy and exciting when you would see Danger Mouse dodging bombs and seeing that big title appearing. This cartoon holds a very special place into many people's hearts who grew up in the early 80's in America and Europe and is still popular to this day. 


16. My Life as a Teenage Robot

This early 00's Nicktoon is one of many cartoons that tells the plot of the show by its opening theme. It's very upbeat, catchy, and fast with the animation and the singing. The lyrics were very memorable and the action of the opening theme made you want to watch the show.


15. Caitlin's Way

One of my favorite underrated Nickelodeon shows of all time has a great underrated opening theme. The rock band Dig Circus did one of their songs "Wishing For a Sail" and it fits the show very well. The concept with Caitlin feeling alone and left out with moving to Montana with family members she never met. If you haven't listened to this song, check it out sometime.


14. You Can't Do That on Television

The opening theme really looks like it came from a Monty Python cartoon. The strangeness of a group of kids made in a sausage factory, going into a school bus by a water faucet and entering a school ending it with Les Lye's head being plastered with the title is eye-popping. Pretty strange to think about it when the show was just a sketch comedy show starring kids and teenagers, but it's still memorable.



13. Danny Phantom

Just like with My Life as a Teenage Robot, the entire plot in Danny Phantom is explained in the opening theme. It has a catchy, upbeat rap song explaining about how Danny got his ghost powers and the task he was giving to save his town. It was a fantastic concept of a TV show during the time in which the Ghostbusters series was pretty much dead. Danny Phantom and Luigi's Mansion were the only ones that kept the ghost concept relevant for kids until the Ghostbusters video game came out and talks about Ghostbusters 3 emerging again. However, it was a really cool opening theme that made me wanted to tune in.


12. Rugrats

It was one of the first opening themes that many people remember when tuning in to watch Nickelodeon and I can understand why. The catchy songs that was generated by Mark and Bob Mothersbaugh and the simple concept of babies walking around and playing made it a unique concept never seeing before when it came out in 1991. It's an opening theme that resonates in many people's childhood memories, including me. 


11. Hey Dude

If you've read my review on Hey Dude, you already know how much I HATE this show! But the one thing that was memorable about it was it's opening theme song. The first and pretty much only Nickelodeon show that was a western makes it a standout for this list. Everything else in Hey Dude sucks, but this opening theme is the only thing that they did right. I think that if the opening theme wasn't memorable, then nobody would remember this show. Seriously.


10. KaBlam! 

Based on the song "Two Toned Army" by The Toasters, the opening theme of KaBlam! was very catchy and memorable. The background was constantly changing and when watching this show back in 1996, I had no idea what it was about. Then I found out it was a variety show taking place in a comic book with shorts based on different animation. It was a unique concept that hasn't been done since and this is one of the shows that I want to see remade in Nickelodeon.


9. Hey Arnold!

Just like what Infamous Jak said about it, the atmosphere really sets the mood for what you're about to see. The song is a really nice jazzy tune, which was something very unique at the time, and the main characters interacting with each other in the big city made the scenery very big. It's one that really resides in my heart and one that won't be forgotten.


8. CatDog

Just like Hey Dude, it's another show that I don't really like, but has a great opening theme. Also just like Hey Dude, it's a country western song. Seriously, what is it with Nickelodeon having great country songs on bad shows? Anyway, what makes this song great was that the creator of CatDog, Peter Hannan, was the one who not only wrote the song, but sang it as well. That's creativity right there! It's a very catchy song that I sometimes can't stop listening to.


7. Double Dare

The very first game show for kids had a really fun, fast, and catchy theme song done by Edd Kalehoff, who did a lot of music for Nickelodeon around the mid to late 80's. Being my second favorite Nickelodeon game show of all time, it had a lot of things that made it a classic. The one thing that I fondly remember besides the physical challenges, the obstacle course, Robin, Harvey, and Marc Summers, was the opening theme song.


6. Spartacus and the Sun Beneath the Sea

This decent French cartoon from the 80's had an amazing, catchy theme song. You might recall hearing it in episode 2 of Nick Jukebox. While I said that the show was okay, I cannot deny what a great opening theme the show had. There were two opening themes to this show: the one sung by Pathfinder and the one sung by Menudo. I prefer Pathfinder's version: it's more catchy, memorable, and explains what the plot of the show is. If you haven't seen the show, check it out sometime. 


5. Invader Zim

This show was very weird, bizarre, dark, and strange. Same thing for the opening theme, which perfectly captures what you're getting into. The weird music combined with the introduction of the plot and characters without lyrics makes it a very hypnotic theme song. The style of Jhonen Vasquez is all over this show so from the moment you see this opening, you've entered into his crazy, psychotic mind. The thing about it is, you don't want to leave.



4. The Mysterious Cities of Gold

Another one of my favorite underrated Nickelodeon shows of all time has a fantastic opening theme. It opens to the explanation of the 1500's when explorers where traveling to the New World looking for treasures. Then it cuts to the main plot of looking for El Dorado and the introduction of the main characters. It's one of the most catchiest songs I've ever listened to and you may remember it in episode 2 of Nick Jukebox when I played the ending theme. Not to mention, it has a great soundtrack all together done by Haim Saban and Shuki Levi, the same guys who did the soundtrack to Inspector Gadget, He-Man and The Masters of the Universe, and Mighty Morphing Power Rangers. It's a great song that captures the show beautifully.





3. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012)

From what we've learned from in the 2003 series, the 1987 theme song was more memorable. The people behind the 2012 show knew that so they took the 1987 theme song and updated it to the 21st century. At first, it was strange to hear it like that. But now, it's one of my favorite theme songs of all time. It's like the old saying goes: "If it's not broken, don't fix it". It introduces the Turtles, it's very colorful, it's exciting, it's action packed, and it pays homage to not only the 1987 show, but to the comics, the 2003 show, and the movies while giving it a fresh twist. You can't ask for more.




2. As Told by Ginger

The song is wonderful! The lyrics perfectly paint a picture of what you can expect when watching the show. Sometimes you want to be able to reach a perfect life without realizing that you're already there. The show has a down-to-earth feel to it and the show's opening theme does as well. Originally sung by Macy Gray, then later on by Cree Summer, the last good Klasky Csupo Nicktoon was short, simple, and grounded. 


1. The Adventures of Pete & Pete

What can be said about this show? It's funny, it's strange, it's weird, it's surreal, and it's down-to-earth. The opening theme song "Hey Sandy" and the entire soundtrack of the show was mostly done by one band: Polaris. Sure it was basically the indie rock band Miracle Legion without the fourth member Ray Neal, but it didn't matter. Their songs capture the feel of The Adventures of Pete & Pete perfectly and it blended with all the show so well. In fact, I recently purchased the Pete & Pete soundtrack on iTunes. There's some nice songs in there. I played two songs from this soundtrack on episodes 1 and 3 of Nick Jukebox and the opening theme song is my favorite. 


That's my list of my top 20 Nickelodeon opening theme songs. What are your favorite opening theme songs from Nickelodeon? Post it in the comments below. 

That's all for now. Hope to see you around Old School Lane soon. Thanks for reading!

-Patricia












Monday, March 18, 2013

Nick Jukebox Episode 4: The Dream Master

In the fourth episode of Nick Jukebox, we take a look at songs from classic Nickelodeon shows from the 80's, 90's, and 00's. Expect songs from The Tomorrow People, Rocko's Modern Life, iCarly, and more.


Thursday, March 14, 2013

Writers Guild of America demands Nickelodeon to pay $3 million

A quick news update about Nickelodeon being demanded over $3 million dollars by the WGA and discussions about Nickelodeon's current state. To read the article, click the link below.

http://tv.yahoo.com/news/wga-west-demands-3m-bond-nickelodeon-over-payments-194937644.html