Breadwinners
Breadwinners (TV series)
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Breadwinners
Breadwinners logo.png
Genre Comedy
Format Animated series
Created by Steve Borst
Gary DiRaffale
Voices of Robbie Daymond
Eric Bauza
Composer(s) Tommy Sica
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 20 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Gary DiRaffale
Steve Borst
Producer(s) Lizabeth Velasco
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Nickelodeon Animation Studio
Broadcast
Original channel Nickelodeon
Picture format 1080i
Audio format Stereo
Original run February 17, 2014 – present
Breadwinners is an American animated television series produced by Nickelodeon. The
series was created by Gary DiRaffale and Steve Borst, and centers upon two
anthropomorphic ducks named SwaySway and Buhdeuce who run a bread delivery service.[1]
In February 2013 Nickelodeon announced that they had ordered a 20 episode season based
on the show's pilot episode.[2] A preview of the series, marketed as a "beak peek",
aired on February 17, 2014. The series began airing in its regular timeslot on
February 22, 2014.[3]
Contents
1 Plot
2 Cast
2.1 Additional cast
3 Production
4 Episodes
5 Reception
6 References
7 External links
Plot
SwaySway and Buhdeuce are carefree ducks who fly around in a rocket van delivering
bread to their customers. The best friends live together on their home planet,
Pondgea, and get into all sorts of adventures. SwaySway is the leader of the duo and
even though he does not always use the best judgment, he is a pro when it comes to
flying the van. Buhdeuce is a klutzy duck, but he is loyal to SwaySway and has plenty
of heart. Together, the friends have fun all the time while flying around delivering
bread.[3]
Cast
Robbie Daymond as SwaySway
Eric Bauza as Buhdeuce
Additional cast
Alexander Polinsky as Jelly
Fred Tatasciore as The Bread Maker
John DiMaggio as Lava Mole
Vanessa Marshall as Intercom lady
Kari Wahlgren as Ketta
Production
The show was conceived in a Studio City, Los Angeles efficiency apartment nicknamed
the "Doodle Chamber".[4] It was originally a 4½-minute cartoon about two feisty,
accident-prone ducks and was intended to be a one-off short film crafted to entertain
fellow animators at a short-film festival held at a New York bar.[4] Series creator
Gary DiRaffaele got an email from a Nickelodeon executive about the short film, which
he had posted on YouTube: "I thought it was spam," DiRaffaele said. "I couldn't
believe someone from Nickelodeon would contact me."[4] Within a couple of months,
Nickelodeon hired DiRaffaele and co-creator Steve Borst to expand Breadwinners into a
full-length television series.[4]
Episodes
Main article: List of Breadwinners episodes
Season Episodes Originally aired
Season premiere Season finale
1 20 February 17, 2014 TBA
Reception
David Hinckley of New York Daily News gave the pilot episode three out of five stars,
saying "Breadwinners captures well the silliness, absurdity and occasional total
grossness that should entice its target demographic of the very young".[5] Robert
Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times stated, "The show, which runs on speed and bad puns,
butt jokes, snatches of old-school hip-hop and house and arcade-game conventions, is
loud and often gross, but basically genial. It should not drive your children into a
life of crime. Apart from those moments when two characters, alarmed or aroused,
scream the same words in unison, which hurts daddy's head and has become altogether
too much of A Thing, I am inclined to bestow upon it my official critical
blessing."[6]
Toonzone was more critical, saying "In its pandering gross-out humor aimed at 6-11
year old boys, Breadwinners is eschewing any chance it has to obtain a larger audience
or to attract boys who aren’t necessarily thrilled by toilet and gross-out humor."[7]
The first episode scored 2.8 million viewers.[8]
Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media gave the show two out of five stars, stating:
Breadwinners relies heavily on wedgie and flatulence jokes to maintain kids'
attention through 30 minutes of generally bizarre plots and a parade of strange
characters. There's some merit to the dynamic duo's friendship and the fact that
neither leaves the other out to dry in any of their mishaps, but this kind of content
seems more a lucky byproduct than the intended message of a show in which silliness
and physical comedy rule supreme.
One thing the show does have going for it is a wealth of funny bread-related puns,
from delivering a "pumperknuckle punch" to a bad guy to saying goodbye with a
resounding, "Hasta la yeasta!" Unlike a well-worn poop joke, these never get old, but
then again, they're not likely to strike the same chord of hilarity with your kids.[9]
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