San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Texans flip back to favorite childhood shows for film onNickelod­eon’s ‘orange era’

- By Jeremy Hallock CORRESPOND­ENT Jeremy Hallock is a Dallas-based writer.

As kids attending elementary school in Conroe, Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney bonded over theirmutua­l love for one thing: Nickelodeo­n. Growing up before social media, they would call each other and talk for hours while watching the “anti-Disney” network for children.

Three decades later, they are still friends — “The Adventures of Pete & Pete” is still one of their favorite shows — and now they’ve made their first film as a team documentar­y and, no surprise, it’s about the first network for children.

“The Orange Years: The Nickelodeo­n Story,” available on video on demand, DVD and Blu-ray beginning Tuesday, focuses on the network’s beginnings in the late ’70s until just before the turn of the century, when Nickelodeo­n started thriving with toy sales during the “SpongeBob SquarePant­s” era.

The movie showcases the ’90s as Nickelodeo­n’s golden years — or the orange years, to reference the network’s old logo. Barber and Sweeney secured the first round of funding for the documentar­y by re-creating some of their favorite scenes fromthe Nickelodeo­n shows they grew up watching on the crowdfundi­ng site Indiegogo. Their project started turning heads when a preview was screened at New York Comic Con in 2017.

After Adam F. Goldberg, creator of the sitcom “The Goldbergs,” joined as executive producer, they were able to interview every person on their list. They were even allowed to use “The Goldbergs” stage for interviews.

“The Orange Years” includes former members of Nickelodeo­n’s creative team along with stars such as Kenan Thompson, the longtime “Saturday Night Live” cast member from “All That”; his “Kenan & Kel” co-star , Kel Mitchel; “Double Dare” host Marc Summers; “Clarissa Explains It All” star Melissa Joan Hart; voice of “SpongeBob SquarePant­s” TomKenny; and former teen idol Larisa Oleynik.

The nostalgia packs quite a punch for those who grew up

with cable in the ’90s, when the network was hitting its stride with both live-action shows and cartoons. Viewers will go gaga when they see footage of kids getting slimed on “You Can’t Do That on Television,” hear the theme song from “Salute Your Shorts” or when Hart addresses Clarissa’s love of They Might Be Giants. But as irreverent and entertaini­ng as the film is, it sticks to an informativ­e approach.

“Nostalgia might bring eyes to the table,” says Barber, 40, who still lives in Conroe and worked as an actor before developing an interest in filming and editing. “But it couldn’t just be a walk down memory lane. People have deep reactions when you bring these shows up, and we wanted to pull the curtain back and show that it wasn’t an accident.”

“We tried to make sure there were no empty calories in the film,” adds Sweeney, also 40, who lives in Austin and has a background

in screenwrit­ing. “On the surface, Nickelodeo­n wasmessy and there was slime. But there was deep and rich storytelli­ng and characters you loved for a reason. They found a way to connect and treat children like adults.”

“The Orange Years” has surprising revelation­s. Nickelodeo­n’s impact on animated series in the early ’90s wasmassive and swift. Back in 1991, its cartoons often had unusual storytelli­ng and looked like experiment­al animated shorts. But “Rugrats,” “Doug” and “The Ren & Stimpy Show” were all developed in just

two weeks.

“Creator-driven cartoons like ‘Rick and Morty’ really owe a lot to those shows,” Barber says. “Before that, cartoons for children were mostly on Saturday mornings. They had really flimsy scripts and were just commercial­s for toys.”

“The Orange Years” also reminds viewers that Hart was considered somewhat of a feminist pioneer when she starred in “Clarissa Explains It All.”

“There was an urban legend within the entertainm­ent community that girls will watch a boys show, but boys will not watch a girls show,” Barber explains. “Clarissa destroyed that.”

“I wanted to hang out with her as a friend,” Sweeney says. “She showed that it was OK to be eccentric. She was basically our generation’s Ferris Bueller.”

Marc Summers, who became the face of Nickelodeo­n, appears throughout the documentar­y and

seems as nice as one could hope a childhood hero to be. His decision to leave the network to spendmore time with his family near the end of the era covered in the film is particular­ly poignant.

“The way people feel about Mr. Rogers, they feel that same way about him,” Barber says. “He was like a babysitter or parent to a whole generation.”

“All of the people we interviewe­d were very authentic and selfless,” Sweeney says. “I think that bleeds into all of what Nickelodeo­n was about. We watched ‘The Mickey Mouse Club’ too, but it never felt accessible.

“As fun as it is to believe that you could be friends with a young Ryan Gosling or Britney Spears, it was never going to happen,” he continues. “But I felt like I could go to summer camp with the kids from ‘Salute Your Shorts.’ ”

 ?? Lee Leshen ?? Producer Shawn Cauthen, from left, meets with Kenan Thompson, and co-directors Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney.
Lee Leshen Producer Shawn Cauthen, from left, meets with Kenan Thompson, and co-directors Scott Barber and Adam Sweeney.
 ?? Adam McLaren ?? “People have deep reactions when you bring these shows up,” says co-director Scott Barber of Conroe.
Adam McLaren “People have deep reactions when you bring these shows up,” says co-director Scott Barber of Conroe.
 ?? Courtesy photo ?? The popular “Rugrats,” though appearing experiment­al, was developed in two short weeks.
Courtesy photo The popular “Rugrats,” though appearing experiment­al, was developed in two short weeks.

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