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I redid this entire page in the grid format. All by myself. Enjoy- user:cowbellcity45
Just wondering in the episode "Married" the article states
After 9/11 Nickelodeon stopped airing this episode due to Helga's dream from the future in which the New York City skyline included the World Trade Center.
Yet it also states the airdate as being May 11, 2002. I remember watching this episode so I know it has been aired before. Can I get clarification on this? 97.99.25.214 01:21, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
Yes, a quick question. I looked through all the descriptions of all the eppisodes, but can't find mention of one in particular. Its one where Arnold accidently gets in a fight with Harold, so to get out of it he plays a song with the following words "Don't hit me, I'll hit me" Does anyone know what eppisode that is? VTPhantos ( talk) 07:29, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
The 1994 Hey Arnold! pilot (Arnold) was never aired on TV, only its remake (24 Hours to Live) was aired on TV. The pilot wasn't shown to the general public until July 10, 1996 as a theatrical short released through Harriet the Spy. 24.180.56.157 ( talk) 18:14, 2 August 2015 (UTC)
Grandpa's Packard aired after Phoebe's Little Problem, not before. I remember at the end of Grandpa's Packard, the "EXECUTIVE PRODUCER CRAIG BARTLETT" credit appeared and that only appears at the end of the second half of episodes of Hey Arnold!. 24.180.56.157 ( talk) 23:31, 2 August 2015 (UTC)
In this edit, Upgrader01 made a good-faith edit, changing a number of production codes, with the justification, "Correcting production order for Seasons 1-3. (The iTunes order is the production order)" The edit was not sound for a number of reasons, and I have reverted accordingly. Firstly, there was no reference. There was also no previous reference. If the claim is that the iTunes order is the production order, that needs to be demonstrated with something other than Upgrader's well-meaning assertion. Specifically, we need the 1.XX, 2.XX, 3.XX (and so on) production numbers to be sourced and to be matched with the correct episodes. If they cannot be sourced, they should be removed. Far more likely is that they were manufactured. Cyphoidbomb ( talk) 22:01, 12 October 2015 (UTC)
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Typically speaking, (and I'm not trying to be condescending, only detailed so that other readers can understand, should they care to) production codes are numerical coding used internally by a network, for billing, budgeting, organization, labor assignments, and so forth. These numbers are not always released, especially in children's animation. Let's say we're talking about a 22 minute animated series that has two 11-minute carts. Each cart might have a unique production code at the time they are being produced. This can be as simple as "101" for "season 1, cart 1", but can also be more complicated like "1ATX01". But when they ultimately get paired as a single episode, the episode may get a new episode number entirely, in which case we're really not talking about "production codes". Below, we've paired internal production codes 101 and 103 together because we want the same director working on the entire two-part episode. While 101 is being worked on, Director 2 is working on 102.
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What's up with the order of the episodes in the page? It's a bizarre mix of the DVD order and the original airing order (though some airdates are wrong) Should I re-organize the episodes into their "intended" order? This order is the one found on iTunes and Amazon Video. Upgrader01 ( talk) 02:34, 11 December 2015 (UTC)
This edit adds material based on a statement in a blog from the series' creator. Sort of. It says a fairly minor cartoon that ended 15 years ago is suddenly coming back.
Yes, WP:SPS carves out an exception from a recognized expert... blah... blah... blah. This is not about that.
The blog cited was created very recently (the day it was used here) and the posting cited is the only post on that blog. How do we know it was created by the series' creator? Because it says it is?
Were I interested in doing so, I could easily create a blog for "Donald Trump - President of the United States" and claim he has now revealed he plans to annex Canada, he has authorized the construction of a KFC in the Rose Garden and that he is an alien-human hybrid.
Why would anyone bother? Who knows? For several years we've had a vandal working their way through various kids TV shows creating new seasons of various long dead shows. Maybe some of their favorite shows were cancelled and the just can't cope with it. Sorry, Wikipedia isn't here for you to create a fantasy reality.
If this is actually the series' creator's own blog, it will not be the only place the future of the series is announced. At the moment, there is nothing to suggest this blog is in any way a reliable source for anything. - SummerPhD v2.0 18:16, 27 January 2019 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated List-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
I redid this entire page in the grid format. All by myself. Enjoy- user:cowbellcity45
Just wondering in the episode "Married" the article states
After 9/11 Nickelodeon stopped airing this episode due to Helga's dream from the future in which the New York City skyline included the World Trade Center.
Yet it also states the airdate as being May 11, 2002. I remember watching this episode so I know it has been aired before. Can I get clarification on this? 97.99.25.214 01:21, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
Yes, a quick question. I looked through all the descriptions of all the eppisodes, but can't find mention of one in particular. Its one where Arnold accidently gets in a fight with Harold, so to get out of it he plays a song with the following words "Don't hit me, I'll hit me" Does anyone know what eppisode that is? VTPhantos ( talk) 07:29, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
The 1994 Hey Arnold! pilot (Arnold) was never aired on TV, only its remake (24 Hours to Live) was aired on TV. The pilot wasn't shown to the general public until July 10, 1996 as a theatrical short released through Harriet the Spy. 24.180.56.157 ( talk) 18:14, 2 August 2015 (UTC)
Grandpa's Packard aired after Phoebe's Little Problem, not before. I remember at the end of Grandpa's Packard, the "EXECUTIVE PRODUCER CRAIG BARTLETT" credit appeared and that only appears at the end of the second half of episodes of Hey Arnold!. 24.180.56.157 ( talk) 23:31, 2 August 2015 (UTC)
In this edit, Upgrader01 made a good-faith edit, changing a number of production codes, with the justification, "Correcting production order for Seasons 1-3. (The iTunes order is the production order)" The edit was not sound for a number of reasons, and I have reverted accordingly. Firstly, there was no reference. There was also no previous reference. If the claim is that the iTunes order is the production order, that needs to be demonstrated with something other than Upgrader's well-meaning assertion. Specifically, we need the 1.XX, 2.XX, 3.XX (and so on) production numbers to be sourced and to be matched with the correct episodes. If they cannot be sourced, they should be removed. Far more likely is that they were manufactured. Cyphoidbomb ( talk) 22:01, 12 October 2015 (UTC)
Extended content
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Typically speaking, (and I'm not trying to be condescending, only detailed so that other readers can understand, should they care to) production codes are numerical coding used internally by a network, for billing, budgeting, organization, labor assignments, and so forth. These numbers are not always released, especially in children's animation. Let's say we're talking about a 22 minute animated series that has two 11-minute carts. Each cart might have a unique production code at the time they are being produced. This can be as simple as "101" for "season 1, cart 1", but can also be more complicated like "1ATX01". But when they ultimately get paired as a single episode, the episode may get a new episode number entirely, in which case we're really not talking about "production codes". Below, we've paired internal production codes 101 and 103 together because we want the same director working on the entire two-part episode. While 101 is being worked on, Director 2 is working on 102.
|
What's up with the order of the episodes in the page? It's a bizarre mix of the DVD order and the original airing order (though some airdates are wrong) Should I re-organize the episodes into their "intended" order? This order is the one found on iTunes and Amazon Video. Upgrader01 ( talk) 02:34, 11 December 2015 (UTC)
This edit adds material based on a statement in a blog from the series' creator. Sort of. It says a fairly minor cartoon that ended 15 years ago is suddenly coming back.
Yes, WP:SPS carves out an exception from a recognized expert... blah... blah... blah. This is not about that.
The blog cited was created very recently (the day it was used here) and the posting cited is the only post on that blog. How do we know it was created by the series' creator? Because it says it is?
Were I interested in doing so, I could easily create a blog for "Donald Trump - President of the United States" and claim he has now revealed he plans to annex Canada, he has authorized the construction of a KFC in the Rose Garden and that he is an alien-human hybrid.
Why would anyone bother? Who knows? For several years we've had a vandal working their way through various kids TV shows creating new seasons of various long dead shows. Maybe some of their favorite shows were cancelled and the just can't cope with it. Sorry, Wikipedia isn't here for you to create a fantasy reality.
If this is actually the series' creator's own blog, it will not be the only place the future of the series is announced. At the moment, there is nothing to suggest this blog is in any way a reliable source for anything. - SummerPhD v2.0 18:16, 27 January 2019 (UTC)