ProStars | |
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Genre | Animation |
Created by | Andy Heyward Douglas Booth |
Developed by | Rob Humphrey Jim Peterson |
Written by | Douglas Booth |
Starring | Michael Jordan Bo Jackson Wayne Gretzky |
Voices of | Dorian Harewood Dave Fennoy Townsend Coleman Diana Barrows Susan Silo |
Composer | Eric Allaman |
Country of origin | United States Italy |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Andy Heyward |
Producer | Kevin O'Donnell |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production companies | DIC Animation City Reteitalia S.p.A. |
Original release | |
Network | NBC (U.S.) Telecinco (Spain) |
Release | September 14 – December 7, 1991 |
ProStars is a cartoon television show featured on Saturday morning cartoon that aired on NBC from September 14 to December 7, 1991. [1] Three professional athletes from that era appear in the show in live action and as fictional super hero characters: Michael Jordan, Wayne Gretzky, and Bo Jackson. [2]
The series was produced by DIC Animation City and Reteitalia, S.p.A., in association with Spanish network Telecinco.
Originally intended to air on ESPN, the show centers on Michael Jordan, Bo Jackson and Wayne Gretzky fighting crime, helping children, and often protecting the environment as well. [3] These three were chosen to represent the pinnacle of all four major American professional sports in the early 1990s. While Jordan and Gretzky are broadly associated with their respective sports, Jackson was included since he could represent both football and baseball and was a high-profile celebrity off the field as well. A reference to his "Bo Knows" Nike ad-campaign was worked into almost every episode.
The stars appear in live-action sequences before the show, in which they would tell kids about the upcoming episode, and often answer questions from kids at the conclusion. Normally this is done solely by Gretzky and Jackson—often in separate sound stages and edited to appear as if talking to each other. Jordan's filmed bits were almost always one line or two, and not part of the skits before the episode. Most of the live-action parts by the athletes dealt with things such as morality. In one episode they explained ghosts stating that even they get scared sometimes, and that fear is a normal human emotion. In an episode with robot athletes, they explained how such an idea will never come to reality, as it goes against the dedication men put into their sport. However, during the animated segments of ProStars, their animated counterparts were voiced by voice actors instead of their actual selves.
When the show first came out, the original theme song, "We Are ProStars", was an homage to the song "We Will Rock You", by the rock group, Queen. In later episodes, the song was slowed down, and the chorus was reduced to "ProStars! Show staaaars!" The lyrics also reference the "Bo Knows" ad campaign, including the line "Bo knows everything".
Each character on ProStars has one stand-out character trait, especially the ProStars themselves:
In nearly every episode the ProStars would get a message by teleconference from a child explaining the situation such as a little boy from an island in the South Seas who said his village's treasures were being stolen by Short John Silver.
Most of the villains were standard cartoon fare and had often done villainous acts akin to cartoons of the early 1990s (such as Captain Planet and Free Willy ), namely environmental irresponsibility such as strip mining, coastal pollution, or deforestation of the rainforest.
Other times, a villain might hold a child for ransom, such as a mad scientist named Dr. Lobe who demanded the ProStars play his line of robot athletes in order to release a little girl he kidnapped. Episodes also touched upon kids in gangs, where an Australian village is being held captive by Gargantus' motorcycle gang and a little girl's brother joins the gang thinking they are macho to which Michael Jordan tells the little girl she cannot stop having faith or love in her brother. One episode dealt with the larceny of the Stanley Cup committed by Clockwork Delaronge (which is a personal issue for Wayne Gretzky as his name is carved on it four times) and he tells kids of the history and prestige of the award.
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DIC Video originally released three single VHS tapes of the series in 1991 containing the episodes "Knightmare Riders", "Short John's Revenge" and "The Slugger's Return". In the same year, BMG Kidz, through the DIC Toon-Time Video series, released three single VHS tapes with the episodes "Roll to Victory", "The Perbots of Dr. Lobe" and "The Valley of the Snow Falcon".
In October 2003, Sterling Entertainment released a DVD called "Slam Dunkin' with the Airman", containing the episodes "Gargantus and the Highway of Doom", "Knightmare Riders" and "Roll to Victory". This DVD was reissued by NCircle Entertainment in 2007. These sets went out-of-print in 2012.
As of today, NCircle has yet to release the complete series or even release the episodes separate on DVD or digital for reasons beyond WildBrain's control. [a]
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