The Problem Solverz | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy Mystery |
Created by | Ben Jones |
Written by |
|
Directed by | Ben Jones |
Voices of |
|
Narrated by | John DiMaggio |
Composers |
|
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 13 (26 segments) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Producers |
|
Running time | 11 minutes |
Production companies |
|
Original release | |
Network | Cartoon Network |
Release | April 4 – September 29, 2011 |
Network | Netflix |
Release | March 30, 2013 |
The Problem Solverz is an American animated television series created by Ben Jones for Cartoon Network. It follows Alfe, Roba, and Horace; a group of detectives in their troubled town, Farboro.
The aforementioned characters were designed while Jones attended college in the 1990s; he later founded the art collective Paper Rad with Jessica and Jacob Ciocci. The characters were featured in Jones' and the collective's animations and comics before the creator pitched a pilot in 2007 to Adult Swim featuring the trio, collaborating with PFFR and Williams Street. [1] The network's executives referred Jones to Cartoon Network, who commissioned a series featuring the same characters. The series was produced in Adobe Flash, with around fifteen animators employed at Cartoon Network Studios and the co-production of Mirari Films.
The Problem Solverz was first aired on April 4, 2011. The first season consisted of nine episodes, concluding on September 29, 2011. A second and final season was released exclusively on Netflix in 2013. The show received extremely negative reviews from both audiences and critics, many considering it as one of the worst animated series ever made.
The series follows the eponymous detectives Alfe (Ben Jones), Roba (also Jones), and Horace (Kyle Kaplan). The trio take up solving, and sometimes creating, the numerous problems that plague their town, Farboro. To their aid is Tux Dog (John DiMaggio), an extremely wealthy dog who helps the Solverz in some of their cases but is just as often the source of their problems.
Alfe (pronounced Alfé) is a large, fluffy, fur monster (even though it was suggested that he may be "half-chocolate, half-mutt" in Neon Knome or that he was a man-dog-anteater by creator and voice actor Ben Jones during the 2011 San Diego Comic Con Panel) found and raised by Horace when both were young. He loves devouring large quantities of food, especially pizza and hamburgers, and acts impulsively during missions. Roba, Horace's twin brother and cyborg, is the smartest member of the group, but he suffers from insecurity and anxiety. Horace is the calm and collected leader of the team, usually applying common sense with his detective work and caring after Alfe.
Growing up in Pittsburgh, creator Ben Jones had an appreciation for comics and animation. [2] : 21 His father's Macintosh computer served as a vehicle for Jones to create art and influenced his later visual style. [3] Jones attended the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in the mid-1990s, where he became motivated to launch a project he could adapt to different media. [2] : 21 This impetus manifested itself in the characters Alfe, Horace, and Roba. [4] Tux Dog, another principal character, was designed while Jones was in primary school. After his graduation, Jones formed the art collective Paper Rad with Jessica and Jacob Ciocci in 2000. The collective moved that year to Providence, Rhode Island, to participate in the Fort Thunder music venue. [2] : 21 After the venue's closure in 2001, Jones released animations on the Web using Adobe Flash, with some featuring Alfe. [2] : 22
Paper Rad later produced animations with the premise of The Problem Solverz but with the three principal characters absent. [4] The collective's 2006 direct-to-DVD release Trash Talking features a segment called "Gone Cabin Carzy" in which Alfe, Horace, and Roba appear. [5] In tandem with these experiments, Jones worked as a television animator on Yo Gabba Gabba! and Wonder Showzen . [3] The year of the DVD's release, Jones talked to Nick Weidenfeld, then an executive producer at Adult Swim, about an idea for a series of his own. [4] The result was Neon Knome, a pilot produced by PFFR Productions and Williams Street in 2007, and released on Adult Swim's website two years later as part of a development contest sponsored by Burger King. [4] Mark Marek, who was known for his work on Nickelodeon's KaBlam! was one of the artists and animators for the short. After deciding the show's aesthetics were not a good fit for Adult Swim, who claimed it looked "too mind-blowingly cute" for their channel, the network's executives later referred Jones to Cartoon Network, believing his creativity would fit better there. Jones agreed to do business with Cartoon Network on the condition that Alfe be a character on The Problem Solverz. [2] : 21
Eric Pringle, a veteran of 2D digital animation, was employed as animation director, providing Jones with much technical assistance. Pringle's colleagues from Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends , another Cartoon Network production, comprised a team of around fifteen full-time animators at the network's studio, [2] : 22 all working on Apple computers. [3] Greg Miller was hired as supervising director, Martin Cendreda as technical director, and John Pham with Jon Vermilyea as character designers. Miller is the creator of Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones? , another series on the network. [4] Vermilyea worked also as a character designer on the network's series Adventure Time , while Cendreda, Pham, and Jones all contributed to the anthology comic book Kramers Ergot . [6] Michael Yank was employed as a writer for most episodes, with Mirari Films' CEO Eric Kaplan supervising the creation of scripts. [4]
The series was noted for its visual style employing highly saturated colors and varying shapes. [2] : 21 Jones was inspired by the limited-animated series Roger Ramjet and The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show , which he felt employed good character design, cohesiveness, jokes, and timing. [4] He credited The Problem Solverz as the first seamless use of Flash for television animation, with conceptualization and the end result occurring in the same program. Writing was the longest aspect of production, taking up to several months for the crew to conceive the story and draft a script. Animation was comparatively quicker, with the team delivering work in only a few weeks given the digital approach; Jones felt that the animators could play to the strengths of the fully digital animation process. [2] : 22
The show's criticism led to only 26 episodes being produced. 18 of which were produced during the first season in 2011. Towards the end of 2011, eight episodes were produced for the second and final season, and was supposed to air by the end of 2011 or any time in 2012, but due to the show's low ratings, they were only released through Netflix on March 30, 2013.
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | |||
Pilot | 2008 | Adult Swim | |||
Shorts | 2 | 2006 | 2007 | Direct-to-video | |
1 | 9 | April 4, 2011 | September 29, 2011 | Cartoon Network | |
2 | 4 | March 30, 2013 | Netflix |
The main Problem Solverz characters first appeared in an animated short entitled, "Alfe: Gone Cabin Carzy"[ sic ]. The short was created and produced by the art collective Paper Rad, and was written by Ben Jones. This short was included on their DVD Trash Talking, published by Load Records in 2006.
The second Paper Rad animated short, "Problem Solvers", was released on a stand-alone DVD in 2008 as a bonus for the seventh volume of The Ganzfeld, a periodical book series written by Dan Nadel. Although it does not include the main Problem Solverz characters, it introduces the problem solving concept which Jones would use as the basis of his homonymous Cartoon Network series.
Title | Written and storyboarded by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|
"Alfe: Gone Cabin Carzy" | Ben Jones (as Paper Rad) | 2006 | |
Horace is convinced that there is radiation outside since they have not gone out for 5 days. Note: A prototype of Alfe's cousin Ralphe appears in this short. He also appears in two The Problem Solverz episodes, "Glam-Vampire Hunterz" and "Zazz Boyz Are Zazzing It Up". [7] | |||
"Problem Solvers" | Ben Jones (as Paper Rad) | 2008 | |
The short describes the adventures of six original characters: Dewey, T Bubbles, Pandemonia, Riviera, Buck, and D-O-G. It's composed of three segments ("Intro", "Dewey's Bike Ride", and "D-O-G's Song"), and from only two episodes:
Note: D-O-G, Dewey, and Buck are the only characters of the short that made cameo appearances in The Problem Solverz. |
The pilot episode "Neon Knome" was produced in 2007 [8] by PFFR and Williams Street for Adult Swim, and then released in 2010 on their official website [ citation needed ] as part of the "Big, Über, Network, Sampling" programming block.
Title | Written and directed by | Original release date | |
---|---|---|---|
"Neon Knome" | Ben Jones | June 13, 2007 | |
Horace, Alfe and Roba try to destroy a giant rollerblade appeared on their yard, but eventually end up getting lost in the forest. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Written by | Storyboarded by | Original air date | Prod. code | US viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1a | 1a | "Time Twister" | Eric Kaplan | Ben Jones | April 4, 2011 | 102 | 1.138 [9] |
The Problem Solverz encounter on the city's amusement park "Time Twister", a time-travelling rollercoaster that ages people. They solve the problem of people and seal the rollercoaster, but Alfe later uses it to satisfy his pizza cravings by traveling back in time and getting a slice of pizza, and ends up causing the appearance prehistoric animals to cause chaos in the city plus he turns into a baby. To put an end to this mess, the Solverz on the advice of Tux Dog must reverse the process destroying Time Twister through its core of Eternitron, a giant clock time monster. The trio achieves this through the many Alfe's clones collected by the same rollercoaster. Ask Alfe: Ask Alfe Instruction. | |||||||
1b | 1b | "Videogamez" | Michael Yank | Nick Bertonazzi | April 11, 2011 | 103 | 1.262 [10] |
Horace hinders a mission by being addicted to a video game, "Tomb of Nefertiti", given to him by Famitaro's owner Mr. Konishi, to kill its rogue AI. Horace himself continuing to play for 8 days, becoming hypnotized in the process until after the universe is threatened by the same video game enemies. To stop the invasion Alfe and Roba, with the help of a special cable given to them by Tux Dog, enter the game but must return before Horace completely turns into a virtual human block. Once finding him immediately the trio must pass the last three levels and then defeat the AI at the final level. Ask Alfe: What should I do if I have trouble falling asleep? | |||||||
2a | 2a | "K-999 and Da Little Explorerz" | Michael Yank | Nick Bertonazzi | April 18, 2011 | 104 | 1.152 [11] |
The Problem Solverz team up with K-999, a robot dog to stop a Girl Scout-aided alien invasion. Ask Alfe: My hair gets so tangled up! | |||||||
2b | 2b | "Awesome Banditz" | Michael Yank | Nick Bertonazzi | April 25, 2011 | 105 | 1.148 [12] |
The Problem Solverz are involved, thanks to the Police Captain of the city's huge mall, in an underground elevator racing, world from which they capture a group of thieves place experts in this race, called the "Elevator Banditz". To capture Alfe and Roba go undercover, and to do dress up and look like them. Ask Alfe: I'm not sneaky enough. | |||||||
3a | 3a | "Funny Facez" | Michael Yank | Leo Riley | May 2, 2011 | 106 | 1.277 [13] |
The work of a funny-face artists named Tony Marv, which Roba is a biggest fan, is stolen due to someone who leaked the photos of him in his program for the next show. His assistant Buddy Huxton presents the Problem Solverz, who asked them to solve this problem, finding the culprit. At the beginning Roba and Horace are still in doubt to solve it due to Alfe, that under the effect of "Taco crazy" think they know you already know everything with a rangefinder taco, and doing even suspect that a loser funny-faces artist named Fungsten has not leaked the photos. But then discover that real culprit is still at large when the taco truck sign blocking the view. At the end the trio back to Buddy Huxton which, however, admits: he leaked that photos to postpone tonight's show of Tony, and in order to avenge him for his trauma as a child. Ask Alfe: What can I do at the beach? | |||||||
3b | 3b | "Hide and Seek Ninjaz" | Michael Yank | Nick Bertonazzi | May 9, 2011 | 107 | 1.424 [14] |
Alfe, Roba and Horace find some Go-Seeki Hide and Seek Ninjaz in whom kidnap a little girl of the Hido Clan's mom. Ask Alfe: I'm totally stumped! | |||||||
4a | 4a | "The Mayan Ice Cream Caper" | Eric Kaplan | Ben Jones | May 16, 2011 | 101 | 1.647 [15] |
The Problem Solverz are called upon to stop an ice-cream factory from being destroyed by its owner. Ask Alfe: From this episode onward, no Ask Alfe segments appear. | |||||||
4b | 4b | "Badcat" | Michael Yank | Casey Leonard | May 23, 2011 | 108 | 1.274 [16] |
Tux Dog gets over his head and tried to stop Badcat himself. The Problem Solverz promise the mayor to solve this problem. They enter Badcat's hideout, but Alfe and Roba refused because of their disguise. Horace insults the senses into them. | |||||||
5a | 5a | "Fauxboro" | Michael Yank | Casey Leonard | May 30, 2011 | 109 | 1.508 [17] |
The town of Farboro is getting a little stranger every minute; Alfe's drums sound weird, the root beer tastes bad, and the people of Farboro declare no more problems. Worse, they have been replaced by Bionic Zombies! If the gang doesn't stop them, they're toast! | |||||||
5b | 5b | "Magic Clock" | Michael Yank | Casey Leonard | June 6, 2011 | 110 | 1.498 [18] |
Alfe, Roba and Horace try to get back a stolen clock, followed by hardcore fan Katrina Rad turns on them, because she wants to use the clock to date Roba. | |||||||
6a | 6a | "Breakfast Wars" | Michael Yank | Casey Leonard | June 13, 2011 | 112 | 1.588 [19] |
Alfe, Roba and Horace try to find more cereal for a sugar-crazed kid. | |||||||
6b | 6b | "Zoo Cops" | Michael Yank | Casey Leonard | June 20, 2011 | 111 | 1.290 [20] |
The Problem Solverz try to help the zoo to capture Dork Face. But things goes bad when agent Lidget betrays the Problem Solverz, Dork Face sends them into a different world. Now Horace, Alfe and Roba have to get out in Flatland in time. | |||||||
7a | 7a | "Hamburger Cavez" | Michael Yank | Casey Leonard | August 25, 2011 | 114 | 1.125 [21] |
Horace and Roba force Alfe to go on a camping trip. Alfe, in a "mad-for-hamburgers" phase, wanders off looking for some, and stumbles upon an old cave and accidentally releases and gets possessed by a man eating spirit named Wendigo. Note: Stylized versions of Mordecai and Rigby are briefly shown. | |||||||
7b | 7b | "Puffy Puppiez" | Dave Tennant | Casey Leonard | September 1, 2011 | 115 | 1.055 [22] |
When Roba vows to take care of Miss May's puppies (much to the dismay of Alfe and Horace), things get complicated as the puppies destroy the trio's furniture and sends Roba spiraling into a craze. Meanwhile, Badcat (voiced in this episode by John DiMaggio) returns to exterminate and put all dogs in a "dog superjail" (a dog themed reference to Superjail! ). Later, Alfe enters a bike contest to save the dogs from Badcat's evil minions. | |||||||
8a | 8a | "Glam-Vampire Hunterz" | Dave Tennant | Casey Leonard | September 8, 2011 | 116 | 1.191 [23] |
Alfe, Roba & Horace try to stop a group of metal rock vampires from taking over Farboro. Later, Ralphe (Alfe's cousin and mentor) stops by for a visit and claims to know the secret method of destroying the Glam Metal Vampirez. In the end they find that Ralphe might not be all that he had claimed to be. | |||||||
8b | 8b | "Problem Solverz Academy" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | September 15, 2011 | 117 | 1.280 [24] |
Tux Dog sends the trio back to school to get better at solving problems. Roba becomes the "cool guy" and Horace finds out how tough it is to be the super dork. Later, Tux Dog sends K-999 too for training in the Problem Solverz Academy. | |||||||
9a | 9a | "Mermaid Raid" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | September 22, 2011 | 118 | 1.184 [25] |
Alfe pretends to be afraid of water, which prevents the Problem Solverz from answering a mermaid's distress call. | |||||||
9b | 9b | "Tux Dog's Island" | Michael Yank | Leo Riley | September 29, 2011 | 113 | 1.072 [26] |
The trio goes on a vacation to an island resort sent by Tux Dog. But Horace thinks the island is too perfect, and tries to find a problem to solve. |
Eight episodes were produced for Season 2 and were originally supposed to air in 2012, but were released through Netflix on March 30, 2013 due to the show's negative critical reception. [27] It never aired on television.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Written by | Storyboarded by | Original release date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10a | 1a | "Making of The Problem Solverz Video Game" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
When Mr. Konishi (from "Videogamez") is kicked out by his wife, the Solverz decide to take him in. | ||||||
10b | 1b | "Alfe is Da Boss" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
Alfe gains authority over the house and becomes corrupt beyond repair shortly after. | ||||||
11a | 2a | "Roba Has Dreadlocks" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
Roba becomes a hippie after he runs out of his precious hand sanitizer. | ||||||
11b | 2b | "Alfe Has a Baby" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
The Problem Solverz must care after the daughter of Alfe's Uncle Chocofus. | ||||||
12a | 3a | "Zazz Boyz are Zazzing it Up" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
Alfe and Roba form their own band, much to the chagrin of Horace when he is thrown out of the band due to his terrible vocal skills. | ||||||
12b | 3b | "Yogurt Nights" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
Alfe discovers that Roba and Horace attend a support group for people that live with fur monsters. NOTE: This episode reveals Alfe's species as a fur monster. | ||||||
13a | 4a | "Super Close TV Watching" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
The trio decide to join a league when Horace demonstrates his professional soccer skills. | ||||||
13b | 4b | "Alfe's Gonna Run Away" | Ryan Levin | Casey Leonard | March 30, 2013 | |
After being disciplined by Roba and Horace too many times, Alfe decides to leave the gang in search of more 'awesome' places. |
The Problem Solverz was first aired on April 4, 2011, on Cartoon Network. The premiere was seen by 1.1 million viewers, receiving a Nielsen rating of 0.8, in that 0.8 percent of families with a television set viewed the episode on that date. [28] The most-watched episode of the series ("The Mayan Ice Cream Caper") was seen by 1.6 million viewers. [29] Viewership fell with the first episode to have been aired on a Thursday ("Hamburger Cavez"), which was watched by 1.1 million viewers. [30] The first season concluded on September 29, 2011, after eighteen episodes. A second season consisting of eight episodes was released exclusively on Netflix on March 30, 2013. [31]
The series received mostly negative reviews from critics, who viewed the series as "dull, boring, and uninteresting"; but worse reviews from audiences and online viewers. Criticism of The Problem Solverz was directed at the visual style and writing. Rob Owen writing for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called the style reminiscent of Atari 5200 video games and wrote that viewers could "thank" or "blame" Jones for his creation. [3] For the magazine Variety , Brian Lowry disregarded the series as uninteresting and challenging to watch, the visuals and sounds weird for weirdness' sake. [32] Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media defined the series as misguided, its stories as undeveloped, and its visual style as unappealing. [33] The Weekly Alibi 's Devin D. O'Leary acknowledged the style as Paper Rad's own and found the writing more solid than that of Adult Swim's programming for which it could be mistaken. The jokes were not instantly funny according to O'Leary, but the visual style combined with the writing would provide amusement for Paper Rad's existing fans. [34] Critics felt that the series would've worked better had it been on Adult Swim instead of Cartoon Network.
Art-related publications, on the other hand, gave praise to Jones' creativity. Dan Nadel, a former publisher of Jones, lauded the series in The Comics Journal for the imagination displayed, "funny and humane and invaluable" at the same time. [4] Paper writer Sammy Harkham called The Problem Solverz "radical" and unlike any other series on television. [35] Geek Exchange writer Liz Ohanesian called the second season more "subdued" than the first, allowing viewers to concentrate on the principal character's relationships. She compared the series to the band Anamanaguchi, in that its unique and polarizing style makes fans of the series hard to find. [36]
Robotomy is an American animated television series created by Michael Buckley and Joe Deasy for Cartoon Network. The series ran from October 25, 2010 to January 24, 2011. The series revolves around Thrasher and Blastus, two teenage alien robots who live in the planet Insanus. It was produced by Cartoon Network Studios and World Leaders Entertainment, and co-executive produced and directed by Christy Karacas, creator of Superjail! and Ballmastrz: 9009. The series was the result of numerous failed pitches to the network by the creators.
Full Throttle Saloon is an American reality television reality series premiered on November 10, 2009. Based on the bar of the same name the show originally aired on truTV. The series chronicles the daily operations of the bar for which it is named. The Full Throttle Saloon is located in Sturgis, South Dakota and is known as the world's largest biker bar.
Benjamin Queair Jones is an American artist, animator, filmmaker, and voice actor. He was a co-founder and member of the art collective Paper Rad from 2001 to 2008, as well as his own studio Ben Jones Studio, Inc. in 2008. He has worked on various animated television programs and web series for Animation Domination High-Def (ADHD). Since 2017, Jones is the creative director of Bento Box Entertainment. He lives and works in Los Angeles, California.
The first season of the American animated sitcom Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated short films The Naïve Man from Lolliland and 2 in the AM PM. The season's production officially began on August 14, 2009, was produced by Cartoon Network Studios, and ran from September 6 to November 22, 2010.
The second season of the American animated television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated shorts 2 in the AM PM and The Naïve Man from Lolliland. Following its first season's success, Regular Show was renewed for a second season in 2009, ahead of its premiere. The season ran from November 29, 2010, to August 1, 2011, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios.
The third season of the American animated television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated shorts 2 in the AM PM and The Naïve Man from Lolliland. Following its second season's success, Regular Show was renewed for a third season on November 16, 2010, ahead of its second-season premiere. The season ran from September 19, 2011, to September 3, 2012, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios.
The fourth season of the American animated comedy television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated shorts 2 in the AM PM and The Naïve Man from Lolliland. Following its third season's success, Regular Show was renewed for a fourth season on October 26, 2011. The season ran from October 1, 2012, to August 12, 2013, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios.
The first season of Adventure Time, an American animated television series created by Pendleton Ward, premiered on Cartoon Network on April 5, 2010, and concluded on September 27, 2010, and was produced by Frederator Studios and Cartoon Network Studios. The series is based on a short produced for Frederator's Nicktoons Network animation incubator series Random! Cartoons. The season follows the adventures of Finn, a human boy, and his best friend and adoptive brother Jake, a dog with magical powers to change shape and size at will. Finn and Jake live in the post-apocalyptic Land of Ooo, where they interact with the other main characters of the show: Princess Bubblegum, The Ice King, Marceline the Vampire Queen, Lumpy Space Princess, and BMO.
The second season of Adventure Time, an American animated television series created by Pendleton Ward, premiered on Cartoon Network on October 11, 2010, and concluded on May 2, 2011, and was produced by Frederator Studios and Cartoon Network Studios. The season follows the adventures of Finn, a human boy, and his best friend and adoptive brother Jake, a dog with magical powers to change shape and size at will. Finn and Jake live in the post-apocalyptic Land of Ooo, where they interact with the other main characters of the show: Princess Bubblegum, The Ice King, Marceline the Vampire Queen, Lumpy Space Princess, and BMO.
The third season of Adventure Time, an American animated television series created by Pendleton Ward, premiered on Cartoon Network on July 11, 2011, and concluded on February 13, 2012, and was produced by Frederator Studios and Cartoon Network Studios. The season follows the adventures of Finn, a human boy, and his best friend and adoptive brother Jake, a dog with magical powers to change shape and size at will. Finn and Jake live in the post-apocalyptic Land of Ooo, where they interact with the other main characters of the show: Princess Bubblegum, The Ice King, Marceline the Vampire Queen, Lumpy Space Princess, and BMO.
Stone Quackers is an American adult animated television series created by Ben Jones. The series premiered October 27, 2014 on FXX as part of their Animation Domination High-Def block.