It's a shame of how Nick focused more on live action during the late 2000s to early 2010s, specifically considering it was a bit of the opposite eariler in the 2000s. I felt that the sliver age in my opinion ended in 2008 with The Mighty Bee as I feel like it blends well with both the eariler stuff from the 2000s with the kid protagonist and the later stuff of the 2010s with its gross out humor.
Yeah. I agree. I still remembered watching 90s Nick cartoons back as a kid. (I was born in 2000 though.) For me, in my point of view, Nick was golden until 2004, when it became the silver age until 2009 (Nick's 30th anniversary & SB's 10th anniversary). There are shows that I like and don't like. I personally enjoyed SpongeBob S1 to S5 (the first 3 seasons are still gold to me), El Tigre, Back at the Barnyard, & Avatar.
I’m sure this is pure coincidence, but in 2008 the financial crisis happened, and I wouldn’t be surprised if live action shows were cheaper for them to produce than animated ones. Viacom who owns Nickelodeon is also perceived to be cheaper or penny pinching compared to the other conglomerates by some. Side note: I am of the opinion that 1992-2008 is the Golden Age of Cable, but that’s just me.
Well, take it from an old fogie like me, there was gross out humor from the beginning. Nicktoons debuted August 11th 1991, on my 7th Birthday, and with Rugrats barf/diaper humor/ earthworm eating and Ren & Stimpys over the top detailed bodily portrait paintings( to name a few besides the violent, maiming humor) with Rocko a mere 3 years away....this would give way to even more gross out humor to even the likes of Zim years later!😂
Well done. Although, there are few facts that must be added. Here's what I read and heard of... 1998 - Nick starts broadcasting in Asia (including my home country Philippines). However, in Sept 2009 (coinciding with the release of Nick's minimalist logo) Nick channel pulled off in Japan due to poor sales and viewership due to the popularity of Disney and natively anime (i.e. Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Pretty Cure). 1999 - The three SpongeBob pilots Help Wanted, Reef Blower, & Tree @ the Tree Dome aired on May 1 after KCA 1999. Two months later, July 17, season 1 continued airing. 2008 - Avatar: The Last Air Bender won the KCA 2008, making SpongeBob the only year without a KCA blimp. 2009 - Coinciding with the release of Nick's new splat-less, minimalist logo; Nick channel pulled off in Japan due to poor sales and viewership due to the popularity of Disney and natively anime (i.e. Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Pretty Cure). 2010 - Adventure Time aired for the first time in Cartoon Network after Nick rejected it. Three SB episodes A Pal for Gary, One Coarse Meal, & Yours Mine & Mine aired in SB S7 and Nick never banned them. 2013 - Paw Patrol premiered for the first time in Nick Jr. SB S9a episodes Little Yellow Book & SB You're Fired aired. Nick also never banned them. 2014 - The Loud House, as a short, aired. 2015 - Stephen Hillenberg (1961-2018) returned & the 2nd SB movie Sponge Out of Water released in cinemas. Harvey Beaks premiered but later ended two years later. Its creator C.H. Greenblatt complained about the harsh treatment Nick did via Tumblr, but later deleted it. Mr. Enter explained it also. 2016 - The Loud House premiered as a TV series. 2017 - The Loud House S2 episodes Brawl in the Family & No Such Luck aired and Nick never banned them. 2018 - Stephen HIllenberg passed away on Nov 26, 2018 due to ALS. Just before Nick greenlit spinoffs The Patrick Star Show & Kamp Koral. Some people (including Pall Tibbit in his Tweet) are against it because Stephen is against spinoffs. He told it to TV Business Journal (TBJ) before he passed away. 2022 - After nick returned their channel in Japan in 2018, it failed again, also due poor sales and viewership due to the popularity of Disney and natively anime (i.e. Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Pretty Cure). So they close it down. Nick in American & Japanese streaming apps in Japan also disappeared. As of 2024, I haven't seen any new Nick shows. SB & TLH is doing well, despite fans worrying about when those shows will end, while Paw Patrol in Nick Jr is still running but successful.
One thing I personally think Nick did to shoot themselves in the foot was tossing their "underperforming" shows onto their other channel during their silver era. They had some genuinely good shows that didn't get their time to shine. I loved Catscratch, Kappa Mikey, El Tigre, The X's, even Back at the Barnyard was good. btw does anyone remember The Secret Show?
Exactly The problem with Nickelodeon is due to putting new shows in their sister’s network and cancellations of shows on both networks especially not giving them a chance like Harvey beaks, mysticons, el Tigre, welcome to the Wayne and Sanjay and Craig. Especially removing shows by putting them on hiatus on another network such as glitch techs
1991-1999: golden age 2000-2006: silver age There was no bronze age AFAIC. Almost everything just sucked after 2006. Cartoon Network however did have a bronze age, from 2010-2016. Nick never recovered since the mid 2000s! Sure, they had better shows like most of their incarnations of TMNT and the first few seasons of The Loud House, but it has never been as good as it was between 1991-1999 or 2000-2006. Nick just doesn't understand kids from the 2010s and 2020s, like they did with those who grew up in the 90s and 2000s. I'm glad I grew up in the 90s and 2000s when Nick was still good.
2010-2016 was more of a renaissance for Cartoon Network than a bronze age. The originals from that period were easily better than what was being churned out from 2005-mid 2007. Chowder got them back on the right track and Adventure Time was the network's statement that they were officially back.
@@karmew32 The problem with Nickelodeon is due to putting new shows in their sister’s network and cancellations of shows on both networks especially not giving them a chance like Harvey beaks, mysticons, el Tigre, welcome to the Wayne and Sanjay and Craig. Especially removing shows by putting them on hiatus on another network such as glitch techs
Nickelodeon’s biggest downfall was right after 2006 due to putting new shows in their sister’s network and cancellations of shows on both networks especially not giving them a chance to match SpongeBob’s ratings like Harvey beaks, Making fiends, The X’s, mysticons, el Tigre, welcome to the Wayne and Sanjay and Craig. Especially removing shows by putting them on hiatus on another network such as glitch techs.
To be honest, the early 90’s of Nickelodeon was at their peak as the golden era while 1999-2005 still continues to showcase as the silver era. Even though Cartoon Network was having more competition to Nick than Disney channel since the early 2000’s, CN and Disney had demolished Nickelodeon from 2004-2014 due to Cyma Zarghami giving more live action appeal for nicks channel.
I watched Nick alot in the 2010's so I have thoughts on the "modern era" I mostly agree with the eras in this video but I feel like 2009's (technically 2010 by premieres since it would start with TUFF Puppy & Korra) era would end in 2016 with the end of Breadwinners and the start of the loud house. Notably from 2009-2016, while Nicktoons weren't lasting as long as past eras, Nick was still making a large amount of them with many airing at a time. However currently and since 2016. Most of the air time is JUST SpongeBob & The Loud House (moreso the loud house) and alot of nicktoons either only lasted one season or got pushed to streaming only like Pinky Malinky and Glitch Techs. Even then, we may even be in A NEW 2020's era from the 2016 one. Since Nick has focused alot more on co-productions and licensed shows like Big Nate, Monster High, and Transformers, or Zokie of Planet Ruby (an original idea from nelvana, only on Amazon Prime Video with no marketing). Along with SpongeBob Spinoffs and constant revivals (Avatar Studio, TMNT Again, Danny Phantom is back in graphic novel form after the Zim comics ended). I'd place this at either the logo change or the launch of Paramount+ Though this video mainly seems to use the template of Comic Eras, I feel like we could atleast be in a post-modern nicktoons era (if that even makes any sense). The separation of 2009-2016 & 2016-2021 is a bit iffy but it feels right as someone who was in the middle of it
It's kind of hard for me to track Nickelodeon's downfall, with Cartoon Network it was pretty easy because I could separate that in eras and when they started to fall, but with Nickelodeon i feel you could say alot of different times is when it really fell. For me, think the time Nick started to really fall off is around 06'ish to 07? At that time they stop airing most of the classics and then SpongeBob just took over the channel
Going a little off topic here,but i honestly think that even if Nickelodeon had a Resurrection era(And I hope this might be possible some century),I think people would continue to be hard on Nickelodeon after all the damage the channel has had in the last years+decade. And of course I can't judge these people since hoping that the Nickelodeon could be good again after so long really takes away these people hopes of wanting to at least give a little visit to Nickelodeon again.
I personally think the Silver Age began around the time Fairly OddParents premiered. Not only was it the first show that was a direct result of the Oh Yeah! Cartoons experiment (and thus unleashed a new batch of creatives on the network), but it also simply felt different from what was on the network at the time. SpongeBob and CatDog at the very least had some overlapping staff with and a somewhat similar feel to the shows that came before them, but Fairly OddParents seemed like something different entirely.
😊 Thanks for this amazing history complilation! Its both sweet and a little sad at the end of how Nick had changed. I will say this as an Older Nick-kid from the 80s, Call me Steelie Phil btw, there were some fun shows from that era. Sure we had alotta international toons such as David the Gnome, Danger Mouse and Count Duckula( arguable the very 1st Nicktoon as Nick execs vistied Thames studios and saw a Duckula image posted and screamed " WE WANT THAT AS A SHOW!!!"😂) but also excellent anime as well such as Saban's Grimms Fairtales and Maya the Bee. There were plenty of other shows segented as well as Nick was getting their footing, but when Nicktoons debuted August 11th 1991, it was not only on my 7th birthday, but changed everything as we got some incredible shows from awesome creatives. Hell Nick still would get a few other shows ( both international/ other network broadcasted reruns) sandwiched in its lineup; such as The Adventures of Tintin and Rupert Bear, to Beetlejuice, Tiny Toon Adventures, Pinky and the Brain and the goat himself, The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show!❤
The end of the silver age probably started behind the scenes around 2004 or 2005 but became fully visible by 2007. The decline in quality of mainstay shows like Spongebob and FOP as well as new ones and poor marketing being given to new ones. The schedule becoming dominated by a few of the biggest shows. Older shows from the previous period like Jimmy Neutron, Danny Phantom and Teenage Robot being cancelled. More focus on CGI, more focus on teen sitcoms. Shifting from original shows to more filmatic follow-ups to create the next Spongebob level thing.
Adding to that, FOP/Jimmy/Danny were actually cancelled right around the time Cyma took charge. Also noteworthy that 2006 was where the scheduling became lackluster for their non-cash cows
I don't really think Avatar is a true silver age show either, despite being successful. Even before it aired, the decision to extend Spongebob past it's first movie was already made even before the fourth season premiered. Plus, most of Herb Scannell's period was defined by oversaturating the Rugrats franchise, which neither Avatar, or the other 2005 shows were really there for (so calling Avatar a true silver age Nicktoon is kinda a stretch since it completely aired at a different period for priorities for the network). Plus, Action League Now is technically an official Nicktoon according to the Nick Animation Studio wiki, so it's not like Catscratch and The X's were really the first Nicktoons to be first season shows (more like they aired at the wrong time if anything, and I don't think the X's was screwed over because of Spongebob, but like for other reasons). Honestly, the only thing the 2005 shows have for being Silver Age Nicktoons is that they premiered before Cyma Zargami became president. But that's literally the only reason why they are silver age shows; 2005 as a whole feels like a transitional period if anything.
Nickelodeon has always had a history of milking their most successful shows well beyond death, but these last few years it's been worse than ever. All of their shows get canned after one season for not being juggernauts, and the channel literally only shows reruns of SpongeBob, The Loud House, and their spinoffs all day every day. It's sad, because they had some great Nicktoons in the mix. Harvey Beaks and Rise of the TMNT were phenomenal, and Welcome to the Wayne and Glitch Techs had an incredible amount of potential. But none of these shows were given a chance, and I think it only makes people more hesitant to give new Nicktoons a chance
@@Commenter839It’s a situation where linear television has declined since streaming took off, and as such channels try to keep shows that they know advertisers will want to fund on the air regardless of whether creators want to continue or not.
I've actually been going through every Nicktoon by the airdate- and I mean that by I made a whole list of every single episode from every Nicktoon in the airdate order, I've been working on a review series covering it- so I hope to have my own take on these eras too. Right now I've just started 2001, and for the Golden Age I'd have to feel like it ended with the Rugrats Movie, as scheduling by 1999 had so many episodes- probably the most packed year I've experienced- and it had such variety between every show. SpongeBob and Rocket Power adding onto it felt like a new stage in shows becoming a part of the Nicktoons brand, with the Nicktoons brand marketing also being a product of these shows- see Nicktoons Racing being the first official Nicktoons crossover, which is also one of the first examples of Nickelodeon prioritizing SpongeBob within their marketing.
At least for the NickToons channel it was the late 2000’s to early 2010’s as that’s when we got a lot of original/exclusive content such as NFL Rush Zone, Wolverine and the X-men, Zevo 3 and Dragon Ball Z Kai
i think you could make the argument there’s sort of a Pewter age from 2009-2012. yeah the rebrand happened but it wasn’t necessarily the end of the channels old energy. a lot of silver & bronze’s traits were carried over into the channel. spinoffs of Avatar and Jimmy Neutron, a co-productions with Dreamworks, TMNT, a third Hartman show with TUFF, etc. The quality could be argued for a lot of those shows but the effort was still there from creatives. I think 2012-2013 is the real cutoff point because it also marks the end of cable being well, relevant. and those who would be watching would be more like…kids with no internet access. Of the big 3 i think Nick was the most effected by the increasing irrelevance of basic cable. also noting is that 2012 was the last year SB and FOP, the two big hitters of silver and bronze, stopped broadcasting new episodes in 4:3. that i think is a significant change worth mentioning. granted i grew up with this sort of post rebrand era so i could just be blowing smoke, but worth noting.
I was born in 1990 and as a typical 90's kid of the time, I was always on TV. So as someone who grew up with the channel, it was easy to notice the constantly changing tone and overall shift in vibe of Nickelodeon considering the evolution of the bumpers and animation styles of the shows. For me it goes as follows: Golden Age: The original Big Three (Doug, Rugrats, Ren/Stimpy), Rocko's Modern Life and Ahh Real Monsters. (Ends with Doug moving to Disney) Silver Age: Hey Arnold through The Wild Thornberrys (Ends with The Rugrats Movie) Bronze Age: Spongebob through Danny Phantom (Ends with the first Spongebob Movie) Modern/CGI Age: Avatar until the end
What I love so much about “Video Killed the Radio Star” is that it’s one of the most iconic 80’s songs ever, but was released in 1979 as the first music video on MTV. I’m not that old, but I love that fact. Long live the Buggles.
1997-2008 (everything from Hey Arnold to Avatar) was the golden age for me. I’m a little biased because that was my childhood. Avatar was the last Nick cartoon that I watched.
Im not an expert but I personally feel afterwards was an era going from Planet Sheen-Welcome To The Wayne (2010-2017) where although Im not sure if its a Dark Age (as there seems to have been enough successes) it was definitely the era where I think most would argue the Nicktoons were probably at their worst as outside of Korra, Loud House, and TMNT, along with maybe Tuff Puppy, KFP, and Winx (I dont really know theyre status of success) pretty much all of them seem to have failed critically and/or commercially with TLH (and maybe Tuff Puppy) being the only orignal(s) to be anywhere close to successful which I personally think Nick noticed leading to... The Franchise/Streaming Era (Hey Arnold The Jungle Movie-Now) As was becoming the norm for media in general Nickelodeon became focused on two things Netflix and nostalgia with every Nicktoon (with the exception of Pony, Middlemost Post, and RPS) being a franchise or a streaming exclusive (with Hey Arnold, Spongebob, Invader Zim, Ren and Stimpy, Rugrats, Avatar, Rocko, Fairly OddParents, The Loud House and TMNT getting new revivals and spinoffs of some sort (although the Ren and Stimpy revival isn't associated with Nickelodeon and is instead on Comedy Central (probably due to being more mature))
Yes, they did actually. 1997-2006 Silver Age is 2007-2010 Bronze Age is 2011-2014 Dark Age is 2015-2021 I haven’t watched since 2021 so I wouldn’t know but I assume it’s probably worse now..
For me, the Golden Age of Nicktoons started in 1991 and ended during the premiere of SpongeBob, as I feel like that would make a lot of sense. As for the Silver Age, I would say that ended with the finale of Avatar: The Last Airbender in 2008, which also saw the finale of All Grown Up. Although, I could see an arguement for it ending in 2009 with the finale of My Life as a Teenage Robot. However, I do struggle with 2009 as that is when Fanboy & Chum-Chum premiered, and that show does not belong in any age imo. As for the Bronze Age...I question if there was one, and if there was, it didn't last long, with it starting in 2012 with the premiere of Korra and ending in 2020 with the end of the Rise of the TMNT finale. However...I don't really know if I should include the likes of The Loud House in that due to how controversial that series is.
Great video! I’ve been a Nickelodeon fan since I was a kid. However I grew out of it since I was in High school because some shows are getting worse. They are gems here and there, but it’s not what they were in their prime.
Coming back to this vid I feel my take only diverges with the ending of the silver era. Having a bronze era be that short seems off to me. Similar to what happened with the oh yeah cartoons clone in 2005, Teenage Robot and Chalkzone had episodes sat on for 3 years until 08' for nicktoons. 2006-2009 was the era of clear changes in priorities for the network which is why symbolically the retirement of the splat seems like a good marking for the end of the silver age. I'd include productions that started in the early to mid 00s simply because the late oughts seem like most limbo for animated productions in-house at Nickelodeon
I would call 2010 - 2015 the Dark Age of Nickelodeon, where their average was really low, with them release horrendous shows like Planet Sheen, Sanjay and Craig, and Breadwinners, and their good shows, say for TMNT, were mostly cancelled due to how bad the network treated it. 2016 to 2020 is what I call the Renaisance Period, when The Loud House premiered, and Stephen Hillinburg returned and helped Spongebob get back on its feet, The Fairly Odd Parents was put out of its misery and cancelled, all of their dark age shows were cancelled as well, and best of all, Zarghami finally resigned and was replaced with Brian Robbins, who, though not perfect, does have a better understanding of what Nickelodeon is than his predecessor. That of course ended in 2020 due to the pandemic as well as the rise of streaming, which is why I call this new era "The TV/Streaming Era", where many of their new shows would air on streaming due to it being easier to find success there.
I think it’s subjective as to what was Nickelodeon’s Golden Age and what was their Dark Age. I grew up in the late 2000s and Early to Mid 2010s Nickelodeon, so I basically think the Dark Age started in 2019, but ended in 2022, as I felt like Nickelodeon was becoming more like Paramount’s side dish rather then the equally owned company that Viacom owned alongside Paramount. Of course to most fans who grew up in the Early to Mid 2000s, they would think 2009 started the dark age of Nick. As for what the Golden Age was… it’s unclear. You could argue it’s the 90s or the Early To Mid 2000s, but that just depends on who you’re asking. I considered 2008-2013 the Silver Age, but again most people grew up in the Early to Mid 2000s, so they don’t think that. 90s Kids would obviously tell you the 90s was the Golden Age, but that’s just debatable. Edit: I decide to put together on what I think were the Nickelodeon Eras. Again, I strongly think it’s subjective as it just depends on you’re asking. But for me… this is what I think were Nickelodeon’s Eras. The Early Years (1977-1990): Most people wouldn’t remember Nickelodeon shows Pre-91, because none of the shows Nick aired weren’t made by them. Nick used to air Canadian & British shows back in the day. The 90s Era: As it states, it’s just every Nick show from the 90s. While the Nick Jr. & Nicktoons shows are talked about by many, only 90s kids would remember the Live Action stuff and non Nicktoons that aired on Nick. The Golden Age (2000-2005): This is where I think Nickelodeon were at its prime. The New Millennium really turned Nick into a quality network. The Transitionary Period/Black Sheep Era (2006-2008): This Era is largely a transitionary period as Nick shows we’re starting to become more modern, while still embracing the kid & teen mentality. The Silver Age (2008-2013) is pretty much Nick’s first foray into the Modern Era that is the 2010s. Most of these shows are underrated, and while Dan Schnider was involved with most of the live action shows, it was relatively successful. The Controversial Era (2013-2018): As the Cartoon Community became a large genre for Internet Discourse, Nick’s shows became much more controversial. While there were some good shows, this was when the Nicktoons Network became commonly known as the black wheel of death. This is also when I feel SpongeBob went from popular, to the most hated. It all got worse when Chris Savino was revealed to be a prick, Dan Schnider was revealed to be a creep, Stephen Hillenburg unfortunately died, and Butch Hartman left Nickelodeon thus destroying his own career when he announced the infamous Oaxis. 2019-2022 Was what I feel became the Dark Age of Nick, or at least Nick’s struggling period. Because of Covid and because Streaming became much more different then it used to, Nickelodeon became less of its own studio/company Viacom (Now known as Paramount) owned, and became more of a random studio Paramount uses to produced shows for streaming services. They basically became the Illumination to Paramount. It only didn’t help that most of Nick’s newer shows were either sent to Netflix with no advertising, or was a show Paramount’s own studio had actually made and not Nickelodeon themselves, like with Star Trek Prodigy and the early episodes of Transformers Earthspark. 2023-onwards is what I think is this new era we’re living in. While Nickelodeon is currently airing nothing but reruns & lesser shows, and given how Nick’s parent company cancelled shows that were good. We have been getting more shows that, while is currently reflective of our time, is pretty much what the 90s Era, the Golden Age, and the Silver Age had given us. That being shows which are more creative driven compared to Paramount’s handling of Nickelodeon during Covid, and any of the shows minus Harvey Beaks, TMNT, and SpongeBob, that happened on Nick in the Controversial Era. As I’ve stated before, the whole Nickelodeon Eras thing is just debatable and subjective, so don’t take what I said seriously. I know most people will disagree with this, but that’s just what I think of the Nick Eras. You have your own, I have mine.
In my opinion it was 1999-2013 In the 90's most of the shows range from decent to Outright boring (Rugrats, Ren And Stimpy and Hey Arnold and Rocko were the only amazing ones) And i didn't mind Nickelodeon focusing on live action more than cartoons because they were starting with live action than cartoons so it make kinda more sense (especially when at the time SpongeBob SquarePants and FOP were going downhill not saying that SS 4-5. And FOP 6-8 Are bad)
Maybe not being really related to this, but another thing worth noting though would be the use of CGI or flash to make their shows. From the 90s up to 2005, most of the shows were traditionally handmade (with the obvious exception being Jimmy Neutron or Kablam), and then 2007 onwards, a good majority of the shows were made in flash or CGI. They sorta went back to just sticking with making traditional 2D shows during the mid 2010s, but CGI shows started to become more common again around the 2020s. That's something I didn't notice until recently, funny enough.
Jimmy Neutron(2002) Tak (2007) Back at the Barnyard(2007) Penguins Of Madagascar(2009) Fanboy and Chum Chum(2009) Planet Sheen(2010) KFP: LOA(2011) Robot and Monster(2012) TMNT(2012) Monsters vs. Aliens(2013) That was their CGI phase.
@@alexkumaratunga2834 Ik like Kamp Koral and the Rugrats reboot. Have you ever noticed Fanboy and Chum Chum and Robot and Monster are the only 2 completely original CGI shows?
Maybe I'm an old fart, but when I think "golden age", I think strictly of the original 3 Nicktoons (and specifically in the case of Rugrats, the original 65-episode run). If anything I'd regard the era of Rocko, Arnold, CatDog, and the continuation of Rugrats as the silver age; and the stretch from the start of SpongeBob to the end of Avatar as the bronze age.
I love Rocko’s modern life I’m obsessed with that show I have almost every merchandise ever made including the 1997 plush I love everything Rocko’s modern life related as well as SpongeBob
Nick objectively had a golden age. Back in the day they had variety on the network. They had game shows, they had sitcoms, they had sketch shows, the shows felt different. Now they mostly play Spongebob and they are over-reliant on spin-offs and reboots. ( Spin offs and reboots can be good but originality is the best). They treat their original modern Nicktoons like garbage. They shoved Ruby of Planet Zookie onto Amazon Prime and didn't advertise it. That's good for me because I am a huge Spongebob fan. As a whole the quality of the individual Nicktoons has been good. Middlemost Post was cute and Rock Paper Scissors is pretty funny.
Imo, the golden age was 1991-1998, the sliver age was 1999-2005, the bronze (sorta dark) age was 2007-2017 and the revival/modern age was 2018-onward. I say the revival age since the network has actually gotten back up again with shows like Rise of the TMNT, It's Pony, Middlemost Post, The Patrick Star Show, Big Nate and Rock, Paper, Scissors. Even if we still have some crappy ones like the Rugrats reboot, The Casagrandes and Kamp Koral.
@@daymonharris8696 Rise of the TMNT and It's Pony too? And I'll agree with you somewhat. Even if we did get some good Nicktoons recently, I still think they pale in comparison to the great Nicktoons during 1991-2005. Even some of the ones from the bronze era were better too, like Harvey Beaks, T.U.F.F. Puppy, Breadwinners, Making Fiends and The Mighty B for example.
Nick was only a 7/10 at most. I only watched it as a kid cause my parents liked the shows and I wasn't allowed to change it to Cartoon Network ESPECIALLY when Toonami was on which is why I'm glad I got my own TV a bit later on :^).
Personally, I would just go with what shows were airing under who. It's like the only thing Nick has going for when it comes to categorizing shows anyways.
The golden age was definitely 1997-2006 in terms of variety of Nocktoons. Before that time there was only 5 of the same Nicktoons that played back to back lmao
Golden: everything from Rugrats probably up to SpongeBob Silver: Fairly Odd Parents to the end of Danny Phantom There is no Bronze Age. Nick stopped caring after 2009
@usanatv2007sentertainmentinc. no I meant Nick. The shows still came out but Nick didn’t care to promote them or keep them on long enough to carry anything just pushing SpongeBob and eventually the Loud House. They just didn’t care about their shows anymore. Still great vid either way.
@usanatv2007sentertainmentinc. I guess. It did seem though that they wanted to replace their new shows with something bigger and better which is why they kept going through some of them so quickly.
To me the golden age was the 90s but the silver age was the early 2000s until 2006. Then 2007 was when I did not like the line up from then onward when they started adding more CGI shows I disliked in the late 2000s apart from Jimmy Neutron (Fan Boy and Chum Chum, Planet Sheen, Back at The Barnyard), and then when they only focused on live action shows, from iCarly onward (though I do like Victorious as an exception, I hated iCarly). Then 2009 was when a lot of Nickolodeon rants on early youtube started to become a norm. When they devoted more time to just iCarly marathons and then all live action, to just Fairly Odd Parents and Spongebob, and then just Live Action and modern Spongebob. Nick did have live action shows, but they were fewer and imo were better quality pre-iCarly. Where from iCarly on their live action shows just got louder, dumber, less relatable and more gimmicky (Henry Danger, Fairly Odder).
When it comes to the Golden Age of anything, (like the Simpsons or Spongebob), it's honestly subjective. *I haven't watched the video yet, but I just wanted to comment that*
Actually Fairly Oddparents (And Invader Zim and Avatar: The Last Airbender as well, for that matter.) are just as much a part of Nickelodeon’s golden age as shows like Ren And Stimpy, Rocko and Hey Arnold.
The golden age of Nick:1991-2005 The bronze age of Nick:2006-2014 The silver age of Nick:2015-2023 The Renaissance age of Nick:2023-present It's kinda bittersweet Nick has changed over the years,but I just wish Nick needs to restart it's cartoon phase all over again and abandon their screwing over cartoons to Nicktoons/Netflix rule after 18 years. Keeping SpongeBob and Loud House alive as goldmines is fine,but Nick needs to make good stuff again after the last good stuff they did was in 2019-2020 with Rocko's Static Cling,Glitch Techs,and Invader Zim:Into The Florpus. Also,they need to stop running movies on their channel and revert Nicktoons back into a channel for both old and new Nicktoon reruns. Brian Robbins needs to know how to run the channel/brand better instead of making incompetent choices. Even CN had the same fate as Nick,but at least the people behind the channel weren't as incompetent as the ones behind Nick and CN is now struggling now with [adult swim] and Checkered Past,but now lost it's 5pm-8pm timeslots to [adult swim],had a few of it's shows purged off Max in 2022 and now available only for purchase(while locked away and preserved from existence by WBD),and it's original CNS headquarters shut down on Augest 2023 because of the Discovery merger. Even if they had Teen Titans Go!,they didn't rely on it much as Nick does to Loud House. CN is still having a few new shows coming out soon like Infinity:Fighter Girl,Marc Brown's Hop,Gumball-Season 7,and the PPG and Foster's reboots.
It has ages, but its weird "Golden age 1991 - 2007" Start of the first Nicktoons till that the awful logo change in 2009. The Worst age 2009 - up till about 2021, and now we are in the "recovery age." I don't see the end of the 90s as the end of the golden age because there wans't a decline in quality until the early 2010s.
In general, the Nicktoons have been good. The only ones I hate are The Patrick Show, Big Nate ( Its a disgrace to the comic strip), and Adventures of Kid Danger. So Nicktoons never had a golden age.
For me, it was the 90s to the late 2000s, which was the complete Golden Age of Nicktoons. It's a Shane they continued to focus so much more on live action shows and less on their animated shows thag are NOT SpongeBob.
My opinion the 1977 to 1988 era was the Orange age/Birthage. The 1989 to 1998 era was the Golden Age. The 1999 to 2005 era was the Silver age. The 2006 to 2010 era was the Bronze age. 2011 to present is the Dark Age.
Here are the eras of Nickelodeon according to most people 1977-1979 the pinwheel era 1979-1984 the early nick era 1985-1990 the orange splat era 1991-1998 the golden age 1998-2005 the silver age 2005-2009 the Bronze Age(which I feel started the decline of Nick) 2009-2015 the dark age 2016-present the still dark age but slight improvement era If you are wondering what I feel like most people say is when Nickelodeon started to suck I’d say it ranges from 1996(the Herb Scannel era) late 1998(the silver age)- mid 2005(the Bronze Age) One thing I also wanted to mention is that for some people the silver age starts with either the wild Thornberry’s, SpongeBob, Rocket Power, As told by Ginger, or The fairly oddparents and invader zim.
Cartoon Network might’ve went from Golden, to bronze, to Silver, or even Golden again. You had the OG cartoons, then the shitty live action period, then the renaissance era.
I say that the definition of Bronze Age Nicktoons needs to be longer. Most of the late ‘00s crop of Nicktoons carried over through the new logo, and the next significant batch would have to be the Breadwinners/Sanjay/Korra/Harvey era of the mid ‘10s
For me Nickelodeon for comedy cartoons and drake and josh zoey 101 and the Amanda show Disney channel for movies and live action shows cartoon network for action cartoons samurai Jack teen titans dragon ball batman naruto justice league
Personally I would argue the bronze age ended at Harvey Beaks and Loud House was the start of the modern more reboot/spinoff based Era with shows like Patrick or Rugrats 2021.
Yes the golden era lasted only a few years but it was legendary. 98-05. So essentially the length of the Catdog series. I wouldve added 91-97, but the shows died so fast it hurt my heart as a kid. That mid 90s timeframe was ok but it was falling behind Disney, Fox kids, and a fast rising Cartoon Network.
Nickelodeon's best era was absolutely in the 90's and early 00's when I was a kid.
It's a shame of how Nick focused more on live action during the late 2000s to early 2010s, specifically considering it was a bit of the opposite eariler in the 2000s. I felt that the sliver age in my opinion ended in 2008 with The Mighty Bee as I feel like it blends well with both the eariler stuff from the 2000s with the kid protagonist and the later stuff of the 2010s with its gross out humor.
Yeah I see the mighty B was the end of the golden age
Yeah. I agree. I still remembered watching 90s Nick cartoons back as a kid. (I was born in 2000 though.) For me, in my point of view, Nick was golden until 2004, when it became the silver age until 2009 (Nick's 30th anniversary & SB's 10th anniversary). There are shows that I like and don't like. I personally enjoyed SpongeBob S1 to S5 (the first 3 seasons are still gold to me), El Tigre, Back at the Barnyard, & Avatar.
I’m sure this is pure coincidence, but in 2008 the financial crisis happened, and I wouldn’t be surprised if live action shows were cheaper for them to produce than animated ones.
Viacom who owns Nickelodeon is also perceived to be cheaper or penny pinching compared to the other conglomerates by some.
Side note: I am of the opinion that 1992-2008 is the Golden Age of Cable, but that’s just me.
Well, take it from an old fogie like me, there was gross out humor from the beginning. Nicktoons debuted August 11th 1991, on my 7th Birthday, and with Rugrats barf/diaper humor/ earthworm eating and Ren & Stimpys over the top detailed bodily portrait paintings( to name a few besides the violent, maiming humor) with Rocko a mere 3 years away....this would give way to even more gross out humor to even the likes of Zim years later!😂
I think the point at which Nickelodeon declined in quality was after 2008.
Yeah. Probably started *right when the rebrand happened the next year.*
Yeah I kinda see fanboy and chum chum sorta as a sign of things to come after that era though overhated as it was back then it wasn't that bad.
That's a fair argument.
after penguins or making fiends
@@charlotteroot442 After The Mighty B!
If I'm gonna be honest here, I think Nickelodeon's downfall began when the network officially rebranded in late 2009.
That's just a fact. It's so clean cut. When the fun and iconic splat was replaced with at best curvy text, you knew the good days were over.
As someone who grew up late into the 2000s, I disagree. It’s just debatable.
I'd say about 1991-2005. The mid to late 2000s is when they started gearing away from animation.
Breaking down the production cycles for us really provides a fresh perspective on old intuitions
Agreed.
Certainly.
This video definitely gives you something you don’t normally hear.
Well done. Although, there are few facts that must be added. Here's what I read and heard of...
1998 - Nick starts broadcasting in Asia (including my home country Philippines). However, in Sept 2009 (coinciding with the release of Nick's minimalist logo) Nick channel pulled off in Japan due to poor sales and viewership due to the popularity of Disney and natively anime (i.e. Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Pretty Cure).
1999 - The three SpongeBob pilots Help Wanted, Reef Blower, & Tree @ the Tree Dome aired on May 1 after KCA 1999. Two months later, July 17, season 1 continued airing.
2008 - Avatar: The Last Air Bender won the KCA 2008, making SpongeBob the only year without a KCA blimp.
2009 - Coinciding with the release of Nick's new splat-less, minimalist logo; Nick channel pulled off in Japan due to poor sales and viewership due to the popularity of Disney and natively anime (i.e. Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Pretty Cure).
2010 - Adventure Time aired for the first time in Cartoon Network after Nick rejected it. Three SB episodes A Pal for Gary, One Coarse Meal, & Yours Mine & Mine aired in SB S7 and Nick never banned them.
2013 - Paw Patrol premiered for the first time in Nick Jr. SB S9a episodes Little Yellow Book & SB You're Fired aired. Nick also never banned them.
2014 - The Loud House, as a short, aired.
2015 - Stephen Hillenberg (1961-2018) returned & the 2nd SB movie Sponge Out of Water released in cinemas. Harvey Beaks premiered but later ended two years later. Its creator C.H. Greenblatt complained about the harsh treatment Nick did via Tumblr, but later deleted it. Mr. Enter explained it also.
2016 - The Loud House premiered as a TV series.
2017 - The Loud House S2 episodes Brawl in the Family & No Such Luck aired and Nick never banned them.
2018 - Stephen HIllenberg passed away on Nov 26, 2018 due to ALS. Just before Nick greenlit spinoffs The Patrick Star Show & Kamp Koral. Some people (including Pall Tibbit in his Tweet) are against it because Stephen is against spinoffs. He told it to TV Business Journal (TBJ) before he passed away.
2022 - After nick returned their channel in Japan in 2018, it failed again, also due poor sales and viewership due to the popularity of Disney and natively anime (i.e. Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Pretty Cure). So they close it down. Nick in American & Japanese streaming apps in Japan also disappeared.
As of 2024, I haven't seen any new Nick shows. SB & TLH is doing well, despite fans worrying about when those shows will end, while Paw Patrol in Nick Jr is still running but successful.
@pooplicker2010 well, Nick Jr is part of Nick though.
One thing I personally think Nick did to shoot themselves in the foot was tossing their "underperforming" shows onto their other channel during their silver era. They had some genuinely good shows that didn't get their time to shine. I loved Catscratch, Kappa Mikey, El Tigre, The X's, even Back at the Barnyard was good. btw does anyone remember The Secret Show?
Exactly The problem with Nickelodeon is due to putting new shows in their sister’s network and cancellations of shows on both networks especially not giving them a chance like Harvey beaks, mysticons, el Tigre, welcome to the Wayne and Sanjay and Craig. Especially removing shows by putting them on hiatus on another network such as glitch techs
1991-1999: golden age
2000-2006: silver age
There was no bronze age AFAIC. Almost everything just sucked after 2006. Cartoon Network however did have a bronze age, from 2010-2016. Nick never recovered since the mid 2000s! Sure, they had better shows like most of their incarnations of TMNT and the first few seasons of The Loud House, but it has never been as good as it was between 1991-1999 or 2000-2006. Nick just doesn't understand kids from the 2010s and 2020s, like they did with those who grew up in the 90s and 2000s. I'm glad I grew up in the 90s and 2000s when Nick was still good.
2010-2016 was more of a renaissance for Cartoon Network than a bronze age. The originals from that period were easily better than what was being churned out from 2005-mid 2007. Chowder got them back on the right track and Adventure Time was the network's statement that they were officially back.
More like 1991 - 2005.
@@karmew32 The problem with Nickelodeon is due to putting new shows in their sister’s network and cancellations of shows on both networks especially not giving them a chance like Harvey beaks, mysticons, el Tigre, welcome to the Wayne and Sanjay and Craig. Especially removing shows by putting them on hiatus on another network such as glitch techs
Accurate. Hit the nail on the head
Nickelodeon’s biggest downfall was right after 2006 due to putting new shows in their sister’s network and cancellations of shows on both networks especially not giving them a chance to match SpongeBob’s ratings like Harvey beaks, Making fiends, The X’s, mysticons, el Tigre, welcome to the Wayne and Sanjay and Craig. Especially removing shows by putting them on hiatus on another network such as glitch techs.
One thing you could've brought up in 1997 was Beavers being the first nicktoon to premiere after the kids choice awards
Yeah because catdog aired after the 1998 kca and spongebob after the 1999 kca
To be honest, the early 90’s of Nickelodeon was at their peak as the golden era while 1999-2005 still continues to showcase as the silver era. Even though Cartoon Network was having more competition to Nick than Disney channel since the early 2000’s, CN and Disney had demolished Nickelodeon from 2004-2014 due to Cyma Zarghami giving more live action appeal for nicks channel.
I love how panicked Otis looks when he's in the bronze rank
I watched Nick alot in the 2010's so I have thoughts on the "modern era"
I mostly agree with the eras in this video but I feel like 2009's (technically 2010 by premieres since it would start with TUFF Puppy & Korra) era would end in 2016 with the end of Breadwinners and the start of the loud house. Notably from 2009-2016, while Nicktoons weren't lasting as long as past eras, Nick was still making a large amount of them with many airing at a time.
However currently and since 2016. Most of the air time is JUST SpongeBob & The Loud House (moreso the loud house) and alot of nicktoons either only lasted one season or got pushed to streaming only like Pinky Malinky and Glitch Techs.
Even then, we may even be in A NEW 2020's era from the 2016 one. Since Nick has focused alot more on co-productions and licensed shows like Big Nate, Monster High, and Transformers, or Zokie of Planet Ruby (an original idea from nelvana, only on Amazon Prime Video with no marketing). Along with SpongeBob Spinoffs and constant revivals (Avatar Studio, TMNT Again, Danny Phantom is back in graphic novel form after the Zim comics ended). I'd place this at either the logo change or the launch of Paramount+
Though this video mainly seems to use the template of Comic Eras, I feel like we could atleast be in a post-modern nicktoons era (if that even makes any sense). The separation of 2009-2016 & 2016-2021 is a bit iffy but it feels right as someone who was in the middle of it
TRy WAtching "A better schedule for Nickelodeon's main block" by Evan Rosman
It's kind of hard for me to track Nickelodeon's downfall, with Cartoon Network it was pretty easy because I could separate that in eras and when they started to fall, but with Nickelodeon i feel you could say alot of different times is when it really fell. For me, think the time Nick started to really fall off is around 06'ish to 07? At that time they stop airing most of the classics and then SpongeBob just took over the channel
Going a little off topic here,but i honestly think that even if Nickelodeon had a Resurrection era(And I hope this might be possible some century),I think people would continue to be hard on Nickelodeon after all the damage the channel has had in the last years+decade.
And of course I can't judge these people since hoping that the Nickelodeon could be good again after so long really takes away these people hopes of wanting to at least give a little visit to Nickelodeon again.
I personally think the Silver Age began around the time Fairly OddParents premiered. Not only was it the first show that was a direct result of the Oh Yeah! Cartoons experiment (and thus unleashed a new batch of creatives on the network), but it also simply felt different from what was on the network at the time. SpongeBob and CatDog at the very least had some overlapping staff with and a somewhat similar feel to the shows that came before them, but Fairly OddParents seemed like something different entirely.
Also I love that background music at the end, the SpongeBob Movie game puzzle room
As a 2000s kid, I can concur that the 90s and 00’s era of Nicktoons were the best.
😊 Thanks for this amazing history complilation! Its both sweet and a little sad at the end of how Nick had changed. I will say this as an Older Nick-kid from the 80s, Call me Steelie Phil btw, there were some fun shows from that era.
Sure we had alotta international toons such as David the Gnome, Danger Mouse and Count Duckula( arguable the very 1st Nicktoon as Nick execs vistied Thames studios and saw a Duckula image posted and screamed " WE WANT THAT AS A SHOW!!!"😂) but also excellent anime as well such as Saban's Grimms Fairtales and Maya the Bee.
There were plenty of other shows segented as well as Nick was getting their footing, but when Nicktoons debuted August 11th 1991, it was not only on my 7th birthday, but changed everything as we got some incredible shows from awesome creatives. Hell Nick still would get a few other shows ( both international/ other network broadcasted reruns) sandwiched in its lineup; such as The Adventures of Tintin and Rupert Bear, to Beetlejuice, Tiny Toon Adventures, Pinky and the Brain and the goat himself, The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show!❤
The end of the silver age probably started behind the scenes around 2004 or 2005 but became fully visible by 2007.
The decline in quality of mainstay shows like Spongebob and FOP as well as new ones and poor marketing being given to new ones. The schedule becoming dominated by a few of the biggest shows. Older shows from the previous period like Jimmy Neutron, Danny Phantom and Teenage Robot being cancelled. More focus on CGI, more focus on teen sitcoms. Shifting from original shows to more filmatic follow-ups to create the next Spongebob level thing.
Adding to that, FOP/Jimmy/Danny were actually cancelled right around the time Cyma took charge. Also noteworthy that 2006 was where the scheduling became lackluster for their non-cash cows
I don't really think Avatar is a true silver age show either, despite being successful. Even before it aired, the decision to extend Spongebob past it's first movie was already made even before the fourth season premiered. Plus, most of Herb Scannell's period was defined by oversaturating the Rugrats franchise, which neither Avatar, or the other 2005 shows were really there for (so calling Avatar a true silver age Nicktoon is kinda a stretch since it completely aired at a different period for priorities for the network). Plus, Action League Now is technically an official Nicktoon according to the Nick Animation Studio wiki, so it's not like Catscratch and The X's were really the first Nicktoons to be first season shows (more like they aired at the wrong time if anything, and I don't think the X's was screwed over because of Spongebob, but like for other reasons).
Honestly, the only thing the 2005 shows have for being Silver Age Nicktoons is that they premiered before Cyma Zargami became president. But that's literally the only reason why they are silver age shows; 2005 as a whole feels like a transitional period if anything.
Nickelodeon has always had a history of milking their most successful shows well beyond death, but these last few years it's been worse than ever. All of their shows get canned after one season for not being juggernauts, and the channel literally only shows reruns of SpongeBob, The Loud House, and their spinoffs all day every day.
It's sad, because they had some great Nicktoons in the mix. Harvey Beaks and Rise of the TMNT were phenomenal, and Welcome to the Wayne and Glitch Techs had an incredible amount of potential. But none of these shows were given a chance, and I think it only makes people more hesitant to give new Nicktoons a chance
Action League Now was a one and done, but it remained an outlier in that regard until 05.
@@Commenter839It’s a situation where linear television has declined since streaming took off, and as such channels try to keep shows that they know advertisers will want to fund on the air regardless of whether creators want to continue or not.
6:14 Invader zim can he have a extra review for his anniversary?
I've actually been going through every Nicktoon by the airdate- and I mean that by I made a whole list of every single episode from every Nicktoon in the airdate order, I've been working on a review series covering it- so I hope to have my own take on these eras too. Right now I've just started 2001, and for the Golden Age I'd have to feel like it ended with the Rugrats Movie, as scheduling by 1999 had so many episodes- probably the most packed year I've experienced- and it had such variety between every show. SpongeBob and Rocket Power adding onto it felt like a new stage in shows becoming a part of the Nicktoons brand, with the Nicktoons brand marketing also being a product of these shows- see Nicktoons Racing being the first official Nicktoons crossover, which is also one of the first examples of Nickelodeon prioritizing SpongeBob within their marketing.
At least for the NickToons channel it was the late 2000’s to early 2010’s as that’s when we got a lot of original/exclusive content such as NFL Rush Zone, Wolverine and the X-men, Zevo 3 and Dragon Ball Z Kai
Back when the Nicktoons Network didn’t became the Nickelodeon Graveyard
i think you could make the argument there’s sort of a Pewter age from 2009-2012.
yeah the rebrand happened but it wasn’t necessarily the end of the channels old energy. a lot of silver & bronze’s traits were carried over into the channel. spinoffs of Avatar and Jimmy Neutron, a co-productions with Dreamworks, TMNT, a third Hartman show with TUFF, etc. The quality could be argued for a lot of those shows but the effort was still there from creatives.
I think 2012-2013 is the real cutoff point because it also marks the end of cable being well, relevant. and those who would be watching would be more like…kids with no internet access. Of the big 3 i think Nick was the most effected by the increasing irrelevance of basic cable. also noting is that 2012 was the last year SB and FOP, the two big hitters of silver and bronze, stopped broadcasting new episodes in 4:3. that i think is a significant change worth mentioning.
granted i grew up with this sort of post rebrand era so i could just be blowing smoke, but worth noting.
2005-2008
Spongebob Movie, Fairly OddParents still good, Danny Phantom, and of course or most importantly Avatar the last Airbender was airing
I was born in 1990 and as a typical 90's kid of the time, I was always on TV. So as someone who grew up with the channel, it was easy to notice the constantly changing tone and overall shift in vibe of Nickelodeon considering the evolution of the bumpers and animation styles of the shows. For me it goes as follows:
Golden Age: The original Big Three (Doug, Rugrats, Ren/Stimpy), Rocko's Modern Life and Ahh Real Monsters. (Ends with Doug moving to Disney)
Silver Age: Hey Arnold through The Wild Thornberrys (Ends with The Rugrats Movie)
Bronze Age: Spongebob through Danny Phantom (Ends with the first Spongebob Movie)
Modern/CGI Age: Avatar until the end
What I love so much about “Video Killed the Radio Star” is that it’s one of the most iconic 80’s songs ever, but was released in 1979 as the first music video on MTV. I’m not that old, but I love that fact. Long live the Buggles.
1997-2008 (everything from Hey Arnold to Avatar) was the golden age for me. I’m a little biased because that was my childhood. Avatar was the last Nick cartoon that I watched.
Im not an expert but I personally feel afterwards was an era going from Planet Sheen-Welcome To The Wayne (2010-2017) where although Im not sure if its a Dark Age (as there seems to have been enough successes) it was definitely the era where I think most would argue the Nicktoons were probably at their worst as outside of Korra, Loud House, and TMNT, along with maybe Tuff Puppy, KFP, and Winx (I dont really know theyre status of success) pretty much all of them seem to have failed critically and/or commercially with TLH (and maybe Tuff Puppy) being the only orignal(s) to be anywhere close to successful which I personally think Nick noticed leading to...
The Franchise/Streaming Era (Hey Arnold The Jungle Movie-Now) As was becoming the norm for media in general Nickelodeon became focused on two things Netflix and nostalgia with every Nicktoon (with the exception of Pony, Middlemost Post, and RPS) being a franchise or a streaming exclusive (with Hey Arnold, Spongebob, Invader Zim, Ren and Stimpy, Rugrats, Avatar, Rocko, Fairly OddParents, The Loud House and TMNT getting new revivals and spinoffs of some sort (although the Ren and Stimpy revival isn't associated with Nickelodeon and is instead on Comedy Central (probably due to being more mature))
Yes, they did actually. 1997-2006
Silver Age is 2007-2010
Bronze Age is 2011-2014
Dark Age is 2015-2021
I haven’t watched since 2021 so I wouldn’t know but I assume it’s probably worse now..
This is the only opinion I agree with. The golden age started with SpongeBob.
For me, the Golden Age of Nicktoons started in 1991 and ended during the premiere of SpongeBob, as I feel like that would make a lot of sense.
As for the Silver Age, I would say that ended with the finale of Avatar: The Last Airbender in 2008, which also saw the finale of All Grown Up. Although, I could see an arguement for it ending in 2009 with the finale of My Life as a Teenage Robot. However, I do struggle with 2009 as that is when Fanboy & Chum-Chum premiered, and that show does not belong in any age imo.
As for the Bronze Age...I question if there was one, and if there was, it didn't last long, with it starting in 2012 with the premiere of Korra and ending in 2020 with the end of the Rise of the TMNT finale. However...I don't really know if I should include the likes of The Loud House in that due to how controversial that series is.
10:31. Technically, that could also apply for The X's too since Carlos Ramos worked on a lot of Oh Yeah Cartoon shorts.
1990 to 2005 is the golden age of Nickelodeon. 15 years of almost perfection.
Great video! I’ve been a Nickelodeon fan since I was a kid. However I grew out of it since I was in High school because some shows are getting worse. They are gems here and there, but it’s not what they were in their prime.
Coming back to this vid I feel my take only diverges with the ending of the silver era. Having a bronze era be that short seems off to me. Similar to what happened with the oh yeah cartoons clone in 2005, Teenage Robot and Chalkzone had episodes sat on for 3 years until 08' for nicktoons. 2006-2009 was the era of clear changes in priorities for the network which is why symbolically the retirement of the splat seems like a good marking for the end of the silver age. I'd include productions that started in the early to mid 00s simply because the late oughts seem like most limbo for animated productions in-house at Nickelodeon
I would call 2010 - 2015 the Dark Age of Nickelodeon, where their average was really low, with them release horrendous shows like Planet Sheen, Sanjay and Craig, and Breadwinners, and their good shows, say for TMNT, were mostly cancelled due to how bad the network treated it. 2016 to 2020 is what I call the Renaisance Period, when The Loud House premiered, and Stephen Hillinburg returned and helped Spongebob get back on its feet, The Fairly Odd Parents was put out of its misery and cancelled, all of their dark age shows were cancelled as well, and best of all, Zarghami finally resigned and was replaced with Brian Robbins, who, though not perfect, does have a better understanding of what Nickelodeon is than his predecessor. That of course ended in 2020 due to the pandemic as well as the rise of streaming, which is why I call this new era "The TV/Streaming Era", where many of their new shows would air on streaming due to it being easier to find success there.
I think it’s subjective as to what was Nickelodeon’s Golden Age and what was their Dark Age. I grew up in the late 2000s and Early to Mid 2010s Nickelodeon, so I basically think the Dark Age started in 2019, but ended in 2022, as I felt like Nickelodeon was becoming more like Paramount’s side dish rather then the equally owned company that Viacom owned alongside Paramount.
Of course to most fans who grew up in the Early to Mid 2000s, they would think 2009 started the dark age of Nick.
As for what the Golden Age was… it’s unclear. You could argue it’s the 90s or the Early To Mid 2000s, but that just depends on who you’re asking. I considered 2008-2013 the Silver Age, but again most people grew up in the Early to Mid 2000s, so they don’t think that. 90s Kids would obviously tell you the 90s was the Golden Age, but that’s just debatable.
Edit: I decide to put together on what I think were the Nickelodeon Eras. Again, I strongly think it’s subjective as it just depends on you’re asking. But for me… this is what I think were Nickelodeon’s Eras.
The Early Years (1977-1990): Most people wouldn’t remember Nickelodeon shows Pre-91, because none of the shows Nick aired weren’t made by them. Nick used to air Canadian & British shows back in the day.
The 90s Era: As it states, it’s just every Nick show from the 90s. While the Nick Jr. & Nicktoons shows are talked about by many, only 90s kids would remember the Live Action stuff and non Nicktoons that aired on Nick.
The Golden Age (2000-2005): This is where I think Nickelodeon were at its prime. The New Millennium really turned Nick into a quality network.
The Transitionary Period/Black Sheep Era (2006-2008): This Era is largely a transitionary period as Nick shows we’re starting to become more modern, while still embracing the kid & teen mentality.
The Silver Age (2008-2013) is pretty much Nick’s first foray into the Modern Era that is the 2010s. Most of these shows are underrated, and while Dan Schnider was involved with most of the live action shows, it was relatively successful.
The Controversial Era (2013-2018): As the Cartoon Community became a large genre for Internet Discourse, Nick’s shows became much more controversial. While there were some good shows, this was when the Nicktoons Network became commonly known as the black wheel of death. This is also when I feel SpongeBob went from popular, to the most hated. It all got worse when Chris Savino was revealed to be a prick, Dan Schnider was revealed to be a creep, Stephen Hillenburg unfortunately died, and Butch Hartman left Nickelodeon thus destroying his own career when he announced the infamous Oaxis.
2019-2022 Was what I feel became the Dark Age of Nick, or at least Nick’s struggling period. Because of Covid and because Streaming became much more different then it used to, Nickelodeon became less of its own studio/company Viacom (Now known as Paramount) owned, and became more of a random studio Paramount uses to produced shows for streaming services. They basically became the Illumination to Paramount. It only didn’t help that most of Nick’s newer shows were either sent to Netflix with no advertising, or was a show Paramount’s own studio had actually made and not Nickelodeon themselves, like with Star Trek Prodigy and the early episodes of Transformers Earthspark.
2023-onwards is what I think is this new era we’re living in. While Nickelodeon is currently airing nothing but reruns & lesser shows, and given how Nick’s parent company cancelled shows that were good. We have been getting more shows that, while is currently reflective of our time, is pretty much what the 90s Era, the Golden Age, and the Silver Age had given us. That being shows which are more creative driven compared to Paramount’s handling of Nickelodeon during Covid, and any of the shows minus Harvey Beaks, TMNT, and SpongeBob, that happened on Nick in the Controversial Era.
As I’ve stated before, the whole Nickelodeon Eras thing is just debatable and subjective, so don’t take what I said seriously. I know most people will disagree with this, but that’s just what I think of the Nick Eras. You have your own, I have mine.
In my opinion it was 1999-2013
In the 90's most of the shows range from decent to Outright boring
(Rugrats, Ren And Stimpy and Hey Arnold and Rocko were the only amazing ones)
And i didn't mind Nickelodeon focusing on live action more than cartoons because they were starting with live action than cartoons so it make kinda more sense (especially when at the time SpongeBob SquarePants and FOP were going downhill not saying that SS 4-5. And FOP 6-8 Are bad)
Maybe not being really related to this, but another thing worth noting though would be the use of CGI or flash to make their shows. From the 90s up to 2005, most of the shows were traditionally handmade (with the obvious exception being Jimmy Neutron or Kablam), and then 2007 onwards, a good majority of the shows were made in flash or CGI. They sorta went back to just sticking with making traditional 2D shows during the mid 2010s, but CGI shows started to become more common again around the 2020s. That's something I didn't notice until recently, funny enough.
Jimmy Neutron(2002)
Tak (2007)
Back at the Barnyard(2007)
Penguins Of Madagascar(2009)
Fanboy and Chum Chum(2009)
Planet Sheen(2010)
KFP: LOA(2011)
Robot and Monster(2012)
TMNT(2012)
Monsters vs. Aliens(2013)
That was their CGI phase.
@@Brewart2012 True, but there's also the 2020 shows though.
@@alexkumaratunga2834 Ik like Kamp Koral and the Rugrats reboot. Have you ever noticed Fanboy and Chum Chum and Robot and Monster are the only 2 completely original CGI shows?
@@Brewart2012 I also didn't realize this.
Maybe I'm an old fart, but when I think "golden age", I think strictly of the original 3 Nicktoons (and specifically in the case of Rugrats, the original 65-episode run). If anything I'd regard the era of Rocko, Arnold, CatDog, and the continuation of Rugrats as the silver age; and the stretch from the start of SpongeBob to the end of Avatar as the bronze age.
Bring these shows back!!!
It's the Year Transitions on how I find out EAM is a Sonic fan.
I grew up watching Nick and CN cartoons from the 90s and 2000s!
Danny Phantom, Avatar, My Life As Teenage Robot and TMNT are my favorites Nicktoons
Catscratch is really underrated
I love Rocko’s modern life I’m obsessed with that show I have almost every merchandise ever made including the 1997 plush I love everything Rocko’s modern life related as well as SpongeBob
When I was a kid 2005 definitely felt like a turning point for Nick. That was when I started to not like the new cartoons as much
Invader zim review Extra ?
1997 is arguably nick's best year due to variety!
You should do a video similar to this one but about Cartoon Network!
Well it’s a good exlplaination of. Nicktoons history
Nick objectively had a golden age. Back in the day they had variety on the network. They had game shows, they had sitcoms, they had sketch shows, the shows felt different. Now they mostly play Spongebob and they are over-reliant on spin-offs and reboots. ( Spin offs and reboots can be good but originality is the best). They treat their original modern Nicktoons like garbage. They shoved Ruby of Planet Zookie onto Amazon Prime and didn't advertise it. That's good for me because I am a huge Spongebob fan. As a whole the quality of the individual Nicktoons has been good. Middlemost Post was cute and Rock Paper Scissors is pretty funny.
With television the way it is, we’ve probably seen the best variety that most cable channels are ever going to offer
Imo, the golden age was 1991-1998, the sliver age was 1999-2005, the bronze (sorta dark) age was 2007-2017 and the revival/modern age was 2018-onward.
I say the revival age since the network has actually gotten back up again with shows like Rise of the TMNT, It's Pony, Middlemost Post, The Patrick Star Show, Big Nate and Rock, Paper, Scissors. Even if we still have some crappy ones like the Rugrats reboot, The Casagrandes and Kamp Koral.
I wouldn't call this the Revival age at all all those shows that you named sucks sadly
@@daymonharris8696 Rise of the TMNT and It's Pony too?
And I'll agree with you somewhat. Even if we did get some good Nicktoons recently, I still think they pale in comparison to the great Nicktoons during 1991-2005. Even some of the ones from the bronze era were better too, like Harvey Beaks, T.U.F.F. Puppy, Breadwinners, Making Fiends and The Mighty B for example.
Nick was only a 7/10 at most. I only watched it as a kid cause my parents liked the shows and I wasn't allowed to change it to Cartoon Network ESPECIALLY when Toonami was on which is why I'm glad I got my own TV a bit later on :^).
What did they have against Cartoon Network?...
yea the 90s til 05 had some bangers
Personally, I would just go with what shows were airing under who. It's like the only thing Nick has going for when it comes to categorizing shows anyways.
The golden age was definitely 1997-2006 in terms of variety of Nocktoons. Before that time there was only 5 of the same Nicktoons that played back to back lmao
3:52 I Love The Rugrats Movie!
Invader zim anniversary is this march.
Golden: everything from Rugrats probably up to SpongeBob
Silver: Fairly Odd Parents to the end of Danny Phantom
There is no Bronze Age. Nick stopped caring after 2009
@usanatv2007sentertainmentinc. no I meant Nick. The shows still came out but Nick didn’t care to promote them or keep them on long enough to carry anything just pushing SpongeBob and eventually the Loud House. They just didn’t care about their shows anymore. Still great vid either way.
@usanatv2007sentertainmentinc. I guess. It did seem though that they wanted to replace their new shows with something bigger and better which is why they kept going through some of them so quickly.
With the rebrand on March 4, 2023, let's hope Nickelodeon gets back to doing what it does best.
To me the golden age was the 90s but the silver age was the early 2000s until 2006. Then 2007 was when I did not like the line up from then onward when they started adding more CGI shows I disliked in the late 2000s apart from Jimmy Neutron (Fan Boy and Chum Chum, Planet Sheen, Back at The Barnyard), and then when they only focused on live action shows, from iCarly onward (though I do like Victorious as an exception, I hated iCarly). Then 2009 was when a lot of Nickolodeon rants on early youtube started to become a norm.
When they devoted more time to just iCarly marathons and then all live action, to just Fairly Odd Parents and Spongebob, and then just Live Action and modern Spongebob. Nick did have live action shows, but they were fewer and imo were better quality pre-iCarly. Where from iCarly on their live action shows just got louder, dumber, less relatable and more gimmicky (Henry Danger, Fairly Odder).
When it comes to the Golden Age of anything, (like the Simpsons or Spongebob), it's honestly subjective. *I haven't watched the video yet, but I just wanted to comment that*
That’s fair to say.
I say overall Nick was good up through the mid 2000’s, and declined afterwards, but that’s just me.
@fortynights1513 plus, there's some show past the 2000s I genuinely like or find guilty pleasures in.
Actually Fairly Oddparents (And Invader Zim and Avatar: The Last Airbender as well, for that matter.) are just as much a part of Nickelodeon’s golden age as shows like Ren And Stimpy, Rocko and Hey Arnold.
Nah, that’s not how that works.
Even though Penguins of Madagascar is not an "original" Nicktoon, it's still a Nicktoon anyway.
It's an adoption.
@@bradyanderson6311yeah, that too
Haven't watched the video yet. Yes. It was when Tiny Toons was on the air.
Here’s my timeline
1990-2005: Golden Age
2006-2009: Silver Age
2009-2023: Bronze Age
2023-present: Renaissance Era
What shows make 2023 the start of a renaissance in your opinion?
The SpongeBob episodes getting better, international prints of 2024 shows, including the splat coming back, any 2023 show, etc.
Harvey beaks has its own platinum era
Harvey beaks was pretty good, still bummed they didn’t give it much of a chance.
The golden age of Nick:1991-2005
The bronze age of Nick:2006-2014
The silver age of Nick:2015-2023
The Renaissance age of Nick:2023-present
It's kinda bittersweet Nick has changed over the years,but I just wish Nick needs to restart it's cartoon phase all over again and abandon their screwing over cartoons to Nicktoons/Netflix rule after 18 years. Keeping SpongeBob and Loud House alive as goldmines is fine,but Nick needs to make good stuff again after the last good stuff they did was in 2019-2020 with Rocko's Static Cling,Glitch Techs,and Invader Zim:Into The Florpus. Also,they need to stop running movies on their channel and revert Nicktoons back into a channel for both old and new Nicktoon reruns. Brian Robbins needs to know how to run the channel/brand better instead of making incompetent choices.
Even CN had the same fate as Nick,but at least the people behind the channel weren't as incompetent as the ones behind Nick and CN is now struggling now with [adult swim] and Checkered Past,but now lost it's 5pm-8pm timeslots to [adult swim],had a few of it's shows purged off Max in 2022 and now available only for purchase(while locked away and preserved from existence by WBD),and it's original CNS headquarters shut down on Augest 2023 because of the Discovery merger. Even if they had Teen Titans Go!,they didn't rely on it much as Nick does to Loud House. CN is still having a few new shows coming out soon like Infinity:Fighter Girl,Marc Brown's Hop,Gumball-Season 7,and the PPG and Foster's reboots.
It has ages, but its weird "Golden age 1991 - 2007" Start of the first Nicktoons till that the awful logo change in 2009. The Worst age 2009 - up till about 2021, and now we are in the "recovery age." I don't see the end of the 90s as the end of the golden age because there wans't a decline in quality until the early 2010s.
In general, the Nicktoons have been good. The only ones I hate are The Patrick Show, Big Nate ( Its a disgrace to the comic strip), and Adventures of Kid Danger. So Nicktoons never had a golden age.
For me, it was the 90s to the late 2000s, which was the complete Golden Age of Nicktoons. It's a Shane they continued to focus so much more on live action shows and less on their animated shows thag are NOT SpongeBob.
Golden age of Nicktoons I think ended around 1998/1999
Next talk about nicktoons fron 2009 to now
My opinion the 1977 to 1988 era was the Orange age/Birthage. The 1989 to 1998 era was the Golden Age. The 1999 to 2005 era was the Silver age. The 2006 to 2010 era was the Bronze age. 2011 to present is the Dark Age.
Fanboy & Chum Chum, CatDog, & Back at the Barnyard are overhated imo.
Here are the eras of Nickelodeon according to most people
1977-1979 the pinwheel era
1979-1984 the early nick era
1985-1990 the orange splat era
1991-1998 the golden age
1998-2005 the silver age
2005-2009 the Bronze Age(which I feel started the decline of Nick)
2009-2015 the dark age
2016-present the still dark age but slight improvement era
If you are wondering what I feel like most people say is when Nickelodeon started to suck I’d say it ranges from 1996(the Herb Scannel era) late 1998(the silver age)- mid 2005(the Bronze Age)
One thing I also wanted to mention is that for some people the silver age starts with either the wild Thornberry’s, SpongeBob, Rocket Power, As told by Ginger, or The fairly oddparents and invader zim.
Is the early 2010’s the worst due to SpongeBob overexposure?
You also forgot Jimmy Neutron, Danny Phantom, Chalkzone, and Catscratch.
2:57 Since when does John K not like cartoons?
Making fiends was the last good nicktoon
Cartoon Network might’ve went from Golden, to bronze, to Silver, or even Golden again. You had the OG cartoons, then the shitty live action period, then the renaissance era.
I say that the definition of Bronze Age Nicktoons needs to be longer. Most of the late ‘00s crop of Nicktoons carried over through the new logo, and the next significant batch would have to be the Breadwinners/Sanjay/Korra/Harvey era of the mid ‘10s
Harvey beaks was the only great 2010s nicktoon during the renaissance era which they canceled 😞
Nah yall have nostalgia for your eras
Yes they did, 1999 to 2001
1999-2008 was the Golden Age. SpongeBob Fairly OddParents Jimmy Neutron and Avatar.
And Zim, Danny Phantom and Teenage Robot as well. Can’t forget about those classics.
That period was really good, but the years before then are also good too in my opinion.
NGL that year transition was super annoying.
Nickelodeon and Nicktoons were in it's golden age when they had Dragon Ball Z Kai
What did someone say at 6:58?
For me Nickelodeon for comedy cartoons and drake and josh zoey 101 and the Amanda show Disney channel for movies and live action shows cartoon network for action cartoons samurai Jack teen titans dragon ball batman naruto justice league
you forgot the nicktoon making fiends, it was very very mistreated by nick so hard.
Nickelodeon was launched in 1977, not 1979.
Personally I would argue the bronze age ended at Harvey Beaks and Loud House was the start of the modern more reboot/spinoff based Era with shows like Patrick or Rugrats 2021.
Yes the golden era lasted only a few years but it was legendary. 98-05. So essentially the length of the Catdog series. I wouldve added 91-97, but the shows died so fast it hurt my heart as a kid. That mid 90s timeframe was ok but it was falling behind Disney, Fox kids, and a fast rising Cartoon Network.