The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story

2018

Action / Documentary

12
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 88% · 8 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 94% · 50 ratings
IMDb Rating 7.5/10 10 1436 1.4K

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Plot summary

A journey behind the scenes of the Nickelodeon television network to chronicle its unprecedented success, from its humble origins as a small local channel to its status as an international phenomenon that helped shape an entire generation of children.


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October 29, 2022 at 06:36 PM

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1 hr 42 min
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1.71 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
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940.03 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
Seeds 1
1.7 GB
1904*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
Seeds 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Reviews_of_the_Dead 8 / 10

Informative Documentary Involving an Important Part of my Childhood

This was a documentary that Jaime and I watched together. We started it on a Friday night, I had to leave to catch a movie at the theater so we finished this the next day. We were intrigued to see this since to different degrees, we grew up with the shows that were on the channel, Nickelodeon.

We learn here about the history of this channel. From its humble beginnings in Columbus, Ohio to Geraldine Laybourne taking over and how her approach helped it grow. This also helps to explain why it did so well and the trend that it started with being the first channel dedicated to children. Looking back on it, it makes a lot of sense. During that time, not so much. There were children and teens along with adults who hadn't made it, taking on different shows with producers who were learning on the fly. If that doesn't sound like growing up, I'm not sure what else would.

This was fun to see the likes of Danny Cooksey, Lori Beth Denberg, Melissa Joan Hart, Kel Mitchell, Kenan Thompson and Marc Summers get interviewed. I remembered these people from my childhood years. What I didn't know was that Christine Taylor, Larisa Oleynik and others also got their start on Nickelodeon. Coupling with them are people behind the scenes and hearing their perspective adds another layer as well.

What I'll say is that this is a well-made documentary. I like that it hooked me. It then gives the history and going through the different years/era. It was informative. They edit scenes and clips that helped to showcase what they're conveying. There is a bit about each of the different shows and what their contribution was to the growth. The ending was sad, since my daughter won't know the world before this channel or how it changed what she will watch in her formative years. I enjoyed this quite a bit. I'd recommend it to people my age or those interested in how Nickelodeon changed children's television.

My Rating: 7.5 out of 10.

Reviewed by fischer_patrick 9 / 10

Great nostalgic look at Nick History

This is a really well done film. It does a great job in telling the history of Nickelodeon. It does so with great archival footage and modern day interviews with the biggest stars of Nickelodeon's past. A super fun and nostalgic trip down memory lane if you grew up in the 80's or 90's.

Reviewed by drqshadow-reviews 7 / 10

Fond Memories for Any Child of the 1990s

I came of age in the late '80s and early '90s, and in retrospect, I'm not sure there was a single more powerful influence on those formative years than Nickelodeon. Pinwheel and Danger Mouse colored my earliest memories, Double Dare and Mr. Wizard arrived a bit later, Salute Your Shorts and Ren & Stimpy spoke to me as a pre-teen... it seemed that as I grew and matured, so did the network, catering its programming to meet what I wanted or needed at that specific point in my life.

Looking back at it here, through a wide-angled lens, I was startled by how much of this material has lingered in my long-term memory banks and still, subtly, feeds my personality today. That's where The Orange Years makes its hay: coasting through a laundry list of beloved short-run TV shows and catchy pre-commercial bumpers, refreshing fond recollections in its audience while serving a dash of backstage skinny to better humanize the men and women behind this little network that could. And that's really what it was, at least in the early days: a boutique cable channel, catering to a very specific market, in an era before that was a proven formula.

The peeks behind the curtain are wonderful and inspiring - happy conversations with stars, creators and executives who are still jazzed about the product, twenty years after moving on - but the greater urge to service nearly every original property with some degree of inspection grows tiresome after nearly two hours. Should've been twenty minutes shorter.

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