Nickelodeon Studios: A Complete History - Nick Knacks Episode

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • We take a long, year-by-year look at Nickelodeon Studios, the center of Nickelodeon's operation and the prize attraction of Universal Studios Florida. In what ways was it a good idea? In what ways was is it a bad idea? And just why did it ultimately fail?
    --CHAPTERS--
    0:00:00 - 1903
    0:06:40 - 1962
    0:17:58 - 1988
    0:32:52 - 1990
    0:47:11 - 1991
    0:54:29 - 1992
    0:59:26 - 1993
    1:04:20 - 1994
    1:06:16 - 1995
    1:11:21 - 1996
    1:14:52 - 1997
    1:19:28 - 1998
    1:23:08 - 1999
    1:25:25 - 2000
    1:27:55 - 2001
    1:31:25 - 2002
    1:32:16 - 2003
    1:33:37 - 2004
    1:34:23 - 2005 and beyond
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Komentáře • 524

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian Před rokem +301

    Without even hesitating, I think it's safe to say that this is the definitive documentary on the history of Nickelodeon Studios.

    • @PositionLight
      @PositionLight Před rokem +13

      Both Bright Sun Films and Defunctland took stabs at the topic, but they don't seem to be as comprehensive as I remember.

    • @davidbilu1166
      @davidbilu1166 Před rokem +6

      I worked there on the set around 2000. Ask me anything 😊

    • @hbmento8102
      @hbmento8102 Před rokem +5

      @@davidbilu1166 What was it like working at Nick during the early years of Spongebob? While Rugrats was still top dog at the time, what was the buzz surrounding the show before it was EVERYWHERE just years later?

    • @davidbilu1166
      @davidbilu1166 Před rokem +11

      @@hbmento8102 The arrival of SpongeBob was both a blessing and a curse. It marked the moment that Nickelodeon realized they could save a lot of money by syndicating an animated show worldwide instead of paying for live productions, sitcoms , and game shows which all required Soundstages, equipment, children on set, pay for actors, etc…
      It was the death-knell of Nickelodeon as we knew it. Also around the exact same time as SpongeBob went into “global phenomenon” status was the time that Jamie Lynn Spears, the underaged star of Zoe 101 and sister of Britney Spears, became pregnant at 14 years old. The rumors around Nickelodeon were rampant that one of the producers was the father of the child.
      So to kill 2 birds with one stone, they shifted all development from live production to animation, and shifted the entire production HQ slowly but surely from Nickelodeon Studios in Orlando to Los Angeles where the animation was set up.
      Rugrats was still very popular at the same time as I think the 2nd Rugrats movie had recently been released, as had The Wild Thornberries movie. I remember seeing all their displays up around the game lab for promotion

    • @VahanNisanian
      @VahanNisanian Před rokem +4

      @@davidbilu1166 People like me have called Spongebob "The only reason why Nickelodeon is still in business." Do you agree.

  •  Před rokem +115

    It's really admirable how serious you take doing these Nick Knacks documentaries. Some of the best content about TV history on the internet

  • @apbuitron
    @apbuitron Před rokem +132

    I got a private tour of Nick Studios for my make a wish in 1997. I saw the Keenan and Kel set and got slimed, I still have the certificate they gave me. The slime was warm and tasted like vanilla. The studio was everything my 7 year old heart wanted.

    • @mikesilva3868
      @mikesilva3868 Před rokem +4

      Went to Nickelodeon studios when I was 9 in 1993 at universal studios Florida with my family remember touching the snick couch and my mom telling at me great times 😊

    • @angelinacamacho8575
      @angelinacamacho8575 Před rokem

      I got to play Splat on the figure it out sound stage

    • @adamdavis1648
      @adamdavis1648 Před rokem +2

      I thought Make A Wish was only for kids who were *terminally* sick. 🤔

    • @apbuitron
      @apbuitron Před rokem +21

      No, it’s also for kids with permanent disability. I have cerebral palsy.

    • @Vinny792
      @Vinny792 Před rokem +1

      Nickelodeon slime made traditionally with vanilla pudding mix.

  • @EvanPrower
    @EvanPrower Před rokem +172

    The kid who said "adults don't care about the future because theirs is already half over" is so prescient. Truly from the mouths of babes.

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Před rokem +9

      Not necessarily, there's still plenty of adults who care, but either go about it the wrong way or don't really believe in the cause or just don't have the money or power or become authoritarian in their methods.

    • @normadgarmez7026
      @normadgarmez7026 Před rokem +7

      As an adult, I'm like "ooooooohhh what a burn... to the adults that might get their buttons pushed with that statement."

    • @michaelfarkas2257
      @michaelfarkas2257 Před rokem +1

      that kid is now 45

    • @nomadcowatbk
      @nomadcowatbk Před 11 měsíci

      @@michaelfarkas2257 and voted for Trump twice and probably will in 2024

    • @anthonyangelici2963
      @anthonyangelici2963 Před 11 měsíci

      @@normadgarmez7026 That's a perfect recipe for arguments occurring.

  • @emberjean4230
    @emberjean4230 Před rokem +92

    This is THE hype Nickelodeon moment for us older Nick kids who grew up watching the channel for sure. Also congrats, you officially did it before Defunctland will!

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem +16

      To be honest, as much as I love defunctland, these nick nack documentaries have been more in depth than any defunctland doc, and I don't say that lightly at all.

    • @GalaxyUnicorn
      @GalaxyUnicorn Před 10 měsíci +3

      I feel like Defunctland (or rather DefunctTV) is sort of a “gateway drug” to Nick Knacks, or really any sort of show like this. Defunctland lays out the basics in a way newer viewers can understand, and Nick Knacks is like the next layer of the iceberg - more in-depth and focused.

  • @Fribee83
    @Fribee83 Před rokem +60

    I had no idea that Nick Studios started to sink so quickly. Growing up in the early 90s meant always seeing the "Filmed at Nickelodeon Studios infront of a live studio audience" for every hit show. Guess by the time I grew up and stopped noticing every small change on the channel, they sank. At least I managed to go in 1993, saw the set of Welcome Back, Freshman and got to meet a bunch of Nicktoons.

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem +14

      They really did make it seem like it was some behemoth like MGM or Universal, when the fact that it was a fledgling overambitious mess from the getgo and had an incredibly short shelf life. It would have served them well if they had tried to acquire talent in the florida area (a very feasible idea, Miami is not too far away), and create a more regional, like a version of Hollywood, and in a sense that sort of what they did on the outset. If you see interviews from Marc Summers Kirk Fogg, or former producers and staff, they will talk about how everyone on set was talented but inexperienced. The atmosphere had more of a competent community theatre feel, than a major "Hollywood of the East" feel, and I think that really helped the illusion of accessibility that endeared kids to the network. If they had stuck with that, I think they could have developed a very profitable niche, and would have grown to a point where they have huge bases in LA and Orlando, and might have overtaken Disney as the face of children's entertainment.

    • @normadgarmez7026
      @normadgarmez7026 Před rokem +3

      Disney, Universal, and Nick thought Florida would be the next entertainment destination ( like California, New York and Georgia). Little did they realize, there's more to it than just making a building and calling it a day.

  • @BrynjaminButton
    @BrynjaminButton Před rokem +32

    45:15 Can confirm, my dad swiped a Nickelodeon Studios toilet paper roll and kept it as a souvenir for a very long time. Funny thing is they weren't even there for any of the Nickelodeon stuff, they were just leaving Universal Studios and it happened to be the closest bathroom on their way out.

  • @rdoino2210
    @rdoino2210 Před rokem +49

    As a 90s kid, Nick studios seemed like it was the center of the kid entertainment universe. Pretty incredible it was really only major attraction for a few short years

    • @mato4920
      @mato4920 Před rokem +12

      Yeah, the few things that were shot there were rerun so much that I never would've guessed how unsuccessful the studio ended up being lol

  • @jbwarner8626
    @jbwarner8626 Před rokem +26

    I took the Nickelodeon Studios tour in 1993, and it was like taking a pilgrimage to Mecca as far as I was concerned. I remember Soundstage 19 housed Weinerville at the time, which was my favorite Nick show that year, so even though they weren't filming the day I was there, just seeing the set was enough to make my day. Also, there was a prerecorded bit on the TV screens where Marc Weiner walked us through the prop and puppet room. "This is Zip, he gets thrown around a lot... oh, and here's my shoe, I've been looking for that..."
    I got to see a presentation on sound effect mixing for Rocko's Modern Life, which was a perfect choice because that show had amazing sound design. I remember being too weirded out to taste-test any slime in the kitchen - "Os it really edible, or are they messing with us?" And the video screens had been implemented into the Game Lab by this point, and I'm pretty sure there was some cross-promotion with the Ren and Stimpy SNES and Genesis games going on. And to top it all off, on the way out, they were handing out complimentary issues of Nickelodeon Magazine, which I would go on to subscribe to for the next seven years.
    This video was crazy informative! I always knew dreaming for Nickelodeon Studios to return was just a pipe dream, but now I better understand why. I had no idea it got so empty so quickly; as a kid, I just sort of assumed every Nickelodeon thing somehow happened there, whether it was live action or animated. Honestly, how they run things now is indisputably better, but the idea of letting kids visit and participate was a fantastic one, and played a huge part in why Nickelodeon meant so much to me in the '90s. It wasn't just shows you could watch, it was stuff you could do.

  • @SeiferA2001
    @SeiferA2001 Před rokem +38

    Before watching this Nick Knacks entry, I would’ve sided with the group that wants Nickelodeon Studios back.
    But after watching this? Yeaaaah I agree in that it truly was a product of its time.
    Amazing work as always!

    • @matthewhunter1193
      @matthewhunter1193 Před rokem +4

      I think most of the people who want it back are likely not aware of much, or any of the information listed in this video, and are likely just looking at the studio through nostalgia-filters.
      I'm sure they had a fun experience, but yeah, it wasn't a good idea at the end of the day, and it's best left as a relic from the studio's past.

    • @andrejg4136
      @andrejg4136 Před rokem +1

      @@matthewhunter1193 A part of me wishes it got converted into a living museum, or sorts, of all of Nickelodeon's history. But would that have been the best use of that particular space. Eh, probably not. But I still kinda want to see it.

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem +2

      For sure, and the fact that one of the driving forces was to exploit the terrible labor laws in florida has really dulled my enthusiasm for it.

  • @KaiserBeamz
    @KaiserBeamz Před rokem +77

    This was an eye-opening documentary. I kinda always knew Nickelodeon Studios had problems that caused it to shut down, but I had zero idea they went back that early in its run.

    • @dc9662
      @dc9662 Před rokem

      Hey! You have good taste, and I think your videos are amazing too!

    • @Justin-Hill-1987
      @Justin-Hill-1987 Před rokem +1

      Th unionization of showbusiness was just one of the first of many nails in the studio's coffin...the fact that Florida was a right-to-work state made working for Nickelodeon Studios in Orlando, Florida just as bad as working for a Wal-Mart store...

    • @teddyfurstman1997
      @teddyfurstman1997 Před rokem +1

      Your videos on Anime and Looney Tunes are so good. I also wish the Blue Man Group would stay at the Nick Studios Building in Universal Florida tbh. I do like their Astroplace NYC Shows.

    • @andrejg4136
      @andrejg4136 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, as a child of the 90s, I wanted to go to Nick Studios at least once. But the peak would have been when I was 7 (1992), which given how long the studio limped on, is a condemnation.

    • @anthonyangelici2963
      @anthonyangelici2963 Před 11 měsíci +2

      In the beginning it worked for a little bit. But once the novelty wore off and Roundhouse left for Cali, there was no way to stop the fracturing of the studio.

  • @ARRRRRRGH1
    @ARRRRRRGH1 Před rokem +43

    Glad to see this video carries on the Defunctland tradition of Michael Eisner jumpscares. Great video!

  • @TheItachiIshtar
    @TheItachiIshtar Před rokem +24

    Nick on Sunset is no longer running as a production facility, either, as it closed in 2017. The facility is now being restored back into the Earl Carroll Theatre, which was deemed a historic cultural monument by the city of Los Angeles in 2016. Since then, Nickelodeon has used other soundstages in the LA area, mainly the Burbank Studios.

  • @Starhound
    @Starhound Před rokem +27

    I graduated college in 2005. I had made it my plan the year before that my graduation gift to myself was going to be to go to Universal for the first time and finally, FINALLY, see the studio in person. I hadn't been aware of any of the issues going on behind the scenes with it, and didn't even know about it closing until I heard it announced that April. One month before my trip down. One of those "I just missed it..." deals that still kinda stings a little.

  • @righteatsrightpolitics1323

    I love the music cues for each year especially Nirvana 1991, Oasis 1995, and Brittany 1999. I didn't think anything could be better than your Double Dare video but this was SUPERB!

    • @VahanNisanian
      @VahanNisanian Před rokem +4

      I think they're Karaoke renditions, aren't they. Though "Gettin' Jiggy wit It" for 1998 sounded like the real thing. Still, I agree that they're all great song choices, and I don't mind if they're all Karaoke renditions.

    • @matthewhunter1193
      @matthewhunter1193 Před rokem +7

      Using Survivor in 2001 was honestly a stroke of genius.

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Před rokem +1

      There was Ace of Base, I think for 1994. All it did was remind of music's slow decline starting in the late 90s.

    • @digamejh
      @digamejh Před rokem +2

      I still don't know what 1988 and 1990 were though...

    • @matthewhunter1193
      @matthewhunter1193 Před rokem

      @@digamejh I mostly started noticing once it got to 1991. The only one I don't recognize was 1996, can anyone help me out there?

  • @Malkmusianful
    @Malkmusianful Před rokem +27

    I can safely say that the more you go into detail about this, the more that Nickelodeon Studios sounds like a chaotically bad idea.

    • @anthonyangelici2963
      @anthonyangelici2963 Před rokem +8

      What started off good quickly changed. While this change seemed very minor at first, you really start to see it happen a lot more later on....

  • @carlclo2988
    @carlclo2988 Před rokem +40

    Dang it, now I want an episode on Nick Magazine. Great work once again!

    • @googamp32
      @googamp32 Před rokem +2

      Patience. I know he's going through these topics at a glacial pace, but I'm sure he'll get to Nick Magazine, eventually.

    • @abiodunsulaiman2297
      @abiodunsulaiman2297 Před rokem +3

      I mean nick magazine started in 1993, so just wait and you'll prob get it.

    • @Justin-Hill-1987
      @Justin-Hill-1987 Před 10 měsíci

      @@abiodunsulaiman2297 I remember reading many different issues of original Nickelodeon Magazine throughout my life in the 1990s and 2000s, including the final issue, which went into circulation in December 2009 and had SpongeBob SquarePants and his friends dressed in holiday sweaters on the front cover, which I purchased at my local Barnes & Noble.

    • @meyerj75
      @meyerj75 Před 9 měsíci

      I still have the first issue featuring Chevy Chase on the cover circa 1990. Totally 1989-90 pop culture. Madonna. Batman. The B 52s. Nobody knew Milli Vanilli lip synched back then!

  • @SonofMrPeanut
    @SonofMrPeanut Před rokem +24

    13:23 If you thought Michael Eisner wasn't going to come up in a theme park history video, hi, you must be new here.

    • @cheerijessie
      @cheerijessie Před rokem +3

      Wild how he was involved in everything though, and at a high level

  • @jonathancardello9125
    @jonathancardello9125 Před rokem +27

    I always thought there was tons going on at Nick Studios, thinking it was where all the Live Action shows and Cartoons were produced. To find out the longer it existed the fewer and FEWER things were actually made there, I'm amazed it didn't close sooner. Still, as a kid I remember wanting to go so bad every time I saw that Slime Geiser, good times.

    • @Jamessmith-xk3fh
      @Jamessmith-xk3fh Před rokem +3

      I always wanted to go to be on a game show or at least be in the audience. I think if they would have kept up the game shows and threw in cartoons and live action it would have worked

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem +3

      @@Jamessmith-xk3fh When Nick Studios Opened, game shows were all the rage, unfortunately, they started to decline sharply in popularity in the 90s, where they basically all went away except for staples WOF and Jeopardy, by the time they made an attempted comeback in the early 2000s, the studio was all but dead.

    • @Justin-Hill-1987
      @Justin-Hill-1987 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@agoo7581 There were a few other popular game shows from the 1990s that come to mind, including Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, hosted by Regis Philbin (one of my favorites), which was filmed at the ABC TV studio in New York City back in 1999...

  • @DanJackson1977
    @DanJackson1977 Před rokem +19

    The episode where Nick Knacks and Defunctland became one.

  • @goodolgranite8247
    @goodolgranite8247 Před rokem +24

    This is the exact kind of video I've always wanted to see for this place. I never got to go as I was born a few months after it closed. I will admit that Nickelodeon Studios does somewhat feel a bit of a broken pedestal (If you've been on TV Tropes, you'll know what I mean) to me now that I know why it failed and how the reasoning for its existence was not all that good from a moral perspective, but that will never stop me from having fond nostalgia for a place I never got to experience and certainly will never get to experience. Thanks for the great video, I can't wait for the next episode of Nick Knacks! 1991, here we come! (Hey, that rhymes!)

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem +4

      The fact that it was built in florida to get around unions really does spoil the positive thoughts I have about the studio.

    • @andrejg4136
      @andrejg4136 Před rokem +1

      Personally, I wish that Paramount would revisit the concept and create something that can act as a living Museum for everything Nickelodeon. I mean it's a 40+ year old brand that's still at the very least functioning as a basic cable network. That's gotta be worth something for the proverbial history books.

  • @tecpaocelotl
    @tecpaocelotl Před rokem +17

    Sound like it was doomed from the start.
    Right to work, no privacy.
    I'm surprised those child actors weren't messed up.

    • @superleviathan
      @superleviathan Před rokem +1

      Forced to be squeaky clean and always happy at all times.
      Shockingly, not unlike Stimpy's invention.

  • @bibberly
    @bibberly Před rokem +10

    There was some sort of educational tie-in with NS, too. My eighth-grade math teacher was part of program where we did some Nick-related math problems every so often and had NS book covers (which she required us to use on our math books, for a grade). I feel like there was more to it - maybe she won a grant or something? She took us on a field trip to Universal in late 1991, and we saw a filming of Nick Arcade. The only problem was that the show hadn't hit the air yet, so the concept had to be explained to us (and no, we didn't get to see the final round). It felt like forever before we saw it on TV. But now that episode is on Paramount Plus, and I spotted myself in the audience.

  • @mato4920
    @mato4920 Před rokem +9

    "This program was filmed before a live audience in Nickelodeon Studios at Universal Studios Florida" was such a common refrain that I heard during my childhood that it's so surprising to see how short-lived the golden age of the studio actually was. Hard to mourn it as a filming location (at least as long as the crews were gettting paid sub-union rates) but I feel like I could imagine it surviving as a tourist location. Not that hard to imagine the alternate universe where Nickelodeon Studios got a Rugrats live show and ended up surviving to this day.
    Anyway, great video! Probably one of my favorites since the Nick at Night one. Was fun seeing the whole origin of Universal Studios, especially how a nickelodeon ended up being an important part in it's history lol.

  • @aertnadle2466
    @aertnadle2466 Před 11 měsíci +8

    So would one way to see the studio's eras is:
    1990-94: Golden Age
    1995-97: Stagnation
    1998-99: Decline
    2000: Comeback
    2001-05: One Foot In the Grave

    • @matthewhunter1193
      @matthewhunter1193 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yeah, that about sums it up.
      Aside from Roundhouse leaving in 93', it seemed primarily that the bad stuff started to occur with the rise of Nicktoons and the loss of All That. Nick Studios did seem to be stable for almost the first half of its run, but it isn't particularly great when your studio is around for 15 years, and before the halfway point, productions start leaving.

  • @TJHistory
    @TJHistory Před 11 měsíci +6

    Why does this not have more views? This is absolutely fantastic. Thank you for the great video and for stoking the fond memories I have of Nickelodeon.

  • @CinnamonGrrlErin1
    @CinnamonGrrlErin1 Před rokem +24

    I can't help but think that Spielberg getting slimed was at the forefront on his mind when he made Jurassic Park

  • @MSP10julia
    @MSP10julia Před rokem +58

    I hope Nickelodeon Studios will reopen as a museum or a library in Orlando, FL where we can access a lot of the archive memorabilia such as photos, videos, and news coverages to get some information during the fifteen-year lifespan of this slime-filled magic carpet ride. 😊

    • @mr.tomraypaz6085
      @mr.tomraypaz6085 Před rokem +9

      They couldn’t reopen it as a museum anyways, because pretty much everything Nick themed has since been removed.

    • @JimmySand9
      @JimmySand9 Před rokem +5

      I don't know if that'll happen, but I hope Orange County opens some kind of exhibit somewhere chronicling Nick Studios history in some shape or form. It is, in its own way, a significant part of Central Florida's history.

    • @angelinacamacho8575
      @angelinacamacho8575 Před rokem +3

      The only place I can think of that would do something like that is the museum of the moving picture or the Smithsonian museum

    • @1LilSpark
      @1LilSpark Před rokem +4

      I’d love to see just some tribute store representation…or perhaps a loosely inspired HHN house/scare zone about a game show gone wrong

    • @christopherb501
      @christopherb501 Před rokem +2

      Aside from the Florida part (they deserve nothing), sure.

  • @KidLeavesStoop
    @KidLeavesStoop Před rokem +10

    Inspiring, as always! Excited to inevitably watch again in the coming months

    • @EWisAmazing
      @EWisAmazing Před rokem

      Glad to see you have taste KidLeavesStoop!

    • @estherastudillo8647
      @estherastudillo8647 Před 2 měsíci

      Ay, your that guy that made the Simpsons S6 DVD case video.

  • @apbuitron
    @apbuitron Před rokem +23

    What a depressing story, but a fantastic and engrossing documentary. Bravo my friend!

  • @SpadePyro
    @SpadePyro Před rokem +18

    If I learned anything from this video, and life in general, it's don't build anything in Florida. Florida is the worst place to do anything at all. Walt literally only went there cause it was cheap and no one else wanted to be there. And it was cheap because no one wanted to be there

  • @jordanromesburg6819
    @jordanromesburg6819 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I appreciate whoever set the slime geyser to go off for the first time at 4:20PM 🤣

  • @CoolEric258
    @CoolEric258 Před rokem +12

    Having each song be tied to the literal year it came out was ingenious lol

  • @andyfrench1445
    @andyfrench1445 Před rokem +15

    Another amazing video, this time in a whole nother level. Thank you for all your hard work Pop Arena. Your output is important, informative and entertaining and consistently one of my favorite series on youtube. Praying the youtube recommend algorithm suggests this to everyone and more people will find out about this amazing channel

  • @aertnadle2466
    @aertnadle2466 Před 3 měsíci +5

    At 18:15, to anyone who wants to know where each of Nickelodeon's original live action shows from before 1989 were filmed:
    Pinwheel: Matrix Studios (New York City)
    Nickel Flicks: QUBE Studios (Columbus, Ohio)
    By the Way: QUBE Studios (Columbus, Ohio)
    America Goes Bananaz: Westland Mall (Columbus, Ohio)
    Pop Clips: SamFilm (Sandy City, California)
    Livewire: Ed Sullivan Theater (New York City)
    Kids' Writes: Embassy Television (Cuvier City, California)
    Reggie Jackson's World of Sports: Reid-Dolph Inc (unknown location)
    You Can't Do That on Television: CJOH-TV (Ottowa, Canada)
    Against the Odds: Los Angeles, California
    Standby... Lights! Camera! Action!: MTI (New York City)
    Mr. Wizard's World: Calgary (Alberta, Canada)
    Nick Rocks: Times Square Station (New York City)
    Out of Control: Valley Production Center (Bath, Pennsylvania)
    Turkey Television: Somewhere in Canada
    National Geographic Explorer: WQED (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
    Rated K For Kids By Kids: New York City
    Double Dare: WHYY-TV (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
    Finders Keepers: WHYY-TV (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
    Don't Just Sit There: New York City
    Kids' Court: Unknown

  • @Gino419
    @Gino419 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Im 39, and was fortunate to have a tour of Nickelodeon studios in 1996. And in 1990 I was also in universal studios, and the Nick studios was in the making. I look back at this now and feel so fortunate. My first universal studio's visit was October 1990. Its fourth month. By then all the rides were working. Been 2 back 2 the future as well. Perfect timing to visit. Now that im older, I marvel at my mother, been a single mother and taking me and my brother to Disney. I am 8 years older than my brother. He was born in 92. So in 1996, I got to go a second time, because my mom wanted my brother 2 have the experience. Good times

  • @meyerj75
    @meyerj75 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I was kind of disappointed that I never went to Nickelodeon Studios in my lifetime. I would have enjoyed back when it was first around. I was 14, 15 years old back then living in a Navy town in Connecticut where nobody would shut up about the war in Iraq, the Persian Gulf War, Desert Storm, whatever. Nickelodeon Studios would have eased off my mind from my troubles back then. Every one I knew back then either went to Florida, had gone there before, or like myself wished they were there. The Early 1990s were the best time period to visit there as they were so much hype back then, but missed out. Luckily after watching this documentary on Nickelodeon Studios, I can absorb the "wish I was there" experience without being there.
    It would probably wouldn't work in this day and age. Different time periods, all about nostalgia nowadays. As you mentioned, the only money marker now is the brand name itself. At least they made their mark on Universal in Orlando, Florida and now it's a piece of Nickelodeon history that generations young and old can look back to and say, 'I just saw a darn good documentary. Wish I was there.".

  • @TheItachiIshtar
    @TheItachiIshtar Před rokem +10

    Even as a kid, I got the impression that Slime Time Live started to lose popularity after Nickelodeon premiered U-Pick Live, which was filmed at their headquarters in New York City. Initially Slime Time Live still aired in the earlier afternoon and would transition to U-Pick Live a few hours later. But only a year or so later, Slime Time Live would be moved to the morning hours, with its segments pre-recorded the previous days. I'm sure that didn't help Nickelodeon Studios Florida at all.

  • @horse_renoir
    @horse_renoir Před rokem +56

    It feels like perfect timing that this video dropped at the same time as the WGA Strike. Nickelodeon's attempt to cut corners and avoid hiring union labor by setting up shop in Florida ended up being the fatal flaw that killed Nickelodeon Studios, and they could have saved themselves way more money and headaches had they just filmed everything in Los Angeles instead. The moral of the story here is to respect unions, whatever short-sighted cost savings you can get from union-busting is not worth it in the long run.

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Před rokem +3

      The problem with the current writers' strike is that studios are slashing budgets and cannot retain writers if they can't pay them.

    • @horse_renoir
      @horse_renoir Před rokem +8

      @@lainiwakura1776 They can pay writers, they simply don't want to. The exorbitant amount of money CEOs get paid every year is a testament to that

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem

      @@lainiwakura1776 It takes a brainless bootlicker to truly believe that writers are being underpaid because their bosses don't have anymore money. Like, I can't express how stupid your comment is.

    • @nomadcowatbk
      @nomadcowatbk Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@horse_renoir they still spend $400 million on reboots and sequels hoping to make $1 billion instead spending $50 million to make $200 mil on original projects

    • @joshuaturnage5243
      @joshuaturnage5243 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Again I disagree with this Nevada is a right to work state and they have no problems filming tv shows and movies in las Vegas.

  • @Furore2323
    @Furore2323 Před rokem +7

    These music cues for each year are giving me flashbacks.

  • @allenjankowics8795
    @allenjankowics8795 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Hey, some of my footage was in this video! Might as well give some backstory while I'm here:
    I was a HUGE Nickelodeon viewer back in the day (it was practically the only thing I watched), and my mom was a medical director at General Motors who sometimes had out of state conferences. One day in 1997, she told me she'd be going to Orlando soon and that my dad and I could join her for a couple days. Of course, I was beyond excited at getting to visit Nickelodeon Studios, but then I saw an ad for Universal Hollywood with footage of the "Totally Nickelodeon" attraction, and since I didn't realize there was more than one Universal theme park, I ran to my parents screaming "NO! They moved the whole thing from Orlando to Hollywood! The vacation is ruined!" (Fortunately the misunderstanding was quickly cleared up.)
    We spent one day at Universal, another day at Disney... and then my parents took me home so I could perform in a concert at school. While I did enjoy going to Nickelodeon Studios and taking the tour, I was very upset at not being able to do it a second time. I was so fascinated and in awe at everything I was seeing, but my parents were rushing me through the queue line too fast for me to absorb all of it (see 1:05:12 in this video) and I was never picked for any of the Game Lab activities. Shortly after I got home, I had a dream that Nickelodeon Studios was right across the street from my house but kept disappearing every time I tried to go to it. As a coping mechanism, I redecorated my entire bedroom to be Nickelodeon-themed. My parents later made it up to me by taking me to Nickelodeon Splat City in Ohio, which I actually enjoyed more (so the comment about other Nickelodeon experiences starting to outclass Nick Studios was likely true).

  • @Justin-Hill-1987
    @Justin-Hill-1987 Před rokem +8

    The closing of Nickelodeon Studios in Florida was a tough pill for many fans of the network who watched the network in the 1990s to swallow, given that the studios were being underutilized as filming in California and other parts of the U.S. and Canada became more popular when the year 2000 began.
    It's the harsh reality of budget cuts, media consolidation, the unionization of showbusiness, and the fact that the Florida studios were in the crosshairs of a hurricane-prone area of the country that hastened the studio's demise, as well as a stronger focus on cartoons during key parts of the daily Nickelodeon schedule when the 2000s began...

  • @FdupTV
    @FdupTV Před rokem +9

    Amazing episode. The early 90s really were the perfect time for something like Nick Studios to exist. I visited it once later in the decade and all I recall seeing was the Gullah Gullah Island set sitting dormant. I always assumed Slime Time Live was modeled after MTV's Total Request Live, which had become a huge deal by 2000.

  • @Dr.Quarex
    @Dr.Quarex Před rokem +22

    I now know why I was unaware Nickelodeon Studios ever went downhill, because watching this it is clear I like instantly aged out of Nickelodeon in 1993 and lost track of what was going on entirely. Ironically if I had made it until like 1995 it probably would have still appealed to me. Stupid young Generation X timing Edit: Also I will never forget my friends and I going to see Good Burger because it looked so terrible, and we ended up enjoying it, and I made the brilliant prediction that Kel was going to be a big star one day. You could not have paid me enough money to even remember the other guy's name. That sure worked out well for my prediction in the long run

    • @DanJackson1977
      @DanJackson1977 Před rokem +4

      Nick had 1 show that held my attention despite aging out of it in 91...The Adventures of Pete and Pete. It didn't feel like a Nick show. it was it's own little Twin Peaksy universe. And yeah I probably watched the Looney Tunes reruns too

    • @Dr.Quarex
      @Dr.Quarex Před rokem +2

      @@DanJackson1977 I hear that, Adventures of Pete & Pete definitely kept my attention if I ever flipped past the channel when it was on. And I imagine if I had actually been organized enough to, like, look at a TV schedule I might have kept watching longer instead of just letting 1990s Internet take over my life

    • @chelmrtz
      @chelmrtz Před rokem +4

      Same but I aged out around 96/97. I always thought Nick Studios was such a magical thing
      Similar experience just slightly different timing

    • @J-dew
      @J-dew Před rokem +1

      Kel’s still got a chance if good burger 2 is a hit. He belongs on SNL with kenan

    • @andrejg4136
      @andrejg4136 Před rokem +2

      @@J-dew If Kel Mitchell could get even a minor career revival at this stage of the game, he should count himself blessed.

  • @TylerBozetski
    @TylerBozetski Před rokem +8

    The fact that they tried to keep the lights on until the bitter end, whether the idea was good or not or if the contract demanded it, was cool to see.

  • @bcworkz9734
    @bcworkz9734 Před 9 měsíci +4

    This is by far the best Nickelodeon studios video I’ve ever seen.

  • @SpongeyTheEditor
    @SpongeyTheEditor Před rokem +10

    The CZcams Algorithm gods better bless this video.

    • @bluebaron6858
      @bluebaron6858 Před rokem +1

      Please! I want more knick knacks videos faster!

  • @richardgadberry8398
    @richardgadberry8398 Před rokem +7

    This comment was typed before a live studio audience at Nickelodeon Studios at Universal Studios Florida.

  • @SonofMrPeanut
    @SonofMrPeanut Před rokem +6

    As an Official Slime Kid circa March '96 (got the certificate to prove it):
    1) The bench riser seating had a marked spot for the Slime Kid.
    2) Wow, and here I thought the "slime is too dry" bit was unique to my session. Admittedly, it's an effective gag.
    3) The Slime Kitchen served in small cups by that point. They were serving classic Slime and the tapioca-w/-pineapple-chunks Booger.
    4) We were an "at random" selection at my family company's St. Patrick's Day party the night before (after-hours event). That was incidently when my role of Slime Kid was secured.
    5) He's not joking about the quiet stages. The sets were up at least.

    • @lonedragon3261
      @lonedragon3261 Před rokem +1

      I remember the green slime tasted bad, the gak tasted good and seeing the completely empty set of Eureka's Castle.

    • @SonofMrPeanut
      @SonofMrPeanut Před 10 měsíci

      @@lonedragon3261 Neat! IIRC, my stages had All That (right before the move), Kenan & Kel and Gullah Gullah Island.

  • @Lynn17
    @Lynn17 Před rokem +6

    The fact that this is airing live the day before my 40th birthday is awesome.

  • @PrinceAkkanatan
    @PrinceAkkanatan Před rokem +11

    So today I learned the green slime geyser erupted for the first time at 4:20...nice. 😊

    • @jbwarner8626
      @jbwarner8626 Před rokem +1

      What better time to send a green cloud into the air? 😆

  • @chrisjt86
    @chrisjt86 Před rokem +6

    Greg gives it all he's got on this channel, and you can't help but respect that.

  • @FlashTimberwolf
    @FlashTimberwolf Před rokem +8

    I remember way back in 1993 when I visited Nickelodeon Studios. I saw the sets of "Clarissa Explains It All" and "Welcome Freshman".

  • @Rochelle1985
    @Rochelle1985 Před rokem +4

    The absolute best documentary on the original Nick Studios I've ever seen, thank you!! I visited the site in 2019 and was heartbroken to see what it's become, lol.

  • @lainiwakura1776
    @lainiwakura1776 Před rokem +12

    I can't say I blame Marc Summers for ripping the microphones apart. Makeup time is getting into the correct headspace time and seems pretty intrusive, but as a kid, it would be pretty cool to see the performers in real life.

  • @slashingkatie7872
    @slashingkatie7872 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I was there in 1999 when it was on its last legs. I wanted to visit so much as a kid but as a high school senior in 1999 it was sad.
    I’m surprised we don’t have a Nickelodeon Theme Park to this day as popular as Nick is with kids.

  • @radd1865
    @radd1865 Před rokem +5

    The work you put into this really shows. Great documentary.

  • @j.r.shartzer
    @j.r.shartzer Před rokem +5

    Well done! That building was Mecca to my entire generation, but it was an insane idea.
    I wish they could bring it back in some form, not the full TV production (as you state would never happen in your conclusion, and I agree), but turn GUTS, Legends of the Hidden Temple, Nick Arcade, and Double Dare into entirely new, interactive theme park attractions that honor what those shows were.
    What are the odds you'd actually get picked and be able to run through that temple on a vacation? They could build that temple, for real, not just on a soundstage, maybe as a darkride, and every guest will finally get to enter the Shrine of the Silver Monkey.

  • @TreyMcDonaldAnimator
    @TreyMcDonaldAnimator Před 8 měsíci +4

    I feel so fortunate to have visited the studio. I get the gripes of having the studio on display and especially at an amusement park, but it still feel so ridiculous Nick packed up and went out to California. Just stinks. I loved the studio though, it really looked and felt magical. (I didn't get slimed though and I'm still salty about that.)

    • @dustinlyons7440
      @dustinlyons7440 Před 8 měsíci

      It just shows their ungrateful people that took some great series away elsewhere.

  • @devochka-s-kare
    @devochka-s-kare Před rokem +4

    This documentary is incredibly well made. I was lucky enough to take the tour and participate in the CatDog hoop game with my mom when I was a kid on family vacation. So many memories and even new to me information was collected in this project. Thank you so much for this look back at the studio, warts and all.

  • @SeinenNinja
    @SeinenNinja Před rokem +7

    It's also interesting that the soundstages in Universal Orlando had at least one thing consistently being used for. And that is for production of professional wrestling programs. WCW, to producing TNA programs for over a decade, to now AEW and ROH.

  • @samfeldstein4498
    @samfeldstein4498 Před rokem +8

    I can't wait to see the reveal of the time capsule in 2042.

    • @thedrewster0408
      @thedrewster0408 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Apparently in the time capsule enclosing ceremony they already told the viewers about the items that were going to be placed inside of the capsule. But that VHS camera tape recording of the burial event is going to be really interesting.

    • @hurtspublishing3906
      @hurtspublishing3906 Před 25 dny

      I hope I'm still alive

  • @righteatsrightpolitics1323
    @righteatsrightpolitics1323 Před 11 měsíci +6

    After watching this GREAT documentary twice now, I can say there were two big mistakes that caused Nickelodeon to leave Florida.
    1) Canceling both Legends and Guts in late 1995 without having two replacement game shows ready to go was TERRIBLE. Family Double Dare and Nick Arcade were cancelled in 1993, but Guts and Legends replaced them. 1996 was the first year that ZERO gameshows were produced at Nick Studios and this was the beginning of the end for Nick in Florida.
    2). Nickelodeon allowed too many of its shows to film outside of Florida even before things started to get bad in 1996. They should have had Alex Mack, Pete & Pete, Salute Your Shorts and others film in Florida, instead these shows were all filmed in California except for Pete which was in NJ/NY. These were mostly non studio audience shows, so they could have filmed them outdoors and show off the natural beauty of Florida, which could help bring a more stable film workforce to Florida for outdoor filming and keep Nick Studios humming along (when these shows needed studio space to film). Maybe they could have created a teenage version of Baywatch and film it somewhere in Cocoa Beach (less than an hour from Orlando).

    • @nomadcowatbk
      @nomadcowatbk Před 11 měsíci +3

      Are you Afraid the Dark was shot in Canada, nothing animated was produced in Orlando

    • @good03boy
      @good03boy Před 8 měsíci +1

      After 2 seasons of Salute Your Shorts, Nickelodeon tried to get SYS to move to Orlando from Los Angeles. No one from SYS wanted to leave L.A. for Orlando. New game shows were pretty sparse after 1995 on Nickelodeon. Nicktoons started to take over Nickelodeon.

  • @t.w.mackay11
    @t.w.mackay11 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This, as usual, was a fantastic documentary. It may be one of the best episodes of Nick Knacks, if not the best.

  • @Tubewings
    @Tubewings Před rokem +5

    Just as a side note--by 1996, MCA effectively ceased to exist after Seagram had acquired majority ownership the year before and renamed the company Universal Studios.

    • @nomadcowatbk
      @nomadcowatbk Před 11 měsíci

      and everyone got wine coolers

    • @thedrewster0408
      @thedrewster0408 Před 5 měsíci

      And then Seagram was acquired by Vivendi and then General Electric, owning NBC at one point, bought out Vivendi and turned it into NBCUniversal. Then Comcast bought GE’s shares of NBCUniversal, which is now the current owner of Universal Studios.

  • @DEATHWISH1991
    @DEATHWISH1991 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Best Nickelodeon documentary, I'll use this as background ambience all the time.

  • @jbanks979
    @jbanks979 Před rokem +9

    Just absolutely incredible, better than the high bar I was expecting given everything you’ve done so far. I love the original universal history, I love the nostalgia, I learned more than I was expecting. I’ve gone from “why did this fail” to “how did this ever work”
    It seems like…….Nick got rolled on the initial deal. 13 years is a LONG time. No show is in production year round. I saw a lot of the day 1 programming. I was out of college by the end of the deal. In 1990 there were about 30 channels, 0 competition, 0 internet. Even half a decade later Layborne was running the basic cable Disney and Cartoon Network had started.
    It just seems like doing it in Florida and not California was it’s fatal flaw, whatever cost savings there was in the begining. (To be fair there were some short term attempts to make use of MGM too)

    • @agoo7581
      @agoo7581 Před rokem

      On one hand, maybe if they stuck to gameshows and talk shows, it would have lasted longer, the problem was that gameshow's popularity in America absolutely plummeted shortly after it opened and a sprawl of talk shows had completely diluted the market (combine that with the fact that trash shows such as jerry springer and maury started to appear, and you couldnt really do that on Nickelodeon, it just wasn't a feasible method for growth)
      And of course, Florida slide into overt fascism, and moron politicans who grow bonors at the thoughts of screwing over employees, and well... there you go.

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Před rokem

      @@agoo7581 That's not fascism, come back when DeSantis declares himself eternal ruler of the state.

    • @andrejg4136
      @andrejg4136 Před rokem

      @@lainiwakura1776 At the very least they want to make it seemingly impossible to exist as a 'liberal', however DeSantis and the FL State Legislature decides to define it during any given hour.

  • @VicHD
    @VicHD Před rokem +2

    This episode was a gut punch of nostalgia and a kick below the belt from reality.
    We want it to come back, but it likely never will.

  • @Inkoolu15
    @Inkoolu15 Před rokem +7

    Awesome video as always. Given with the extensive information and research put into it, this probably has to be my favorite Nick Studios Florida documentary on CZcams now.

  • @kentheg7368
    @kentheg7368 Před rokem +2

    This was an amazingly well put together video!

  • @aertnadle2466
    @aertnadle2466 Před 11 měsíci +6

    Here's how many shows were filmed in each year (counting Slimetime Live and Nickelodeon Splat but not one off pilots or awards shows) the studio was open:
    1990: 4
    1991: 9
    1992: 10
    1993: 8
    1994: 13
    1995: 8
    1996: 5
    1997: 6
    1998: 2
    1999: 1
    2000: 4
    2001: 1
    2002: 1
    2003: 2
    2004: 2
    1994>1992>1991>1993/95>1997>1996>1990/2000>1998/2003-04>1999/2001-02
    Seems aside from the debut year, the 1991-95 was averaging 9 shows a year, then it decreases a bit to 5-ish by 1996/97 with All That leaving, then downgrades to just 1 or 2 a year from 1998 to the end with Nickelodeon on Sunset making this studio obsolete, 2000 being the only year to have more than 2 shows, likely attempting to make a comeback too little too late.

  • @ryanklima791
    @ryanklima791 Před rokem +4

    Nickelodeon still has an amusement park presence in Nickelodeon Universe at the Mall of America in Minnesota. It’s never really been accepted locally because it replaced Camp Snoopy, which had local ties.

  • @evilvelvet
    @evilvelvet Před rokem +2

    fantastic look into the history! so much behind the scenes I've never seen before, thank you!

  • @sayscalled
    @sayscalled Před rokem +3

    In 1991, I was one of those kids slimed at the Game Lab. They had me take a shower after the show, but I couldn't wash all of the slime out. I spent the rest of the day recognizable in the park, with dried green bits in my hair.

  • @Optimegatrongodzilla
    @Optimegatrongodzilla Před 6 měsíci +3

    I never thought that I would see Steven Spielberg of all people get Nickelodeon-slimed!

  • @CinnamonGrrlErin1
    @CinnamonGrrlErin1 Před rokem +5

    To add another quote from MST3K: "Doesn't the fact that it's Universal make it International?"

  • @amwfan88
    @amwfan88 Před rokem +7

    Fantastic video, Greg! It was well worth the wait! Honestly, from what you described, it sounded like the studio was doomed from the start. I never got to visit, but wow those behind the scenes home movies made it look amazing. I agree with what you said, though. It's best to leave it in the past. Also, I have a couple observations. One, I had no idea about the Shelby Woo situation, and now I'm really looking forward to its Nick Knacks episode! (It also explains why everyone except for Irene Ng and Pat Morita disappeared after the second season). And secondly, I had no idea Game Farm was an actual game show! When my family subscribed to Nick GAS in 2004, I would see them as interstitial commercials - and I thought they were really dumb. The show itself didn't look much better. And one final note; I know it'll be awhile, but I'm looking forward to Noah Knows Best on Nick Knacks, because I want to know why it bombed so badly. I don't remember it being that bad...but then again, I was 12 and only saw two episodes.

  • @skystarless
    @skystarless Před rokem +4

    I'm so glad to learn that the time capsule still exists!! I can't believe it's been 30 years already! I remember watching that broadcast as a kid and becoming a little bit obsessed with the whole concept of time capsules, haha.
    It kind of sucks to grow up and realize that most of your favorite childhood shows were made in a place with questionable labor practices. Say what you want about California, I guess, but at least out there you've got unions. But even if they'd chosen to build the studio in LA, it likely still wouldn't have lasted very long. Nickelodeon had their moment, but they haven't been at the forefront of pop culture or kids' culture for a while now, and probably never will be. (With the exception of Spongebob, I guess. Maybe they should just call it the Spongebob Network lol)
    For me, Universal Studios/Nickelodeon Studios was WAY more appealing than any Disney park, or theme parks in general. I loved watching behind the scenes footage and learning how movies and TV were made. My parents and I loved the Back to the Future movies, and I wanted to go on that ride with them more than anything. I never got to, and now I won't even go within spitting distance of Florida (thankfully, I have no reason to).
    Thanks for what you do. I love this channel.

  • @tinaun
    @tinaun Před rokem +2

    I just have to say I love all of your intro and transition graphics in this episode, really a step up. Great music choices too!

  • @sunnysanjo
    @sunnysanjo Před 7 měsíci +3

    I was listening in the background and 14:34 scared the crap out of me lol

  • @datguyyo
    @datguyyo Před rokem +3

    Wonderful. Great job. I enjoyed every minute of it, well worth the wait.

  • @jayjaybulldog9180
    @jayjaybulldog9180 Před rokem +6

    I remember watching Gullah Gullah island as one of my favorite Nick jr shows on vhs, Philip e Garcia was such a great talent it was still sad to know the tragic loss of his life😔.

  • @caseyw1286
    @caseyw1286 Před rokem +5

    This was a really interesting look at Nickelodeon Studios. As a kid growing up in the 90’s, I would always watch the commercials on Nick for the park and dreamed of going there. I ended up going to Disney World with my family in 2001 and took a trip to Universal Studios while there. We took a walk around the Nickelodeon stuff but I never really got the vibe that it was really ever that far gone. I took a part in a live stage show which was cool to see and walked around some other places.
    I agree with Greg and everyone else though. It didn’t seem like a very good business model for them to start producing their own shows. It was fine for the early 90’s maybe when they were producing a lot of game shows like Double Dare, Guts, and LOTHT but once they finished up, what was left? Good idea on paper but not great in practice.

  • @Katiebug11
    @Katiebug11 Před rokem +3

    I was an 00 baby who grew up watching reruns of Double Dare, Nick Guts, and Legends of the Hidden Temple when they'd air late at night. I dreaaamed of being on those shows and going to the studio one day but it's a shame I never would have the chance. Great documentary!

  • @CJODell12
    @CJODell12 Před rokem +3

    Best documentary I’ve ever seen on Nickelodeon Studios.

  • @h1dd3n56
    @h1dd3n56 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I went to Universal Florida only one time in 2016. My dad was always a Blue Man Group fan, so we walked right towards the building for photos.
    It never occurred to me that was the headquarters of 90’s childhood. I really wonder how different things would’ve been had the studio been built in Los Angeles.

  • @melmn2002
    @melmn2002 Před rokem +3

    My family went to Florida in 1992, right after Hurricane Andrew. One of my biggest memories from that vacation was going to Nickelodeon Studios.
    There was a tour and audience game section, but most interesting part was going to some of the first filming for GUTS!
    We saw 3 groups of 3 kids doing the jump off the giant steps and shoot a nerf bow and arrow to a target. They didn't change out the sets between, so multiple shows were shot on the same day, though I am unsure if kids shot multiple days. We were given a cheap towel to wave (I was happy to get purple :) )
    Ultimately, it was pretty boring, though--we had no idea who the kids were, nor did we get any actual info about them during the taping. Glad to have gone, though!

  • @KaseyWynne
    @KaseyWynne Před rokem +3

    That was a fantastic episode. Well worth the wait, and the effort you put into it. I went to nick studios in 1993, and while I don't remember much about it, it was a thrill to go there.

  • @ChaseIsDaAce
    @ChaseIsDaAce Před rokem +2

    I was fortunate enough to attend Nickelodeon Studios in 2003. While I was only five, I still remember the Game Lab and a brief walkthrough of some studio space that had various show logos on the walls. Even though it was clearly a shadow of its former self by that time, I still thoroughly enjoyed it and consider myself very lucky to have gotten that chance, especially as someone interested in Nick's history.
    Enjoyed the video!

  • @johnnyy3964
    @johnnyy3964 Před rokem +1

    Great work! Thank you for taking the time and all of the research. It was a very informative, and really took me back to the memories of going there in the 90s! ( I remember seeing Clarissa Explains it All was being filmed the day we went!)

  • @chestyvulva
    @chestyvulva Před 6 měsíci +2

    "A network for kids by kids." Those kids were smart enough to leave Florida. 👏

  • @thehapevillechannel
    @thehapevillechannel Před 5 měsíci +2

    Wow. Your detail is amazing. I was there. My pal Philip (Binya) is mentioned here. So cool of you. I was the GAKmeister from 1994-1996. Also worked on Shelby Woo, DD, Legends and Figure It Out. Great memories from an epic moment.

  • @MaxineLunaZorua
    @MaxineLunaZorua Před rokem

    Watched the premiere with my whole family! We love this series so much and this was an exceptional video!

  • @joeyphillips6597
    @joeyphillips6597 Před rokem +1

    saw the runtime and am so excited. It will help me get through work today!

  • @Showsni
    @Showsni Před rokem +11

    Really interesting documentary. Feels like a lot of the ultimate issues come back to politics; no talent in the area because of poor working conditions because of state policies... Plus of course the shift from game shows to animation and sitcoms.

  • @leegoldsmith2028
    @leegoldsmith2028 Před rokem +10

    Hyped for this. Such a central piece of my childhood iconography.

  • @trish1344
    @trish1344 Před měsícem

    What a fantastic video. This is just awesome. It started as such a cool idea. Sad to see it fail, but I totally agree it’s better off left to rest. Amazingly well researched!!

  • @seanhoefling5045
    @seanhoefling5045 Před rokem +3

    I worked on the back lot (Universal Studios Orlando in Sound Stage 25) when that was built. It was a GREAT time!

  • @alphabassist
    @alphabassist Před rokem +3

    Finally, the intersection of PopArena and DefunctLand that we’ve all been waiting for

  • @SpikeShooter92
    @SpikeShooter92 Před rokem +4

    I went to Nick Studios as part of my birthday Orlando trip in May 2000. For a kid it was a cool experience just to go through the tour and see the Double Dare 2000 set and Slime Time Live being shot. My then mom’s boyfriend’s kids took part in the Gamelab portion which I was jealous of. Sad to see though the reliance on Nicktoons, switching to a more corporate structure under Herb Scannell and productions insistence on moving back to CA sunk the studios the way it did. For the kids that went, the memories are still fresh.