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The Berenstain Bears (2002 TV series)

Canadian children's television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Berenstain Bears (2002 TV series)
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The Berenstain Bears is a children's animated educational television series aimed at preschoolers based on the children's book series of the same name by Stan and Jan Berenstain, which focuses on the lives of a family of anthropomorphic bears who learn a moral or safety-related lesson during the course of each episode. The series functions as a revival of the 1985–87 cartoon series of the same name, and is co-produced by Nelvana Limited and Agogo Entertainment, produced in association with Treehouse TV (Canada) and PBS (United States).[1]

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Premiering on September 9, 2002, a total of 40 episodes were produced,[2] with the series airing until September 12, 2003.

The show's first two seasons featured former child actor Michael Cera as the voice of Brother Bear.

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Premise

The series is set in a forested land populated only by anthropomorphic bears and primarily focuses on the title Berenstain Bears. The Berenstain Bears are a family residing in the rural community of Bear Country. The family consisted of Mama Bear, Papa Q. Bear, Brother Bear, and Sister Bear.

Although numerous episodes are based on the books and promote the same morals as encouraged in the picture books from which their plots originated, the program's faithfulness to the original series is slightly mixed on account of a number of later episodes following original storylines.

Nonetheless, they mostly portray the same circumstance depicted in the original Berenstain Bears storybooks quite accurately and concentrate on the messages and lessons learned by the family through their different experiences, such as generosity and responsibility, as well as the daily lives of the bears.

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Production and music

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The series was co-produced by Corus' animation unit Nelvana Limited and Agogo Entertainment for PBS Kids in the United States and Treehouse TV in Canada. Eighty 15-minute episodes were produced, adapted from the books and also a few new stories as well, similar to the 1985 incarnation.[3]

Due to Canadian laws requiring Nelvana to employ Canadian writers and designers, the Berenstain couple's involvement in the program was limited; they sought to exert their influence on some details, according to Stan: "Our bears don't wear shoes, and Papa wouldn't wear his hat in the house...And we try to keep complete, total banality out of the stories". Common practicalities of animation did force some minor costume changes from the books, such as eliminating polka dots and plaids (this issue also occurred in the past animated series and specials and only a limited amount of polka dots was allowed in the five specials[3]).

The series is supposed to supplement the 1980s series because new books were released since then, even though the two incarnations have a thoroughly different production style as well as a change of in-universe elements. Another issue is the two series are not seen together. Missing was Honey Bear, a toddler cub who never appeared in the TV series.

All of the series' music composed by Ray Parker and Tom Szczesniak along U.S. country singer Lee Ann Womack performed the series' theme song and lyrics written by Stan Meissner.

After its ending seven years later, twenty episodes of the series were dubbed in Lakota language and aired under the title "Matȟó Waúŋšila Thiwáhe" on PBS stations in the Native Dakotas starting in September 11, 2011.[4]

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Broadcast and home media

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In Canada, the series first aired on September 9, 2002 on Treehouse TV and French-language Ici Radio-Canada Télé. In 2010 until 2012, it also briefly aired on YTV as part of the short-lived "YTV Playtime" block.

It first premiered in the United States on PBS on January 6, 2003.[5] Initially, it aired together with Seven Little Monsters (originally part of the "PBS Kids Bookworm Bunch") in a shared half-hour timeslot, but two shows were eventually separated.[6] The original broadcast run on PBS ended September 10, 2004,[7] and repeated until February 1, 2009,[8]a along with Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat and Zoboomafoo.[8] The series continued to air in repeats on PBS stations KLCS & KVCR-DT of 2025.

In Fall 2005, all of repeats aired on PBS's new, preschool-aimed, digital cable spinoff PBS Kids Sprout (later known simply as "Sprout") from its inception up until the channel rebranded into Universal Kids on September 9, 2017, after Sprout's rights to air the series expired for twelve years.[9]

In the mid-2000s, Sony Pictures Entertainment (formerly Columbia-TriStar) released the series on both VHS and DVD in the United States. In the late 2010s, PBS released more DVDs of the series.

In Canada, kaBoom! also released all of the series on both VHS and DVD.

As of 2025, the series now streamed on both Treehouse Direct and Amazon Prime.

Episodes

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Voice cast

Main

Recurring

Family

Friends

  • Amanda Soha as Lizzy Bruin
  • Nikki Marshall as Queenie
  • Mark Rendall as Ferdy Factual
  • Gage Knox as Too-Tall
  • Patrick Salvagna as Skuzz
  • James Eckhouse as Smirk
  • Maryke Hendrikse as Hillary

Citizens

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Accolades

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Notes

a. ^ National repeats on PBS ended.
b. ^ With Family Segments On YouTube.

References

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