Carl the Collector: Difference between revisions

 

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|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|2025|10|14}}

|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|2025|10|14}}

|ProdCode = 120<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.wgte.org/schedules/program/hd/carl-the-collector/the-potato-collection-nico-and-the-nutty-buddies/10-14-2025/08-30-00 |title=Schedule Program – WGTE Public Media |website=[[WGTE-TV|WGTE]] |date=August 15, 2025}}</ref>

|ProdCode = 120<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.wgte.org/schedules/program/hd/carl-the-collector/the-potato-collection-nico-and-the-nutty-buddies/10-14-2025/08-30-00 |title=Schedule Program – WGTE Public Media |website=[[WGTE-TV|WGTE]] |date=August 15, 2025}}</ref>

|ShortSummary = <br>When the Junior Nutty Buddy Nut Lovers’ Club started accepting new members, Nico wanted to join and has Forrest come to help put a good word for her. However when they turn up for the club, Nutty Buddy Numero Uno doesn’t accept Forrest not wanting to join the club despite being a squirrel, and refuses to believe that Forrest is even allergic to nuts, saying that his family must be embarrassed of him. Nico tells Forrest to play at the jungle gym while she joins the club. After being accepted, Buddy goes after Forrest and bullies him even more, going as far as calling him a fake squirrel. Nico, furious about his treatment to her friend, calls him out for this, which ends up getting her kicked out. Seeing this encourages Amanda and the other Nutty Buddies to stand up to him as well. Nico and Forrest also stand up for Carl when he gets yelled at by Buddy for taking pictures, making him leave. Afterwards, Carl takes a picture of Nico, Forrest, and the Nutty Buddies.

|ShortSummary = <>When the Junior Nutty Buddy Nut Lovers’ Club started accepting new members, Nico wanted to join and has Forrest come to help put a good word for her. However when they turn up for the club, Nutty Buddy Numero Uno doesn’t accept Forrest not wanting to join the club despite being a squirrel, and refuses to believe that Forrest is even allergic to nuts, saying that his family must be embarrassed of him. Nico tells Forrest to play at the jungle gym while she joins the club. After being accepted, Buddy goes after Forrest and bullies him even more, going as far as calling him a fake squirrel. Nico, furious about his treatment to her friend, calls him out for this, which ends up getting her kicked out. Seeing this encourages Amanda and the other Nutty Buddies to stand up to him as well. Nico and Forrest also stand up for Carl when he gets yelled at by Buddy for taking pictures, making him leave. Afterwards, Carl takes a picture of Nico, Forrest, and the Nutty Buddies.

|LineColor = d6a800

|LineColor = d6a800

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2024 American-Canadian animated television series

Carl the Collector
Created by Zachariah OHora
Directed by Lisa Whittick
Voices of Kai Barham
Peter Laurie
Abigail Oliver
Beatrice Schneider
Antonina Battrick
Maddy McIlwain
Country of origin
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 23 (45 segments)
Executive producer
Running time 23 minutes
Production companies
Network PBS Kids
Release November 14, 2024 (2024-11-14) –
present

Carl the Collector (stylized in all caps) is a children’s animated television series created by Zachariah OHora. It was produced by Fuzzytown Productions and Spiffy Pictures, animated by Yowza! Animation, and premiered on PBS Kids on November 14, 2024, as the network’s first series to be led by autistic characters. Carl the Collector takes place in the fictional Fuzzytown and is centered around the titular character, an autistic child raccoon with a special interest in creating collections, and his friends, including Lotta, an autistic fox.

OHora is a children’s author and illustrator recruited by PBS Kids for his art style around 2015. His concept for the series was influenced by his sons’ school and its usage of the inclusion model. PBS Kids greenlit the series for 40 episodes to address the discrepancy between autism representation in children’s programming and autism rates in the United States. To ensure authenticity, neurodivergent people were hired in a variety of occupations in the production team, the child characters were voiced by children, and the animation team worked with advisors to accurately visually convey autism.

Set in the fictional and peaceful Fuzzytown, Carl the Collector centers on the life of Carl, an autistic child raccoon with a special interest in creating collections of various items, and his friends. Carl’s friends include Sheldon, a compassionate beaver and Carl’s best friend; Lotta, a shy and autistic fox with an artistic talent and hypersensitivity to sound; Forrest, a hyperactive squirrel; and Nico and Arugula, identical twin bunny sisters with opposing personalities. Episodes often involve Carl and his friends working together and learning lessons to overcome new situations.

  • Kai Barham as Carl, an autistic gray raccoon with a special interest in collecting.
  • Heather Bambrick as Maude (Mama), Carl’s mother; Bambrick also voices the plushies.
  • Peter Laurie as Sheldon, a compassionate brown beaver and Carl’s best friend.
  • Abigail Oliver as Nico, a often insensitive pink rabbit and identical twin to Arugula.
  • Beatrice Schneider as Arugula, a nice pink rabbit and identical twin to Nico.
  • Antonina Battrick as Forrest, a hyperactive and impulsive grey squirrel with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder[1]
  • Maddy McIlwain as Lotta, an autistic red fox with an artistic talent.

Supporting characters

[edit]

  • Alli Chung as Sheldon’s mother, aka Coach Mom.
  • Peter Cugno as Harold, Carl’s father.
  • Terry McGurrin as Mr. Kelly, a teacher at school.
  • Duff MacDonald as Mr. Barnaby, a lion who drives the ice cream truck and the school bus.
  • Amanda Martínez as Ms. Huffman, a bear who is a librarian.
  • Paulino Nunes as Fernando, Forrest’s father.
  • Chase Ruigrok as Mimi Toots, a hedgehog who plays the trumpet.
  • Elisa Paszt as Skyler, a skunk who gave Lotta the nickname “Headphone Girl”.
  • Salvatore Scozzari as Mr. Howell, a wolf grocer.
  • Milo Toriel-McGibbon as Dylan, a shy armadillo and new kid at Carl’s school.
  • Claire Poon as Brittany, Sheldon’s cousin.
  • Zachariah OHora as Yeti, who runs the Pyramid Pizza. Only his arm is shown.
  • Claire Whittick as Lilah, Mr. Barnaby’s niece and a soccer player.
  • Zoe Wheatley as Marble Mabel, an online influencer who likes making marble runs.
  • Advait Mathur as Punk Turtles, a group of musician turtles.

Zachariah OHora is a commercially successful children’s author and illustrator based in Philadelphia, known for his picture books featuring bipedal animals such as Wolfie the Bunny, Niblet & Ralph, and My Cousin Momo.[2][3] In c. 2015, during a time when PBS Kids was searching for “creators outside its usual pool of talent”,[3] Natalie Engel, the Director of Content for Children’s Programming, approached OHora, liking his art style, to create a television series. At the time, OHora had created a raccoon character called “The Collector”, based on OHora’s own collecting habits, who had not been used in any of OHora’s stories at the time.[2] OHora’s concept for the series was inspired by a school that his two non-autistic sons went to and that centered around the inclusion model.[2][3] OHora described his experiences with the school as a “lightbulb moment”; he felt what he perceived as stigma surrounding disabilities would diminish if children were exposed to the “spectrum of humanity”.[3][4]

According to OHora, “it took a while to get the concept completely right and fleshed out”; he cited his occupation as a writer and believing the series’ creation was not guaranteed. PBS Kids would later greenlight Carl the Collector for 40 episodes, half of which were completed by November 2024,[3] with OHora serving as executive producer.[5] Fuzzytown, the fictional setting of Carl the Collector, is modeled after Narberth, Pennsylvania, the residence of the show’s creator.[6] Carl the Collector was produced by Fuzzytown Productions and Spiffy Pictures, both of which hired neurodivergent people in a variety of occupations for the production team.[7] The child characters are portrayed by child actors. Both autistic characters, Carl and Lotta, are portrayed by autistic child actors Kai Barham and Maddy McIlwain, respectively.[4] Yowza! Animation produced the pilot and later animated the series,[2] replicating OHora’s art style and using the Toon Boom programs Harmony and Storyboard Pro.[3]

Though Carl was not the first autistic character featured in children’s programming, being predated by Julia in PBS Kids’ Sesame Street for example, autistic representation in children’s programming is nonetheless rare compared to autism rates in the United States. According to Senior Vice President Sara DeWitt, PBS Kids sought to “fill a gap” in this autistic representation,[4] and OHora and series director Lisa Whittick wanted to continue the legacy of autistic characters in children’s programming.[8] Lotta was written in addition to Carl to reflect the autism spectrum.[9] Many specific details about Carl were figured out in the animation process such as his stimming.[1] According to Whittick, her team created animation cycles of stimming and sent them to PBS Kids and advisors for feedback.[3] To make interactions in the series feel natural, the pacing was deliberately slowed down, with influence from Charlie Brown cartoons, and voice-acted lines were often kept unedited.[2] “The Fall”, in which Carl discloses his autism to his friends, was written for viewers to learn the reasons behind Carl’s mannerisms, according to writer Ava Xiao-Lin Rigelhaupt.[9]

Broadcast and reception

[edit]

Carl the Collector was first announced on November 2023 as the first PBS Kids series to be led by an autistic character.[5] Targeted toward children ages 4–8,[4] Carl the Collector premiered on November 14, 2024, on PBS Kids.[16] Heather Bambrick, voice actress of Maude, has expressed hope for a second season, saying she thinks “we need a show like this.”[17] On Common Sense Media, Ashley Moulton gave Carl the Collector four stars, commending the series’ characterization and sensitivity in handling autism. Moulton described the characters as relatable and praised the series’ representation of the autism spectrum by demonstrating how the characters of Carl and Lotta experience autism differently and how autistic traits manifest without othering the characters.[18] Carrie Gillispie of New America considered the character of Carl “a hopeful sign that perhaps disability inclusion could become the norm for the next generation”.[19]

  1. ^ a b Ohora, Zachariah; Whittick, Lisa (November 4, 2024). “Creative team of PBS KIDS’ Carl the Collector talk autism representation, illustrations, and authenticity”. The Parent Watch (Interview). Interviewed by Tiara Starks. Archived from the original on December 8, 2024. Retrieved December 18, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e Davis, Victoria (December 11, 2024). Carl the Collector: A Lovely Walk Inside the Mind of Autism”. Animation World Network. Archived from the original on December 16, 2024. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Zahed, Ramin (November 11, 2024). ‘Carl the Collector’ Celebrates Friendship & Fun Across the Spectrum on PBS Kids”. Animation Magazine. Archived from the original on December 12, 2024. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d Graeber, Laurel (November 22, 2024). Carl the Collector Puts an Autistic Child (Well, Raccoon) in the Lead”. The New York Times. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  5. ^ a b White, Abbey (November 9, 2023). Carl the Collector, PBS Kids’ First Series Led by an Autistic Character, to Premiere in Fall 2024 (Exclusive)”. Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on December 19, 2024. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  6. ^ Giordano, Rita (November 13, 2024). “In PBS Kids’ first show with major characters on the autism spectrum, a Philly-area town has a major role”. Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
  7. ^ Greenberg, Jaclyn (December 5, 2024). “Why ‘Carl the Collector’ on PBS Kids is Making History”. Parents. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
  8. ^ Hank, Melissa (November 10, 2024). “Kids’ show Carl the Collector spotlights autistic characters”. National Post. Retrieved March 6, 2025.
  9. ^ a b Amatangelo, Amy (November 14, 2024). ‘Carl the Collector,’ a new animated PBS series, features characters with autism”. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 6, 2025.
  10. ^ Carl the Collector. TV Insider. Archived from the original on December 19, 2024. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  11. ^ Carl the Collector by Episode”. PBS. Archived from the original on December 16, 2024. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  12. ^ “Schedule Program – WGTE Public Media”. WGTE. August 15, 2025.
  13. ^ “Schedule Program – WGTE Public Media”. WGTE. August 15, 2025.
  14. ^ “Schedule Program – WGTE Public Media”. WGTE. August 15, 2025.
  15. ^ “Schedule Program – WGTE Public Media”. WGTE. August 15, 2025.
  16. ^ Pederson, Erik (December 16, 2024). “2024 Premiere Dates For New & Returning Series On Broadcast, Cable & Streaming”. Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on July 24, 2024. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  17. ^ Cole, Abby (January 5, 2025). “Newfoundland voice actress lands role in new PBS cartoon featuring autistic character”. CBC News. Archived from the original on January 11, 2025. Retrieved January 11, 2025.
  18. ^ Moulton, Ashley. “Parents’ Guide to Carl the Collector: Is It Any Good?”. Common Sense Media. Archived from the original on November 12, 2024. Retrieved December 16, 2024.
  19. ^ Gillispe, Carrie (December 3, 2024). “Carl the Raccoon and the Power of Inclusive Education for the Next Generation”. New America. Archived from the original on January 3, 2025. Retrieved January 2, 2025.

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