BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends

BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is a is an American adult crossover animated sitcom created by animator and founder of The Bloo Bloo J and developed by Riki EX for Cartoon Network's late-night programming block Adult Swim, Comedy Central,Nick at Nite,The CW Television Network,MTV and The Bloo's late-night programming block The Bloo DeTour. The series was pitched to The Bloo in 1997 as part of their then-recently created block The Bloo DeTour,(that would replace Comedy Central on The Bloo) the Company greenlit the series for production in 1999 after the pilot was completed for The Bloo DeTour. The series was originally supposed to air in 1999 on MTV but the show was held back until 2000 due to behind-the-scenes issues with The Bloo. Episodes are produced at The Bloo Studios,Cartoon Network Studios,Williams Street,Klasky Csupo,Nelvana,Corus Entertainment,Frederator Studios,Teletoon,Braniff,Gracie Films Pramount Television Logo and Warner Bros. Television and aslo in the Year 2000 the show was one of The Bloo DeTour block's debut shows aslo the show is aslo seen on Adult Swim,,Nick at Nite,Comedy Central,The CW Television Network and MTV and animated by the Canadian studio Jam Filled Entertainment.

The Bloo DeTour officially premiered  on BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends on August 11, 2000 as part of 5th Anniversary aslo the show was one of The Bloo DeTour block's debut shows. BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends garnered great ratings and reviews from audiences and critics alike. In May 2002, the show's main characters were featured on the front cover of Variety as an example of cultural and ethnic diversity impacting television programs. Ever since,BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is currently the long-running The Bloo DeTour original series.

The series is rated TV-14-DLSV for mild violence, some blood, few character deaths, use of profanity and sexual elements while the uncensored version is rated TV-MA, with TV-PG episodes being rated TV-14

Plot
A boy and his beloved imaginary friend are able to stay together at an orphanage of sorts for imaginary friends that children have outgrown to be adopted by new children as It shows their adventures as they try to entertain themselves on a daily basis.

Main

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Episodes
See List of BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends Episodes

Production
BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends was created by Bloo J for The Bloo. So while working on it after production on Rocko's Modern Life was finished, he decided to lower the number of siblings to eleven. He pitched the idea to Nickelodeon, however they turned it down, telling him that it looked similar to Ren and Stimpy and Rocko's Modern Life, which contained too adult humor, and it would work better as an adult cartoon.

In 1997, he pitched the idea to The Bloo for its then-recent late-night block The Bloo DeTour, as a 30 second cell animation of the characters fighting over who gets to the bathroom first and Lars pointing a knife at them ordering them to form a line. The Bloo DeTour accepted it and originally planned to greenlite the show in 1999, The series was originally supposed to air in 1999 on MTV but the show was held back until 2000 due to behind-the-scenes issues with The Bloo.

The Bloo DeTour officially premiered  on BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends on August 11, 2000 as part of 5th Anniversary aslo the show was one of The Bloo DeTour block's debut shows. BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends garnered great ratings and reviews from audiences and critics alike.

In December 2001, Paramount Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures approached Bloo J for a movie based off the show, at he agrered

In Bloo J's mind, the movie had to be a proper send off to the show. When the film was completed, Bloo J intended it to be the series finale, "so [the show] wouldn't jump the shark" and it can giving networks that fellow running shows like Family Guy, The Simpsons and even SpongeBob SquarePants a lesson to learn, "finales deserve to be respected and not forgotten". However, The Bloo DeTour wanted more episodes, which Bloo J accepted to continue the show.

Critical reception
BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends has received great reviews, specifically for its animation, voice acting, characterization, and its off-color humor. Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media praised the show's voice cast and thematic messages, writing that "Adults and teenages will come to The Loud House for the laughs, but they'll return for the ensemble cast and the surprisingly heartwarming themes that dominate every story." Kevin Johnson of The A.V. Club gave the show a A -, noting that "the characters are defined by their traits, but never judged for them."

Other Media

 * BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends: The Complete First Season (DVD)
 * BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends: The Complete Second Season (DVD)
 * BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends: The Complete Season 3 (DVD)


 * BlooJ's Foster's Sliver Screen for Imaginary Movies (2003 film)
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