Jennifer Rubin Trump Makes Himself John Kelly and Everyone Around Them Look Rotten Yet Again

American blithe satirical television serial

Our Drawing President
OurCartoonPresident.png
Genre
  • Animated sitcom
  • Political satire
  • Workplace comedy
Created past
  • Stephen Colbert
  • Chris Licht
  • Matt Lappin
  • Tim Luecke
  • R. J. Fried
Voices of
  • Jeff Bergman
  • James Adomian
  • Emily Lynne
  • Gabriel Gundacker
  • William Sadler
  • Cody Lindquist
  • John Viener
  • Griffin Newman
  • Jennifer F. Jackson
  • Jim Santangeli
  • Mike Leech
  • Zach Crimson
Ending theme "Donald Trump is the President" by Gabriel Gundacker
Composer Gabriel Gundacker
Country of origin U.s.a.
Original language English language
No. of seasons three
No. of episodes 46 (listing of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Stephen Colbert
  • Chris Licht
  • R. J. Fried
Producer Tammy Walters
Editors
  • Thomas Berkley
  • Thomas Vogt
  • Volition Velasquez
Running time 24–43 minutes
Production companies
  • Spartina Productions
  • Licht Media Solutions
  • CBS Television Studios
  • Get-go Networks
Distributor CBS Media Ventures
Release
Original network Showtime
Flick format 1080p (xvi:9 HDTV)
Original release February 11, 2018 (2018-02-11) –
November 8, 2020 (2020-11-08)
Chronology
Related shows
  • The Colbert Study
  • The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
  • Tooning Out the News
  • Fairview

Our Cartoon President is an American adult blithe satirical television series that premiered on Feb 11, 2018 and ended on November 8, 2020, on Showtime. The series was created past Stephen Colbert, Chris Licht, Matt Lappin, Tim Luecke, and R. J. Fried and is based on a recurring segment from Colbert'due south late night talk evidence The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.

In Baronial 2019, it was announced that the series had been renewed for a tertiary and terminal flavor, which premiered on January 26, 2020.[1]

Premise [edit]

Our Cartoon President is based on a recurring segment of Stephen Colbert'southward The Tardily Show with Stephen Colbert. A workplace comedy taking place in the White Business firm and other Washington D.C. locations, the prove takes a await at President Donald Trump, his sycophants, his family members, members of Congress, and cable-news based newscasters and political commentators. The second flavour introduces the 2020 Democratic presidential candidates, every bit the focus of the show shifts to the 2020 ballot.

Cast and characters [edit]

Main [edit]

  • Jeff Bergman every bit Donald Trump, Lou Dobbs, Joe Biden, Bill de Blasio, and John F. Kennedy
  • Cody Lindquist as Melania Trump and Louise Linton
  • William Sadler as John F. Kelly, Jeff Sessions, Mitch McConnell, Wilbur Ross and William Barr
  • Emily Lynne equally Ivanka Trump, Eric Trump, Karen Pence, Nancy Pelosi, Stormy Daniels, Theresa May, Elizabeth 2, and Ann Coulter
  • John Viener every bit Mike Pence, God, and Howard Schultz
  • Gabriel Gundacker equally Donald Trump Jr., Stephen Miller, Jake Tapper, and Brian Kilmeade
  • Griffin Newman every bit Jared Kushner
  • Jennifer F. Jackson as Sarah Huckabee Sanders (episode xi–present), Maggie Haberman, Kellyanne Conway, and Susan Collins
  • Molly Gordon every bit Sarah Huckabee Sanders (episodes one–10)
  • Jim Santangeli as H. R. McMaster and Fred Trump
  • James Adomian equally Ted Cruz, Sean Hannity, Alex Jones, Nib Clinton, Rudy Giuliani, Sebastian Gorka, Benjamin Franklin, Mike Lindell, Bernie Sanders, and Elon Musk
  • Zach Scarlet as Ben Carson, Colin Kaepernick and Evander Holyfield

Recurring [edit]

  • Amanda Phillipson as Rachel Maddow and Kimberly Guilfoyle
  • Stephen Colbert as Wolf Blitzer and Wilson Livingood (Flavour 1 premiere and Season 3 premiere)
  • Brett Davis as Anderson Cooper
  • Katie Rich as Betsy DeVos and Ruth Bader Ginsburg
  • Mike Leech as Paul Ryan and Tim Pawlenty
  • Anna Eilinsfeld as Ainsley Earhardt and Kristen Welker
  • Thomas Whittington as Chuck Schumer, Emmanuel Macron, Tucker Carlson, and Beto O'Rourke
  • R.J. Fried as Steve Doocy, Vladimir Putin, Chris Cuomo, and Stephen Breyer
  • Zach Smilovitz equally Steve Mnuchin, John R. Bolton, and Chuck Todd
  • Paul Christie equally Jim Mattis
  • Jen Spyra as Hillary Clinton
  • Eliana Kwartler as Angela Merkel, Promise Hicks and Marianne Williamson
  • Mike MacRae every bit Mitt Romney and Joe Manchin
  • Matt Rogers as Bill Polish, Pete Buttigieg and Ben Shapiro
  • Jack McBrayer as Lindsey Graham
  • Alise Morales equally Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
  • Godfrey (season 1) as Cory Booker and Barack Obama
  • Dean Edwards (season 2) as Cory Booker
  • Iman Crosson (season ii) as Barack Obama
  • Bob Powers as Mike Pompeo
  • Ben Siemon as Tagg Romney
  • Tim Robinson equally Brett Kavanaugh
  • Joe Cassidy equally John Roberts
  • Allie Levitan as Elizabeth Warren
  • Matthew Piazzi equally Jim Acosta and George Stephanopoulos
  • Kate Villa equally Amy Klobuchar and Elena Kagan
  • Yoshi Amao as Shinzo Abe
  • Ziwe Fumudoh as Kamala Harris

Guest [edit]

  • Arthur Lai as Xi Jinping
  • Aaron Landon equally Justin Trudeau
  • James Monroe Iglehart as Barack Obama (singing)
  • Thomas Berkley as Rex Tillerson
  • Grace Edwards as Omarosa Manigault Newman and Michelle Obama
  • David Slavin as Sean Conley
  • Jason Kravits as Michael Bloomberg
  • Sam Freed as Ronny Jackson
  • Jonathan Van Ness every bit himself
  • Kathryn Allison as Aretha Franklin
  • Brian Stack as Ronald Reagan
  • John Thibodeaux as Lester Holt
  • Michael Shannon equally Midterms Trump ad narrator
  • Matt Lucas as Boris Johnson

Episodes [edit]

Production [edit]

Background [edit]

The series is a spin-off from The Tardily Show with Stephen Colbert, which, since 2016, had featured a series of sketches featuring a drawing caricature of Trump designed by Tim Luecke and voiced past Brian Stack. The sketches used Adobe Character Animator to let Colbert to interact with the character in real-time.[2] [3] The graphic symbol was also featured in an animated short during Colbert'due south election night special for Kickoff.[three] [four]

Development [edit]

Following the online success of the sketches, Late Show showrunner Chris Licht suggested to Tim Luecke and Matt Lappin that they develop the concept into its ain tv set serial. In their pitch to Showtime, Luecke and Lappin described the potential series as a wait "behind the scenes at the White Firm" and that their goal would be to "produce it as quickly as we maybe could so that we could brainstorm to proceed up with the news wheel."[5]

On July 27, 2017, Showtime appear that information technology had greenlit an blithe series based on the sketches, with Colbert, Matt Lappin and Chris Licht as executive producers.[two] [6] On December xviii, 2017, it was announced that the serial would premiere on Feb 11, 2018.[7] [viii] On March 8, 2018, Kickoff announced that they were ordering an additional seven episodes of the series that are set to air during the summer of 2018. This lodge would bring the first season total of episodes upwards to seventeen.[nine] [10] On May 30, 2018, it was announced that the additional 7 episodes of season one would premiere on July 15, 2018.[11] On August 22, 2018, it was appear that Start had greenlit a midterm elections themed television special from the series titled "Our Cartoon President: Election Special 2018". The episode was scheduled to air on November 4, 2018 and expected to feature appearances from the drawing versions of Vladimir Putin, Rudy Giuliani, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, and Barack Obama.[12] [ needs update ] On January 22, 2019, information technology was announced that Commencement had renewed the series for a second season consisting of ten episodes.[13] On January 26, 2020, the first role of the tertiary season was aired, consisting of ten more episodes. On July 29, 2020, Offset announced in a video that the evidence would be returning on September 20, 2020 with the 2d one-half of Season 3, featuring new characters, such as Cartoon Jill Biden, Cartoon Dr. Anthony Fauci, and Drawing Andrew Cuomo.

Colbert said during the 2020 presidential election that if Trump won a second term, the series would be renewed for a fourth flavour. However, Trump lost reelection and the serial was therefore not renewed, with Colbert and the team moving to other projects.[xiv] [15]

Release [edit]

Marketing [edit]

On December 18, 2017, Kickoff released the start teaser trailer for the series.[7] [8] On May 30, 2018, a trailer for the additional seven episodes of season one was released.[11] On October 31, 2018, a trailer for the "Our Cartoon President: Ballot Special 2018" boob tube special was released.[16]

2018 White House Correspondents' Dinner [edit]

On April 28, 2018, a special iii-minute video created by the cast and coiffure of the series aired during the 2018 White Business firm Correspondents Dinner.[17]

Domicile media [edit]

On December eighteen, 2018, the first season was released on DVD by CBS Home Entertainment and Paramount Home Media Distribution featuring all 18 episodes and the mid-term election special. The release also includes numerous bonus features such as episode commentary tracks, a featurette looking at the blitheness process, footage from the table read for episode eleven, and clips from The Tardily Show with Stephen Colbert, Stephen Colbert'south 2016 Election Special, and The White House Correspondent's Dinner.[18] The second season was released on DVD on October 13, 2020.[19]

Reception [edit]

The commencement season of Our Drawing President has been met with a mixed to negative response from critics upon its premiere. On the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the first flavor holds a 32% approval rating with an average rating of five.17 out of 10 based on 25 reviews. The website'southward critical consensus reads, "Saccharide-coated satire, Our Cartoon President wavers between scathing social criticism and softball slings in a mode that's as unsatisfying every bit it is uncomfortable."[twenty] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the flavor a score of 42 out of 100 based on xi critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[21]

Jack Nevins of The Guardian praised the show, calling information technology a farce that "nailed the Trump drama," and contrasting the evidence's surreal workplace comedy approach with the more than reality and headline-driven approach of other late night one-act shows.[22] In contrast, United states Today critic Kelly Lawler reviewed Our Cartoon President negatively, describing it as "slight, dated and unsustainable". She also ended that "Watching ane episode is enough to go the point. Watching ix more than feels unnecessary."[23] Ben Travers of Indiewire also reviewed the show unfavorably, calling information technology "a pointless, unfunny drudge" and criticized it for "humanizing" Trump.[24] In a mixed review, Brian Lowry of CNN wrote that "While Our Cartoon President certainly has its moments, the best news for Showtime might exist it'southward only stuck with this experiment in quick-turnaround animation, at least initially, for 10 weeks." He also said that the show suffered from many of the same problems as That's My Bush!, a sitcom produced in 2001 satirizing the presidency of George West. Bush.[25] Matt Wilstein of The Daily Brute was more favorable, writing that "The biggest surprise [of the show] is how hilarious it is" and praising the show for being "remarkably adept at boiling down characters to their cadre traits, from Trump and his family to members of his Chiffonier and Congress to the Trick News personalities he spends most of his day watching".[26]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "OUR Cartoon PRESIDENT Returns for Tertiary Season on January 26". Broadway World. January vii, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Blistein, Jon (July 27, 2017). "Stephen Colbert to Produce Animated Donald Trump Series". Rolling Rock . Retrieved December xviii, 2018.
  3. ^ a b Rubin, Ben Fox (July 28, 2017). "How Cartoon Donald Trump comes to life on 'The Belatedly Bear witness'". CNET . Retrieved Dec 18, 2018.
  4. ^ Grove, Lloyd (Nov 9, 2016). "Stephen Colbert's Mournful Election Night Special". The Daily Animate being . Retrieved December eighteen, 2018.
  5. ^ Trumbore, Dave (May 19, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President': Tim Luecke on Animating the Trump Assistants in Real-Fourth dimension". Collider . Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  6. ^ Deb, Sopan (July 28, 2017). "Stephen Colbert to Produce an Blithe Trump Series". The New York Times . Retrieved March 8, 2018.
  7. ^ a b de Moraes, Lisa (December 18, 2017). "Showtime Sets Premiere Engagement For Blithe 'Our Cartoon President' From Stephen Colbert: Watch The Trailer". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved Dec 18, 2018.
  8. ^ a b Mason, Charlie (December xviii, 2017). "Trump-Themed Drawing President Premiere Date Announced by Showtime — Watch Teaser Trailer". TVLine . Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  9. ^ Evans, Greg (March 8, 2018). "Get-go Extends 'Our Cartoon President' With Seven Summer Episodes". Borderline Hollywood . Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  10. ^ Otterson, Joe (March 8, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President' Gets Boosted Vii-Episode Order at Get-go". Diversity . Retrieved December eighteen, 2018.
  11. ^ a b Pedersen, Erik (May xxx, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President' Gets Beginning Return Appointment & New Trailer". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved May 30, 2018.
  12. ^ de Moraes, Lisa (August 22, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President: Election Special 2018' Set For Showtime On Sun Before Midterm Ballot". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  13. ^ Otterson, Joe (January 22, 2019). "'Our Cartoon President' Renewed for Flavour 2 at Showtime (EXCLUSIVE)". Diversity . Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  14. ^ White, Peter (November three, 2020). "Stephen Colbert Says "Concur On Tight" Equally He Jokes That 'Our Cartoon President' Might Get Some other Season". Borderline Hollywood . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  15. ^ O'Rourke, Ryan (September 21, 2021). "Stephen Colbert Has Two New Blithe Shows 'Fairview' and 'Washingtonia' Coming to Comedy Cardinal". Collider . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  16. ^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (October 31, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President: Ballot Special 2018' Trailer: Trump And Don Jr. Try To Relieve America From Democratic Wave". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved November one, 2018.
  17. ^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (April 29, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President' Imagines White House Correspondents Dinner With Trump In Omnipresence". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  18. ^ Milligan, Mercedes (Dec seven, 2018). "CBS Releasing 'Our Cartoon President' S1 on December 18". Animation Magazine . Retrieved December 23, 2018.
  19. ^ "Our Cartoon President: Season Two".
  20. ^ "Our Cartoon President: Season 1". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  21. ^ "Our Drawing President: Season 1". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  22. ^ Nevins, Jake (Feb nine, 2018). "Our Cartoon President review – Stephen Colbert's farce nails Trump drama". The Guardian . Retrieved December eighteen, 2018.
  23. ^ Lawler, Kelly (January 26, 2018). "Review: Stephen Colbert's Trump satire 'Our Cartoon President' lacks bite". USA Today . Retrieved December xviii, 2018.
  24. ^ Travers, Ben (January 29, 2018). "'Our Cartoon President' Review: Starting time's Lame Trump Cartoon Turns Donald Into a Dumb Sitcom Dad". IndieWire . Retrieved Dec xviii, 2018.
  25. ^ Lowry, Brian (January 29, 2018). "Trump gets animated in Showtime satire 'Our Cartoon President'". CNN . Retrieved Dec xviii, 2018.
  26. ^ Wilstein, Matt (January 27, 2018). "Stephen Colbert's 'Our Cartoon President' Nails Trump's Alt-Reality". The Daily Creature . Retrieved Dec 18, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Our Cartoon President at IMDb

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Cartoon_President

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