Blue Prints (found unaired pilot of "Blue's Clues" Nick Jr. animated/live-action series; 1994-1995): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
m (Fixed references and bold/italics)
Line 6: Line 6:
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>
}}
}}
''Blue's Clues'' is a American animated/live action children's TV show that aired on Nick Jr. from 1996 to 2006. The show follows Steve and his dog, Blue, looking for "clues" (blue pawprints made by Blue), and then piecing the clues together, leading into the climax of the story.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue's_Clues] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue's_Clues Wikipedia page on Blue's Clues.] ''Retrieved 7 May 2020''</ref>  
''Blue's Clues'' is a American animated/live action children's TV show that aired on Nick Jr. from 1996 to 2006. The show follows Steve and his dog, Blue, looking for "clues" (blue paw-prints made by Blue), and then piecing the clues together, leading into the climax of the story.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue's_Clues Wikipedia page on ''Blue's Clues''.] Retrieved 7 May 2020</ref>  


The show heavily encouraged interaction from its young viewers, with Steve talking to the audience and often asking questions and giving the viewers a pause to answer. This was a revolutionary idea for a children's show, being nominated for nine Emmy awards in children's programming during its run.   
The show heavily encouraged interaction from its young viewers, with Steve talking to the audience and often asking questions and giving the viewers a pause to answer. This was a revolutionary idea for a children's show, being nominated for nine Emmy awards in children's programming during its run.   


=Development & Pilot=
==Development & Pilot==
The show spent many years in development, with the show's writers experimenting around with different ideas, such as Blue originally being a cat named Mr. Orange. These ideas resulted in the unaired 1995 test pilot created with the working title, '''Blue Prints'''.
The show spent many years in development, with the show's writers experimenting around with different ideas, such as Blue originally being a cat named Mr. Orange. These ideas resulted in the unaired 1995 test pilot created with the working title, '''''Blue Prints'''''.


[[File:SteveBluePrints300px.png|thumb|246px|Steve in the Blue Prints Pilot, with a red shirt instead of his iconic green striped shirt.]]
[[File:SteveBluePrints300px.png|thumb|246px|Steve in the ''Blue Prints'' Pilot, with a red shirt instead of his iconic green striped shirt.]]
After the pilot was finished, it was only shown to a few preschoolers as a way to test out the show's interactive elements. According to reports, the children ate it up, but there were several changes that needed to be made.  Mr. Salt also had a Brooklyn accent as a contrast to the French accent he was ultimately given. Steve also sported a red shirt instead of his signature green stripes, as well as the aforementioned Mr. Orange.
After the pilot was finished, it was only shown to a few preschoolers as a way to test out the show's interactive elements. According to reports, the children ate it up, but there were several changes that needed to be made.  Mr. Salt also had a Brooklyn accent as a contrast to the French accent he was ultimately given. Steve also sported a red shirt instead of his signature green stripes, as well as the aforementioned Mr. Orange.


The Blues Clues Wiki also states that the pilot was the basis was the first episode, "Snack Time".<ref>[https://bluesclues.fandom.com/wiki/Blue_Prints bluesclues.fandom.com/wiki/Blue_Prints] The Blues Clues Wiki page on Blue Prints. ''Retrieved 7 May 20''.</ref>
The Blues Clues Wiki also states that the pilot was the basis was the first episode, "Snack Time".<ref>[https://bluesclues.fandom.com/wiki/Blue_Prints The ''Blue's Clues'' Wiki page on ''Blue Prints''.] Retrieved 7 May 2020</ref>
   
   
==Availability==
==Availability==
Line 28: Line 28:
House300px.png|Steve's House. [4/6]
House300px.png|Steve's House. [4/6]
300px--Blue Prints- Title Card.png|Title Card. [5/6]
300px--Blue Prints- Title Card.png|Title Card. [5/6]
Prekblueprints300px.png|The preschool audience watching Blue Prints.[6/6]
Prekblueprints300px.png|The preschool audience watching ''Blue Prints''.[6/6]
</gallery>
</gallery>
==Videos==
==Videos==

Revision as of 02:54, 8 May 2020

Lmwtan cleanup.png


This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its lack of references.



300px--Blue Prints- Title Card.png

The title card from the pilot.

Status: Partially Found

Blue's Clues is a American animated/live action children's TV show that aired on Nick Jr. from 1996 to 2006. The show follows Steve and his dog, Blue, looking for "clues" (blue paw-prints made by Blue), and then piecing the clues together, leading into the climax of the story.[1]

The show heavily encouraged interaction from its young viewers, with Steve talking to the audience and often asking questions and giving the viewers a pause to answer. This was a revolutionary idea for a children's show, being nominated for nine Emmy awards in children's programming during its run.

Development & Pilot

The show spent many years in development, with the show's writers experimenting around with different ideas, such as Blue originally being a cat named Mr. Orange. These ideas resulted in the unaired 1995 test pilot created with the working title, Blue Prints.

Steve in the Blue Prints Pilot, with a red shirt instead of his iconic green striped shirt.

After the pilot was finished, it was only shown to a few preschoolers as a way to test out the show's interactive elements. According to reports, the children ate it up, but there were several changes that needed to be made. Mr. Salt also had a Brooklyn accent as a contrast to the French accent he was ultimately given. Steve also sported a red shirt instead of his signature green stripes, as well as the aforementioned Mr. Orange.

The Blues Clues Wiki also states that the pilot was the basis was the first episode, "Snack Time".[2]

Availability

The pilot was obscure, and mostly unknown until 2006 when Nickelodeon aired a 10-year anniversary special detailing the history of the show. A few very short clips of the pilot were shown, and the crew members commented on it. After the airing, fans of the series scoured online resources, including bootlegs, torrents, and file-sharing sites to no avail. Nickelodeon has yet to fully release the episode, as they have stated "it felt it was too different from the rest of the series".

Gallery

Videos

The 10-year anniversary special, featuring clips from the Blue Prints pilot. [4:18]

Song from the pilot [4:26 in 10-year anniversary video]

References