Freaky Stories (found Canadian animated/live-action horror TV series; 1997-2000)

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Freaky stories.jpg

The show's title card.

Status: Partially found


Freaky Stories is a Canadian animated/live-action horror TV series for kids, produced by Decode Entertainment (now known as DHX Media) and developed by creator Steve Schnier and executive producer John A. Delmage, that ran from 1997 to 2000, with its pilot episode premiering on YTV's 1995 "Dark Night 3" Halloween block.[1][2]

Schnier first pitched the idea of an urban legends based kids show to YTV in 1991; in 1994, he teamed up with Delmage and produced the aforementioned 1995 pilot, resulting in the full series being put into production 2 years later.

The show's 35 episodes each consist of 4 short animations (of varying artistic styles), based around various urban legends, with each short running roughly 5 minutes and beginning with the show's trademark phrase, "This is a true story, it happened to a friend of a friend of mine". The shorts are interspersed with live-action segments hosted by two animatronic puppets, Larry de Bug and Maurice the maggot, although, notably, when aired in some countries, said segments were withheld from broadcast.

Of the show's 140 shorts, roughly 50 of them have surfaced online (along with a handful of the aforementioned live-action segues), with the majority remaining unaccounted for. As of this writing, the show is seldom aired any more. Both English and French dubs of the show are known to exist, as well as a Spanish dub; the bulk of the found episodes have been sourced from the English dubbed version, with one or two only being currently available in other languages.[3]


The first episode of Freaky Stories (sans live-action segments).

The second episode of "Freaky Stories" (sans live-action segments).

References

  1. Wikipedia article on Freaky Stories. Last retrieved 01 Jul 2014.
  2. Official Freaky Stories page on DHX Media's website. Last retrieved 01 Jul 2014.
  3. Freaky Stories YouTube playlist. Last retrieved 01 Jul 2014.

External links