My Life as a Teenage Robot (2024)

My Life as a Teenage Robot (1)

My Life as a Teenage Robot is an American television series created by Rob Renzetti. The series follows the adventures of a 16-year-old robot girl called Jenny Wakeman (aka XJ-9), who was created by her mother Dr. Nora Wakeman and designed to protect Earth, but really wants to do teenage stuff and not save the world.

Nickelodeon debuted the series by airing the first episode of My Life as a Teenage Robot on August 1, 2003 at 8:30 PM. But despite critical success, the series was a ratings disappointment. After the series was cancelled, later episodes of the series started airing as "never before seen episodes" on Nicktoons Network. The series is distributed outside the United States by the Canadian animation studio, Nelvana Limited.

The first season is available on iTunes.Template:Cite Seasons 1, 2, and 3 are now available on DVD at Amazon.Template:Cite

Contents

  • 1 Synopsis
  • 2 Voice cast
  • 3 Episodes
  • 4 Production
  • 5 Release
    • 5.1 Reception
  • 6 Home video
    • 6.1 DVDs and box arts
  • 7 References
  • 8 External links
  • 9 Gallery

Synopsis[]

Jenny Wakeman (Janice Kawaye), whose real robot name is XJ-9, is a teenage robot created by Dr. Nora Wakeman (Candi Milo); that makes Nora XJ-9's mom and XJ-9 Nora's daughter. Jenny is programmed to protect the Earth and fight off anyone or anything that causes harm (such as Queen Vexus {Eartha Kitt} and the Cluster). But Jenny wants to live the life of a normal teenage girl (without her mom getting in her way and bugging her) and hang out with her friends Brad Carbunkle (Chad Doreck), his little brother Tuck (Audrey Wasilewski), Sheldon Lee (Quinton Flynn), and Misty (Wasilewski again). Later on, Jenny's mom adopts Melody (Yeardley Smith) from the evil mad scientist jailbird, Dr. Locus (Grant Albrect).

Voice cast[]

File:MLaaTR Big.png
  • Janice Kawaye as XJ-9 / Jenny Wakeman
  • Chad Doreck as Brad Carbunkle
  • Audrey Wasilewski as Tuck Carbunkle (Seasons 1-2) and Misty
  • Jess Harnell as Tuck Carbunkle (Season 3)
  • Nancy Cartwright as Tuck Carbunkle
  • Candi Milo as Nora Wakeman
  • Quinton Flynn as Sheldon Lee / Don Prima
  • Moira Quirk as Brit Crust
  • Cree Summer as Tiff Crust / Vexus (TBA-present)
  • Eartha Kitt as Vexus (2003-2008)
  • Sandy Fox as Melody (original)
  • Yeardly Smith as Melody (current)
  • Grant Albrect as Dr. Locus
  • Charles Adler as Mr. Peter Carbunkle
  • Kath Soucie as Mrs. Peter Carbunkle (Josie Carbunkle)
  • Frank Welker as Animals' vocal effects (uncredited)Template:Cite

Episodes[]

{{List of My Life as a Teenage Robot episodes}}

Production[]

Nickelodeon debuted the series by airing the first episode of My Life as a Teenage Robot on August 1, 2003 at 8:30 PM. My Life as a Teenage Robot was aired in repeats on The N on August 7, 2005.[1] The show was a part of Nickelodeon's Saturday night programming block called SNICK on August 2, 2003 and briefly was a part of the TEENick lineup on August 2003 to August 2004. The first season ended on June 27, 2004 with "The Wonderful World of Wizzly" and "Call Hating."

The second season, which was originally set to air on October 1, 2004, was pushed back to December 8, 2004 with the Christmas episode "A Robot For All Seasons." A new second season episode wasn't aired until January 24, 2005.[2] After the airing of the infamous 48-minute Escape from Cluster Prime 2-part episode (which was emmy nominated in 2006),[3] the show was cancelled,[4] as Carlos Ramos left the project to focus on The X's.[5]

The third season first aired in Asia starting on October 6, 2006, with "Weapons of Mass Distraction / There's No Place Like Home School." For those in North America watching on Nicktoons, the third season started on October 4, 2008 with the last episode of the third season airing on May 2, 2009. This marked the end of the series' 7-year run.

It is yet to be known when season 4 of the show will be produced by Nickelodeon or the fans at YouTube.

Release[]

The series first aired on August 1st, 2003.

Reception[]

My Life as a Teenage Robot received a generally positive reception from critics and the general public. As of June 2014, it holds a 6.9/10 rating on the Internet Movie Database[6] and an 8.1/10 rating on TV.com.[7]

Home video[]

On December 12, 2011, all 3 seasons of My Life as a Teenage Robot were released on DVD at Amazon and CreateSpace.[8] Although, Escape from Cluster Prime is absent from the Season 2 DVD, so this suggests a possible future DVD release.

On February 5, 2012, Magna Home Entertainment released all 3 seasons of My Life as a Teenage Robot as a single DVD set in Australia.

DVDs and box arts[]

References[]

  1. [1] Template:Dead link
  2. http://65.98.113.4/schedule/displaySeries.php?seriesID=309&networkID=19 Schedule for "My Life as a Teenage Robot" on Nicktoons
  3. Template:Cite web
  4. Template:Cite web
  5. Template:Cite web
  6. My Life as a Teenage Robot. Internet Movie Database
  7. My Life as a Teenage Robot. TV.com.
  8. Template:Cite web

External links[]

Gallery[]

<gallery type="slideshow">Character jenny.jpg0002s39d42304284.jpg|Kissing.Jenny-3.jpg|Saving the world.Jenny.pngJennyAboutToCry.png|About to cry.JennyCrying.JPG

My Life as a Teenage Robot (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kieth Sipes

Last Updated:

Views: 5810

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kieth Sipes

Birthday: 2001-04-14

Address: Suite 492 62479 Champlin Loop, South Catrice, MS 57271

Phone: +9663362133320

Job: District Sales Analyst

Hobby: Digital arts, Dance, Ghost hunting, Worldbuilding, Kayaking, Table tennis, 3D printing

Introduction: My name is Kieth Sipes, I am a zany, rich, courageous, powerful, faithful, jolly, excited person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.