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Most of the episodes were produced at the Cartoon Network Studios in Burbank, California, while the rest were produced at Boulder Media in Dublin, Ireland. The theme song was composed by James L. Venable, who had originally collaborated with McCracken on The Powerpuff Girls. Additional music was composed by Venable and Jennifer Kes Remington. Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends became one of Cartoon Network's most successful original series and received critical acclaim and industry accolades, including 5 Annie Awards and 7 Emmy Awards, winning a total of 12 awards out of 35 nominations. It has since been named by Entertainment Weekly as one of the best Cartoon Network shows and by IGN in their list of best animated series at number 85.
Wilt
The series first premiered on Cartoon Network on August 13, 2004, as a 90-minute television film. On August 20, it began its normal run of minute episodes on the Fridays block. The series finished its run on May 3, 2009, with a total of 6 seasons and 79 episodes. One of the two main protagonists of the series, a bright, creative, happy-go-lucky, sensitive and somewhat shy 8-year-old boy and Bloo's creator and best friend who visits Foster's every day. Mac is often the voice of reason among his friends (especially Bloo) when they're making decisions. He is very attached to Bloo and it is shown in episodes such as "House of Bloo's" and "Duchess of Wails" that his biggest fear is never seeing him again because Bloo is what keeps him happy and cheerful and vice versa.
Other main characters:
‘Foster’s Home’ Reboot Getting New Imaginary Friends, But All We Want is Eduardo Back - Remezcla
‘Foster’s Home’ Reboot Getting New Imaginary Friends, But All We Want is Eduardo Back.
Posted: Tue, 19 Jul 2022 07:00:00 GMT [source]
The show has 79 episodes in 6 seasons; it has also aired 18 shorts. He is very easily frightened and at times talks in complete Spanish. Bloo made a cameo in a "Getting the Blues" poster in the Villainous pilot episode, The Dreadful Dawn. Terrence appeared in the special, The Lost Cases of Beach City. The series was acknowledged in the Cartoon Network 30th Anniversary video in October 2022.
Bloo
At the end of the promotional period, the adopters got a certificate thanking them for participating. Kazoo (voiced by Keith Ferguson) is Mac's best friend and imaginary friend, Bloo is a blue-colored friend who resembles as a dome cylinder not unlike a bollard with two eyes. He is often very immature, happy-go-lucky, self-centered and egotistical as well as having a knack for getting in trouble and prone for doing kid's and children's antics.[1] Despite all this, he still has a good heart and apologizes for his jealousy. Bloo loves paddle-balls and toys even though he cannot make the ball hit the paddle. He, along with Mac, made a cameo appearance in The Powerpuff Girls series finale, "The Powerpuff Girls Rule!".
A tall red imaginary friend who enjoys helping others and playing basketball and constantly apologizes for no reason at all. His left eyestalk and arm are damaged from an accident that happened to him before he came to Foster's. Coco is an imaginary friend that was discovered, as her creation is unknown.
Once children outgrow them, friends are relocated to the titular orphanage, where they stay until other children adopt them. The home is run by the elderly Madame Foster, its lovable, kind founder; her imaginary friend Mr. Herriman, the strict rule-abider and business manager; and her granddaughter Frankie, who handles day-to-day operations. Because his mother believes he is too old for imaginary friends, eight-year-old Mac is pressured by her to abandon his imaginary friend, Bloo. When Mac takes Bloo to Foster's after seeing a television advertisement, they discover that if Bloo were to live there, he would be available to be adopted by another child.
Awards
His oversized basketball shoes always squeak against the floor/ground, no matter what surface he is walking on. According to the episode "Room with a Feud", among him, Coco and Eduardo, he has been in the house for the longest time. Mac (voiced by Sean Marquette) is Terrence's younger brother who is a bright, shy, and creative eight-year-old boy and Bloo's creator who visits Foster's every day.[1] Mac is often the voice of reason among his friends when they are making decisions. However, his extremely good nature tends to make him somewhat naive. He is very attached to Bloo and it is shown that his biggest fear is never seeing him again, because Bloo is what keeps him happy and cheerful and vice versa.
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A bird-like imaginary friend who's able to lay an infinite amount of colorful plastic eggs that can hatch into absolutely anything. However, she can only say and write her own name (or variations thereof) and exists in her own universe independent from the other imaginary friends and humans, but she's very amiable and much, much smarter than she lets on. On July 18, 2022, it was announced a Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends reboot is currently in the works.

Mac becomes extremely high and hyperactive to the point of a rabid mania when he eats sugar. Once in this state, he will become impossible to control, will often become obsessed with seeking any other source of sugar, and if he gets hyperactive enough, will run around naked or in his underwear. Frankie Foster (voiced by Grey DeLisle) is Madame Foster's redheaded 22-year-old[2] granddaughter, addressed as "Miss Francis" by Mr. Herriman. Frankie is the caregiver at Foster's and helps keep everything in order.[1] In spite of Mr. Herriman's fussiness and fixation with rules and cleanliness, she is usually very friendly, outgoing and laid-back.
Mac then bargains with Frankie, Herriman, and Madame Foster until they agree to guard Bloo from adoption so long as Mac continues to visit the center daily. Mac continues to visit the home every day after school to experience the escapades of the mischievous Bloo and the array of eccentric, colorful characters inhabiting Foster's and the obstacles with which they are challenged. Wilt exhibits consummate good sportsmanship, which he applies to every part of life he can. He is considered the nicest person at Foster's and is known for being excessively polite and apologetic, saying “I’m sorry” all the time. Wilt has a big heart, is frequently cool and collected, and, only on very rare occasions shows anger at all, at which point, he will express his anger in overdramatic hysterics.
Whenever Duchess turns on the spot, her entire body pivots like a sheet of paper being flipped, revealing that she is two-dimensional (however, in the pilot movie "House of Bloo's", she was not two-dimensional). Full name "Blooregard Q. Kazoo", Mac's 5-year-old imaginary friend and best friend who resembles a simple, domed cylinder. Bloo is often very self-centered, egotistic, narcissistic, and occasionally sociopathic as well as having a knack for getting in trouble. Despite all this, he still has a good heart and apologizes for his actions. Bloo loves paddle-balls even though he cannot make the ball hit the paddle (though the only times he was able to do it were in "Berry Scary" and "Let Your Hare Down").

He became increasingly mischievous over the run of the series and can be a show-off. He is the only character to appear in every episode of the series. In 2005, Cartoon Network Latin America website gave viewers a chance to adopt an imaginary friend online, with Wilt, Coco, and Eduardo as their choices. Similar to the Neopets site from Nick.com, the web surfers gave their friends food to eat (some good, some not so good) and games to play to keep their imaginary friend happy.
Cheese appears to be somewhat madcap and dim-witted, often saying incoherent phrases and breaking into sudden bouts of screaming. Cheese likes chocolate milk (despite the lactose intolerance), cereal, and so forth. In the finale of the series, Goodbye To Bloo, because Louise's new residence bans imaginary friends, Cheese makes a surprise appearance announcing "Now we're brother roomies!" as he moves to Foster's. This is a list of main characters seen in the animated television series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends. The first imaginary friends created by infants, which are nothing more than a jumbled mass of jiggling black lines (due to the lack of comprehension a toddler might have to envision an actual friend), hence the name.
According to her driver's license in "Bus the Two of Us", she was born on July 25, 1984. Frankie is friends with most of the imaginary friends at Foster's (particularly Wilt, Eduardo, Coco, and Bloo) and can be described as a protective big sister to them, but sometimes gets unsuccessfully annoyed at Bloo, Mac, Cheese, Madame Foster and Mr. Herriman. The series is set in an alternate reality in which childhood imaginary friends coexist with humans. In the show's universe, imaginary friends take physical form and become real as soon as children think them up.
Craig McCracken will be involved with it and the series will be produced by Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe.[1] The series will be titled Foster’s Imaginary Nursery[2] Unlike the original series, it will be more aimed at a preschool demographic and will be CGI-animated. The Coco Bird (voiced by Candi Milo) is a chicken-like imaginary friend with a palm tree for a head, a crooked red beak and an aeroplane-like body who can only say her name at various speeds and different emphases. A talent unique to her is her ability to lay colorful eggs containing a plethora of objects.[1] Mac, Bloo, Eduardo, Frankie, Wilt, and others usually understand her when she speaks, and often translate for her. Despite her appearance and quirky behavior, she can demonstrate a perceived intelligence, principle and kindness. No one knows who her creator is as she was found on a South Pacific island by two scientists named Adam and Douglas.
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