Johnny Test

Johnny Test
Johnny Test
Johnny Test Logo.jpg
Series logo
Genre Comedy
Comic science fiction
Format Animated television series
Traditional animation
(season 1)
Flash animation
(season 2-5)
Created by Scott Fellows
Directed by Scott Fellows
(season 1-2)
Matthew Grazyson
Larry Jacobs
(season 2-5)
John Lei[1][2]
(season 4)
Gammy McGarfield
Paul Riley
(season 4)
Chris Savino
(season 1)
Joseph Sherman
Mark Writtenfield
Voices of James Arnold Taylor
Louis Chirillo
(season 1-4)
Trevor Devall
(season 5)
Brittney Wilson
(season 1 & 5)
Ashleigh Ball
(season 2-4)
Maryke Hendrikse
Ian James Corlett
Kathleen Barr
Lee Tockar
Andrew Francis
Theme music composer Kevin Manthei
(season 1)[3]
Ian LeFeuvre
(season 2-5)
Composer(s) Kevin Manthei
(season 1)[3]
Ian LeFeuvre
(season 2-5)
Ari Posner
(season 2-5)
Country of origin United States
Canada
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 91[4] (whole)
182 (segments) (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Scott Fellows
(season 2-5)
Loris Kramer Lunsford
Sander Schwartz
(season 1)
Pamela Slavin
(season 2-4)
Michael Hirsh
(season 2-5)
Toper Taylor
(season 2-5)
John Vandervelde
(season 5)
Producer(s) Scott Fellows
(season 1)
Chris Savino
(season 1)
Dave Beatty
(season 2-4)
Audrey Velichka
(season 5)
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Warner Bros. Animation
(season 1)
Cookie Jar Entertainment
(season 2-5)
Broadcast
Original channel United States:
The WB (2005-2006)
The CW (2006-2008)
Cartoon Network (2009-present)
Canada:
Teletoon
Picture format SDTV 480i
HDTV 1080i
Original run September 17, 2005 (2005-09-17) – present
Chronology
Related shows The Moxy Show
Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide
Big Time Rush
External links
Website

Johnny Test is an American/Canadian animated television series. It premiered on Kids' WB, on The WB Television Network, on September 17, 2005. Five months later, it was introduced to Cartoon Network UK on January 12, 2006, first, as a sneak preview on Jungle Saturdays Block, and then on June 5, 2006, added to its daily lineup. Despite the merger of the UPN and that programming block's parent channel into The CW Television Network, the show still continued to air on Kids' WB, on The CW, with its second and third seasons, through October 28, 2006 to until March 1, 2008.[5] The series currently airs in the United States on Cartoon Network, as of January 7, 2008,[6] and in Canada on Teletoon, as of October 28, 2006.[7] International airings include Teletoon in Canada, Nick Germany, Disney Channel Spain and on Cartoon Network in Latin America, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Denmark, Ireland and Sweden.[8] The show was produced by Warner Bros. Animation for the first season and later seasons by Cookie Jar Entertainment. The series is rated TV-Y7 for the first four seasons, and TV-Y7-FV for the fifth.

The series revolves around the adventures of the titular character, Johnny Test, an 11-year-old suburban boy who lives with his super-genius 13-year-old scientist twin sisters, Susan and Mary, in the Test residence in the fictional town of Porkbelly. Johnny often wittingly plays test subject for his genius twin sisters' various inventions and experiments, as well as be given gadgets and/or superpowers, and while at the same time reluctantly tackling and exploiting occasional problems and miscellaneous sticky situations, and as well as fighting evil villains and other enemies in the process; and also, if he wants to, Johnny and his relatives and friends can often save the day before dinner time, or risk being grounded for good.[9]

A fourth season of the show debuted on Teletoon on September 10, 2009, and on Cartoon Network in the U.S. on November 9, 2009.[10] As revealed and announced on August 24, 2010, the show was continued with a fifth season renewal which premiered on June 13th, 2011.

Since November 7, 2011, Season 5 of the show has been airing on Cartoon Network UK with the original Season 1 title sequence.

Contents

Background

Origin and development

On February 16, 2005, Kids' WB's unveiling of its new Fall schedule for the 2005-2006 television season was announced by The WB Television Network, featuring its returning series Yu-Gi-Oh!, Pokémon, The Batman and Xiaolin Showdown, with the inclusion of four new series introduced and to be added to its weekly Fall lineup. Among the former three shows, Loonatics Unleashed, Coconut Fred's Fruit Salad Island and Transformers: Cybertron, was none other than Johnny Test. The aforementioned schedule was announced by The WB/Kids' WB Entertainment President David Janollari, Kids' WB Senior Vice President and General Manager Betsy McGowen, speaking to advertisers and the media press during the Kids’ WB upfront sales presentation in New York.[11] Johnny Test was created and executively produced by Scott Fellows, the creator of the two Nickelodeon live-action series Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide and Big Time Rush, and the head writer for The Fairly OddParents. The show premiered on September 17, 2005 on Kids' WB's Saturday morning lineup of its weekly fall schedule, alongside Loonatics Unleashed and Coconut Fred's Fruit Salad Island. The episode pair, Johnny to the Center of the Earth and Johnny X, marked the series premiere.

When the show first progressed on its original first-run on Kids' WB (Season 1 only), it captured top posts for second straight week in total and was very well-received in the Nielsen ratings. It ranked as the #1 broadcast program in Girl 2-11 (garnering 2.2/10), and ranked as the #2 broadcast series in Kids 2-11 (gaining 2.3/11 in the process) and Girls 6-11 (2.4/11), and ultimately ranking #3 in Kids 6-11 (receiving 3.0/14).It's second season received a slightly more number of viewers in average in the United States: 2.6 million viewers per 2nd season episode. Its 3rd season's average number of viewers in the United States was 3.1 million viewers. Its 4th season got an average number of viewers of about 4.3 million viewers per episode in the United States. Its 5th premiere attracted over 4.7 million viewers in the United States.[12]

The series was developed for television by Aaron Simpson, with a brief, slightly longer pre-existing pilot short produced by Simpson as well, before the show was picked up as a full series by Kids' WB. Based on Episode 1A "Johnny to the Center of the Earth", the pilot episode was animated roughly in Adobe Flash, but retaining the same plot, and used the same, similar color schemes as the aforementioned episode, and was recorded with an American voice cast (retaining James Arnold Taylor, as the voice of Johnny Test) instead. The original production design (including character designs, prop designs and background designs) was created, provided and contributed by Matt Danner and Marc Perry,[13] and then later worked upon by producer Chris Savino and art director Paul Stec. Fellows, the creator of the series who had interested the network to the series' premise, based the titular character on himself when he was a young boy, with Johnny's twin sisters, Susan and Mary, being based on his own two sisters, also named Susan and Mary.[14] In the original pilot and early promotional material of the show, Dukey was referred to as "Poochie".

James Arnold Taylor said that he was not Fellows' original choice for the role of Johnny Test, he had previously voiced the lead character in the initial test pilot. After the show got pick up by the WB network as a series, he was initially going to replaced by a different voice actor, with a Canadian voice cast instead. But of course, the studio had trouble finding Johnny's initial voice convincing for the first six episodes, so they gave Taylor back the role to redub his dialog for the rest of the first season, and managed to keep him on the cast for the rest of the series.[14] Aaron Simpson, who had developed the series and produced the pilot, was the creator and executive producer's first choice to serve as the producer of the show, before he turned it down.

Production

The remainder of the first season was produced in-house by Warner Bros. Animation, but since this show was a utilized U.S./Canada co-production, some of the animation production service work was outsourced by Canadian animation studios Studio B Productions and Top Draw Animation, and as well as South Korean animation production company Digital eMation, which also provided the original main title animation opening, storyboarding of some of the episodes was done by Atomic Cartoons; Nearly much of the original writers, storyboarders, and art crew of the series' first production season was recycled of mostly and notably that of familiar Cartoon Network Studios and Nickelodeon Animation Studios alumni, as well as some from WB Animation, Walt Disney Television Animation and DiC Entertainment, and even the comic book industry, including Chris Savino, Marc Perry, Paul Stec, Matt Danner, Joe Horn, Mike Kazaleh, Brian Larsen, Jun Falkenstein, Scott Shaw!, Nora Johnson, Milton Knight, Ray Leong,[15] Chris Battle, Casey Mitchum,[16] Pat Ventura, John Derevlany, J.C. Cheng, Aliki Theofilopoulos, George Cox III, Frederick J. Gardner III, Allan Penny, Justin Schultz, Christopher D. Lozinski, Dane Taylor and Rita Cooper.[17] The original version of the show's theme song and all of its underscores were both written, composed and conducted by Kevin Manthei, with creator Scott Fellows having wrote and provided the lyrics to the theme song.[3] Voice recording was provided by Voicebox Productions, Inc., with voice direction by Terry Klassen; however, the merger of UPN and The WB into The CW Television Network had resulted in many budget cuts for the show, and resulted in hiatus. Cookie Jar Entertainment, another Canada-based entertainment company, decided to take control of the series' production.[7] Due to this change, the writers, storyboarders, and art crew who worked on the first season were let go, resulting in an entirely new crew managing the show. In addition, the budget of the show dropped dramatically, leading seasons two and three of the show being animated in Adobe Flash by Collideascope Digital Productions.[18]

The show's opening theme was later changed for the second season, later for the third season[19] and once again for the entire latter remainder of the series, with the opening being made of recycled episode footage. It is now regarded as part of Teletoon's original series catalogue. On March 1, 2008, the episode pair, Johnny X: A New Beginning and Johnny X: The Final Ending, aired. It was originally intended as the series finale; however, James Arnold Taylor had announced that it was renewed for a fourth season. The fourth season was animated at Atomic Cartoons with animation assistance from Seventoon Inc. and Philippine Animators Group Inc., which are both located in the Philippines. It finally premiered in high-definition on Teletoon on September 10, 2009,[20] and on Cartoon Network in the U.S. on November 9, 2009.[10] Later on August 24, 2010, it was announced that Johnny Test was renewed for a fifth season. Like the fourth season before it, it will still have another full set of 26 episodes, with plus a bonus 27th episode added to the end, henching that the renewal will bring the series total to 92 episodes. The fifth season premiered on Cartoon Network in America on June 13, 2011 along with a new theme sequence with the same song used from season 2-4. Starting with the fifth season, Trevor Devall would become the new voice of Dukey, leaving Louis Chirillo to leave the series for good. This led to some minor controversy over viewers complaining about this change on social websites, such as YouTube, due to the new voice actor having no similarities to the original in terms of voice. Similarily, Ashleigh Ball retired as the voice of Mary (but not Sissy nor Missy) at the end of the 4th season, due to her work on My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic; as a result, Mary was replaced by Brittney Wilson, her original voice.

Plot

Johnny is part of the fledgling Test family, which consists of his 13-year old genius identical twin sisters, Susan and Mary, and his over-the-top parents, his mother Lila, who is a full-blown workaholic businesswoman who works like the stereotypical father of the family nearly all night and day, and his father Hugh, who is an obsessive-compulsive househusband whose two biggest obsessions are cleaning and cooking meatloaf. The Test Twins frequently use Johnny as a guinea pig for their various experiments and inventions (thus their surname of Test) in their laboratory filled with highly advanced technology built in over the Tests' household attic, with most of which they try to impress their pretty boy next-door neighbor, Gil Nexdor, with whom both harbor a deep love and obsession, although their attempts to come up with something new and/or another in order to attract his attention always end in failure.

Johnny is the troublesome, and widely disrespectful bratty kid who is generally the cause of problems in the city, and he is best friends with his anthropomorphic talking (and talkative) pet dog, Dukey, who is a mutt that Susan and Mary gave human-level intelligence and the ability to speak in an experiment when he was a puppy. Because Johnny has Susan, Mary, and Dukey by his side, he gets to live any kid's dream, only to find that some dreams are not worth living. He is very hyperactive, and often messes with his sisters' inventions, causing trouble and mayhem, but just as often proves himself to be extremely clever such as by frequently tricking his genius sisters or saving the day from whatever danger happens to show up. Johnny can be considered very spoiled and stubborn, as he gets what he wants through deceit, blackmail, or manipulation, though he does love his sisters in a way only a brother can. Johnny hates school and does not work hard at all; if anything, he goes to great lengths to avoid doing work, often using his sisters' inventions to do so and often putting himself and/or others in trouble as a result.

As for Susan and Mary, though they generally refuse to help Johnny in his antics, they generally end up doing so anyway due to Johnny blackmailing or manipulating them, or in exchange for Johnny allowing them to use and serve him as their aforementioned lab rat. Their hard-headed demeanor makes them gullible, and they have been tricked by Johnny on various occasions; And Dukey, whom Johnny likes to take places, sometimes dresses as a human being when going out in public, usually in a shirt marked 'NOT A DOG', and he is addressed by others as Johnny's "hairy friend" or "the kid with the rare hair disorder" because the minor characters' lack of intellect causes them to believe that Dukey is a human. Recently, when Dukey is not dressed like a human and someone hears Dukey say something to Johnny, they will ask "Did that dog just talk?", which Johnny quickly replies "No, you're just hallucinating."

Johnny's main arch-nemesis, however, is Bling-Bling Boy (Real name: Eugene Hamilton, as he apparently changed his name from that to his present one), a fellow arch-rival of the Test sisters and friendly pal and enemy of Johnny and Dukey, who acts as one of the recurring evil forces at work, and has a big crush on Susan, who does not reciprocate his feelings, and often resorts to try and force her to be his girlfriend, and whom he is after a specific date with, even though she has absolutely no interest in him. Since Season 3, Johnny has also gained a second major rival, Dark Vegan, a space warlord from the planet Vegandon, of which he is leader. On the other hand, The girl who may have a crush on Johnny, Sissy Blakely (who serves as Johnny's female rival as well, and has a pink laberdoodle named Missy, who is also Dukey's rival and mate), fellow bully Bumper, the General, from the army base Area 51.1, and Mr. Black and Mr. White, two federal agents from the Super Secret Government Agency (SSGA), sometimes help, distract, and/or annoy, the Tests on most various occasions.

His catchphrase is "Whoa, didn't see that coming" during an unexpected event. There have been minor alterations to that phrase and in some cases, others have said it, including Dukey; while the twins have a habit of speaking in unison especially when reciting their catchphrase "We're such geniuses." Other recurring catchphases including "Come on!" and "Say Wha?!" and most recently "That was convenient" when some mistake of Johnny turns out in his favor. The backstory given to the Johnny Test character was that it was his 11th birthday, and for the ultimate birthday gift, for a while, Johnny wanted a dog as his present, so he chose a mixed-breed dog, who was once the "smelliest, mangiest and friendliest mutt" that he could find at the dog pound, and named him Dukey. But Susan and Mary, since they hated stupid smelly dogs, decided to genetically alter him so that he will have human-like abilities so that he will stop being and acting like one. Meanwhile, Johnny's enemy, Bling-Bling Boy, had once attended the same exclusive school (The Porkbelly Mega Institute of Technology) that his sisters do, but he got expelled after an "unfortunate incident" that resulted in their teacher, Professor Slopsink, receiving a metal claw for a hand, hence why Bling-Bling Boy currently serves as an evil boy genius who will stop at nothing to get Susan (and win her love), and occasionally, to take over the world.

Cast

  • James Arnold Taylor as Johnny Test, Hank Anchorman, The Principal, Mr. Mittens, Bee Keeper, Dark Vegan, Dog Catcher
  • Louis Chirillo as Dukey, Mr. Henry Teacherman (Seasons 1-4)
  • Trevor Devall as Dukey, Mr. Henry Teacherman (Season 5), Additional Voices (Season 2)
  • Maryke Hendrikse as Susan Test, Jillian Vegan
  • Brittney Wilson as Mary Test (Seasons 1 and 5), Sissy Blakely (Season 1), Additional Voices (Season 2)
  • Ashleigh Ball as Mary Test (Season 2-4), Sissy Blakely, Missy (Season 2-5)
  • Ian James Corlett as Hugh Test
  • Kathleen Barr as Lila Test, Janet Nelson Jr., Blast Ketchup
  • Bill Mondy as Mr. Black, Brain Freezer
  • Scott McNeil as Mr. White, Zizrar, Bumper Randalls
  • Andrew Francis as Gil Nexdor, Tim Burnout, Additional Voices (Season 2)
  • Lee Tockar as Eugene "Bling-Bling Boy" Hamilton, General, Mayor Howard, Mr. Wacko, Montague, Albert
  • Richard Newman as Professor Slopsink, Additional Voices (Season 2)

Additional Voices

Media

For Cartoon Network, the series has been a ratings success, now being one of the highest watched shows on their lineup and their 6th most popular show. It has also gathered worldwide popularity by June 30, 2011.

The show is a popular component of the Irish-language children's television block "Cúla 4" on the Irish television channel TG4. The characters are dubbed with Dublin accents.

Toys

Cookie Jar had partnered with restaurant chain CKE Restaurants to offer a promotional Johnny Test toy campaign at its Carl's Jr. and Hardees restaurants in the U.S. and Mexico, one of the four custom-designed premiums with the purchase of their Cool Kids Combo meals; The campaign ran from June 28, 2010 through until August 24, 2010, with Carl's Jr. also having subsequently presented a Johnny Test soccer-themed promotion in Mexico, which had lasted between June 7, 2010 and July 25, 2010, to coincide with the country's World Cup activities.[21][22] Interestingly, Jollibee had advertised a similar toy campaign in their Kids' Meals as well, in form of their Amazing Adventure Chasers mini-toyline.[23]

DVD releases

The series has five DVDs released by NCircle Entertainment. Johnny Test: Johnny & Dukey and Johnny vs. Bling Bling Boy were released on December 23, 2008.[24][25] Johnny X and Super Pooch was released on August 11, 2009,[26] Extreme Johnny was released on December 1, 2009[27] and Game Time was released on May 4, 2010.[28]

On January 4, 2011, it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to the series, under license from Cookie Jar Entertainment. They subsequently released Seasons 1 & 2 on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time on February 15, 2011.[29] Seasons 3 & 4 were released on September 13, 2011 in a 4-disc set.[30]

On February 21, 2008, Liberation Entertainment released the Complete 1st Season on DVD in the UK;[31] but as of 2011, no more Seasons have been released in Region 2 format.

Mill Creek Releases Episodes Release Date
The Complete 1st and 2nd Seasons 26 February 15, 2011
The Complete 3rd and 4th Seasons 39 September 13, 2011
The Complete 5th Season 26 TBA

Video games

See also: Johnny Test (video game)

On January 21, 2010, another partnership was emerged between Cookie Jar Entertainment and the mobile application developer Jirbo that resulted in two Johnny Test video games produced by the developer and made available exclusively for download from iTunes, for free and $0.99, for the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad. The first game, Johnny Test: Clone Zapper, finds Johnny Test and Dukey engaged to combat an army of Johnny clones they accidentally created of them from a clone machine, with the help of two special laser zapper guns as their only weapons to defeat the clones and destroy them personly, and the second game, Johnny Test: Bot Drop, sees Johnny, Dukey and the Test twins going on a rescue chase, with Johnny and Dukey both piloting a bot drop plane for use the robot clones of Johnnies (first seen in 101 Johnnies) for the titular "Bot Drops" to eject them to safery in a moving rescue vehicle driven by Susan and Mary. In the plot of that latter forementioned game, and like in each level of the game before it, Johnny has to aim and time to drop the robots so they will land safely onto the vehicle, then Johnny Test has saved the day once again. Both games are typical shootslinging and side-scrolling games that in all utilize the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad's unique multi-touch capabilities and scrolling, and, as a whole, players of both games can compete on the worldwide highscores list of each level of game and competitive player. Later in the Spring of 2011, the series was finally really officially licensed by Cookie Jar for a new third, and fully console-handled, video game, this time, however, to come out on Nintendo DS; a sneak preview and trailer of the game has been already included on the complete first and second seasons DVD set (as aforementioned above), and was released in March 29, 2011.[32][33]

Comic books and graphic novels

Viper Comics announced in April 2011 that they would be publishing a Johnny Test graphic novel along with another Cookie Jar Group property, Inspector Gadget.[34] The book was subsequently published with the title Johnny Test: The Once and Future Johnny.[35]

Reviews

Joly Herman of Common Sense Media posted a review of Johnny Test on Go.com. In the review, Herman indicated that the series "is an age-appropriate choice for kids" and was "surprisingly inventive and not as violent as other cartoons in this genre.", before finally explaining "The only thing worth mentioning: All the experiments Johnny undergoes are unattended by adults, which allows all types of zany plots to unfold." Herman gave the show three stars out of five.[36]

Awards and Nominations

In 2006, the first season of the series was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Live Action and Animation at the 33rd Daytime Emmy Awards and a Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing in Television Animation (for the episode pair, Deep Sea Johnny and Johnny and the Amazing Turbo Action Backpack) at Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA. In 2007, the second season of the show won a Gemini Award for Best Direction in a Children's or Youth Program or Series (for the episode pair, Saturday Night's Alright for Johnny and Johnny's Mint Chip) [37] and in 2008, the third season was nominated for another Gemini Award, this time for Best Original Music Score for an Animated Program or Series (for the episode pair, Johnny vs. Bling-Bling 3 and Stinkin' Johnny); finally, in both 2009 and 2010, the show, in its fourth season, was nominated once more for yet another Gemini Award, this time wholly for Best Animated Program or Series (for the episode pair, Johnny Cakes and Johnny Tube)[38] and had been awarded a Grand Prize for Best Program - All Categories at the Alliance for Children and Television's 2009 Gala award ceremony, which ultimately marks the series' owner, Cookie Jar's first ACT award.[39]

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ [2]
  3. ^ a b c Kevin Manthei Music
  4. ^ http://www.cynopsis.com/editions/cynopsis/92911-mipcom-and-mipjunior-2011-shopping-guide/
  5. ^ COOKIE JAR'S NEWEST SHOWS HIGHLIGHT KIDS' WB! ON THE CW 2007-08 LINEUP
  6. ^ JOHNNY TEST TO DEBUT CARTOON NETWORK
  7. ^ a b COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT MOVES FULL STEAM AHEAD WITH ITS LATEST FANTASY-ACTION-COMEDY SERIES JOHNNY TEST
  8. ^ COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT SERVES UP MORE JOHNNY TEST FOR CARTOON NETWORK CHANNELS AROUND THE WORLD
  9. ^ Basic plot of many episodes
  10. ^ a b JOHNNY TEST RETURNS TO CARTOON NETWORK
  11. ^ Kids’ WB! Upfront 2005-2006 Announcement
  12. ^ "Looney Tunes-Inspired "Loonatics Unleashed" Remains #1 Broadcast Kids’ Series Second Week in a Row Among All Key Demos". TimeWarner. September 29, 2005. http://www.timewarner.com/corp/newsroom/pr/0,20812,1111667,00.html. Retrieved 2011-03-01. 
  13. ^ Johnny Test Logo|aaaron.com - The Home of Aaron Simpson
  14. ^ a b James Arnold Taylor - Johnny Test
  15. ^ Johnny Test character clean-up model sheet by Ray Leong, at Test Characters|Flickr - Photo Sharing!
  16. ^ Johnny Test character clean-up model sheets by Casey Mitchum, at his blog site Puppies and Paint: September 2008
  17. ^ May 5 2008-PresentThe C-Word: (demented) Fanart corner: Johnny Test
  18. ^ Evidence of behind-the-scenes archives at the Collideascope Animation blog site
  19. ^ KIDS' WB! ON THE CW RENEWS JOHNNY TEST FOR THIRD SEASON
  20. ^ COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT'S MIPTV LINEUP FEATURES DOODLEBOPS ROCKIN' ROAD SHOW AND NEW SEASONS OF CAILLOU, MAGI-NATION, ARTHUR AND JOHNNY TEST
  21. ^ "Johnny Test" Kids Meals at Carl's Jr. and Hardee's - Animation News Discussion Cartoon Community
  22. ^ COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT PARTNERS WITH CARL'S JR.® AND HARDEE'S® RESTAURANTS FOR JOHNNY TEST PROMOTIONS IN U.S. AND MEXICO
  23. ^ Azrael's Merryland: TOY NEWS : Unleash your imagination with Jollibee Kids Meal’s new blockbuster toys : Johnny Test and Carp Captor Sakura
  24. ^ title= Amazon.com: Johnny Test & Dukey: Johnny Test: Movies & TV
  25. ^ title= Amazon.com: Johnny Test Vs. Bling-Bling Boy: Johnny Test: Movies & TV
  26. ^ title= Amazon.com: Johnny X and Super Pooch: Johnny Test: Movies & TV
  27. ^ title= Amazon.com: Extreme Johnny: Johnny Test: Movies & TV
  28. ^ title= Amazon.com: Game Time: Johnny Test: Movies & TV
  29. ^ http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Johnny-Test-Seasons-1-and-2-and-Super-Smarty-Pants/14876
  30. ^ http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Johnny-Test-Seasons-3-and-4/15703
  31. ^ title= Johnny Test Complete Series One (DVD): Amazon.co.uk: (DVD)
  32. ^ COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT AND JIRBO TEAM UP TO RELEASE NEW JOHNNY TEST GAMES FOR IPHONE AND IPOD TOUCH
  33. ^ title= KidScreen - Cookie Jar gets in the game with Johnny Test
  34. ^ "Free Comic Book Day: Inspector Gadget and Johnny Test". Viper Comics. 13 April 2011. http://vipercomics.com/2011/04/13/fcbd-inspector-gadget-and-johnny-test/. 
  35. ^ Mettam, Dale (2011). Johnny Test: The Once and Future Johnny. Viper Comics. ISBN 9780983367017. 
  36. ^ Herman, Joly (September 25, 2005). "Television Review: Johnny Test - Kid-friendly 'toon is more imaginative than most." (in English). Common Sense Media (USA). http://family.go.com/entertainment/article-csm-81143-television-review--johnny-test-t/. Retrieved 29 September 2011. 
  37. ^ JOE SHERMAN WINS GEMINI FOR BEST DIRECTOR OF COOKIE JAR'S JOHNNY TEST
  38. ^ "The Cultural Post: Nominations for the 2010 Gemini Awards". The Cultural Post. August 31, 2010. http://anhkhoi.blogspot.com/2010/08/nominations-for-2010-gemini-awards.html. Retrieved 2011-03-01. 
  39. ^ COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT'S JOHNNY TEST WINS ALLIANCE FOR MEP GRAND PRIZE

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