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This article is about the original 1998 TV series. Pink letters reading “The Powerpuff Girls” against a black background. Omlete ideas Girls, which was only shown at festivals.

The Powerpuff Girls aired on Cartoon Network for six seasons, three specials, and a feature film, with the final episode airing on March 25, 2005. A total of 78 episodes were aired in addition to two shorts, a Christmas special, the film, a tenth anniversary special, and a special episode using CGI technology. The show is set mainly in the city of Townsville, USA. Townsville is depicted as a major American city, with a cityscape consisting of several major skyscrapers. As depicted in the opening sequence of each episode, the Powerpuff Girls Blossom, Bubbles, and Buttercup were created by Professor Utonium in an attempt to create the “perfect little girl” using a mixture of “sugar, spice, and everything nice”.

The three girls all have oval-shaped heads, abnormally large eyes inspired by Margaret Keane’s art, flat feet and stubby arms and legs, and lack of noses, ears, fingers, toes and necks. Her personality ingredient is “everything nice”, her signature color is pink, and she has long red-orange hair with a red bow. Tara Strong in the series, and by Kath Soucie in the What a Cartoon! Her signature color is blue, her personality ingredient is “sugar”, and she has blonde hair in pigtails. Her personality ingredient is “spice”, her signature color is green, and she has short black hair in a flip. The first early animated versions of the Powerpuff Girls, who were originally known as the “Whoopass Girls”.

The name Whoopass was dropped for inclusion as part of the What a Cartoon! Following the second short, Cartoon Network picked up The Powerpuff Girls for a regular animated series. All of the original episodes were hand-drawn and produced at the Korean studio Rough Draft Studios, except the What a Cartoon! Animal House in Japan and the second being animated at Fil Cartoons in the Philippines. The Powerpuff Girls in the 2014 special. On January 28, 2013, a CGI special titled Powerpuff Girls: Dance Pantsed was announced to premiere that year, though it was later delayed to January 20, 2014. Boeing 737-232 decorated with the Powerpuff Girls.

In a 2000 Entertainment Weekly review, Marc Bernardin complimented the show on its “spot-on pop-culture acumen” and “unparalleled sense of fun”, giving it a warm welcome from earlier “lame” superhero cartoons that he grew up with. IGN ranked the series 18th in its Top 25 Primetime Animated Series of All Time list in 2006. Robert Alvarez, Lauren Faust, et al. In April 2005, plans for a Japanese anime series based on the cartoon, Demashita! The series premiered in Japan the following year with 52 half-hour episodes, airing each Saturday from July 1 to December 23, 2006, and from January 6 to June 30, 2007. From 2000 to 2006, DC published a series of seventy comics based on the television show. The Powerpuff Girls Movie was released in the United States on July 3, 2002, by Warner Bros.