Pokémon in Brazil: Difference between revisions
RikkiKitsune (talk | contribs) OMG, it was a mess! I seems that me and {{u|Sayaka}} will have much work.... |
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The second season had also big audience, but not so much as the first. This was due to the broadcast of {{wp|Digimon}} series in a rival channel of Record, {{wp|Rede Globo}}, in the same hour. After, Rede Record acquired seasons until fourth. | The second season had also big audience, but not so much as the first. This was due to the broadcast of {{wp|Digimon}} series in a rival channel of Record, {{wp|Rede Globo}}, in the same hour. After, Rede Record acquired seasons until fourth. | ||
Since Rede Record had "spent" its episodes in a little period of time, it started to | Since Rede Record had "spent" its episodes in a little period of time, it started to rerun episodes frequently, fact which lowered its audience. | ||
'''Rede Globo''' then purchased season 5th in 2005. Pokémon was so successful in the mornings of Globo that it also acquired the 6th and the 7th seasons. But when it ran out of new episodes, Globo replayed them by some time and after took out of its mornings. | '''Rede Globo''' then purchased season 5th in 2005. Pokémon was so successful in the mornings of Globo that it also acquired the 6th and the 7th seasons. But when it ran out of new episodes, Globo replayed them by some time and after took out of its mornings. | ||
In 2008, RedeTV! was finding a temporary cartoon to fill a space which would be took by a new | In 2008, RedeTV! was finding a temporary cartoon to fill a space which would be took by a new program, and then acquired the first season to do so. However, Pokémon was so successful that the RedeTV! acquired other seasons to air at nights of the channel, at 18:00. Nowadays, Pokémon is on the animation block TV Kids, at almost the same hour. In 2009, RedeTV! was the first to air [[Pokémon Battle Dimension|Season 11]], even before [[Cartoon Network]]. | ||
===Dubbing=== | ===Dubbing=== | ||
When Pokémon arrived in Brazil, the Latin American distribution of Pokémon (Swen and Televix) led him to be dubbed the Master Sound Studios in São Paulo and then offer it to a TV station open. The Master Sound did a good job, despite some blunders, and chose a great voice cast for the protagonists. After the success achieved in Brazil and the world, the distributors brought the 2nd season of Pokémon, this time was dubbed the BKS. The BKS has committed more errors than the Master Sound and even changed the voices of the Narrator and Meowth. In addition, many voice actors in the series refused to dub at BKS and it took a lot of work to convince the original cast coming back. | When Pokémon arrived in Brazil, the Latin American distribution of Pokémon (Swen and Televix) led him to be dubbed the Master Sound Studios in São Paulo and then offer it to a TV station open. The Master Sound did a good job, despite some blunders, and chose a great voice cast for the protagonists. After the success achieved in Brazil and the world, the distributors brought the 2nd season of Pokémon, this time was dubbed the BKS. The BKS has committed more errors than the Master Sound and even changed the voices of the Narrator and Meowth. In addition, many voice actors in the series refused to dub at BKS and it took a lot of work to convince the original cast coming back. | ||
The following year, the Swen Televix and decided to change the dubbing studio, especially after the controversy dubbing Sailor Moon R the BKS. The new studio that hosted the 3rd season of Pokemon was | The following year, the Swen Televix and decided to change the dubbing studio, especially after the controversy dubbing Sailor Moon R the BKS. The new studio that hosted the 3rd season of Pokemon was Parisi Video, also from São Paulo, who also voiced the 4th, the 5th and 6th season. The Parisi brought the entire cast of the series around and between each other and blunders, has achieved a voiceover good, but not to pay its employees, ended up going bankrupt. Thus, Swen and Televix brought the anime to be dubbed in another studio in São Paulo. | ||
Centauro took anime from the 7th season and although this brings the main voice cast back, changed the voices of almost all the supporting cast and extras, but did such a good job who won an Oscar Dubbing (Yamato Award 2006) Award for Best Continuing/Redubbing. The good thing is that some of these changes proved for the better. The Centaur also dubbed the mini-series spin-off Pokémon Chronicles, which changed the voices of almost all supporting characters, but still did a good job on issues of translation and audio. After that, the 8th season (Pokémon - Advanced Battle) arrived in Brazil and was in charge of Centauro again! With a | Centauro took anime from the 7th season and although this brings the main voice cast back, changed the voices of almost all the supporting cast and extras, but did such a good job who won an Oscar Dubbing (Yamato Award 2006) Award for Best Continuing/Redubbing. The good thing is that some of these changes proved for the better. The Centaur also dubbed the mini-series spin-off Pokémon Chronicles, which changed the voices of almost all supporting characters, but still did a good job on issues of translation and audio. After that, the 8th season (Pokémon - Advanced Battle) arrived in Brazil and was in charge of Centauro again! With a troubled dubbing, full change of voices, translation errors and an horrible opening song, raised much criticism from fans. | ||
The 9th season (Pokémon - Battle Frontier) arrived at the studio soon after and with the same scheme dubbed the 8th season, but with many improvements and a voice cast more stable with the return of some former players, oblivious to the 7th season and Chronicles. From the middle of the 9th season, the site Poképlus started to help the studio that there were no more failures, which was very positive for the series. Centauro was also the first studio to dub the anime as well as movies (the eighth onwards), in addition to the special payment in the United States in 2005 and 2006. | The 9th season (Pokémon - Battle Frontier) arrived at the studio soon after and with the same scheme dubbed the 8th season, but with many improvements and a voice cast more stable with the return of some former players, oblivious to the 7th season and Chronicles. From the middle of the 9th season, the site Poképlus started to help the studio that there were no more failures, which was very positive for the series. Centauro was also the first studio to dub the anime as well as movies (the eighth onwards), in addition to the special payment in the United States in 2005 and 2006. |
Revision as of 21:18, 3 October 2009
Pokémon in Brazil | ||||
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| ||||
Language | Brazilian Portuguese | |||
Continent | South America | |||
Original animated series airdates | ||||
EP001 | March 7, 1999 | |||
AG001 | 2004 | |||
DP001 | February 9, 2008 | |||
BW001 | ||||
XY001 | ||||
SM001 | ||||
JN001 | ||||
HZ001 |
Pokémon arrived as anime with the broadcast of Pokémon, Eu Escolho Você! in Brazil on May 10th, 1999, during a morning TV program called Eliana & Alegria in Rede Record. Later it was shown in Rede Globo (2005-2008), and RedeTV! (2008-present).
Pokémon anime
Pokémon started airing on Rede Record in May 10, 1999 daily on mornings. Some months after, it also begun to air in the brazilian Cartoon Network channel, along with Dragon Ball Z. Both channels noticed the great sucess that they had in hands, and after some time of first season reairings, the second season started to air in the two, first in Record, and a week after, in Cartoon Network.
![](https://staging.archives.bulbagarden.net/media/upload/thumb/3/3d/CartoonNetwork.png/170px-CartoonNetwork.png)
The second season had also big audience, but not so much as the first. This was due to the broadcast of Digimon series in a rival channel of Record, Rede Globo, in the same hour. After, Rede Record acquired seasons until fourth.
Since Rede Record had "spent" its episodes in a little period of time, it started to rerun episodes frequently, fact which lowered its audience.
Rede Globo then purchased season 5th in 2005. Pokémon was so successful in the mornings of Globo that it also acquired the 6th and the 7th seasons. But when it ran out of new episodes, Globo replayed them by some time and after took out of its mornings.
In 2008, RedeTV! was finding a temporary cartoon to fill a space which would be took by a new program, and then acquired the first season to do so. However, Pokémon was so successful that the RedeTV! acquired other seasons to air at nights of the channel, at 18:00. Nowadays, Pokémon is on the animation block TV Kids, at almost the same hour. In 2009, RedeTV! was the first to air Season 11, even before Cartoon Network.
Dubbing
When Pokémon arrived in Brazil, the Latin American distribution of Pokémon (Swen and Televix) led him to be dubbed the Master Sound Studios in São Paulo and then offer it to a TV station open. The Master Sound did a good job, despite some blunders, and chose a great voice cast for the protagonists. After the success achieved in Brazil and the world, the distributors brought the 2nd season of Pokémon, this time was dubbed the BKS. The BKS has committed more errors than the Master Sound and even changed the voices of the Narrator and Meowth. In addition, many voice actors in the series refused to dub at BKS and it took a lot of work to convince the original cast coming back.
The following year, the Swen Televix and decided to change the dubbing studio, especially after the controversy dubbing Sailor Moon R the BKS. The new studio that hosted the 3rd season of Pokemon was Parisi Video, also from São Paulo, who also voiced the 4th, the 5th and 6th season. The Parisi brought the entire cast of the series around and between each other and blunders, has achieved a voiceover good, but not to pay its employees, ended up going bankrupt. Thus, Swen and Televix brought the anime to be dubbed in another studio in São Paulo.
Centauro took anime from the 7th season and although this brings the main voice cast back, changed the voices of almost all the supporting cast and extras, but did such a good job who won an Oscar Dubbing (Yamato Award 2006) Award for Best Continuing/Redubbing. The good thing is that some of these changes proved for the better. The Centaur also dubbed the mini-series spin-off Pokémon Chronicles, which changed the voices of almost all supporting characters, but still did a good job on issues of translation and audio. After that, the 8th season (Pokémon - Advanced Battle) arrived in Brazil and was in charge of Centauro again! With a troubled dubbing, full change of voices, translation errors and an horrible opening song, raised much criticism from fans.
The 9th season (Pokémon - Battle Frontier) arrived at the studio soon after and with the same scheme dubbed the 8th season, but with many improvements and a voice cast more stable with the return of some former players, oblivious to the 7th season and Chronicles. From the middle of the 9th season, the site Poképlus started to help the studio that there were no more failures, which was very positive for the series. Centauro was also the first studio to dub the anime as well as movies (the eighth onwards), in addition to the special payment in the United States in 2005 and 2006.
External Links
The Pokémon franchise around the world | |
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Africa: | South Africa |
The Americas: | Brazil • Canada • Latin America • United States |
Asia: | Greater China • Indonesia • Japan • Malaysia • Philippines • Singapore • South Asia • South Korea • Thailand • Vietnam |
Europe: | Albania • Belgium • Bulgaria • Croatia • Czech Republic • Denmark • Finland • France • Germany • Greece Hungary • Iceland • Ireland • Italy • Latvia • Lithuania • Netherlands • North Macedonia • Norway • Poland Portugal • Romania • Russia • Serbia • Slovakia • Spain • Sweden • Ukraine • United Kingdom |
Middle East: | Arab world • Israel • Turkey |
Oceania: | Australia • New Zealand |
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This article is part of Project Globe, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon franchise around the world. |