Funny Patrick and Spongebob Squarepants Pictures
| Patrick Star | |
|---|---|
| SpongeBob SquarePants character | |
| | |
| Showtime appearance | "Assist Wanted" (1999) |
| Created past | Stephen Hillenburg |
| Designed by | Stephen Hillenburg |
| Portrayed by | Danny Skinner (Broadway)[i] |
| Voiced by | Neb Fagerbakke Jack Gore (Young; Sponge on the Run) |
| In-universe information | |
| Species | Starfish |
| Gender | Male |
| Relatives | Herb Star (father) Margie Star (mother) Sam Star (sister) Squidina Star (adoptive sister) |
| Birth engagement | Baronial 17[ii] |
Patrick Star is a fictional character in the American animated goggle box serial SpongeBob SquarePants. He is voiced past actor Bill Fagerbakke and was created and designed by marine biologist and animator Stephen Hillenburg. He showtime appeared in the series' pilot episode "Aid Wanted" on May 1, 1999. In addition to his supporting part on SpongeBob SquarePants, Patrick also serves equally the main protagonist of The Patrick Star Show, which premiered in 2021.[three]
Seen as a lazy, overweight and dimwitted pink starfish, Patrick lives under a rock in the underwater city of Bikini Bottom side by side door to Squidward Tentacles' moai. His most significant character trait is his lack of common sense, which sometimes leads him and his best friend, SpongeBob SquarePants, into trouble. Patrick is unemployed and a cocky-proclaimed good in the "art of doing nothing".
The character has received positive reactions from critics and fans alike. Patrick has been included in various SpongeBob SquarePants-related merchandise, including trading cards, video games, plush toys, and comic books. He is a leading character in The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (2004), The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water (2015), and The SpongeBob Picture show: Sponge on the Run (2020).
Role in SpongeBob SquarePants
Patrick is the ignorant but humorous all-time friend of SpongeBob SquarePants. He is portrayed as beingness an overweight pink starfish, who serves as the hamlet idiot of the underwater city of Bikini Lesser.[four] Patrick gets dumber throughout the series and has been shown to make many ludicrous mistakes. Despite this, he has occasionally been portrayed as a savant, with articulate observance to sure subjects in specific item. However, he e'er reverts quickly back to his usual, unintelligent self later displaying a moment of wisdom.[v] He holds no form of occupation except for several very brief stints working at the Krusty Krab and at the Chum Bucket in a multifariousness of positions,[half-dozen] and mostly spends his fourth dimension either clowning around with SpongeBob, catching jellyfish with him, or lounging beneath the rock under which he resides.
At home, Patrick is unremarkably depicted either sleeping, watching Television, or engaged in the "art of doing nothing", at which he is an expert.[7] All the effects in the space nether his rock are made of sand, and Patrick tin simply opt to quickly build up article of furniture as needed; even then, his living space is sparse and contains simply the barest essentials.[eight] Bated from his best friend SpongeBob, who is often impressed by Patrick's chapters to come up up with naïve yet genius plans or solutions,[9] Patrick frequently irritates those effectually him and is confounded by the simplest of questions or subjects.[10] The characters of Mr. Krabs and Squidward have no patience for Patrick'south stupidity, and the former does not pay him much regard; Clancy Dark-brown, who provides Mr. Krabs' voice, said, "The only person that he [Mr. Krabs] doesn't hire is Patrick because Patrick is just too stupid to work for nothing."[11] Sandy often gets bellyaching past Patrick, just however sees him equally a friend.[12]
Character
Creation and blueprint
Stephen Hillenburg start became fascinated with the bounding main and began developing his artistic abilities as a child. During college, he majored in marine biology and minored in art. He planned to return to higher eventually to pursue a main's degree in art. After graduating in 1984, he joined the Ocean Institute, an organization defended to educating the public about marine science and maritime history.[13] [fourteen] While he was there, he initially had the thought that would atomic number 82 to the creation of SpongeBob SquarePants: a comic book titled The Intertidal Zone.[xv] In 1987, Hillenburg left the institute to pursue a career in animation.[15] [sixteen]
A few years afterward studying experimental blitheness at the California Institute of the Arts,[sixteen] Hillenburg met Joe Murray, creator of the Nickelodeon series Rocko's Mod Life, at an animation festival, and was offered a chore as a director of the evidence.[15] [17] [18] [xix] Martin Olson, one of the writers for Rocko's Modern Life, read The Intertidal Zone and encouraged Hillenburg to create a television set series with a like concept. At that indicate, Hillenburg had non even considered creating his own serial. Notwithstanding, he realized that if he ever did, this would be the best approach.[14] [xx] [21] Product on Rocko's Modern Life concluded in 1996.[22] Shortly afterwards, Hillenburg began working on SpongeBob SquarePants.[14]
For the show'south characters, Hillenburg started to draw and used character designs from his comic volume—including starfish, crab, and sponge.[14] He described Patrick equally "probably the dumbest guy in boondocks".[23] The graphic symbol was conceived equally a starfish to embody the animal's nature; according to Hillenburg, starfish look "dumb and slow", only they are "very active and ambitious" in reality, similar Patrick.[24] Hillenburg incorporated character comedy rather than topical humor on the show to emphasize "things that are more than well-nigh humorous situations and nearly characters and their flaws."[25] He designed Patrick and SpongeBob as such because "they're whipping themselves up into situations—that'southward always where the sense of humor comes from. The rule is: Follow the innocence and avert topical humor."[26]
In spite of being depicted every bit having a good temperament or country of listen, Patrick has been shown in some episodes to have a tantrum. Patrick'south emotional outbreak was originally written merely for the offset flavor episode "Valentine'due south Day", where SpongeBob and Sandy try to give Patrick a Valentine's Day souvenir, and "was supposed to be a quondam thing".[27] Notwithstanding, according to episode writer Jay Lender, "when that show came back information technology felt so right that his dark side started popping up everywhere. You can plan ahead all you desire, merely the characters eventually tell yous who they are."[27]
Every main grapheme in the show has its own unique pace audio. The sound of Patrick'south footsteps is recorded past the prove's Foley crew, with a Foley talent wearing a slip-on shoe. Jeff Hutchins, show's audio designer said, "[Going] barefoot makes it tough to have much presence, and so we decided that Patrick would be performed with shoes on."[28]
Vocalization
Patrick's vocalism is provided by actor Bill Fagerbakke, who also does the voices of numerous other characters on SpongeBob SquarePants. While creating the show and writing its pilot episode in 1997, Hillenburg and Derek Drymon, the evidence's then-creative director, were too conducting auditions to find voices for the show's characters.[29] Fagerbakke auditioned for the role of Patrick after Tom Kenny, SpongeBob'south vox actor, had been cast. Fagerbakke said, "Steve is such a lovely guy, and I had admittedly no feeling for the cloth any." He described his experience in the audition, maxim "I was just going in for another audition, and I had no idea what was in shop there in terms of the remarkable visual wit and really the kind of endearing child-like humanity in the show. I couldn't pick that up from the audition material at all. I was just kind of perfunctorially trying to give the guy what he wanted."[30]
Steve Hillenburg actually played for me a portion of Tom [Kenny]'s operation every bit the character, and they were looking for a counterpoint. And I do the big dumb stuff. That's my deal ... that's what I practise [sic]. It was such a bang-up experience. Typically, when you audition for any kind of voiceover stuff, you're in a studio, but every bit I remember information technology, this was, like, in a weird briefing room somewhere, and he had i of those trivial old cassette decks that's well-nigh half the size of a shoebox, and in that location was something and so endearing near it.
—Fagerbakke, on his audition for the role.[xxx]
Fagerbakke referred to Patrick equally "AquaDauber" (a reference to his office every bit Michael "Dauber" Dybinski on the 1990s sitcom Coach) in the first few years of working on the show.[31] Patrick is "enormously entertaining to portray" because, co-ordinate to Fagerbakke, "when I'm performing Patrick, there are many secrets that I could never divulge".[32] Fagerbakke's approach in voicing Patrick is "much the same way I would do [to] any kind of character."[xxx] "I'm always looking for opportunities to explore that freewheeling imagination and insanity of children. To exist able to plug in to that and let that carry you in to a performance is such a gas, I have so much fun with that. I love kids; I raised two girls and I love existence a parent," he said.[31] The bandage members record as a whole cast. Fagerbakke says that the state of affairs improves his performance as a voice thespian because "at that place is something remarkable that happens when people are working together that is unique to that."[31] Fagerbakke modeled his functioning whenever Patrick is angry afterwards that of American extra Shelley Winters.[33]
Fagerbakke has been compared to Patrick's character, which he concurs with. Kenny said that "Bill [Fagerbakke] is a big guy. The world is almost too small for him. He's a forcefulness of nature, like Patrick."[34] Author Jay Lender said, describing Fagerbakke in the recording studio, "Bill Fagerbakke is the near thoughtful performer I've always seen in the berth—he was always asking questions and really trying to get into the mindset, such every bit information technology is, of Patrick."[27] Writer Kent Osborne said of Fagerbakke, "He is this large guy, and he plays Patrick so well. He's just this big guy, and he lumbers around."[35] Fagerbakke said, "I'm clumsy. I'1000 goofy. I make mistakes all the time" and agreed that "I gauge I'thou a lot of Patrick."[32]
Reception
Disquisitional response
Critical reception for the grapheme from both professionals and fans has been positive. In his DVD review for DVD Verdict, Bill Treadway chosen Patrick "the village idiot, who sometimes gives SpongeBob some really bad advice, but he is a loyal friend and that'due south something nosotros don't meet much of these days." He said, "Patrick is the definition of stupid and his antics will have you lot laughing out loud."[36] In a review published in 2007, Peter Keepnews of The New York Times said, "Patrick is a popular character, and the new episodes illustrate why: He is unfailingly enthusiastic, touchingly loyal and absolutely undeterred by his intellectual limitations. Hilariously voiced by Bill Fagerbakke, he is not just an endearing comic creation but a role model for idiots everywhere."[37]
Nancy Basile of About.com chosen Patrick "i of the silliest characters on SpongeBob SquarePants". In her DVD review of "SpongeBob and Friends: Patrick SquarePants", a Patrick-themed SpongeBob SquarePants home video release, Basile said, "The episodes included [...] are hilarious. They're non only some of Patrick'southward all-time episodes, merely as well some of the show's archetype episodes." She ranked "That's No Lady" equally Patrick'due south best episode and said, "I was remiss not to include this episode in my top ten [SpongeBob SquarePants episodes] list." She cited her favorite scene from the episode, where "Patrick tin't read the number on Mr. Krabs' tabular array, maxim, 'Ford human knee.' Mr. Krabs replies, 'That's a seven, Patricia.'"[38] The Kids' Choice Awards, an annual awards testify presented by Nickelodeon, added several new categories, including "Favorite Animated Animal Sidekick", in its 2014 ceremony.[39] Patrick received the Kids' Choice Award Blimp for the category, winning to Perry the Platypus (Phineas and Ferb), Sparky (The Fairly OddParents) and Waddles (Gravity Falls).[xl]
Allegations of homosexuality
In 2002, the show's popularity amidst the gay community grew, and information technology was reported that they had embraced the show, according to BBC Online.[41] The Wall Street Journal also raised questions about SpongeBob and Patrick in a recent article that pointed out the bear witness's popularity in the gay customs.[42] Tom Kenny, in response to the article, said "[I] felt the insinuation was a stretch."[42] "I had heard that gay viewers enjoy the testify in the same way that lots of people—college students, parents and children—like the show [...] I thought it was rather silly to hang an unabridged article on that. I don't think it'due south a case of it being a gay-friendly bear witness—Information technology'due south a man-beingness-friendly prove. They're all welcome," Kenny said.[42]
In 2005, a promotional video that involves SpongeBob promoting diversity and tolerance[43] was criticized by ii U.Due south. Christian evangelical groups, virtually notably Focus on the Family, because they saw the character was being used every bit an advocate for homosexuality though the video contained "no reference to sex, sexual lifestyle or sexual identity."[44] [45] The incident led to questions as to whether or not SpongeBob, his best friend Patrick, and the residual of the series' characters are homosexual characters. After this speculation and comments, Hillenburg repeated his assertion that sexual preference was never considered during the creation of the show.[46] He antiseptic the issue and said "We never intended them to be gay. I consider them to exist almost asexual. We're but trying to exist funny and this has got nothing to practise with the show."[47] [48] Tom Kenny and other production members were shocked and surprised that such an consequence had arisen.[49] Derek Drymon, the evidence's creative managing director until 2004, said, "If SpongeBob holds hands with Patrick it's considering he's his best friend and he loves him. I remember the whole thing is a function of a larger agenda to stigmatize gay people."[29] Focus on the Family founder James Dobson subsequently stated that his comments were taken out of context and that his original complaints were not with SpongeBob or whatsoever of the characters in the video merely with the organisation that sponsored the video, the We Are Family Foundation. Dobson noted that the foundation had posted pro-homosexual material on its website, merely afterward removed it.[50]
Queer theorist Jeffrey P. Dennis, author of the journal article "The Same Thing We Do Every Night: Signifying Same-Sex Desire in Television Cartoons," argued that SpongeBob and Sandy are non romantically in love, while adding that he believed that SpongeBob and Patrick "are paired with arguably erotic intensity." Dennis noted the two are "not consistently coded equally romantic partners," since they live in separate residences, and have distinct groups of friends, but claimed that in the series, "the possibility of aforementioned-sex desire is never excluded."[51] Martin Goodman of Animation World Magazine described Dennis's comments regarding SpongeBob and Patrick equally "interesting."[52]
In other media
Patrick has appeared in other SpongeBob SquarePants-related media, including board games, comic books, keychains, plush toys, trading cards and video games.[53] Patrick has a major role in The SpongeBob SquarePants Moving-picture show, the first feature-length film adaptation of the evidence. The film was released on November 19, 2004 and has been a financial success, grossing over $140 million worldwide.[54] He has also appeared in the picture show'south sequel, which was released in theaters on February 6, 2015. In the 2nd moving picture, Patrick (forth with SpongeBob, Squidward, Mr. Krabs, and Plankton) is rendered in 3D (using CGI) in the live action scenes. The group becomes an "Avengers-type squad"; Patrick transforms to Mr. Superawesomeness.[55]
In 2009, histrion John Fricker portrayed Patrick in the musical adaptation of the third season episode "The Sponge Who Could Fly".[56] Fricker and the musical itself were well received past most critics. Gordon Barr and Roger Domeneghetti of the Evening Chronicle described the musical equally "a silly riot of colour [...] as you lot'd have to await from an adaptation of a cartoon TV bear witness",[57] while Viv Hardwick of The Northern Echo said that Fricker and Martin Johnston (Mr. Krabs) "win the biggest costume contest."[58] A critic from the Chichester Observer wrote, "John Fricker is in his element as the simple but lovable Patrick Star".[59]
The character of Patrick has become viral in the Internet in the forms of memes or prototype macros. A still from The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, which displays Patrick in a driblet-jawed await, inspired a YouTube user to create a presentation of Patrick'southward expression using a number of dissimilar filters. Following this, a YouTube user uploaded another video featuring Patrick reacting to Canadian singer Justin Bieber'due south 2010 single, "Baby". The meme called "Surprised Patrick" started to disseminate, with 1 of the start images was posted to Reddit by SeannyOC, and and then reblogged onto I Can Has Cheezburger?'s Memebase.[60] Comedy websites—including BiteTV,[lx] CollegeHumor,[61] Mashable[62] and Smosh[63]—have published their ain "Best of" lists and compilations, covering the "Surprised Patrick" meme's popularity. Mashable's Nena Prakash said, "For years, Patrick Star helped concord downward Bikini Lesser while SpongeBob was flippin' burgers at [t]he Krusty Krab. Simply at present it'due south time for Patrick to come out from nether that stone and have a seat upon his royal meme throne, because he's an Internet star(fish)."[62] Another popular meme based on the character is the "Push It Somewhere Else Patrick" paradigm macro, which was taken from the second season episode "Sandy, SpongeBob, and the Worm", based on a scene where Patrick suggests that the boondocks should relocate itself in social club to bargain with an Alaskan Balderdash Worm.[64]
The Patrick Star Show
On August 10, 2020, information technology was reported that a Patrick Star talk prove titled The Patrick Star Testify was in development with a 13-episode order.[65] The show, which will characteristic Patrick hosting an imaginary talk testify in his parents' house, was officially announced by Nickelodeon on March iv, 2021, with a premiere on the network later in the summertime.[66]
Legacy
In 2020, a new species of starfish from northwest Pacific seamounts was named Astrolirus patricki in honor of Patrick Star. All known specimens of A. patricki were found closely associated with hexactinellid sponges, and the species was thus named later on the graphic symbol Patrick Star equally a reference to his friendship with SpongeBob.[67]
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Star
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