Zeke's Pad
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Zeke's Pad | |
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Created by | Liz Scully |
Voices of |
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Composer | Steve London |
Country of origin |
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Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 26 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers |
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Running time | 22 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network |
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Release | December 26, 2008 January 9, 2010 (Canada)[1] | (Australia)
Zeke's Pad is an animated television series co-produced by Bardel Entertainment, Flying Bark Productions, Star Farm Productions, and Leaping Lizard Productions in association with Seven Network Australia and YTV Canada Inc.. The show was produced with the participation of The Canadian Television Fund, The Province of British Columbia Production Services Tax Credit, Film Incentive BC, The Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit, The Shaw Rocket Fund, The Independent Production Fund, The Cogeco Program Development Fund, The Bell Broadcast and New Media Fund, and British Columbia Film. It aired on the YTV channel in Canada on Saturdays at 7 PM. The show is about the adventures of a 14-year-old skateboarder and artist named Zeke who owns a magic electronic pad that brings life to anything he draws on it.
Synopsis
[edit]Zeke Palmer is 14 years old. He enjoys skateboarding and creating art. He owns a "pad" that functions as a phone, PDA, GPS device, MP3 player, and a graphics tablet. Anything he draws on the pad becomes animate, and Zeke is shown that actions have consequences.
Characters
[edit]- Ezekiel "Zeke" Palmer (voiced by Michael Adamthwaite): A creative 14-year-old artist and skateboarder. He is a risk taker and often acts without thinking.
- Jayden "Jay" Fritter (voiced by Tim Hamaguchi): Zeke's best friend. Jay is the only person who knows about the ability of Zeke's pad.
- Rachel Palmer (voiced by Chiara Zanni): Zeke's younger sister and a theatre performer.
- Issac "Ike" Palmer (voiced by Trevor Devall): Zeke's older brother and an athlete.
- Ida Palmer (voiced by Tabitha St. Germain): Zeke's mother who is very strict about organization and order in the house.
- Alvin Palmer (voiced by Trevor Devall): Zeke's father, a concert musician.
- Maxine Marx (voiced by Tabitha St. Germain): Zeke's secret crush.
Episodes
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No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
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1 | "You Art What You Eat" | Ian Freedman | Liz Scully | 26 December 2008 | 101 |
Zeke draws up a room full of pancakes. He eats so much that he becomes bloated and sick. The next day at school, he fails a fitness test and he is sent to a fitness camp to get him in shape and lose his belly. Unfortunately, his Pad is confiscated before he can draw his way out of the torturous camp. He has to call his best friend Jay to help him get his Pad back and escape. | |||||
2 | "The Big Picture" | Florian Wagner | Liz Scully | 2 January 2009 | 102 |
After he loses control of the TV remote at home and misses his favorite reality show, Zeke draws himself a giant TV, but the whole neighborhood now wants the remote to his TV. Feeling like he doesn't matter anymore, Zeke draws himself as the star of his reality show. Soon, his ego gets the best of him, and he begins to direct his family on how to portray themselves, eventually replacing them with better actors. This causes his family to stop talking to him, and Zeke must somehow repair the damage his ego has done. | |||||
3 | "Fast Draw" | Ian Freedman | Liz Scully | 9 January 2009 | 103 |
Zeke draws a robot version of himself to do his chores for him. He then adds some personality to his robot to make it cool (i.e. make it more like him). It comes to the point that it asks Zeke's secret crush, Maxine, out for a date. Zeke becomes jealous and tries to make his robot stop, but it goes on a rampage and frames Zeke for it, causing Zeke to be stuck in detention. With Jay's help, Zeke escapes and lures the robot into a back alley for a classic western style showdown, only to discover, much to his surprise, that the robot also has a magic Pad. | |||||
4 | "The Art of Cool" | Florian Wagner | Liz Scully | 16 January 2009 | 104 |
Tired of his father Alvin embarrassing him in front of his friends, Zeke draws his father to be "cooler", which turns him into a Bono-esque rock star; only for Alvin to declare Zeke no longer cool enough to be around and starts trying to reshape Zeke into his image. Alvin also helps Zeke with his role in the family band. When he finds out that the first performance will be at his very own high school dance, Zeke freaks out and worries that he is not cool enough. | |||||
5 | "Drawn Together" | Ian Freedman | Myra Fried | 23 January 2009 | 105 |
Zeke and Jay are starting to get on each others nerves, so they agree to spend some time apart. To ensure they do not come close together, Zeke draws them as opposite charges, not realizing that this only makes them stuck to each other no matter where they go. To make matters worse, Zeke has a skateboarding date with Maxine, and with Jay stuck to him, Zeke has a hard time impressing Maxine. In a moment of frustration, Zeke draws Jay far, far away. Soon, Zeke starts to miss his Jay, unaware that he is only at the local grocery store. | |||||
6 | "Fetch a Sketch" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Hugh Duffy | 30 January 2009 | 107 |
Tired of his pet dog, Chester, always biting him in the rear and just generally being incompetent, Zeke decides to draw his own ideal pet. He creates Sketch, a dinosaur-like hybrid animal that is intelligent and eats normally inedible objects like furniture and fences. But things take a turn for the worse when Sketch begins to cause chaos throughout the neighborhood. But luckily, upon him and Jay realizing that Sketch is just lonely and looking for someone like him, they find Sketch a companion — a platypus. A few months later, they send an egg for Zeke to babysit. | |||||
7 | "Clean Slate" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Nicole Demerse | 6 February 2009 | 106 |
Zeke is tired of the strict cleaning rules of his mother Ida, and draws a "no-cleaning zone" around his house. Things are reversed right away; the house becomes cluttered and Ida instead enforces strict non-cleaning rules. When their precious things go missing, the family revolts against Ida and Zeke returns cleanliness to the house. | |||||
8 | "A Little Sketchy" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Alan Resnick | TBA | 108 |
Zeke is tired of Rachel always getting her way, and the last straw comes when a family vacation is cancelled in order to make way for Rachel's theater audition. Wanting payback, Zeke draws himself and Jay inside Rachel's brain, allowing them to control her actions in order to mess up her audition. However, she ends up winning the audition, forcing Zeke and Jay to escape her brain. They end up in her stomach and must get themselves out and return themselves to normal size before it's too late. | |||||
9 | "Portrait of a Young Artist" | Florian Wagner | Myra Fried | TBA | 110 |
When their parents are out, Ike is left in charge of Zeke. After his curfew forces him to miss out on a party, Zeke uses his Pad to draw himself as an older, but things take a turn for the worse when he start to age rapidly and soon he becomes almost ninety years old. In an attempt to get back down to his normal age, Zeke attempts to draw himself younger, but this causes him to age backwards at a similar rate. Eventually, he returns to his normal age and is content with it. | |||||
10 | "Drawing Conclusions" | Ian Freedman | Hugh Duffy | TBA | 111 |
While watching a crime show with the Palmers, Jay notices that Zeke doesn't think logically. In order to prove him wrong, Zeke draws himself as the superhero "Zeke Streak", assigning himself the duty of finding Ida's missing personal digital assistant, which she uses to organize her chores. When his methods fail and other precious items disappear as a result, Zeke instead becomes "Zeke of Fury", turning himself and his family into ninjas. Thanks to his calm, peaceful demeanor, he discovers that Chester is the thief. | |||||
11 | "Gender Render" | Florian Wagner | Nicole Demerse | TBA | 112 |
Zeke attempts to ask Maxine out to a local dance, but she turns him down as she feels unhappy that one of the members of her relay race team just left. Zeke asks to volunteer, but he can't as the team is girls-only. While thinking of a way to infiltrate the team. Zeke (accidentally) draws himself as a girl named Zee, but he has a difficult time adjusting. Maxine later invites Zee to a sleepover, and the two platonically bond over shared interests. They get up early to train and Zee manages to join the relay race with Maxine. As a result, Zeke turns back into a boy and joins Maxine at the dance, but he still fails to dance with her. | |||||
12 | "Brush With Love" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Alan Resnick | TBA | 113 |
Zeke notices several unrelated incidents that make him believe his parents' marriage is falling apart. He summons Dr. Bill, a popular TV psychologist, to rectify the situation, but his advice only strains their relationship further. Zeke then draws himself as Cupid to try and get his parents back together, but his poorly-aimed arrows only make things worse. Worried that his parents will cancel a dinner date that Maxine will also attend, Zeke confesses the truth, and the date continues. | |||||
13 | "King Of The Pad" | Ian Freedman | Myra Fried | TBA | 115 |
Frustrated over being grounded, Zeke draws himself as the king of his town to get of his parents control. He passes absurd laws and proceeds to use his power punish Ike when he criticizes them. After one of his bodyguards is poisoned, he realizes people secretly hate him. He strips everyone of the ability to lie, but this backfires when a mob forms in front of his house and demands his ousting. | |||||
14 | "Family Portrait" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Alan Resnick | TBA | 109 |
After continuously being annoyed by his family, Zeke erases himself from a family picture, turning him invisible. He uses this ability to scare his parents out of the house, having Jay pose as a paranormal researcher to convince them that the house is haunted. At first, Zeke enjoys his newfound solitude, but a chain of events makes him believe there is a real ghost in the house, forcing him to bring his family back. | |||||
15 | "Unstill Life" | Florian Wagner | Hugh Duffy | TBA | 114 |
A local art gallery is hosting a contest for young artists, but the submissions have to be sculptures. Because of his bad sculpting skills, Zeke uses his Pad to create a replica of The Joseph, a lost statue purportedly created by Michelangelo. However, the statue comes to life, so Zeke and Jay have to catch him and freeze him with a calcite solution to enter him into the contest. However, the credit for The Joseph goes to a janitor who discovered it, so Zeke has to enter his sloppy sculpture instead. | |||||
16 | "Drawn Out Holiday" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Liz Scully | TBA | 116 |
Zeke doesn't want to return to school after the summer holidays, so he draws a calendar where every day is a random holiday. This causes his family to have extravagant celebrations day after day, which slowly takes a toll on him. On the other hand, the normally studious Jay becomes a carefree party freak, and even steals the Pad to prevent Zeke from returning things to normal. In a fight to get it back, Zeke accidentally breaks the Pad, so he has to win Jay back to get in fixed. He successfully ends the celebrations, only to create endless school days in its place. | |||||
17 | "Gifted Artist" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Hugh Duffy | TBA | 117 |
It’s Ida's birthday and Zeke is struggling to come up with the perfect gift for her. He eventually settles on a robotic vacuum cleaner, but it goes rogue and destroys everything in its path. Zeke and Jay try to delay the celebration, but they fail, and Zeke is placed under extreme pressure to create a new gift. He accidentally brings a random squiggle to life, which Ida accepts, touched by his thoughtfulness. | |||||
18 | "Wherefore Art Thou" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Carolyn Hay | TBA | 118 |
Zeke wishes to audition for a musical adaptation of Romeo and Juliet so he can be around Maxine, who will be starring as the female lead. To prepare, he draws himself with the perfect singing voice, but this causes him to sing whenever he talks. When that becomes annoying, he instead creates magical dance shoes that make him an amazing dancer, which he can control via the Pad. However, the Pad gets a virus, and he starts dancing out of control. He crashes the performance and Jay—who is a fan of Shakespeare himself—is cast in his place. | |||||
19 | "Sketch Comedy" | Ian Freedman | Story by : Carolyn Hay and Alan Resnick Teleplay by : Alan Resnick | TBA | 119 |
Zeke and Maxine are paired for a science presentation about the environment. They think about adding humor to catch the listeners' attention, but Zeke worries that no one will find him funny, so he uses the Pad to make people laugh at his jokes. However, everyone laughs at everything he says, so he decides to make people take him seriously. When he blurts out "save the squirrels" as an example of how to care for the environment, people take notes and try to demolish a house to save the squirrels' habitat. In the end, he gives his abilities to Jay, who reminds everybody that squirrels aren't endangered. | |||||
20 | "Art Is Bigger Than Life" | Florian Wagner | Liz Scully | TBA | 120 |
When Ida gets into an accident, Zeke tries to care for his mother, but Ike keeps outperforming him at whatever he does and earning their mother's respect. Tired of being "little", Zeke draws himself at Ike's size, but Ike continues to one-up him. Zeke then becomes an eight-foot-tall, muscular man who cannot control his own strength. At school, he scares everyone, and when he is accidentally spilled with paint, he gets mistaken for a monster. Zeke later realizes the error of his ways and returns to his normal size. | |||||
21 | "Artful Dodger" | Ian Freedman | Hugh Duffy | TBA | 121 |
Zeke hasn't studied for an upcoming science test, so he draws a snowstorm in order to delay the test and get more time to study. However, the storm ends up freezing the entire world, and the unprepared Palmers can neither eat, entertain themselves, nor go outside. In an attempt to fix the situation, Zeke draws the sun to melt the snow, but the differing air temperatures cause a tornado that brings the house to a desert-covered place. To help his family survive, Zeke must use what he learned in science class—in the form of drawings on his Pad. | |||||
22 | "Picture Of Paradise" | Florian Wagner | Story by : Carolyn Hay Teleplay by : Steve Sullivan | TBA | 122 |
Zeke is upset when he finds out that Maxine will be going to a girls' only summer camp. He draws himself and his family at a campground next to theirs; however, everyone but him is less than enthusiastic. Zeke and Jay try to impress Maxine, but they fail. They attempt to help Maxine with a navigational exercise, but they get lost themselves. Zeke later manages to save Maxine from a bear attack, and the two bond at the former's camp. | |||||
23 | "Model Family" | Ian Freedman | Story by : Carolyn Hay Teleplay by : Steve Sullivan | TBA | 123 |
In an effort to learn more about his family tree, Zeke draws a picture of his ancestors, sending them forward in time. They are confused by the modern world and provide little in the way of useful information. Jay reminds Zeke that if the past Palmers stay for too long, he might cease to exist, so they attempt to send Zeke's ancestors back to their time. However, it proves very difficult when they find out Rachel's past lookalike Rafael is a notorious pickpocket who swiped many things, including the Pad. | |||||
24 | "Luck Of The Draw" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Liz Scully | TBA | 124 |
Zeke and his family are chosen to compete on Brain vs. Brawn, a game show that involves trivia questions and obstacle courses. Zeke decides to draw his family as a team to help them win against the Smartlys, a family of geniuses. However, they are too obsessed with cheerleading to study and they lose the trivia round. For the obstacle round, Zeke strips his family of their team spirit, only to turn them into mindless zombies who do only what Zeke tells them to. Finally, for the third round, a relay race, Zeke gives his family both a team spirit and independent thinking, enabling them to win the grand prize—a vacation to Hawaii. | |||||
25 | "Board Strokes" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Story by : Carolyn Hay Teleplay by : Steve Sullivan | TBA | 125 |
Zeke's favorite skateboarder, Rip Ryker, visits the town to host a skateboarding contest, where the winner will get to join him on a promotional tour. Zeke draws a high-tech skateboard to help him win, but it is confiscated by Rip. Realizing that the contest should be fair, Zeke turns his special board into iridium, making it immobile, challenging Rip on a normal skateboard. Zeke fails because of a trick plotted by Rip, but he accepts his loss, no longer wanting to go on the tour. | |||||
26 | "Zeke's Pad" | Tim Golsby-Smith | Story by : Carolyn Hay Teleplay by : Nicole Demerse | TBA | 126 |
In the Series Finale, Zeke wants to live on his own, so he convinces his parents to live in the garage. He then proceeds to turn it into a teen hangout full of the things he likes, and soon everyone in town—including his family—decides to join in on the fun. When it begins to get too crowded, he implements a guest list so that only certain people can enter, but he forgot to add his name, so he is kicked out. He is forced to dig under his house in order to enter the garage, but this causes the house to collapse. Zeke and Jay use all the wood making up the shed to stabilize the house, and the former realizes it's okay to live with his family. |
Broadcast history
[edit]Before its Canadian premiere on YTV, the show had been broadcast more than a dozen countries: Australia (Seven Network), Germany (ZDF), France on (Canal+ Family), Poland (ZigZap), India and Sri Lanka (Sun TV), Spain (Televiso de Catalunya), Latin America (Cartoon Network), and the Middle East (Spacetoon). Zeke's Pad was nominated for the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Children's Television Animation in 2010.[2] At the 2010 Elan Awards, which honors achievements in video games, animation and visual effects, Zeke's Pad took home Best Animation TV Production and Best Art Direction awards.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "YTV announcing the show's debut on Twitter". 9 January 2010. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
- ^ "The Australian Film Institute | Ceremony Winners". www.afi.org.au. Archived from the original on 26 December 2009.
- ^ McLean, Tom (28 April 2009). "Zeke's Pad Top Toon at Elan Awards". Animation Magazine. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
External links
[edit]- 2008 Australian television series debuts
- 2010 Australian television series endings
- 2000s Australian animated television series
- 2010s Australian animated television series
- 2010 Canadian television series debuts
- 2010 Canadian television series endings
- 2000s Canadian animated television series
- 2010s Canadian animated television series
- 2000s Canadian children's television series
- 2010s Canadian children's television series
- Australian children's animated action television series
- Australian children's animated comedy television series
- Australian computer-animated television series
- Australian English-language television shows
- Canadian children's animated action television series
- Canadian children's animated comedy television series
- Canadian computer-animated television series
- Canadian teen animated television series
- Seven Network original programming
- Television shows set in Vancouver
- Television series by Corus Entertainment
- YTV (Canadian TV channel) original programming