Da Jammies
Da Jammies | |
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Genre | Children's musical comedy |
Created by |
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Developed by | Ralph Farquhar |
Written by |
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Directed by |
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Voices of |
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Theme music composer |
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Opening theme | "Here We Come!" |
Ending theme | "Here We Come!" (instrumental) |
Country of origin |
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Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers |
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Cinematography |
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Running time | 22 minutes (regular episodes only) |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | Netflix |
Release | August 31, 2015 |
Da Jammies is an animated musical television series that first aired on August 31, 2015, on Netflix.[1] It was created by Aulsondro "Novelist" Hamilton and William "Dolla" Chapman II. The series covers various issues that affect children with an overarching theme of "unity" and "doing it together".
Ralph Farquhar is the executive producer. It is directed by Tyree Dillihay and Ron Myrick. Featured guest stars include Darius McCrary, Alisa Reyes, Dani Nicolet, Kurtis Blow, Buddy Lewis, Emcee N.I.C.E., William "Dolla" Chapman II aka D.B.I., Tiny Lister Jr., Kel Mitchell and James Avery.[citation needed]
Premise
[edit]Da Jammies centers around a group of friends who attend a performing arts school where they struggle to balance real-life issues with their dreams of stardom. Co-leader Dolla (William "Dolla" Chapman II) is a quick-tempered, rapping dancer who believes that Da Jammies do not practice enough. The other co-leader, Novelist (Aulsondro "Novelist" Hamilton), plays a "peacekeeping" role and always has a solution to help the crew succeed. The other members are Momo (Alisa Reyes), a poet with a bubbly personality; LaLa (Dani Nicolet), a singing diva; and Seven (Anderson Johnson Jr.), a "soulful crooner" who always tries to be helpful. Their nemesis is another group called the Battlebrats, whose leaders Mike Fresh (Kel Mitchell) and Smalls (Shane Tsurugi) constantly seek ways to outdo Da Jammies and usually fail.
In each episode, the show addresses issues that affect young people, such as homelessness, bullying, self-awareness, body image, and friendship.
Cast and characters
[edit]Principal cast
[edit]Character | Voice | Crew | Description | Attribute |
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Dolla | William "Dolla" Chapman II | Co-leader of Da Jammies | A fiery-tempered rapper and breakdancer. His musical heroes are Ludacris & Usher. | Rapper and breakdancer |
Novelist | Aulsondro "Novelist" Hamilton | Co-leader of Da Jammies | Novelist is a high-energy talented rapper. His musical heroes are Jay-Z and Redman. | Rapper and peacekeeper |
LaLa | Dani Nicolet | Da Jammies | LaLa is a supremely vain, talented and confident R&B singer. Her musical heroes are Rihanna, Brandy and Beyoncé. | Singing diva |
Momo | Alisa Reyes | Da Jammies | Momo is a new-age world spoken artist. Her creative heroes are Nikki Giovanni, Nina Simone and Tracy Chapman. In Episode 3, her real name is revealed to be Vivian. | Singing poet |
Seven | Anderson Johnson | Da Jammies | Seven is an asthmatic soul singer who is the heart of Da Jammies. His musical heroes are Freddie Jackson and Ruben Studdard. | Soulful singer |
Secondary cast
[edit]Einny (voiced by Shane Tsurugi) - Resident Genius
Einny is not only the resident genius with an IQ of 300, but he is the king of gadgets. He chose to forego college, telling his mother and father he knows he's smart but that he wants to grow up like a normal kid. He befriended Da Jammies and started inventing things like rockets, time-traveling machines, and space ships.
- Principal Cransberry (voiced by Darius McCrary) The Musical Has Been
Cransberry is an extremely short, money-hungry principal who exploits the students' talents for his own benefit. A former R&B singer who never made it past his first record, he knows the kids can make money, and does all he can to profit off them. This includes taking a portion of all proceeds that Da Jammies and others make while performing at the school.
- Klondell (voiced by Buddy Lewis) All World Security Guard
Klondell is a security guard at the school and the local mall. He acts as a resident uncle to the students but sees the kids as beyond stupid with their reliance on gadgets and technology. He wants things to be as they used to be.
Da Jammies Nemesis
[edit]The Battlebrats
[edit]- Mike Fresh (voiced by Kel Mitchell) Non-talented hothead
Mike Fresh comes from an affluent family that allows him to get whatever he wants. He wants to rap but is not good at it, and is jealous of Dolla. He does whatever he pleases. Part of his everyday routine is coming up with ways to sabotage Dolla; which includes Da Jammies.
- Smalls (voiced by Shane Tsurugi) The Rapping Japanese
Smalls is equally spoiled by his affluent family. He loves to rap sometimes in Japanese and English. His dad is a well-to-do music executive who doesn't know his son is amazing. Mike Fresh and Smalls are best friends who constantly endanger themselves.
Additional characters
[edit]- Covington - James Avery[verification needed]
- Big Horace - Tommy 'Tiny' Lister, Jr.
- Shamus - Marcus T. Paulk
- Kurtis Flow - Kurtis Blow
- Crazy Craze - James "JJ" Lewis
- Lady Lark - Rebecca Shoichet
- Angelique - Kyla Pratt
- Love Man - Rodney Perry
- The Magician - Dorien Wilson
- 8's Mother - Kym Whitley
- Substitute Teacher - May May Ali
- Little Horace - Jamal McCants
- Irish / Jamaican / Pretty Girl - Malia Dawkins
- LaLa's Mother - Rena Andrews
- Nurse Kelly - Riccarda Lacey
- Novelist's Mother - Sophia Santi
- Big Daddy Candy Cane - Ulysses Braxton
- Motor City J – Taylor Boggan
Casting
[edit]Eileen Mack Knight was in charge of casting for Da Jammies.[citation needed]
Episodes
[edit]No. | Title | Characters | Original air date | |
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1 | "Mall in the Family" | Da Jammies, Motor City J, Principal Cransberry, LaLa's Mother & Novelist Mother | August 31, 2015 | |
Da Jammies befriend an annoying kid (Motor City Jay) who wants to be a member of the group. He allows them to use his mall apartment to rehearse for a concert to raise money for a class trip to Washington D.C. Da Jammies' mischievous behavior in the mall gets Motor City Jay and his mom kicked out. When Motor City Jay reveals that he and his mom have relocated to an amusement park, Da Jammies realize that he's homeless. Da Jammies convince Principal Cransberry to use the money from their concert to pay for a new home for Motor City Jay and his mom. | ||||
2 | "3:10" | Da Jammies, Big Horace, Little Horace, Shamus, Mike Fresh, Smalls, Einny, Klondell, Ms. Randall the Detention Teacher | August 31, 2015 | |
When Novelist finds himself challenged to a fight by the school bully (Horace), he goes underground and discovers a world of kids who have been hiding for fear of bullies. The Novelist finally confronts his fears and challenges Horace to a duel which winds up as a freestyle rap battle on the M-I-C. | ||||
3 | "Cello" | Da Jammies, Einny, Covington, Helicopter Security, Irish Girl, Jamaican Girl, The Pretty Girl | August 31, 2015 | |
Da Jammies discover that nothing in MoMo's life is as it seems. She is wealthy and an incredible cello player. MoMo reveals that she's under pressure from her parents to perform at a benefit concert, which prevents her from rehearsing with Da Jammies. Dolla abruptly fires MoMo and holds auditions to replace her. Da Jammies ultimately decide to support MoMo, who turns her performance into a hip-hop spoken word declaration of who she really is. | ||||
4 | "Old School" | Da Jammies, Principal Cransberry, Mike Fresh, Smalls, Einny, Big Daddy Candy Cane, Kurtis Flow, Crazy Craze, and The Real Rosanne | August 31, 2015 | |
Principal Cransberry announces that the Ridgecrest School of the Performing Arts is having an "Old School" competition and the winner will star in a Badidas shoe commercial. The only problem is Da Jammies have no idea what "Old School" is. The kids discover a hidden message on the Krash Groove soundtrack album that leads them to the Old School, a magical place where they are met by old-school hip-hop artists Crazy Craze, The Real Rosanne, and Kurtis Flow. Da Jammies learn from the true old school legends what the real is all about. | ||||
5 | "Birds Tail" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
6 | "Will The Real Dolla" | Da Jammies, Einny, Angelique, Robot Dolla | August 31, 2015 | |
When Dolla joins the basketball team to impress Angelique, he's torn between playing in the basketball game and performing with Da Jammies. Einny bails Dolla out by creating a Dolla robot to perform with Da Jammies while he plays basketball to secure his sweetheart. Dolla is shocked when Angelique ditches the game to watch Da Jammies perform. Meanwhile, Da Jammies are thrilled to have Dolla (Dolla Robot) in the group, especially since he's been nice to them—much nicer than (the real Dolla). Dolla is infuriated to find out that not only has the Dolla Robot taken his place in the group, but Angelique also has a crush on him. | ||||
7 | "Da Fab Five" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
Da Jammies go to Einny for help after they lose to the Battle Brats in a pick-up game of basketball. Einny gives them some special basketball shoes that will help them jump higher and run faster. Seven mistakenly pushes a button on the back of the shoes that sends an electrical pulse through all of Da Jammies and suddenly they discover they have superpowers. | ||||
8 | "The Head Wizard" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
9 | "You're In The Game" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
10 | "No Gut, No Glory!" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
11 | "Love Song" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
12 | "Election" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
13 | "OMG" | TBA | August 31, 2015 | |
Principal Cransberry bans talking on cell phones, texting, or emailing while students are at school forcing the Jammies to come up with a new way to communicate that only kids can hear. |
Broadcast
[edit]As of 2016, Da Jammies was streaming in 14 countries on Netflix: Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, India, Ireland, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Pakistan, Philippines, Russia, South Africa, Thailand, UK and USA.[2]
As of 2021, Da Jammies was no longer available on Netflix.
Reception
[edit]Da Jammies received mixed but favorable reviews upon its debut. Forbes magazine called it "Fame" meets "Josie and The Pussycats".[3] Soul Train deemed it a "First of its kind 3D animated series that combines hip-hop music, dance and fashion".[4] The show received 3 out of 5 stars on Common Sense Media.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ "Stream Netflix's 3D Hip-Hop Animated Series 'Da Jammies' (WATCH) - EURweb". eurweb.com. September 11, 2015. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
- ^ "Da Jammies (2015) on Netflix USA". netflixable.com. Retrieved December 26, 2016.[dead link ]
- ^ Newman, Heather (September 1, 2015). "Netflix's New Arrivals For September: Goodbye 'Lost Boys,' Hello 'Monster Squad'!". Forbes.com. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
- ^ "Q&A: 'Da Jammies' Creators Aulsondro "Novelist" Hamilton & William "Dolla" Chapman". soultrain.com. November 4, 2015. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
- ^ Emily Ashby (January 26, 2016). "Da Jammies - TV Review". commonsensemedia.org. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
External links
[edit]- 2015 American television series debuts
- 2010s American animated television series
- 2010s American black cartoons
- 2015 Canadian television series debuts
- 2010s Canadian animated television series
- 2010s Canadian black cartoons
- American children's animated comedy television series
- American children's animated musical television series
- American computer-animated television series
- Canadian children's animated comedy television series
- Canadian children's animated musical television series
- Canadian computer-animated television series
- American English-language television shows
- Hip hop television
- Netflix children's programming
- Animated television series set in California
- Animated television series about children
- Animated television series about families