![]() His DNA is linked to that of the best ninja clan that ever existed, the Kaburagi Clan. ![]() He is voiced by Nathan Kress.Įizan has no idea that there is a bomb running through his veins. ![]() One of the Qubo's two mascots that were from 2009-2011.Įizan Kaburagi is a 10-year old student, a character and the main protagonist of the animated series, Shuriken School. 2.1 Current programs on Qubo Channel Night Owl blockįrom 2009 to late 2011, Qubo had two mascots: Eizan Kaburagi and Ami Saeki.I don't see any of these shows meshing with the likes of He-Man, She-Ra and Bravestarr. DBZ/Kai already airs on Nickelodeon and Toonzai, One Piece is a FUNimation property IIRC, Naruto just wouldn't be a good fit and even Naruto fans wouldn't be interested in revisiting the pre-Shippuden episodes, Sailor Moon's distribution rights have been in limbo for years, Tenchi Muyo! is too provocative for the likes of Qubo and Ranma 1/2 is just too old no American cable channel is going to jump through hoops to acquire that. Qubo does have a late night block called Qubo's Night Owl, but given that the primary goal for Qubo is to "provide quality, entertaining children's programming in a safe environment", I don't see them acquiring action anime, least of all One Piece, Tenchi Muyo!, Ranma 1/2 and Sailor Moon. ![]() And now that NBC will no longer be running and promoting Qubo, I don't see its' viewership increasing. I'm aware that Qubo is its' own digital sub-channel, but as was mentioned above, the 2 big satellite providers, DirecTV and Dish, generally don't touch it and most cable companies only acquire it in conjunction with a package deal with Ion, a channel a lot of people don't bother with due to its' content being mostly reruns, religious programs and filler. It might make Qubo actually well-known and maybe put it on the map. Im sure with shows like these on Qubo's schedule.even in the dead of night. If one is aired a month that is.over 3 years off once a month special movie events. And with all of these series movies combined, that is a grand total of 41 movies. I was thinking that all these shows could be aired in the dead of night hours, like from 12AM to 6AM each with two episodes in an hour timeslot. Ranma 1/2 - 3 movies and 161 episodes uld actually be aired during the day due to it's fairly clean storyline. Sailor Moon - 3 movies and 200 episodes, appealing to girls (of most ages) and some guys. No Need For Trenchi! - With all the series combined (OVA included), this shows episode count comes to 98, and has three movies, and along with Sailor Moon and Ranma 1/2, is pretty family friendly. Naruto (no Shippuden) - Naruto has proved to be a success every time it has aired on television, so why not bring that success to Qubo? - 220 episodes They could also have special "movie event nights" every so often to show one of the movies.ĭragonball/Z/GT - Same with these 3 shows.altogether there are 508 episodes. Maybe they could even buy the rights to start dubbing it. One Piece - With over 500 episodes and counting and over 10 movies, Qubo could show two episodes a day and not repeat any for almost a year, plus One Piece appeals to all ages so it would be a commercial success. Here, I'll elaborate on my choices from the first post. Part of the reason why blocks like Qubo are faltering is because syndicated blocks can't compete with 24-hour cable/satellite channels, who tend to hold a monopoly on the major shows and studios. Super Show! is DiC, so if that show ever goes to a syndicated SatAM block it'll be Cookie Jar TV Pepper Ann is a Disney property, Disney keeps their shows exclusive to their channels, and Doug, Rugrats and Rocko are all property of Viacom, who like Disney is notorious for not playing sharsies with other studios and markets. None of those other aforementioned shows are likely to turn up on Qubo either: Super Mario Bros. Same deal with The Banana Splits: WB owns all of the Hanna-Barbera shows, so no chance of that coming to Qubo. The Silver Age WB shows are property of Warner Bros., and as such WB isn't likely to loan them out to a syndicated market when WB has 2 entire channels Cartoon Network and Boomerang) to potentially run their shows on. Actually, I meant new original shows done in the spirit of those aforementioned shows, not those exact shows per se.
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