Dora Henti

Dora Henti




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Dora Henti
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American animated television series
"Dora the Explora" redirects here. For the song by Pink Guy, see Pink Season .

Gayle McIntyre
Karyn Finley Powell
David Wigforss

This section needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. ( August 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

^ Eric Weiner (writer), Tina Kugler, Erik Wiese (storyboard) (August 29, 2000). "Grandma's House". Dora the Explorer . Season 1. Episode 12. Event occurs at 2:00. Nickelodeon . ¡Hola, señora Márquez!

^ "Dora and Diego's Amazing Animal Circus". Dora the Explorer . Season 7. Episode 8. October 16, 2012. Nickelodeon .

^ "Dora's Thanksgiving Day Parade". Dora the Explorer . Season 7. Episode 15. November 19, 2012. Nickelodeon .

^ Jump up to: a b c d Dawidziak, Mark. "Dora the Explorer: Nickelodeon's little heroine celebrates 10 years of stories" . The Plain-Dealer . Retrieved June 13, 2022 .

^ Friedman, Emily (May 21, 2010). "Is Dora The Explorer an Illegal Immigrant?" . ABC News . Retrieved January 21, 2013 .

^ "Dora the Explorer Updates Her Look" . ABC News . Retrieved 2009-03-08 .

^ "After Dora uproar, Nick and Mattel soothe moms" . Deseret News . Retrieved 2022-06-01 .

^ "New Tween "Dora The Explorer" Revealed" . Popcrunch.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15 . Retrieved 2011-03-19 .

^ Vicki Passmore (February 1, 2011). "Boy, How You've Changed: Nine Big Mascot Makeovers" . Walletpop. Archived from the original on 27 January 2011 . Retrieved March 19, 2011 .

^ Calabash Animation Creates New 'Dora' Opening . Animationinsider.net

^ "Dora's Explorer Girls" . Nick Jr. Archived from the original on 22 September 2009 . Retrieved 2011-03-19 .

^ Addley, Esther (2007-08-03). "Mattel recalls nearly 100,000 toys after lead paint alert" . The Guardian . London . Retrieved 2008-07-06 .

^ Gregory, Angela (2007-08-03). "Dora the Explorer leads toy giant's recall" . The New Zealand Herald . Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 . Retrieved 2008-07-06 .

^ Story, Louise (2007-08-02). "Lead Paint Prompts Mattel to Recall 967,000 Toys" . New York Times.

^ "Dora the Explorer: Super Star Adventures" . IGN. Archived from the original on 31 October 2004 . Retrieved 2011-09-09 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Dora the Explorer: Journey to the Purple Planet" . IGN . Archived from the original on 22 June 2002.

^ Global Star (2004) Dora the Explorer: Super Star Adventures Manual

^ 2K Play (2009) Dora the Explorer: Dora Puppy Manual

^ "Dora the Explorer: Dora Puppy" . IGN . Archived from the original on 27 February 2010 . Retrieved 13 June 2022 .

^ "Dora's Cooking Club" . IGN . Archived from the original on 23 June 2010 . Retrieved 13 June 2022 .

^ 2K Play (2010) Dora's Cooking Club Manual

^ Spangler, Todd (25 May 2020). "Best Video Streaming Services: Netflix, HBO Max, Disney Plus, Hulu, Amazon, Apple TV Plus" . Variety . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ "Go Jetters │Streamed" . 10 Play . Retrieved 2 June 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer │Streamed" . Amazon Prime . Retrieved 24 May 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer" . Paramount+ . Retrieved March 4, 2021 .

^ Goldberg, Lesley (25 November 2019). "Nickelodeon Content Coming to CBS All Access" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 13 June 2022 .

^ "Foxtel" . Foxtel . Retrieved 2 June 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer │Streamed" . Noggin . Retrieved 24 May 2020 .

^ Spangler, Todd. "Vámonos! 'Dora the Explorer' Episodes Arrive on Nickelodeon's Noggin Streaming App" . Variety . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ "Stan - Dora the Explorer Search │Streamed" . Stan . Retrieved 28 May 2020 .

^ Knox, David (23 January 2015). "Stan launches on Australia Day" . TV Tonight . Retrieved 24 May 2020 .

^ Green, Ricki (22 January 2015). "Stan Set to Launch on Australia Day" . Campaign Brief . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer │Streamed" . Vudu . Retrieved 24 May 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer" . Apple TV+ . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ "Noggin extends free trial globally" . Advance Television . 2 April 2020 . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ Milligan, Mercedes (24 April 2020). "Noggin Launches on Apple TV in 25+ Territories, More Than 20 Languages" . Animation Magazine . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ Clover, Julian (24 April 2020). "Noggin makes Apple TV debut" . Broad Band TV News . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer │Streamed" . Google Play . Retrieved 2 June 2020 .

^ "Dora the Explorer │Streamed" . Microsoft Store . Retrieved 2 June 2020 .

^ "Nickelodeon Unveils New Generation Of Content For New Generation Of Kids At Annual Upfront Presentation" (Press release) . PR Newswire . 25 February 2013. Archived from the original on 18 August 2014 . Retrieved 13 June 2022 .

^ Villaneda, Rebecca (28 February 2013). " 'Dora and Friends': New Spin-off Will Star the Little Latina Heroine" . Hispanic Business . Archived from the original on 15 October 2013 . Retrieved 31 March 2013 .

^ "Nickelodeon "Dora And Friends: In The City" TV Show" . Nickutopia. 8 March 2013 . Retrieved 31 March 2013 .

^ Peel, Sarah (11 March 2013). "Nickelodeon Announces Dora and Friends: Into the City" . BSC Kids. Archived from the original on 13 March 2013 . Retrieved 31 March 2013 .

^ "Dora & Friends Music Video" . Nick Jr . Archived from the original on 13 August 2014.

^ Los Angeles Times (18 August 2014). "Dora the Explorer is growing up and getting a spinoff series" . Los Angeles Times .

^ Dave McNary (February 26, 2018). " 'Dora the Explorer' Live-Action Movie Gets Summer Release" . Variety . Retrieved March 11, 2018 .

^ " 'Dora the Explorer' Begins Filming, Reveals First Photo of Isabela Moner as Eponymous Adventurer" . Collider . 2018-08-10 . Retrieved 2018-08-11 .

^ "Isabela Moner Cast as Dora the Explorer in Live-Action Film" . ComingSoon.net . 2018-05-02 . Retrieved 2018-05-03 .

^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (August 9, 2019). "Scary Stories Screams $2.3M, Dora Strikes $1.25M In Thursday Night Gold – Box Office Update Preview" . Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved August 9, 2019 .

^ Peter White (February 24, 2021). "Nickelodeon's Dora The Explorer & The Fairly OddParents Get Live-Action Series Remakes On Paramount+" . Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved February 24, 2021 .

^ Denise Petski; Nellie Andreeva (February 15, 2022). " Dora The Explorer CG-Animated Preschool Series Gets Paramount+ Green Light, Live-Action Dora Series Now Aimed At Tweens" . Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved February 15, 2022 .

^ Joe Otterson (February 15, 2022). " SpongeBob Squarepants Spinoff Movies, Dora the Explorer Live-Action Series Set at Paramount Plus" . Variety . Retrieved February 15, 2022 .



Reading Rainbow (1996)
Dora the Explorer (2009)
Dora the Explorer (2010)
I Can Be President: A Kid's-Eye View (2012)
Kasha and the Zulu King (2013)
Doc McStuffins (2015)
Doc McStuffins (2016)
Doc McStuffins (2018)
Doc McStuffins (2019)


Pinwheel (1977–1991)
Nickel Flicks (1979–1980)
America Goes Bananaz (1979–1980)
By the Way (1979)
Video Comic Book (1979–1981)


All Grown Up! (2004)
As Told by Ginger (2002–2003)
The Backyardigans (2004–2006)
Bob the Builder (2001–2002)
Busytown Mysteries (2009–2013)
Care Bears: Adventures in Care-a-lot (2007–2009)
ChalkZone (2003–2004)
Dora the Explorer (2000–2006)
DinoSquad (2007–2009)
Franklin (1998–1999; 2000–2002)
Go, Diego, Go! (2005-2006)
Hey Arnold! (2002–2004)
Horseland (2006–2009; 2011-12)
Little Bear (2000–2001)
Little Bill (2000–02; 2003-04; 2004-2006)
Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends (2004-05)
Noonbory and the Super Seven (2009-10)
Oswald (2001–2002)
Pelswick (2002)
Rugrats (2003)
Sushi Pack (2007–2009)
The Wild Thornberrys (2002–2004)


Blue's Clues (2000–2006)
The Brothers García (2004)
Cake (2006-2009)
Dance Revolution (2006–2007)
LazyTown (2004–2006)


Amby & Dexter
I Can Do It!
Just Ask!
Just for Me Stories
LazyTown Shorts
Maggie and the Ferocious Beast
Mighty Bug 5
Miss Spider's Bug Facts
Nick Jr. Playful Parent
Nick Jr. Presents
Nick Jr. Show and Tell
Nick Jr. Sings
Nickelodeon Election Connection
Tinpo
What's the Buzz with Philomena Fly


Madeline (2006–2007)
Sabrina: The Animated Series (2006–2007; 2009–2011)
Sabrina's Secret Life (2010–2011)
Strawberry Shortcake (2007–2009; 2010)
Trollz (2006-07; 2011)

Dora the Explorer is an American children's animated television series and multimedia franchise created by Chris Gifford , Valerie Walsh Valdes and Eric Weiner that premiered on Nickelodeon on August 14, 2000, and ended on August 9, 2019. The series was produced by Nickelodeon Animation Studio . The show focuses on the adventures of a Latin American girl named Dora and her monkey friend Boots, with a particular emphasis on the Spanish language . The show is presented in the style of an interactive CD-ROM game, with gimmicks such as title cards appearing in windows and Dora asking the viewer to help her by showing the current items in her inventory and asking the viewer which one is best for the current scenario.

The series centers around Dora Marquez, a seven-year-old Latina girl, with a love of embarking on quests related to an activity that she wants to partake of or a place that she wants to go to, accompanied by her talking purple backpack and anthropomorphic monkey companion named Boots (named for his beloved pair of red boots ). Each episode is based around a series of cyclical events that occur along the way during Dora's travels, along with obstacles that she and Boots are forced to overcome or puzzles that they have to solve (with "assistance" from the viewing audience) relating to riddles , the Spanish language, or counting. Common rituals may involve Dora's encounters with Swiper, a bipedal , anthropomorphic masked thieving fox whose theft of the possessions of others must be prevented through fourth wall -breaking interaction with the viewer. To stop Swiper, Dora must say "Swiper no swiping" three times. However, on occasions where Swiper steals the belongings of other people, the viewer is presented with the challenge of helping Boots and Dora locate the stolen items. Another obstacle involves encounters with another one of the program's antagonists; the "Grumpy Old Troll" dwelling beneath a bridge that Dora and Boots must cross, who challenges them with a riddle that needs to be solved with the viewer's help before permitting them to pass. Known for the constant breaking of the fourth-wall depicted in every episode, the audience is usually presented to two primary landmarks that must be passed before Dora can reach her destination, normally being challenged with games or puzzles along the way. The episode always ends with Dora successfully reaching the locale, singing the "We Did It!" song with Boots in triumph.

On numerous occasions, television specials have been aired for the series in which the usual events of regular episodes are altered, threatened, or replaced. Usually said specials will present Dora with a bigger, more whimsical adventure than usual or with a magical task that must be fulfilled, or perhaps even offer a series of different adventures for Boots and Dora to travel through. They might be presented with an unusual, difficult task (such as assisting Swiper in his attempts to be erased from Santa Claus's Naughty List) that normally is not featured in average episodes, or challenge Dora with a goal that must be achieved (such as the emancipation of a trapped mermaid ). Sometimes, the specials have involved the debut of new characters, such as the birth of Dora's superpowered twin baby siblings and the introduction of the enchanted anthropomorphic stars that accompany Dora on many of her quests.

The show was developed out of Nickelodeon's desire to "come up with the next big hit" similar to the network's other hit preschool shows at the time Little Bear and Blue's Clues . The creators sought to combine both shows format, with the narrative focus of Little Bear combined with the interactivity of Blue's Clues . [4] The creators further developed the concept by observing preschoolers with the creators coming to the conclusion that "they are little explorers." [4]

Dora is a Latina . According to a Nickelodeon spokesman, "she was developed to be pan-Latina to represent the diversity of Latino cultures". [5] Initially the character was not planned to be Latina although after an executive at Nickelodeon attended a conference about the lack of Latino representation, the creators were asked if they could include such elements. At first there was hesitancy, but eventually they realized that they had "a great opportunity" and the character was designed as such. [4] Nickelodeon at first did not like the antagonist Swiper, at first with researchers stating that "he was bad modeling and unsettling to kids"; however, the creators felt strongly about the inclusion of a villainous character and he remained in the final show. [4]

On March 8, 2009, Mattel and Nickelodeon announced that Dora will receive a tweenage makeover, switching from a young age to a teenage attending middle school . Initially, it was announced that the new look would not be revealed until late 2009, [6] but after a short controversy, the tween Dora was unveiled on March 16, 2009. [7] [8] [9]

In 2012, a CGI opening was created for new episodes of the series. [10]

In 2009, Mattel and Nickelodeon introduced a preteen version of Dora, with four friends named Naiya, Kate, Emma, and Alana, who call themselves the Explorer Girls. [11] The Explorer Girls were included in the Dora and Friends spin-off in 2014. [ citation needed ]

Dora the Explorer has been produced in various other languages worldwide. It facilitates the learning of important foreign language words or phrases (mostly English), interspersed with a local language (e.g. Norwegian, Russian, Hindi, or German), with occasional use of Spanish (used in the Irish, Serbian, and Turkish versions) through its simplicity and use of repetition.

As shown in the list above, Spanish is the second language taught in the original English language version of the show (also broadcast for Malay speakers), in the Irish, Serbian, and the trilingual Turkish versions, but for other versions of the show, the language being taught is English.

Two stage versions of Dora the Explorer toured North America, the first being "City of Lost Toys", and the second being "Dora's Pirate Adventure". Produced by Nickelodeon and LiveNation , these productions featured live actors portraying the roles of Dora and her friends, including Boots, Diego, Isa, and the Fiesta Trio. Many of the characters wore elaborate foam costumes designed to resemble the Dora characters. Each production featured a structure similar to an episode of the television series. City of Lost Toys featured Christina Bianco as Dora while Dora's Pirate Adventure featured Danay Ferrer of the band Innosense in the role of Dora and Frankie Grande as Boots. Both productions featured a version of the popular Gloria Estefan song "Get On Your Feet" as the final number of the show. Both productions were conceived by Chris Gifford, creator of the television show, and directed by Gip Hoppe.

There have been three Dora touring companies. The "City of Lost Toys" company and the "Pirate Adventure" company featured actors and crew that were members of Actor's Equity and IATSE , respectively, the unions for professional actors and stagehands in the United States. The third company performs a reduced version of "Pirate Adventure" and does not employ union personnel. This production is currently touring North America, and scheduled to travel to the United Kingdom and France.

Many action figures and playsets are available in many markets, along with DVDs, cosmetics, hygiene products, ride-ons, books, board games, plush dolls, apparel, handbags, play tents, play kitchens, and more. Licensees include Fisher-Price in the United States and Holland Publishing in the United Kingdom.

In 2004, Lego released four sets based on the TV series' characters. These include 7330 Dora's Treasure Island , 7331 Diego's Rescue Truck , 7332 Dora and Boots at Play Park , and 7333 Dora and Diego's Animal Adventure .

In 2007, lead paint used by a contract toy manufacturer in China prompted Mattel to issue recalls for nearly a million toys, many of which featured Sesame Street and Nickelodeon characters, including Dora the Explorer. Nickelodeon responded that they would introduce "third-party monitoring" of all manufacturers of products under its brands. [12] [13] [14]

Contains: Dora's picnic, Follow those feet, Dora in the deep sea, I love my Papi!, Say "Cheese"

Contains: Dora's Backpack, Little Star, Happy Birthday, Mami!, Meet Diego!, Dora Saves the Prince, Dora's Treasure Hunt, Good Night, Dora!

Contains: Dora's Book of Manners, Dora Goes to School, Dora's Fairy-Tale Adventure, Dora's Chilly Day, Show Me Your Smile!, Dora's Pirate Adventure, Big Sister Dora!

Video games based on the 2000 television show Dora the Explorer were released. In Canada, Cheerios offered a free Dora the Explorer the Game CD-ROMs in specially marked packages. However, packages sold in Quebec would only have the French version. Dora the Explorer: Barnyard Buddies is a video game released for the PlayStation in 2003 in the US, thus making it the first Dora the Explorer video game for the home consoles. It was not released in Europe until 2005 being one of the last games released on that platform in that territory following the PlayStation's discontinuation the following year and all production on PS1 games in 2006. Dora the Explorer: Super Star Adventures is an adventure video game for the Game Boy Advance released in 2004. It was developed by Imaginengine and published by Global Star . [15]

Dora the Explorer: Journey to the Purple Planet is an action-adventure video game , developed by Monkey Bar Games , published by Global Star Software and powered by Vicious Engine . The game was released for GameCube in North America on October 13, 2005, [16] and later in PAL regions on December 16, 2005. The PlayStation 2 version was released on PAL regions on December 2, 2005, and later in North America on February 9, 2006. [16] The game is about Dora and Boots who finds some lost aliens from the purple planet. However, to take them home, she and Boots are required to collect keys to open the space gate, leading to the saturn planet. The game is unique in that it uses pictures and symbols to communicate rather than words. The object of the game is to capture one of the six explorer stars. Each explorer star has a special power such as the ability to be noisy or the ability to create music. In order to capture the star, the player must complete a hide-and-seek activity. These activities include maze navigation, matching games, side-scrolling race games, a " Frogger "-type game, a complete-the-pattern activity and a song playing game. [17]

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