Teenage Robot Porn

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Teenage Robot Porn
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Teenage Robot ( engl. : My Life as a Teenage Robot ) ist eine US-amerikanische Zeichentrickserie , die beim US-Fernsehsender Nickelodeon 2003 auf Sendung ging. Zusätzlich wurde ein auf der Serie basierender Fernsehfilm mit dem Titel My Life as a Teenage Robot – Escape from Cluster Prime gedreht. Die Produktion der Serie wurde nach drei Staffeln eingestellt. Die Serie basiert auf einem kurzen Cartoon, der unter dem Label Oh Yeah! Cartoons im amerikanischen Nickelodeon lief. In Deutschland war die Serie erstmals ab 2005 auf dem Sender Nick zu sehen.
Die Serie handelt von den Abenteuern des einem menschlichen Teenagermädchen nachempfundenen Roboters XJ-9, welcher aber lieber Jenny genannt werden möchte. Dies ist auf die englische Aussprache von „J-9“ zurückzuführen, die mit ein bisschen Abänderung wie Jenny klingt. Obwohl Jenny sich gezwungen sieht, die Welt vor jedwedem Unheil zu retten, würde sie lieber das tun, was jugendliche Mädchen in ihrem Alter dem Klischee nach tun: einen Popstar anhimmeln, Teenie-Zeitschriften lesen oder mit ihren Freunden Brad und Tuck abhängen.
Die Serie wurde 2003 unter der Regie von Robert Renzetti und anderen von Frederator Incorporated produziert. Für den Schnitt war Jeff Adams verantwortlich, Art Director war Alex Kirwan. Die Musik der Serie komponierten Paul Dinletir und James L. Venable, der Titelsong der deutschen Fassung wurde von der Synchronsprecherin Magdalena Turba gesungen.
Die Erstausstrahlung der Serie fand ab dem 1. August 2003 bei Nickelodeon statt. Bis zum 2. Mai 2009 wurden 40 Folgen in drei Staffeln ausgestrahlt. Ab dem 12. September 2005 wurde die Serie in Deutschland durch Nick ausgestrahlt. Außerdem gibt es Übersetzungen ins Japanische, Griechische und Spanische.
Der auf der Serie basierende Film My Life as a Teenage Robot – Escape from Cluster Prime wurde am 12. August 2005 im US-amerikanischen Fernsehen gezeigt.
Teenage Robot gewann im Jahr 2004 einen Emmy in der Kategorie Outstanding Individual Achievement In Animation .
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A New Jersey company says it has developed "the world's first sex robot," a life-size rubber doll that's designed to engage the owner with conversation rather than lifelike movement.
At a demonstration at the Adult Entertainment Expo in Las Vegas, the dark-haired, negligee-clad robot said "I love holding hands with you" when it sensed that its creator touched its hand.
Another action, this one unprintable, elicited a different vocal response from Roxxxy the robot. The level of sophistication demonstrated was not beyond that of a child's talking toy, but Roxxxy has a lot more brains than that - there's a laptop connected to cables coming out of its back.
It has touch sensors at strategic locations and can sense when it's being moved. But it can't move on its own, not even to turn its head or move its lips. The sound comes out of an internal loudspeaker.
Douglas Hines, founder of Lincoln Park, New Jersey-based True Companion, said Roxxxy can carry on simple conversations. The real aim, he said, is to make the doll someone the owner can talk to and relate to.
"Sex only goes so far - then you want to be able to talk to the person," Hines said.
The phrases that were demonstrated were pre-recorded, but the robot will also be able to synthesize phrases out of pre-recorded words and sounds, Hines said. The laptop will receive updates over the internet to expand the robot's capabilities and vocabulary. Since Hines is a soccer fan, it can already discuss Manchester United, he said. It snores, too.
Owners will also be able to select different personalities for Roxxxy, from "Wild Wendy" to "Frigid Farrah," Hines said.
He's charging somewhere from $7,000 to $9,000 for the robot, including the laptop, and expects to start shipping in a few months.
A Japanese company, Honey Dolls, makes life-size sex dolls that can play recorded sounds, but Roxxxy's sensors and speech capabilities appear to be more sophisticated. Hines' goals are certainly more far-reaching.
An engineer, Hines said he was inspired to create the robot after a friend died in the September 11, 2001, terror attacks. That got him thinking about preserving his friend's personality, to give his children a chance to interact with him as they're growing up.
Looking around for commercial applications for artificial personalities, he initially thought he might create a home health care aide for the elderly.
"But there was tremendous regulatory and bureaucratic paperwork to get through. We were stuck," Hines said. "So I looked at other markets."
The broader goal of the company is still to take artificial personalities into the mainstream, beyond sex toys, Hines said.
"The sex robot thing is marketing - it's really about making a companion," he said.
In a 2007 book, Love and Sex with Robots, British chess player and artificial intelligence expert David Levy argues that robots will become significant sexual partners for humans, answering needs that other people are unable or unwilling to satisfy.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is the latest accepted revision , reviewed on 11 October 2022 .
American animated science fantasy television series
Rob Renzetti
Alex Kirwan
Joseph Holt
Jill Friemark
Dan Krall (season 1)
This section needs expansion . You can help by adding to it . ( June 2010 )
^ Jump up to: a b c d e The third and final season originally aired in Asia from November 17, 2006 to March 30, 2007, and later in the United States on Nicktoons from October 4, 2008 to May 2, 2009.
^ Baisley, Sarah (August 1, 2003). "My Life As A Teenage Robot Premieres" . AWN, Inc . Retrieved July 13, 2020 .
^ Heffley, Lynne (August 1, 2003). " 'Teenage Robot' bolts to Nick's spinoff club" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved March 17, 2020 .
^ Jump up to: a b "Oh Yeah! Cartoons" . Frederator . Archived from the original on September 23, 2019 . Retrieved March 17, 2020 .
^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows . Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 417–418. ISBN 978-1538103739 .
^ "Band Aids and Teenage Robots" . Teenageroblog.blogspot.com. October 17, 2005 . Retrieved September 21, 2011 .
^ "XJWriter is No More!" . Teenageroblog.blogspot.com. October 25, 2005 . Retrieved September 21, 2011 .
^ [1] Archived November 27, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
^ "Toonzone - Shows - Schedule for Episodes of My Life as a Teenage Robot on Nicktoons" . Archived from the original on July 5, 2011 . Retrieved January 17, 2011 . Schedule for "My Life as a Teenage Robot" on Nicktoons
^ "Complete list of prime-time Emmy nominations" . The New York Times . December 31, 1969 . Retrieved September 21, 2011 .
^ "My Life As A Teenage Robot: The Complete Series" . Beyond Home Entertainment . Retrieved September 26, 2013 .
^ Aitchison, Sean (October 14, 2017). "Keep It 2000: 8 Cartoons From The '00s That Hold Up (And 7 That Don't)" . CBR .
^ Herman, Joly (August 1, 2003). "My Life as a Teenage Robot review" . Common Sense Media .
^ "31st Annie Awards" . annieawards.org . Retrieved October 19, 2020 .
^ "My Life As A Teenage Robot Awards & Nominations" . Emmys.com . Retrieved October 19, 2020 .
^ "2004 BMI Film/TV Awards" . bmi.com . May 12, 2004 . Retrieved October 19, 2020 .
^ "32nd Annie Awards" . annieawards.org . Retrieved October 19, 2020 .
^ "33rd Annie Awards" . annieawards.org . Retrieved October 19, 2020 .
^ "2007 Golden Reel Award Nominees: Television" . Motion Pictures Sound Editors . Retrieved October 19, 2020 .
^ "Janice Kawaye (Visual voices guide)" .
^ "Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl: Jenny Revealed (Plus Hugh Neutron & Rocko) - IGN" .
^ "Nickelodeon and Smite collide in an all-new crossover, live July 12" . July 5, 2022.
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My Life as a Teenage Robot , or Teenage Robot (abbreviated as MLAATR ), is an American animated superhero comedy television series created by Rob Renzetti for Nickelodeon . It was produced by Frederator Studios in association with Nickelodeon Animation Studio . [2] [3] Set in the fictional town of Tremorton, the series follows the adventures of a robot girl named XJ-9, or Jenny, as she prefers to be called, who attempts to juggle her duties of protecting Earth while trying to live a normal human life as a teenager. [4]
Renzetti pitched the series to Frederator Studios' animated shorts showcase Oh Yeah! Cartoons and a pilot titled "My Neighbor is a Teenage Robot", which aired on January 5, 1999. [3] Viewer approval ratings led to the commissioning of a half-hour series, which premiered on August 1, 2003; after airing its first two seasons, the series was cancelled on October 17, 2005. The completed third season eventually aired on Nickelodeon's spinoff network Nicktoons from October 4, 2008, until ending its run on May 2, 2009. The series totaled three seasons, each consisting of 13 episodes.
My Life as a Teenage Robot is set in the fictional town of Tremorton and its themes focus on making lighthearted fun of typical teenage issues and other conventions and drama of the teenage and superhero lives mixed up with a combination of action, adventure, sci-fi fantasy and comedy sequences. The series follows XJ-9 ("Jenny Wakeman", as she prefers to be called; voiced by Janice Kawaye ), who is a highly sophisticated state-of-the-art sentient gynoid automaton robot girl created by her mother Dr. Nora Wakeman ( Candi Milo ), an elderly robotics scientist, five years before the series. Jenny is Earth's protector, armed to the teeth with a wide range of weapons and devices, but all she really wants is to live the life of a normal teenager. She was preceded in development by eight other models; in season 1, the episode "Sibling Tsunami" introduced XJs 1–8.
Jenny's friends are her next-door neighbors Brad ( Chad Doreck ) and Tuck Carbuckle ( Audrey Wasilewski ). Brad is outgoing and adventurous, and is the first human friend Jenny makes, while Tuck is Brad's rambunctious younger brother who usually tags along on adventures. Another one of her friends is Sheldon Lee ( Quinton Flynn ), a somewhat stereotypical nerd who is obsessed with her. Jenny often rejects his romantic advances, but still cares for him as a friend.
At high school, Jenny has an ongoing rivalry with the Crust cousins, Brit ( Moira Quirk ) and Tiff ( Cree Summer ), the popular girls in school. Dr. Wakeman often tries in vain to control her creation and keep her daughter focused on protecting the planet Earth. Adding to her trouble is that she is constantly being dogged by the all-robotic Cluster Empire, whose queen, Vexus ( Eartha Kitt ), wants her to join their world of robots (by force if necessary). Despite it all, Jenny struggles to maintain some semblance of a mostly-human life.
The special of the series, " Escape from Cluster Prime ", shows that the alien planet is actually a peaceful paradise for every kind of robot. It's also revealed that Vexus has made Jenny out to be a villain because of her constant refusals to join, branding her responsible for destroying the missing components that allow robots to transform, while they are truly hidden by Vexus, to control the population.
Rob Renzetti moved from Cartoon Network to Nickelodeon to develop his own ideas as part of Fred Seibert 's and Frederator Studios ' Oh Yeah! Cartoons . At Nickelodeon, he developed a pilot called "My Neighbor was a Teenage Robot", which was the basis for the series. After brief stints working on Family Guy , The Powerpuff Girls , Time Squad , Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones? , and Samurai Jack , Renzetti returned to Nickelodeon to start the Teenage Robot series.
Renzetti made 11 shorts during two seasons as a director on Oh Yeah! Cartoons . Five of these starred two characters called Mina and the Count and followed the adventures of a rambunctious little girl and her vampire best friend. He hoped that these characters might get their own series, but Nickelodeon rejected the idea. Faced with an empty slot where the sixth Mina short was slated to go, Fred Seibert tasked Renzetti to come up with three new ideas. One of these was about a teenage girl whose boyfriend was a robot. After further thought, Renzetti merged the two characters to create Jenny, a robot with the personality of a teenage girl.
The show's crew revealed on their blog on October 17, 2005, that the show had been cancelled, and that the third season would be the last: "The executives love the show but the ratings aren't good enough for them to give us more episodes." [5] [6] Following the series' cancellation, Renzetti left for Cartoon Network Studios, working on Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends and The Cartoonstitute , before moving on to the Disney Channel to become supervising producer for Gravity Falls . The third season aired on Nicktoons from October 2008 to May 2009, officially concluding the broadcast of the series in the United States.
Nickelodeon premiered My Life as a Teenage Robot on August 1, 2003, at 8:30 PM. [7] [ better source needed ] The show was a part of Nickelodeon's Saturday night programming block called SNICK in Fall 2003, and briefly was a part of the TEENick lineup in 2004 to June 2005. [ citation needed ] The first season ended on February 27, 2004, with "The Wonderful World of Wizzly / Call Hating".
The second season (which was originally set to air on October 1, 2004) was pushed back to December 8, 2004, with the Christmas episode "A Robot for All Seasons". A new second-season episode was not aired until January 24, 2005. [8] In the second season, a 48-minute, two-part TV movie titled " Escape from Cluster Prime " (which was nominated for an Emmy in 2006) [9] aired. Since the series' cancellation, reruns continued to air on Nicktoons until April 14, 2013, and again from December 13, 2015, to May 15, 2016. [ citation needed ] As of 2022, the entire series is now streaming on Paramount+ .
The episodes "See No Evil", "The Great Unwashed", "Future Shock", "A Robot for All Seasons", "Hostile Makeover", and "Gridiron Glory" were released on Nick Picks DVD compilations. [ citation needed ] As of December 12, 2011, seasons 1, 2, and 3 are available on DVD exclusive to Amazon.com in region 1 . [ citation needed ] The full series was released across six discs by Beyond Home Entertainment in Australia on February 5, 2012. [10]
Sean Aitchison from CBR wrote positively of the show stating, "Aside from the look of the show, My Life as a Teenage Robot had a fun premise that made for some great action comedy storytelling, and it definitely holds up [in modern day]. Though the show's depiction of teendom is somewhat outdated, the cliches actually end up working in favor of the humo
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