Company: | Mercury Filmworks Chilco Productions EKA Distribution Egmont Imagination |
Runtime: | 30 minutes |
Creator: | Kim Anton Tracey Hornbuckle Jill Luedtke [1] |
Voices: | Julie Lemieux Emma Pustil Ian Busher Taylor Barber |
Opentheme: | "Books are moo-ve-lous" |
Endtheme: | "Books are moo-ve-lous" (instrumental) |
Country: | Canada |
Language: | English |
Network: | CBC Discovery Kids (United States) |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 26 (52 segments) |
Wilbur is a Canadian live-action/puppet animated children's television series that premiered in the Kids' CBC block of CBC Television on October 30, 2006. In the United States, it first aired on the Ready Set Learn block on Discovery Kids on April 16, 2007,[2] later moving to TLC starting on April 23, 2007, airing until March 21, 2008.[3]
Produced by Mercury Filmworks in association with Chilco Productions, EKA Distribution and Egmont Imagination, it focuses on an anthropomorphic calf and his friends as they solve problems by reading books with each other. 26 episodes (52 segments) were produced.
Wilbur has an episode with a basic formula: at first, Wilbur and his friends would encounter a problem. After this, Wilbur gets a wiggling sensation which prompts him to read a book that guides the group in solving their problem. The book in question is usually an animated original story or retelling for the purposes of the show, told in rhyme, and often features Wilbur and his friends in various roles.
After the story is read, the group discusses their problem and a possible idea which usually fails. Thinking that the solution is still inside the book, they decide to read through a second time, this time, with clips showing children reciting the line "Once upon a time" at the beginning, retelling the story in their own words, and finishing by saying "The end". Afterwards, Wilbur and his friends try again, this time, with an idea that works. They reflect on how the story inspired their solution, to which Wilbur ends the episode by saying his catchphrase, “Books are Moooo-velous!”.
The franchise existed as a series of videotapes produced in 1997. A pilot for Wilbur was produced by Cuppa Coffee Studios in 2001.