Jim Jinkins
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jim Jinkins (b. August 8, 1953) is an American animator and creator of the animated Doug television series which was later the basis for a feature film. He is a 1975 graduate of Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee.
Contents |
[edit] Background and Career
Jinkins was born on August 8, 1953 and grew up in Richmond, Virginia. After graduating from Lipscomb University, he attended graduate school at Ohio State University to study animation and filmaking. One of his first animation jobs was for the Children's Television Workshop's PBS program, Square One Television.
Jinkins worked in advertising, creating TV commercials and promotions featuring a young boy and a dog, which would become the main characters of his major creation. Jim had developed Doug Funnie through doodles during a time of the early days of his career. Doug and his dog Porkchop would star in a popular children's book, "Doug got a new pair of shoes", which evolved into an animated cartoon series. He sold the Doug pilot to Nickelodeon. The pilot tested higher than any other pilot for the network at the time. Jinkins established Jumbo Pictures in 1991 to produce Doug for Nickelodeon. Doug's success caught the eyes of Walt Disney executives. In 1996 Jim sold Jumbo Pictures to Disney. Disney then developed Disney's Doug (originally Brand Spanking New Doug) as part of their "One Saturday Morning" lineup.
Jinkins and his team at Jumbo Pictures have produced the PB&J Otter and 101 Dalmatians animated series and featue film Doug's 1st Movie for Disney. Jinkins has also founded an independent company, Cartoon Pizza, which produces shows such as JoJo's Circus, Stanley, HoopDogz and "Pinky Dinky Doo".
[edit] Jinkins on Doug
“ | Doug is not a powerful character. He is more where I feel that kids are today. They are softspoken and bewildered. But they often make the right decisions. What we tried to get across was that you should feel good about yourself and not give in to peer pressure. The underlying foundation was that doing the right thing will pay off. | ” |
[edit] References
- Chaudoin, Kim "Jinkins turns love of doodling into career," pg 15-16, The Torch - Lipscomb University, Spring 2005