Advertisement

'iCarly': Ruler of the tweens

Miley Cyrus' 'Hannah Montana' may get more attention, but the Nickelodeon show starring Miranda Cosgrove gets more young viewers.

April 28, 2009|Denise Martin

Schneider has also been savvy about what the kids are watching and sharing online. In February, "iCarly" devoted an entire episode to viral video star Lucas Cruikshank, who plays Fred, a hyper 6-year-old with temper problems, on his YouTube video channel, the site's most subscribed-to feed.

"I go online a lot, and I read stuff all the time from fans saying they love the weird stuff, the stuff that doesn't belong anywhere or make any sense," Schneider said.


For The Record
Los Angeles Times Wednesday, April 29, 2009 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 4 Metro Desk 1 inches; 32 words Type of Material: Correction
'iCarly': A caption for a photo accompanying an article on the TV show "iCarly" in Tuesday's Calendar section identified Dan Schneider as the show's director. He is a writer and executive producer.


Advertisement

To that end, he keeps the iCarly.com website stocked with online-exclusive videos to keep fans buzzing between new episodes. And, along with his actors, he is big on Twitter. Over the weekend, he posted a dozen pictures of Cosgrove getting her first driving lesson in his Dodge Challenger SRT8.

Which is not to say "iCarly" is simply a string of Web-inspired sketches and gags. Outside of her Web hosting duties, Carly is an overachiever in school, kind of neurotic and usually more mature than her older brother, Spencer (Jerry Trainor), who raises her while their dad is (permanently) stationed on a submarine in Europe. Sam is her brash, school-hating best friend and Freddie (Nathan Kress) is their nerdy-cool Web show producer. Together they get into trouble while producing popular Web TV.

Further separating it from your average kids' sitcom, the series talks up to its audience, often appearing to forego lessons learned in favor of laughs. In the Season 2 premiere, Carly and Sam decide to date the same boy, and as they fight over him toward the end of the half-hour, he stumbles backward, falling eight floors down an elevator shaft and winds up in a full body cast. It ends the squabbling -- and the episode.

"There's no resolution and I love that. And let me tell you, it took me a long time to win those battles [with the network]," said Schneider, who counts Larry David and the creators of "South Park" among his heroes. "The sweet wrap-up scenes? Who wants to see 'em? Let's just end on big funny."

Nickelodeon and MTV Networks Kids & Family Group President Cyma Zhargami said Schneider has earned the right to get his way, having worked on the network's comedies since 1997's "Kenan & Kel." "He goes farther and farther in every episode, but as you start to understand it's just a big fat comedy, your tolerance goes up for the not-so-sappy endings. And that's fine," she said. "I like to think he's innovating, not pushing boundaries."

Nick talent

Los Angeles Times Articles
|