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Sealab 2021



         


Sealab 2021 is a comic animated series that plays on Cartoon Network during the Adult Swim segment of their programming. It currently airs Sundays at 11:45 PM e/p and Monday through Thursday at 12:00 and 12:15 AM e/p. Each episode is 15 minutes long, including commercials. Like Cartoon Network's Space Ghost: Coast to Coast, the show consists almost entirely of stock animation redubbed and re-edited for comedic effect, in this case from the short-lived environmentally-themed Hanna-Barbera cartoon Sealab 2020. As with most shows in the Adult Swim block, Sealab has language and content intended for viewers over the age of 14. The show is produced by 7030 Productions for Cartoon Network's Williams Street Studios.

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Characters and Premise

Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.

The show is set one year after the timeframe of Sealab 2020. During this year, the crew has slowly gone crazy, and as this has happened, the crew has spent more time goofing off in various ways than doing any serious work.

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Main Characters

Captain Hazel "Hank" Murphy is the ostensible leader of the crew. Unfortunately, he's also the most deranged member, and quite unfit for service; instead of providing any real leadership, he's either running a pirate radio show, complaining about his Happy Cake oven, or playing golf near the station's reactor core (among other things). Murphy was voiced by Harry Goz until his death on September 5, 2003 from cancer. After that, Murphy was described as having left Sealab to fight in the "Great Spice Wars."

Captain Bellerophon "Tornado" Shanks earned his position as Sealab's new captain by answering a help-wanted ad. A retired football coach and lovable redneck, he has all of Murphy's shortsighted idiocy combined with a Southern charm. Tornado's leadership qualities have led him to coach the crew in a football game against killer robots, declare Sealab a sovereign nation, warped the minds of Sealab's orphan population, and asserting that a huge tumor on his head would go away through prayer alone, forcing the crew to shrink themselves and get injected into his body in order to save him. Shanks is voiced by Michael Goz, son of the late Harry Goz.

Debbie DuPree (voiced by Kate Miller) is the token female of the crew, a marine biologist, and blonde and beautiful to boot. Being the token female, she tends to get upset when the guys do chauvinistic things, but being a stereotypical blonde, she's not exactly all there herself (and she tends to hit on the guys as much as they hit on her). She has a relationship going on with Doctor Quinn -- when she feels like it, of course -- and she's slept with Murphy at least once.

Derek "Stormy" Waters (voiced by Ellis Henican) is the station's resident pretty boy (his actual function on the crew has never been revealed). He's all looks and no brains; most of the time, he barely knows what's going on around him. His stupidity has gotten into trouble several times, mainly with "Black" Debbie (who thinks he's a racist).

Doctor Quentin Q. Quinn (voiced by Brett Butler) is the brains of the outfit. As the only member of the crew with any formal education and any sort of common sense left, he's the one that ends up running the station (and, in some cases, trying to keep it from exploding). He's also the token black guy. He and Debbie have an on-again, off-again relationship.

Jodene Sparks (voiced by Bill Lobley) is the station's sarcastic, scheming radio operator, and co-conspirator with Captain Murphy in most of his escapades (though often as a front to further his own plans). Sparks is never seen out of his rolling chair. He claims this is because he's crippled, but he's really just lazy.

Marco Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar Gabriel Garcia Marquez (voiced by Erik Estrada) is the station's engineer, macho man and wannabe Latin lover. He's tried to seduce both females on the station at various times, with limited success. He also has a thing for CHiPs.

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Minor Characters

Debbie Love (a.k.a. "Black" Debbie) (voiced by Angela Mills) is both the only other female and the only other black person on the station. She teaches school to Dolphin Boy and the rest of Sealab's orphans, is very proud of her blackness (she's fought with Stormy over this at least once), and has been seduced by Marco several times. She has also been known to get stoned off a hookah pipe, while loudly asserting that in full compliance with standards and practices (Cartoon Network's censoring department) that she's enjoying the pipe "in a drug-free way."

Dolphin Boy is a little, chubby boy (who looks to be about 10) that talks in dolphin noises. He's a member of Black Debbie's class, and is the target of endless fat jokes.

Fatass McBlobicus is an achne-infested, bespectactled member of Black Debbie's class. While Dolphin Boy is chubby, McBlobicus is severely overweight. While he was substituting for Debbie, Quinn didn't think that was his real name, but a quick check of the class roster proved him wrong.

Doctor Ilad Virjay (voiced by Adam Reed) is the station's official doctor and in-house surgeon. He has been known to use the surgery's gas mask on himself.

Hesh Hepplewhite is the station's intern, and quite often the whipping boy as well. Nasal-voiced, smart-mouthed and whiny, Hesh isn't well liked by most of the crew, and thus works in the part of the station furthest away from them (the reactor core). Exposure to intense radiation will turn Hesh into "Monster Hesh", an Incredible Hulk-like alter ego with no neck. Hesh is voiced by independent rapper and Cartoon Network staffer MC Chris (Chris Ward).

Carl is an overweight man who works in the reactor room with Hesh, barely tolerating him. He often ends up killed by whatever crisis the crew is currently facing. Carl is voiced by Sealab 2021 artist Christian Danley.


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Episode List and Original Air Dates

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Three Episode Pilot

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Season One

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Season Two

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Season Three

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Season Four

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Home Releases

The first DVD of the series, featuring the first 13 episodes (I, Robot through Swimming in Oblivion), was released July 20, 2004, along with Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Volume Two.

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See also

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