Twenty-five years ago, this iconic yellow sea sponge debuted on Nickelodeon and is currently in his fourteenth season with no signs of slowing down. The series has spawned three theatrical feature films, two spinoff series, a Broadway musical, a Netflix film, and another Netflix original expected in 2025. Yet the first three seasons and the first theatrical film were the most influential time for the franchise; the kids who watched SpongeBob during those years carried the funniest moments into modern internet culture, complete with over a hundred different meme templates. I’m a part of the generation whose grade school years were filled with the series’ golden age, and in that time, SpongeBob became my main special interest. I watched the show every night, drew the characters constantly, came up with my own season of episodes, and even introduced the series to my family. Our favorite episodes were Frankendoodle, Rock-a-Bye Bivalve, and the legendary Band Geeks. SpongeBob changed my life more than any other TV show ever has, so to celebrate this monumental year for the immortal talking cheese, here are twenty-five valuable life lessons he’s taught my generation:
Kids like to laugh at grouchy Squidward complaining about his job and then getting beat up for it because he’s such a killjoy jerk, but adults laugh because they see themselves in Squidward—stuck with unfulfilled dreams in an unfulfilling job. Kids like to laugh at SpongeBob in Pizza Delivery singing, “Krusty-KRAYAYAAYAYAAB-PIIIZZAAA-IS-THE-PIZZA-YEAH-AAAH-FOR-YOU-AND…MEEE-EEE-EEE-EE-EE-EEE!!” because of his silly singing voice. Yet adults laugh because of how much SpongeBob’s singing annoys Squidward, which sparks those adult viewers’ recollections of dealing with similar annoying people. Hardly any TV shows, for kids or adults or anyone in between, could speak so broadly to the inner child of multiple generations and encourage them to sustain their youth when reality wants them to move on. Thus, I’d like to thank the late creator Stephen Hillenburg for massively influencing many to remain youthful over the past twenty-five years. Trevor is an author and illustrator of books about life with autism, movies, bullying, disabilities and a new novel for middle-grade readers. See his books here.
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Inspiration for Life with AutismThis blog is written by Trevor Pacelli, a young adult with autism and an author and illustrator. Guest bloggers are welcome. Categories
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