
Some episodes focus on Lincoln and Clyde with their friends, Liam Hunnicut, Rusty Spokes, Zach Gurdle, and Stella Zhau. Some episodes feature Luna and her band, the Moon Goats, while others focus on Lucy and her friends in Royal Woods Elementary's Morticians' Club. The family patriarch, Lynn Loud Sr., also opens his own restaurant, Lynn's Table, at the end of the show's third season, and a few episodes afterward involve the kids helping out there. Inspired, Lincoln asks his parents the same question and Lisa manages to trace Lynn Sr.'s heritage to Scotland.
Top cast
The first two DVDs, titled Welcome to the Loud House and It Gets Louder, each contained 13 episodes of the first season. The third and fourth DVDs, called Relative Chaos and Absolute Madness, each collected 13 episodes of the second season. The series focuses on Lincoln Loud, the middle and only male child in a house full of girls, who is often breaking the fourth wall to explain to viewers the chaotic conditions and sibling relationships of the household. Lincoln's room has beige walls, green carpeting, one small circular window, a dresser, mirror, various comic books and action figures (see below for more details), a bookshelf, several posters, a closet clothes rack with several identical clothes and toys hanging on it, and a bed with a brown frame and blue blanket. It is located between Lana and Lola's room and Lisa and Lily's room, and opposite to the bathroom. Lori and Leni's room has baby blue walls covered in posters, dark blue carpeting, one window, a closet, holiday lights on the ceiling, a dresser, a chair, a sewing machine, with various sewing supplies surrounding it, and Lori and Leni's, blue blanket and pink blanket beds.
Tuning into ‘The Really Loud House’: A season 2 prelude with Jahzir Brown and Wolfgang Schaeffer - Los Angeles Times
Tuning into ‘The Really Loud House’: A season 2 prelude with Jahzir Brown and Wolfgang Schaeffer.
Posted: Fri, 16 Feb 2024 08:00:00 GMT [source]
Series Info
It is located opposite to the staircase, and between Luna and Luan's room and Lana and Lola's room. Rita and Lynn Sr.'s bedroom has pink orange walls, desaturated red carpeting, two windows, a two-person bed with dark magenta sheets and two pillows and two nightstands on either side with identical lamps on them, a large closet used to house their clothes and Lynn Sr.'s tie collection. The dining room has grayish green walls, green carpeting, two windows, a bookshelf, the loud family trophy case, and a long white cloth covered table capable of Hosting 13 + chairs. The Loud house, 1216 Franklin Avenue, Royal Woods, Michigan,[1] is the residence of the Loud family, and the main setting of the series, appearing in almost all episodes, as well as a majority of its extended media. On October 19, 2017, Nickelodeon fired Savino due to allegations of sexual harassment, and continued to work on the show without him.[1] Michael Rubiner will become the main showrunner and Kyle Marshall will be the main director, with Amanda Rynda, a replacement for Savino, directing "Selfie Improvement".

Graphic novel series
The themes by Christopher Lennertz and the official music by Phillip White, it features many songs sung by Oh, Hush! Jam Filled Entertainment, a Canadian-based animation studio located in Ottawa (now owned by Boat Rocker Media), animates the whole series digitally with Toon Boom Harmony software. Early in development, the Loud family was originally going to be a family of rabbits, and instead of 11 children, there were going to be 26, a reference to the fact that rabbits can reproduce so quickly. An employee at Nickelodeon suggested to Savino that it would be best if the characters were humans.
Lisa and Lily's room has green walls and carpeting, one window, a closet, a desk with various scientific equipment on it, a nightstand with a lamp on top of it next to a bed with a dark green blanket, a small pink rug next to a crib with purple bedsheets and pillow, and prior to Season 5, a changing table. It is located opposite to Lana and Lola's room, and between the staircase and Lincoln's room. It is located between Lynn and Lucy's room and Lincoln's room, and is opposite to Lisa and Lily's room. It is located opposite to Lori and Leni's room, and between the bathroom and Lynn and Lucy's room. The series was created by veteran animator Chris Savino and was inspired by his childhood.
Season 4 (2019–
They are usually anthology comics, however, others are arranged on certain themes, while others have overarching storylines. The first graphic novel, There Will Be Chaos, was released on May 9, 2017.[93] There are currently two series, a running series and a special series focusing on the seasons and certain holidays. The Bathroom has beige walls, green carpeting, blue-gray walls, a black-and-white checkered floor, two small windows with the sink between them, a toilet, a shower, and a towel closet. It is located between Lori and Leni's room and Luna and Luan's room, and opposite to Lincoln's room. Lynn and Lucy's room has grayish yellow walls, dark green carpeting, and one window with red and black curtains, which splits the room into two sides, with Lynn's side containing a closet build into the room, pennants on the wall, and a bed with a red blanket, while Lucy's side has a mirror, a writing desk, and a bed with a black blanket and a high frame.

A second comic, titled Deuces Wild, was created for the 2016 Comic-Con, and was also adapted as an animated short. Comics based on the show were planned to appear in issues of Nickelodeon Magazine; however, when Papercutz stopped publishing the magazine, the comics instead appeared in the Nickelodeon Pandemonium graphic novels as well as their own books. To date, seventeen Loud House graphic novels (plus winter, summer, Valentine's Day, and back-to-school-themed one-off specials) have been published, with at least two more (plus a superhero-themed special and a spy-themed special) to be published in the future. Lincoln Loud was originally voiced by Sean Ryan Fox in the show's pilot "Bathroom Break!" He was replaced by Grant Palmer for the series proper (as Sean's voice had hit puberty by that time). Palmer voiced the character until "A Fair To Remember", when he was replaced by Collin Dean for the rest of the season due to hitting puberty; Palmer now voices Grant, the part-time Burpin' Burger employee who also works at Lynn's Table. Dean voiced Lincoln for the entirety of season two (becoming the first voice of Lincoln to participate in an actual full season of the series at that time), but was was replaced by Tex Hammond (the son of fellow voice actor Grey Griffin) during season three due to hitting puberty.
Episodes200
Clyde welcomes Lincoln back to Royal Woods with some duke-themed cream puffs. An extended version of the "Flippee Jingle" from the episode "Save Royal Woods" is shown in commercial form. When three girls sit down outside of Flip's Food & Fuel needing a drink when their juice is warm, Flip breaks out into a jingle about Flippees with help from Lincoln, his sisters, Clyde, and Nacho. An extended version of the song "Right Where We Belong" from the episode "Save Royal Woods" is shown in music video form. Every episode and segment of this season was directed by Chris Savino, with him co-directing with Kyle Marshall in the episode "The Price of Admission"/"One Flu Over the Loud House" (#125). When viewed from outside, the basement appears to only have one window, located next to the garage, despite being consistently depicted with multiple windows.
Hammond was then replaced by Asher Bishop due to hitting puberty during the fourth season (starting with the episode "Wheel and Deal"). Bishop continued to voice Lincoln entirely for season five and even voiced Lincoln for its first theatrical film. However, Bishop was replaced by Bentley Griffin, starting in season six due to him hitting puberty. As the series goes on, many of the individual siblings get their own spotlight episodes, often focusing on their lives outside the titular house.
The first season originally consisted of 13 episodes (26 segments in total), but Nickelodeon changed it to 26 (52 segments in total). The third animated film in the franchise, was first unveiled on April 26, 2024 on Nickelodeon’s Instagram page.[9] It is scheduled to release on Paramount+. The Los Angeles Times cited The Loud House as a major factor in maintaining Nickelodeon's position as the highest-rated children's network in summer 2016.
The first episode of The Loud House shown in prime time, "11 Louds a Leapin'," was the seventh most-viewed telecast across all U.S. households on Friday, November 25, 2016. Chris Savino based The Loud House on his own experiences growing up in a large family. He pitched the idea to Nickelodeon in 2013 as a 2½-minute short for their annual Animated Shorts Program.
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