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Monday, January 16, 2023

Craig of the Creek// Review #20

Welcome back everyone!

I hope your year started off great!  

To kick off the first real post of the new year, I wanted to bring your attention to something amazing I discovered recently: Craig of the Creek. 

Craig of the Creek is my new favorite comfort show, and I want to share it with all of you now.

Now, I've been meaning to watch this show ever since my "Fight Night" post about The Proud Family and its reboot. In it, I mentioned that I was disappointed that The Proud Family was the only black cartoon to make a lasting impact on children's animation within the last 20 years. Since then, black cartoons have been far and few between, with even less of them for children/ family audiences. Much to my disappointment, out of all the children’s cartoons on TV recently, the only black show that I was aware of was Craig of the Creek.

A black animator I follow on YouTube, Toonrific Tariq, did a wonderful video on why this is a shame, and why this shouldn't be the case, specifically in the context of Craig of the Creek. I highly recommend watching the whole video, as it covers everything that I felt and still feel on the subject of black animation, all while being funny and relatable.

Toonrific Tariq's video, "How to Black: An Analysis of Black Cartoon Characters"

Nonetheless, I'm glad that Craig of the Creek exists in the capacity that it does today, and I'm so happy that I was able to watch all four seasons of it that are currently available on HBO Max.* 

I want everyone to appreciate this show as much as I do, and so I'm going to talk about it at length until you get on my level.

Let's begin, shall we?

Category 1: Characters- A+

One area where Craig of the Creek shines where other shows (animated or otherwise) may fall flat is their characters.

The three main characters of this show are the titular Craig Williams, along with his two best friends, Kelsey Pokoly, and John Paul "JP" Mercer. They each have their own unique character traits that make them stand out as people, but of course, they all work better as a team. It's crazy that none of these characters are older than twelve, but they all have a lot of personality between them.

Craig is a map-maker, and uses his love of the Creek behind his house as an excuse to explore and document everything he's found in and around it. He helps the other kids in the community and he often likes to go an adventures just to discover what's out there. He's a smart kid, with an eye for math and engineering, but he's a little oblivious sometimes, which can get him into trouble.

Kelsey is a warrior at heart, who is determined to become the hero of her own fantasy novel series. She loves reading and writing fantastical stories about her and her friends, and she's definitely not afraid of a fight. She often hangs around the Creek with her pet bird, Mortimer, and her PVC pipe turned "sword" to fend off any enemies at the Creek.

JP is the heart of the group, and he's also the oldest among the three friends. He's never afraid to get messy in the Creek, and he's not the sharpest tool in the shed. Even though he may not be the brightest in his friend group, that doesn't make him dumb by any means- he has the highest emotional intelligence of everyone around him. He loves monster trucks and going on adventures with his best friends.

JP, Kelsey and Craig

While the main characters of the show are important, and it is good to root for them and like them, I think Craig of the Creek has more than enough side characters to also root for and like. In fact, the supporting characters may be the best part of the show.

In the series, we get to know Craig's entire family- his brother and sister, his cousins, his aunt and uncle, his grandparents. We also get to see all of the kids he hangs out with in the Creek every day after school. And let me tell you- there are a lot of them. 

Left to right: Bryson (Craig's cousin), Craig, Bernard (Craig's older brother), and Jessica (Craig's younger sister)

Personally, I love Craig's younger sister Jessica! She's easily my favorite character. I also love Craig's older brother, Bernard! I love Kelsey's father! I love Craig's mom! I honestly think I love the side characters in this show more than I love the main characters, and that's saying something because the main characters are so lovable.

Some of my other favorite recurring characters are- Sparkle Cadet, Wildernessa, Cannon Ball, Omar (The Green Poncho), Toman (AKA T-Money, AKA the T-Man, AKA the Tomato-Master), The Elders of the Creek (Mark, David, and Barry), Kit, and Bobby. (There are definitely more, but I had to have a hard stop for this list otherwise I would just list everyone in the Creek.)

Surprisingly, I also love some of the one-off characters. I love Paloma, the Jinx-girl. I love Angel, the Creek day-care worker. I love that kid Deltron, from the year 3030. I love the fact that even if some of the characters were only featured in one 11-minute episode, they feel fully fleshed out and real. I still think about Helen, a girl who was homeschooled and never actually showed up in the Creek (I mean, technically).

This is a testament to how real these characters seem. I feel like I know these characters, partially because I knew people like them growing up. These kids make me feel like a kid again myself, and that's pretty special, if you ask me.

Category 2: World-building- A

I'm not an outdoorsy person by any means, but this show makes me want to move to Baltimore, Maryland, and play behind the Creek in my house. A lot of this is due to the worldbuilding within the Creek, and the Creek itself.

This show's worldbuilding is next level for something that is so ordinary as living in the suburbs. Unlike other animated shows with good worldbuilding (like Amphibia or Gravity Falls), nothing all that fantastical or supernatural is happening in the Creek. (At least, mostly, anyway.)

No, Craig doesn't need to be transported to a frog society or attacked by a triangle shaped demon. Craig of the Creek is good at reminding you that every group of kids had their own subculture growing up, and kid culture had lots of little cliques. There were kids you knew with their own little worlds, and their own made-up rules and languages.

Basically, Craig of the Creek successfully captures kid-society.

Within the world of the Creek, there are several different sub-groups of kids that all hang out in areas that Craig and his friends map out as they adventure.

Craig and his friends are known as "The Stump Kids" because they always hang out by an old hollowed out tree stump where they keep all of their stuff. It's their homebase and their clubhouse of sorts. Outside of the main trio, there are several other sub-groups that are all around the Creek.

There are the kids who ride their bicycles around the Creek all the time, trying to do cool tricks (The 10-Speeds), the Horse Girls who like to pretend to be horses grazing in the meadow, the Ninja Kids who like anime and pretend to be ninjas, the Sewer Kids who like to hang out in the open sewer pipes and swim all day, and the Paintballers who play paintball all day. There are also the Forest Scouts, the Tea Timers (who hold tea parties in the Creek), the Elders (high school/ college age dorks who hang out in the Creek), and the Alliance of Science (science kids who conduct experiments in the Creek).

I could go on and on about all of the specific sub-groups within the Creek, but the cool thing about this show is that everyone has their own little clique that they fit in with, or their own role to play in the Creek as a whole. For example, there's Kit, who runs the local Trading Tree, a business where kids trade in various items for snacks that she brings to the Creek every day. Her business is a cornerstone of the Creek, and it serves as a hub for all of kid-society. Choco-rolls and candy are her currencies of choice.

Craig's map of the Creek

The fact that Craig is a map-maker makes the entire world of the Creek seem much more fleshed out and realized. This is especially true in the later seasons of the show, because soon Craig, JP, and Kelsey discover kid-lore that tells of an overpass that split the Creek in two. Eventually, the group has a whole new side of the Creek to discover.

This is where we discover what happens on the other side of the Creek. (SLIGHT SPOILERS AHEAD) In seasons 2-4 of the show, Craig discovers that there is a king who rules over all of the children on his side of the Creek by pressuring them into being his subjects. King Xavier is a bully, who runs his side of the Creek by weaponizing his rich kid status and promising to give only the best candy and toys to his "best friends."

Without getting into too many spoilers, I'll just say that King Xavier's side of the Creek truly expands Craig's world, not only through the eyes of the characters, but also in the eyes of the viewers. In learning about this entire other community of kids that play on the other side of the overpass, we get to see what life is like for them, and how they view kid-society under the rule of an oppressive bully regime.

There are so many different types of kids who hang in and around the Creek, and that's not even to mention all of the other aspects of the Creek that just make sense from a worldbuilding perspective: like how there is a daycare for the kids who have younger siblings they don't want to look after, and how every Halloween Kit makes all of the kids pay off their tabs at the Trading Tree. There are even things that I'm convinced were just one-off jokes that get fleshed into full 11-minute episodes, like the Baby Casino, where kids bet on baby games like Tic-Tac-Toe.

The entire reason why Craig of the Creek is fun to watch is because of the amazing worldbuilding that's in this normal setting. The Creek isn't a magical place in a realistic sense, but it's magical because the kids think it's magical, and so their imagination colors our viewing of it.

The Creek is just where kids go to be kids, and I think that's pretty amazing.

Category 3: Diversity- A+

In his video, "How to Black" (above), Toonrific Tariq acknowledges that Craig of the Creek was a show that was created by two white men (Matt Burnett and Ben Levin), about a young black boy as a main character as he journeys through the suburbs of his hometown and adventures in the Creek behind his house.

Some would argue that this is a bad thing, or that it's pandering to be more "woke" in today's day and age. I would wholeheartedly disagree.

Everyone should want to be represented in the media they consume; it just so happens that black people have had a long history of being excluded from animated shows, or included in problematic, and often derivative ways.

Again, I highly recommend watching Tariq's video on the subject because it covers the issues of race and representation a little more broadly than I will, however, I will say that I completely agree with the core of his argument, which is that representing another race/ group of people that you don't represent in media needs to be handled with care and grace, without representing that group just for the sake of saying that they're included. 

Representation is, at its core, about the care that it takes to depict someone else as a fully fleshed out person, with real emotions and struggles not solely based on their race or their marginalized background.

I can see how much the creators of this show care about getting their representation right just from how the show presents itself.

All different races and all different ethnicities are included in the Creek. This is especially evident because Craig and his whole family is black. I wholeheartedly love the episodes with Craig's family because as someone who grew up with a black family and watched other shows about black families (see, again, my take on the original The Proud Family), this meant so much to me. There's a Halloween episode where Duane and Nicole, Craig's parents, dress up as Urkel and Missy Elliot, and it made me smile because I understood those references despite not being the target audience for this show. I love the use of black slang when Craig's uncle and cousins drop by. I love the way Craig understands there are certain things young black kids just don't do. I love that Jessica has attitude without being disrespectful to adults (which is a real problem that I have with little black girls on TV nowadays, but that's an issue for another time). Overall, I just love the care that was taken into these depictions of black characters, even though their defining trait isn't that they're black. They just are.

Craig's family at Thanksgiving (sans Craig, his cousin Bryson, and his older brother, Bernard)

There's also not a shortage of black kids in the Creek outside of Craig and his family. There's also Cannonball and Warp-speed from the 10-Speeds, Kit, and Sparkle Cadet, just to name a few. Not to mention, there are so many other examples of kids coming from other racial and ethnic backgrounds in the Creek, such as the Sewer Queen being Filipino and Raj from the Honey Suckle Rangers being Indian. Both of their cultures are explored in individual episodes where we get to know their families and backgrounds outside of the Creek.  

The LGBT+ representation in this show is also incredible because Kelsey is canonically queer, along with a few other characters in the Creek, like the Creek Witches (two teen goth girls who trick the kids into thinking they're witches) and the Honeysuckle Rangers. There are also references to nonbinary characters- the merkid comes to mind- along with Angel, the Creek babysitter, who is also nonbinary.

In the fourth season of Craig of the Creek, the show introduced Jackie, who is a kid who is deaf/hard of hearing and introduced Craig to sign language. The fact that this show bothered to include something as real as sign language (specifically for a kid of color), was truly iconic behavior from the creators of the show. I don't believe I've seen disability representation like this since the animated The Little Mermaid series on the Disney Channel (or maybe Toph from Avatar: The Last Airbender).

Everyone should aspire to be this aware of other perspectives, and to take as much care as possible to represent them as well as Craig of the Creek did.

Category 4: Plot- C+

One thing about Craig of the Creek is that since this show is character-based and not plot-based, there isn't an overarching plot for most of the stories in this series.

Each episode of Craig of the Creek is more of less self-contained, so even if you start watching it in the middle of a season, you can follow along fine. Most of the storylines are about life in the Creek of Craig learning a lesson with his family of his friends. However, in the later seasons of the show, there are episodes that enhance the lore of the Creek, such as (SPOILER) the story arc with King Xavier and his impending invasion. The multi-episode story arc with King Xavier in seasons 2-3 was/is the most cohesive plot in the entire show, as most of the show's plots are one-offs or 1-2 episode arcs. 

Most of the show just revolves around the main trio messing around and growing up. The stakes for most episodes are relatively low, but because the main characters are kids, everything seems like the biggest deal in the world. Everything from wearing a coat that makes you look uncool, to not wanting to try new foods, to wanting to beat your father at video games, all becomes life-or-death situations, despite how all of these issues are fairly common in everyday life.

The animation definitely reflects the severity of these issues to these kids, though.

Which leads into-

Category 5: Animation- A

Craig of the Creek was created by a lot of the same people who worked on Steven Universe (a show that I have never seen, nor do I have any interest in seeing due to the toxic fandom surrounding it), and from what I can tell, it includes a lot of the same themes of friendship and inclusion of people of color and LGBT+ representation. Matt Burnett and Ben Levin, the co-creators of Craig of the Creek, actually used to work with the storyboard artists for Steven Universe before Craig of the Creek was picked up by Cartoon Network.

Poster for Steven Universe (2013-2020)

Outside of Steven Universe, one of the things that I really appreciated when researching this post was that many of the storyboard artists for Craig of the Creek were people of color, specifically black people (some of whom also worked on Steven Universe as well). In fact, Pearl Low, one of the storyboard artists from the Oscar-winning short film, Hair Love, was a part of animating Sparkle Cadet in Craig of the Creek, which I think is amazing! (Watch the reel of her animation here- it's super interesting.)

The fact that this show hired more than one person of color to storyboard their show (Richie Pope, Lamar Abrams, Amish Kumar, and Tiffany Ford just to name a few) speaks volumes to the amount of care the team behind Craig of the Creek put into the show. Too often are animated spaces limited to white animators, further limiting the amount of access that people of color have in the world of animation.

I'm glad that this show not only depicts a person of color, but it also includes other people of color in the animation process, further cementing this show as one of my favorites.

Category 6: Kid-Friendliness- A+

This show was definitely 100% written for kids and with kids in mind. The amount of imagination involved with this show is incredible, and I can say without a doubt that this show is propaganda to get kids to play outside instead of play video games. If I were a child, I'm pretty sure it would work.

Sure, Craig and his friends have cell phones, but they rarely come up, as they spend most of their time playing and imagining fun worlds in the Creek. They run, they adventure, and they hang out with friends. This show is everything it meant to be a kid growing up, and yet it still manages to be so modern and new.

If kids aren't watching this show, they should start. This show is the best comfort cartoon that I've seen in recent years, because even though it doesn't have much of a cohesive plot (most of the time), the adventures the Stump Kids go on are fun and light-hearted. They learn lessons and conquer their fears, they adventure into worlds unknown, and live with imagination in their hearts.

I love this show.

Craig of the Creek is on the same level as another cartoon that I really enjoyed, Amphibia. I do believe I enjoyed this show a tad more, though, due to the fact that the characters are more relatable to me and my family, and it was so easy to binge several 40-episode seasons in a few weeks.

*As of October 2022, Craig of the Creek fell victim to the infamous (and truly heinous) HBO Max/ Discovery + merger, as Cartoon Network, the network that aired Craig of the Creek, has been effectively gutted by this move (see my previous post regarding HBO Max and animated content). Since then, the show's final season 5 order has been cut in half, along with its spinoff, Jessica's Big Little World's, first season being halved as well. There is a Twitter thread about this issue from Richie Pope, a storyboard artist for Craig of the Creek, linked here.

Along with other shows that have been impacted by this merger, such as Infinity Train or Close Enough (which is an adult animated series produced by HBO Max, not Cartoon Network, but stay with me), the merits of these shows are not what is preventing them from sticking around or not being cancelled by Cartoon Network or HBO Max. It is their profitability. Unfortunately, due to this awful corporate merger, there have been several casualties, and Craig of the Creek just happens to be the latest in this long, horrible list.

On the bright side, the co-creator of the show, Matt Burnett, has confirmed that there will still be a Craig of the Creek movie to be released at some point in the near future, presumably to close out the series and to introduce the world to Jessica's limited spinoff series.

Overall, I love this show. It captures the magic and imagination around being a kid, and it allows for a broader audience to feel represented in its animation without feeling cheap or like it's pandering to certain people. Craig of the Creek is a perfect cartoon in my book (an A), and I hope that this show goes on to influence other animators to make shows that also inspire kids and adults alike to dream bigger and create more hopeful, inclusive content.  

Thanks for reading! 

This post was originally released last October as one of the final posts that I had for the early access tier of my Patreon. I want to say that I really appreciate anyone and everyone who read my blog posts on my now defunct Patreon, and everyone who reads them here, now. Thank you for your continued support.

1 comment:

  1. I'm glad you recommended this show to me - even though I've watched all the episodes out of order as I recorded them on my TV (how early 2010s of me, lol) I greatly enjoyed the characters and the kid-friendly atmosphere. It's one of those rare shows that actually captures the feeling of what it's like to be a kid. The diversity is organic and meaningful, and I hope that there are many kids who grow up watching this show and see themselves in these characters.
    I almost wish that Craig of the Creek got more attention - but as a survivor of the Steven Universe fandom, maybe it's fine where it's at right now. I think that in the long run, shows like Steven Universe were a kind of "sacrifice" - we had to have one game-changing show with a rabid fanbase in order to get shows with more natural POC and LGBT representation, like Craig of the Creek or Disney's The Owl House.
    On its own, Craig of the Creek is still amazing. My favorite episode had to be the one with Helena, it really captured a sense of wonder while (as an adult) I could clearly see where these kids were letting their imaginations run wild. Also the episode with Raj's grandma made me ugly cry.

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