Mole Miner

 is an American-Japanese-Canadian animated television series produced by, Jazz Television Media, Latikuu Edacra Entertainment North America, , (seasons 3-7), and  in association with , with animation produced by Soup Cup Cartoons (seasons 1–6), The Roelandts Group (season 7),  (seasons 1-5),  (seasons 6-7),  (season 8-present) and YES Somni Asia (season 8-present). The series premiered on November 5, 2001 on. The series originally ran for 7 seasons from 2001 to 2007 and ran for 200 episodes, being one of the longest-running PBS Kids series. A revival, with animation produced by and YES Somni Asia, was ordered in 2020 for an 8th season.

Mole Miner received widespread praise from critics throughout its run, and the series proved to be an extremely popular draw for PBS. The series received multiple Daytime Emmy and Annie Award nominations, as well as a Humanitas Prize nomination for the episode "Rochester's Dad". It was named the 5th-greatest PBS Kids show of all time by The Worcester Beacon in 2016.

Currently, the franchise is owned by Seagrounds Financial Group, who acquired the series in 2014 after distributor Alfred Haber Distribution Co. wrote the series off for tax purposes. Seagrounds would later acquire the rights to the albums from in January 2016.

In August 2019, the characters were featured in a CGI-animated online video, Mole Miner: Strike It Richer, with the aim of increasing "self-esteem and general confidence" in youth. After it's success, PBS, Latikuu Edacra and Seagrounds all confirmed they were exploring the idea of putting Mole Miner back into production. In May 2020, PBS confirmed the series' revival for a 8th season, set to premiere on December 24, 2020 with the Christmas special "It's Yet Another Mole Miner Christmas!". Much of the 8th season was produced, written, voiced and animated remotely from the production crew members and actors' homes due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with YES Somni Asia using a small skeleton crew of four which remained working at their studio.

Synopsis
Darren, an anthropomorphic mole miner, works the mines in the Rockies, a fictional mineral-rich mountain region in the state of. He work alongside other moles and at the same time teaches the audience middle school-level knowledge about geology, engineering, history of mining, and industrial uses of different minerals.

Origin and development
Creator Phelan Morkel was only a 15-year old high schooler when his comic Darren the Mole Miner was featured in the school paper of in  in 1996. The comic gained national attention for its teaching of geology and the history of mining and Morkel soon signed a deal with to release collections of the comic. The first collection, Hey, It's Me, Darren!, made Morkel one of the youngest authors to have a title on the. In 1999, Morkel was approached by to produce a television series adapted from the comic. Lear had noticed that one of his grand-nephews had outgrown Arthur and felt there was no educational kids program that could appeal to him or other kids of his age range, and thought Morkel's comic would work great as a TV series. Lear and Morkel produced a pilot and pitched the series to of  in 2000. WNET producer Kristin Laskas Martin thought the show could have appeal since the titular character, Darren, "wasn't as divisive as Barney and wasn't as neurotic as Arthur".

Lear's Act III Productions worked with -based, -based Jazz Television Media (a division of the Asheville-based advertising agency HRV Advertising, who helped fund PBS programming through their charitable arm The Harry R. Voskanyan Foundation), and Latikuu Holdings USA (who also took interest in the original pitch) to produce a pilot for the series. Several Japanese and Canadian firms, Soup Cup Cartoons and being among them, were contracted to animate the pilot, with the -based  providing the voice recording and casting. The pilot was screened to WNET and PBS executives and a test audience of local children at a private event in August 2000. The children "fell in love with the characters", and the executives agreed that a Mole Miner show would be successful for PBS. WNET & PBS immediately greenlit the series for a initial season of 20 episodes, which debuted on November 5, 2001. The aforementioned firms returned to produce the series, being joined by WNET. At age 20, Phelan Morkel was, at the time, the youngest creator of a daytime television series.

Episodes
The following seasons were aired:
 * Season 1 (2001-2002) - 40 episodes
 * Season 2 (2002-2003) - 25 episodes (combined with Season 1's 40 episodes - this made 65 episodes - which the series was originally scheduled to end with)
 * Season 3 (2003-2004) - 30 episodes
 * Season 4 (2004) - 15 episodes
 * Season 5 (2004-2005) -  30 episodes
 * Season 6 (2006-2007) - 30 episodes
 * Season 7 (2007) - 30 episodes

United States

 * (November 5, 2001 - reruns until August 2, 2009 on national feed)
 * Original version: November 7, 2001 - September 26, 2005
 * 2017 version: reruns since June 2, 2020 - present
 * (reruns from August 2012 - May 2014)
 * (reruns from August 2012 - May 2014)

Japan
A Japanese dub titled Moru Kōfu aired in Japan.
 * (November 8, 2001–Spring 2007)
 * (September–October 9, 2011)

Canada

 * (November 18, 2001 - reruns until May 3, 2011)
 * (November 8, 2001 - present)
 * (November 11, 2001 - reruns until June 2013)
 * As SCN: November 12, 2001 - reruns until May 2010
 * As Citytv Saskatchewan: reruns from June 2015 - May 2017
 * (November 8, 2001 - August 15, 2008)
 * (November 8, 2001 - present) (dubbed in French as Le mineur taupe)
 * (November 2001 - December 2009) (dubbed in French as Le mineur taupe)
 * (November 2001 - December 2009) (dubbed in French as Le mineur taupe)

United Islands
In the United Islands, the series' funding credits are removed.
 * NBS Kids (late 2001 – mid-2004, June 2020)

United Kingdom

 * (February 2002 - November 2010)
 * (July 2004 - present)
 * (2002 - 2009)

El Kadsre

 * ETVKK (April 23, 2002 - May 5, 2009)
 * KadsreTV stations (2002 - 2012, 2015 - present)
 * El TV Kadsre Japanese (May 9, 2007 - July 30, 2010) (dubbed in Japanese as Moru Kōfu)

Eruowood

 * TechEruo Kids (June 4, 2002 - May 9, 2008)

France
The airings from 2002 to 2003 used the Quebecois dub Le mineur taupe. Airings since 2003 have used a European French dub titled Darren le mineur.
 * (August 2002 - May 2011)

Czech Republic
Aired dubbed in Czech as Krtek horník.
 * TV KAO (August 2002 - May 2009)

Poland
Series was aired dubbed as Kret górnik. The Polish dub was made by Studio Dolby in.
 * (October 3, 2002 - April 4, 2004)
 * (January 3, 2004 - October 7, 2008)
 * (November 2, 2004 - January 22, 2008)

Germany
Aired in German as Mole Miner - Der kitschige Bergmann!. The series was dubbed into German in,.
 * (December 2002 - 2007)

Kuboia

 * KT (January 13, 2003 - November 16, 2008)
 * Boomerang (January 15, 2010 - April 14, 2013)

Hungary
Dubbed in Hungarian as A vakondbányász.
 * (March 3, 2003 - December 31, 2009)

Italy
Series was dubbed into Italian in. The Italian dub kept the English name, but was also known as Mole Miner - Lavorare il giorno di distanza nelle miniere (the name of the custom Italian theme song by used for the dub's airings on  channels).
 * (December 1, 2003 - October 27, 2007)

Brazil

 * Surtiopouio (June 7, 2003–October 31, 2010)

Joseje
In Joseje, a Josic language dub by SkyDub titled Dè Mòl Maìna was released. Although the dub was originally direct-to-video, it was aired on television from 2004 to 2008.
 * JTV Kidz (May 2004–2008)

Middle East and North Africa
In the Middle East and North Africa, the original dub (by Venus Centre in ) aired on Spacetoon and was also syndicated to various regional channels in the Arab World's countries. The new Modern Standard Arabic dub (made by VoiceMedia in ) aired on Disney Channel Arabic.
 * (October [Ramadan] 2005 - August 2013)
 * Disney Channel Arabic (February 15, 2019 - present)

Reception
Season One holds a Metacritic score of 95 out of 100, indicating "universal acclaim".

Trivia

 * It was the third most watched program on the Eruowoodian children's television channel TechEruo Kids in 2002, behind House of Mouse (2nd) and SpongeBob SquarePants (1st).
 * The series was originally cel-animated for the first season, but switched to digital ink-and-paint in the second season.