The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets

The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets is a Jetanie-Kuboian animated television series produced by Colourbox and Kubokartoonz. The third television series in the Sweet Treets, it is the first to be produced with digital ink, and the only to be co-produced by a non-Jetanie studio. The show premiered in 1995, and ended in 1997. Episodes were broadcast on JT1 and Vision 1 simultaneously.

Unlike other entries in the franchise, The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets uses a serial format and a lasting story arc. Though they still appear, the Treets themselves are not as prominent compared to previous series, with more screen time going towards Louise Lockridge and her friends. Nearly all of the voice actors from The Sweet Treets returned to their character roles, including Sharlie Deem, Peter Malosh, Opaline Robins and Henry Buckings.

Premise
Taking place roughly a year or two after the events of the 1984 series, Louise is now nine years old (ten in later episodes). Due to Louise growing up, the Treets are starting to realise they have less control over her and are having trouble keeping her from trouble. Throughout the series, many different events take place, such as Louise's mother, Liane, discovering about the origins of the Treets, King Rojo and the Rogon species decide to open their own restaurant, and Louise's close friend, Marilyn, is struggling to stay focused in school due to a difficult home life and being distracted by a mean, new girl in their class. Louise also finds herself in a tricky situation when she feels her father is not interested in her.

The Treets appear in the series, but do not play as much of a role, often remaining in the background so more focus can be given to Louise. Returning characters from the show include Louise's mother, Liane, her best friend, Nate, her close friend and friendly rival, Marilyn, and her enemy-turned-friend, Swoop the parrot-seagull hybrid. King Rojo returns, but has had his character rewritten entirely, is more of a greedy jerk instead of evil, and only appears in roughly half the episodes. Magfire the crow also reappears, but only in an arc consisting of three episodes.

Several new characters have also been introduced in the show, including Louise's father, Zedd, her younger half-brother, Tyh, and her Asain stepmother, Martine. Other new characters include Hugh, a friend of Louise and Nate and Marilyn's best friend who she is emotionally dependent on, as well as Anthem, a classmate of Louise and her friends who they severely dislike. King Rojo also has several new subjects, including his loyal minion, Stumpy, Stumpy's mischievous brother, Gunge, and Gunge's clumsy best friend, Rusty.

Storylines
Each of the three series of The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets had a series-long storyline.

The series itself tackled many different issues children may face in life, such as making, arguing with and losing friends, being bullied in school, suffering anxiety and being in the centre of family conflicts. Episodes often featured moral messages about friendship, teamwork, honesty, bravery and confidence. Sometimes, the show also dealt with more controversial issues, including smoking, alcohol and LGBT relationships.

The second series generally focuses on Louise and her friends being manipulated by a greedy businessman, Derrick Mangle, who tricks the children into making promises he doesn't keep and giving them underhanded "jobs". The third and final series features a deadly plague being passed around by Rudy, an evil Treet who was created around the same time as the other Treets. During this time, Louise and her mother, Liane, learn more about the history of the Treets, as well as their (and King Rojo's) long-deceased family members.

Typically, each episode would feature a more sophisticated and drama-orientated plot, with a more comical B-plot.

Broadcast history
During the show's initial run, The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets was broadcast simultaneously on JT1 and Vision 1. The show did not air on the Bumper's Block strand on Vision 1 due to its timeslot, and instead aired under the channel's mainstream branding. New episodes were aired on Friday evenings at 5:00p.m. for series 1, and 5:25p.m. for series 2 and 3.

In Kuboia, reruns were eventually picked up by Nick Jr. Kuboia from August 1996, although initially only older episodes would be shown on the channel until roughly 1998.

After the show concluded in 1997, Vision 1 continued to show reruns during weekend nights until late 2001. Nick Jr. Kuboia reran the show until the channel's closure in December 2010.

Development
The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets began development in 1992. According to Flynn Raidon, the 1984 Sweet Treets cartoon was "really unpolished" and that the characters "deserved better". In 1993, Colourbox sold 50% of the franchise to Kubokartoonz. Following Taylor Ridley, the franchise's creator's semi-retirement in 1987, Raidon had been responsible for the ownership of the franchises created by Ridley in the 1970s. Raidon had asked Ashley Maverick and Late Caters for help creating the show due to being impressed with Kubokartoonz' previous television series.

Taylor Ridley herself initially had little to do with the show's development. She was originally unsure about the co-production with Kubokartoonz. Eventually, she joined in to co-direct the show and co-write most of the episodes after being called by Raidon, who was struggling with coming up with new ideas. Ashley Maverick stated "We wanted to do something new for The Sweet Treets, but we also still wanted it to retain that sentimental feel of Windmill cartoons, something only Taylor could really add."

When deciding the new direction for The New Adventures of The Sweet Treets, it was decided that the show should have, according to Ashley Maverick, a "prime-time slot feel, but also something little kids would like. Basically, something the whole family, regardless of age, would love."

According to Maverick, the development team took inspiration from the Canadian animated television series The Raccoons, believing it to be "ahead" of other animated series at the time.

Characters
When coming up with new characters for the show, it was agreed that any character who was bad should get appropriate comeuppance or have redeeming qualities, and that any bad behaviour that children might copy should be portrayed negatively.

It was Ashley Maverick's idea to rework King Rojo's character into a more comedic, morally neutral, character. Maverick stated that the reworked King Rojo was "still a greedy jerk, but has enough positive attributes to make him not entirely villainous". Maverick also argued that King Rojo's large screen time could show children that even questionable people can be good hearted.

When asked about Anthem Rivers and Hugh Halls' inclusion in a 2002 interview, Taylor Ridley stated "Anthem is a mean, spoilt and ungrateful girl who is unfortunately common in real life." She also admitted that Hugh was only created so there was another male child character, saying "We had Louise, Marilyn, Anthem, Zoe and Nate. That's four girls and only one boy. It is unlikely for a school class to have only one boy, so we made another." Hugh is named after Flynn Raidon's younger brother who died before development on the show began.

Jetania

 * JT1 (1995-?)

Kuboia

 * Vision 1 (1995-2001)
 * Nick Jr. Kuboia (1996-2010)
 * Nick Jr. 2 (2004-2010)
 * Kiddioka (2018-present)

Argentina

 * Magic Kids (1997-2006)

Canada

 * CBC Playground/Get Set for Life (1995-2001)
 * YTV (2002-2010)
 * Teletoon Retro (2010-2011)

France

 * TF1 (1996-2003)

Germany

 * Super RTL (1995-2008)

Italy

 * Italia 1 (1995-2000)
 * K2 (2004-2008)
 * Frisbee (2010-2011)

Latin America

 * ZAZ (1996-2003)

Middle East

 * MBC 3 (2004-2013)

Netherlands

 * Kindernet (1996-2003)

Saudi Arabia

 * KSA 1 (1996-2009)

United Arab Emirates

 * Spacetoon (2000-2013)

United Kingdom

 * CBBC (1995-2001)
 * Nickelodeon (1996-1999)
 * Nick Jr. (1999-2010)
 * Nick Jr. 2 (2006-2010)

United States

 * First-run syndication (from 1996)
 * Nick Jr. (2000-2002)
 * Noggin (2003-2007)