Thats So Raven Games Disney Channel

  1. Two breaks from a That's So Raven airing on April 8, 2005 before the premiere of Disney's Kim Possible Movie: So The Drama. This includes a rare and weirdly.
  2. Cory, a high school boy, developed a new version of his own computer game! To help him, you have to guide Cory's piggy bank through the house in That's So Raven: Cory's Money Maze game. Pick up all the money you can and score a lot of points. The gameplay is pretty straightforward, so it should be quite easy for you to get a grasp.
  3. Home Online Games Online Pinball. This pinball is themed on Disney channel's That's So Raven TV show. Very nice graphics, sound effects, and ball action. Current Rating: 3.83 Total Votes: 1,070.
  4. After Boy Meets World and The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, That’s So Raven is the next Disney Channel series to score its very own spin-off. Following in the footsteps of Girl Meets World.

Watch Raven's Home TV Show Disney Channel on DisneyNOW. Don't Trust the G in Apartment 4B. Don't Trust the G in Apartment 4B. Raven About BUNK'D.

Games

That's So Raven is an Americansupernaturalteen sitcomtelevision series. It debuted on the Disney Channel on January 17, 2003, and ended its run on November 10, 2007. The show spawned Disney Channel's first spin-off series, Cory in the House. The series was nominated in 2005 and 2007 for Emmy Awards for Outstanding Children's Programming.[1]

Thats So Raven Games Disney Channel

The show was set in San Francisco and revolved around teenager Raven Baxter, played by Raven-Symoné, her friends Eddie (Orlando Brown) and Chelsea (Anneliese van der Pol), her family members; mother Tanya Baxter (T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh) father Victor Baxter (Rondell Sheridan) and brother Cory (Kyle Massey). The title character drew on her psychic powers, ingenuity, and talent as a fashion designer as well as a variety of disguises to get into and out of amusing adolescent and pre-adolescent situations.

Reruns of episodes aired on the ABC Kids Saturday morning segment of Disney-owned ABC broadcast network in the United States until August 27, 2011, when the block was discontinued. No announcement was made as to whether the show would get complete season releases on DVD. That's So Raven garnered higher ratings than any other Disney Channel show.[2]

  • 1Production
  • 2Episodes
  • 3Characters
  • 5Merchandise
  • 7VHS and DVD releases

Production[edit]

The name for the main character changed several times prior to production, starting with Dawn Baxter in a show named The Future Is on Me. Names changed to Rose Baxter in a show called Absolutely Psychic but finally settling on Raven Baxter when actress Raven-Symoné won the lead part, with the show titled That's So Raven. Symoné originally auditioned for the role of the best friend, Chelsea, but was changed due to ratings. Raven-Symoné was credited simply as 'Raven' throughout the series.

The show filmed a special pilot episode on April 12, 2001 and the first season was filmed from November 9, 2001 – June 2002.[3]The first season premiered on Family Channel in Canada in December 2001, on Disney Channel UK in September 2002 and in the United States on January 2003.

That's So Raven was responsible for many firsts for Disney Channel: the series was the highest-rated series in the history of Disney Channel and the first series to garner more than three-million viewers; the third longest-running original series in Disney Channel history, the first Disney Channel series to reach 100 episodes, the first Disney Channel series to produce a spinoff (Cory in the House) and one of the first three live action original series, where the lead and most of the supporting main characters are minorities (The Famous Jett Jackson and Cory in the House being the others).

In addition, it was also the first Disney Channel sitcom to be shot on videotape, to use a multi-camera format, to be shot in front of a studio audience or use a laugh track,[citation needed] and to use the simulated film look created by FilmLook, Inc. (all of which has become standard on all Disney Channel comedies, though a 'filmized' appearance was given to all of the channel's videotaped sitcoms produced from 2009 onward, as the live-action Disney Channel Original Series begin being produced in high definition).

The first three seasons were produced by Brookwell McNamara Entertainment. The company later left at the end of season 3, being replaced by Warren & Rinsler Productions. Raven-Symoné then received a producer credit for the show's fourth and final season, with the credit being called 'That So Productions'. It became the first Disney Channel series to create a spin-off, Cory in the House, which followed her younger brother, Cory, as his dad became the head chef for the President of the United States, causing the two of them to move to Washington, D.C.

In the fourth season of That's So Raven and on Cory in the House, Victor states that Tanya (T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh) is in England as a lawyer. The show shot its final few episodes in January 2006, but they weren't all aired until a year later, with the series finale airing in March 2007 and the second-to-last episode shown that November.

Opening sequence[edit]

The show's title theme song was written by John Coda, who also composed the music cues to signify scene changes and commercial breaks for this series as well as Even Stevens. It was produced by Jeffrey 'Def Jef' Fortson and Christopher B. Pearman and was performed by Raven-Symoné, Annelise van der Pol and Orlando Brown.

Each season had opening credits composed of footage from the episodes of that season. Each season also made an exception to the guideline by showing footage from the previous seasons, most of the time when it was needed. For example, if footage being shown was of the characters dancing, then footage of a character or characters would be shown. When originally broadcast, season two followed the guideline, but when season three began airing, the opening credits from season two were inexplicably replaced with the opening credits from season three for daytime network rebroadcasts and subsequent syndication.

That's So Games Raven Symone

Each opening sequence, before going to the title card, always ended with the main cast being together (in clips that were not part of any episode). Seasons one, two, and three were of the Baxters sitting on their living room couch, and season four was of the Baxters (with the exception of Tanya), Eddie, and Chelsea coming down the Baxters' living room stairs.

At the end of the opening credits, Raven stands next to the title card and says, 'Yep, that's me.' This remained in season four, except with a new addition. Raven's catchphrase'Oh, Snap!' was dubbed in right before she says, 'Yep, that's me.'

Raven-Symoné performs most of the theme, while Brown performs a rap near the end of the theme and some scattered vocals in the beginning of the theme. Anneliese van der Pol sings the show's title in the chorus. A full-length version of this theme was heard in a music video which aired a few months before the show's U.S. premiere and also can be heard on the show's first soundtrack, released in 2004.

In Disney Channel Asia, an Asian version[clarification needed] of the show's theme song was made. The music video debuted on January 17, 2007, back-to-back with the 100th episode of That's So Raven. It also aired in China on CCTV as 那是因此掠夺.[

That's So Raven
Created byMichael Poryes
Susan Sherman
StarringRaven
Orlando Brown
Kyle Massey
Anneliese van der Pol
T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh
Rondell Sheridan

Disney Channel Games That's So Raven Pinball

Raven’s Home is a popular Disney Channel revival series that follows Raven and Chelsea, who were best friends since they were younger as seen in That’s So Raven. The two are together once again as they raise their three children, Raven’s 11-year-old twins Booker and Nia, and Chelsea’s 9-year-old son Levi.

The popular Disney Channel series is on its fourth season and rumors are circulating that it may be its final season as well. Now, the star of the show — Raven-Symone — is speaking out on whether or not she knows if those rumors are true.

Related: Disney Star Raven-Symoné is Now Married

During a recent interview with ET, Raven-Symone and her wife Miranda Pearman-Maday were discussing their new YouTube channel, when Raven was asked about the status of season 5 for Raven’s Home. And after hearing her response, it seems as though she knows just as much as the fans do — Little to nothing.

“I cannot tell you the status of Raven’s Home because I don’t know it myself,” Raven told ET. “I hope that people go back and watch the series and write in, tweet, post what they would like because ultimately we are here for the fans. We are here to entertain those. And do I love my cast? Yes. Do I want to work with them for as long as I can? Of course. Is it my decision? No, that’s Disney Channel’s decision. So wait for it. Make noise, stomp your feet, do what you can and see what happens.”

Related: Raven-Symone Shares Joy of Fans Rewatching That’s So Raven in Recent Interview

She then was asked about how the season 4 finale could technically be the ending of the series, in which Raven replied with “I directed it. So yes, I do know what it looks like, but I also know there’s been many series in the history of television that have ended but also have come back, and have ended and not come back.”

She continued to explain, “So I think it’s a good cliffhanger to whatever happens, and I think that that chapter in [Raven and Chelsea’s] life as a whole is done. And I think that we encapsulated this series in a really nice way. And who knows what could happen in the future.”

“If I knew exactly whether it’s done, whether it’s not, I would tell you,” Raven concluded. “But as of right now, there is no set answer for you.”

That

In case you have never seen the popular series, Disney Channel describes Raven’s Home as:

Disney Channel That's So Raven Games Basketball

Thats So Raven Games Disney Channel

That's So Raven Games Disney Channel Games

Best friends Raven and Chelsea are together again and raising their three children, Raven’s 11-year-old twins Booker and Nia, and Chelsea’s 9-year-old son Levi.

It is a revival of Raven-Symone’s That’s So Raven, which ran on Disney Channel from 2003 to 2007.

Watch That's So Raven Videos

Do you want to see Disney bring a season 5 of Raven’s Home? Let us know in the comments below.