Tayo the Little Bus (Korean꼬마버스 타요; RRKkoma-beoseu Tayo) is a South Korean 3D computer-animated television series. The series is produced by Iconix Entertainment for the Educational Broadcasting System in collaboration with the Metropolitan Government of Seoul.[1] The show was produced with the help of Seoul mayor Oh Se-hoon's administration.[2] It began airing in South Korea on EBS in 2010 and an English-dubbed version of the series began airing on Disney Junior (Asia) in 2012, with Disney Junior (Australia and New Zealand) following in 2013. In the United States and Canada, Hulu is the exclusive distributor of the series,[3] though the fourth, fifth, and sixth seasons are on Netflix. In Indonesia, the series is distributed by RTV, Indosiar, and Mentari TV.[4]

Tayo the Little Bus
English logo
GenreAnimation
Children's series
Comedy
Educational
Preschool
Written byChoi Jong-il
Directed byKim Min-sung
Presented byRar Sae-Ha
StarringMeara
Voices ofEnglish:
  • Robyn Slade
  • Aramis Merlin
  • Nolan Balzer
  • Kami Desilets
  • Tea Wagner
  • Kerri Salki
  • Jolie L'Esperance
Narrated byHeather Madill
Opening theme"Hey Tayo" by Enhypen
Ending theme"Vroom, Vroom, Vroom!"
Country of originSouth Korea
Original languagesKorean
English
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes156
Production
Running time10-11 minutes per episodes
Production companiesIconix Entertainment
Educational Broadcasting System
Seoul Metropolitan Government
Original release
NetworkEBS
Disney Junior (Asia)
Release23 August 2010 (2010-08-23) –
present (present)
Related
Titipo Titipo

The series is about four buses in a city, based in Seoul, South Korea, populated with anthropomorphic vehicles: Tayo (Bus 120), Rogi (Bus 1000), Lani (Bus 02), and Gani (Bus 1339).[5]

Each episode in the start, middle, and end features a brief narration, and it has six seasons. A spin-off series of Tayo, known as Titipo Titipo, premiered between the main series’ fourth season and fifth season. Titipo focuses on the titular character named Titipo, a young passenger train the show is named after along with all his friends, who are also trains. After the end of Titipo's first season, Tayo's fifth season premiered for English-speaking audiences on October 22, 2018. Titipo Titipo was greenlit for a second season. Titipo's second season premiered for English-speaking audiences starting November 19, 2020. In late 2020, Tayo the Little Bus' 10th anniversary spinoff Tayo and Little Wizards (마법버스 타요) was released.[6] This spinoff premiered on Netflix on September 17, 2021.[7] The sixth season aired on September 1, 2021.[8][9]

The series is available in Korean, English, Spanish, Japanese, Mandarin, Turkish, Indonesian, Malay, Thai, German, and Russian on the production company's official YouTube channel for the series.[10]

Characters

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Main characters

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The series features five main characters. Each of the four original characters (Tayo, Gani, Lani & Rogi) is based on the four actual colors and types of Seoul Buses.

  • Tayo is a friendly, playful, and sometimes mischievous blue bus. He is the 3rd largest and 3rd oldest of the four buses. In the fourth-season episode, Who Is The Real Tayo?, it is revealed that he has a clone of his named Star Tayo, which was in one of his dreams. Tayo also appears as a minor character in the Titipo Titipo series and has appeared in the Season 1 episodes: Going to Choo-Choo Town, Genie Makes a New Friend, and Titipo and Tayo. For Season 2, he appeared in the episodes: A Long Haul: Part 1, Fix and Lift's Music Battle, Loco the Fabulous Freight Train, Oh Please, Genie, Diesel and Rogi and Genie's New Friend.
Voiced by
  • Robyn Slade (A Day in the Life of Tayo (2010) - The Little Buses' Play (2016))
  • Monique Dami Lee (Emergency Dispatch! Tayo and Gani (2018) - The Little Dinosaur Friend: Part 2 (2019))
  • Rogi is conceited, outgoing, and also mischievous, but he is a good-hearted green bus. Although, he and Tayo often get into fights with each other. Funny and mischievous himself, Rogi also has an interest in detective work, as can be seen in episodes like Rogi the Detective! and Prank Call Madness. Rogi appeared in Titipo Titipo's second-season episodes: Oh Please, Genie, Diesel and Rogi and Genie's New Friend.
Voiced by
  • Aramis Merlin (A Day in the Life of Tayo (2010))
  • Nolan Balzer (A Day in the Life of Tayo (2010) - The Little Dinosaur Friend: Part 2 (2019))
  • Lani is a cute girl, cheerful, kind, and sweet-nature yellow bus. However, she is also timid, sensitive, and temperamental. Possessing little tolerance for arguments, she often acts as a mediator between Tayo and Rogi. She is the smallest and youngest of the four buses and is often considered the cute one of the group. Lani appeared in the second-season episodes of Titipo Titipo: Fix and Lift's Music Battle, Welcome, Jenny and Oh Please, Genie.
Voiced by
  • Kami Desilets (A Day in the Life of Tayo (2010) - The Little Dinosaur Friend Part 2 (2019))
  • Gani is a hardworking, warm-hearted, and shy, while also slightly timid and insecure red bus. He is the largest and oldest of the four buses and often acts as the most mature one of the group. Gani appeared in Titipo Titipo's second-season episodes: Oh Please, Genie and Diesel and the Baby Cars.
Voiced by
  • Tea Wagner (Our New Friend, Gani (2010))
  • Kerri Salki (Our New Friend, Gani (2010) - The Little Dinosaur Friend Part 2 (2019))
  • Laura E. Chinde (Tayo Spanish (2020) - YouTube Series (2021))
  • Peanut is an electric city and tour bus that is good-natured and mellow. As he is shaped just like a peanut on the top, he gains this name. He can cause mischief sometimes, but is a very kind bus. He was introduced in Season 4 along with the city tram, Trammy.

Episodes

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Production

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TBA

Reception

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Tayo the Little Bus received mixed reviews from critics and audiences.

Melissa Camacho of Common Sense Media gave the show four stars out of five, stating that the "Animated charmer features positive messages -- and farts."[11]

At a Vietnamese seminar for addressing the struggles of the Vietnamese animation industry, Korean animators named Tayo the Little Bus, a series that has been "dominating" the Korean market. These animators also noted that the series is popular in China, Thailand, and Vietnam.[12]

Cultural impact

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Route 9401 bus that received Gani wrap

In 2014, the Seoul Metropolitan Government commissioned buses designed as the characters Tayo, Gani, Rogi, and Lani, to run around the Gwanghwamun Square area of the city. This was done as part of an initiative to teach children how to use the bus. The initiative was a massive success, drawing crowds of over 40,000 in a single day. People from all across the country came to see the buses. Although the buses were originally set to run from March 26 until Public Transport Day at the end of April, their popularity led to an extension until Children's Day on May 5. The number of buses was also expanded from the original four to 100. In the wake of this success, it was reported that the local governments of other cities in South Korea were considering adopting the campaign.[13] Officials for the city of Seoul initially opposed this on copyright grounds,[14] but they consented in April to let other cities use the characters for non-commercial purposes.[2]

Jaeyeon Woo of The Wall Street Journal's blog Korea Real-Time, speculated in an April 2014 article that the success of this initiative led both of Gyeonggi Province's gubernatorial candidates, Kim Sang-gon and Nam Kyung-pil, to adopt public transportation issues as a key part of their campaign platforms. Seoul-mayor Park Won-soon, who began the initiative, has been criticized by some of his political rivals, who feel that he took credit for the series, even though the series was begun by his predecessor's administration.[2]

On October 16, 2014, a South Korean group called the Teen Astronauts, launched a space balloon designed as the character Tayo from the Space Science Park in Korea's National Science Museum.[15]

In late 2018 there was a Tayo bus phenomenon in Indonesia due to its theme song, often used as a joke or prank by many people.[16] It becomes one of the 15 top trending searches in Google in Indonesia in 2018.[17] Two bus systems in Banjarmasin, South Kalimantan, BRT Banjarbakula and Trans Banjarbakula, are informally called "Tayo bus" due to its size and color.[18][19]

Movies

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  • The Tayo Movie: Mission Ace (2016)[20]
  • Tayo's Vroom Vroom Adventure (2017)
  • Tayo's Toy Adventure (2019)
  • Tayo Dino Kingdom Adventure (2019)
  • Tayo and Little Wizards (2021)

Tayo's Sing Along Show

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Tayo's Sing Along Show is an animation program that aired on EBS in the first season from July 5 to September 27, 2013, and the second season from July 3 to September 25, 2015. It is an extra work of Tayo. The program is a new type of animation in which children's friend, Tayo, the Little Bus, decorates an exciting song with various car friends.

References

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  1. ^ "TAYO the Little Bus".
  2. ^ a b c Jaeyon Woo (11 April 2004). "All Aboard the Election Express". Korea Real Time. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 3 November 2004.
  3. ^ "Watch Tayo the Little Bus online | Free | Hulu". Hulu. Archived from the original on 18 June 2013.
  4. ^ Anggraeni, Meli (28 September 2021). "Jadwal Acara RTV Hari ini, Selasa 28 September 2021: Ada Tayo The Little Bus, Go Go Bus hingga Sinema Ceria". mantrapandeglang.pikiran-rakyat.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  5. ^ Crump, William D. (2019). Happy Holidays—Animated! A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and New Year's Cartoons on Television and Film. McFarland & Co. p. 308. ISBN 9781476672939.
  6. ^ "꼬마버스 타요 (꼬마버스 타요(Hd))".
  7. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Tayo and the Little Wizards Official Trailer #1 l Meet first at Netflix! l Tayo the Little Bus". YouTube. 9 September 2021.
  8. ^ "'꼬마버스 타요' 시즌6 다음 달 1일 첫 방송". 17 August 2021.
  9. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "꼬마버스 타요 6기 최초공개 l 새로워진 차고지와 멋진 새 친구들도 함께 만나요! l 9월1일 EBS에서 만나요!". YouTube. 26 August 2021.
  10. ^ "Tayo the Little Bus - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  11. ^ Camacho, Melissa. "Tayo the Little Bus TV Review". Common Sense Media. Archived from the original on 2 September 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  12. ^ "Vietnam cartoons of good quality, yet still unappealing to viewers". tuoitrenews.vn. 13 October 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  13. ^ Yoon Sojung (8 April 2014). "Have fun riding the bus with Tayo & friends". Korea.net. Government of South Korea. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  14. ^ Bae Myeong-jae (7 April 2014). ""Tayo Bus" Craze in Seoul, "Can't People in Other Areas Ride Tayo?"". The Kyunghyang Shinmun. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  15. ^ M.H. Lee (18 October 2014). "Space Balloon and Tayo Mini Bus Travel to Space — for Short Time". The Korea Bizwire. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  16. ^ Lolita, Lola (11 December 2018). "5 Pelesetan lagu Hey Tayo ini kreatifnya bikin pengen ngakak". Brilio.net (in Indonesian). Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  17. ^ Rosyadi, Muhamad Imron (13 December 2018). "Hey Tayo, Hey Tayo, Dia Bus Kecil Trending" [Tayo, Tayo, Tayo, Tayo, He's A Trending Little Bus]. detikinet (in Indonesian). Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  18. ^ "Dikenal Sebagai Tayo, BRT Dishub Kalsel Mulai Operational untuk Umum Hari ini, Gratis!". Banjarmasin Post (in Indonesian). Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  19. ^ "Bus BTS Tayo Hijau Resmi Diambilalih Pemprov Kalsel". Reportase 9 (in Indonesian). 7 May 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  20. ^ "Watch the Tayo Movie - Mission Ace | Prime Video". Amazon.
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