View Full Version : Eureeka's Castle - Nick Knacks Episode #082


TMC
04-18-2022, 12:40 AM
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By 1989, Nickelodeon finally had the money to make a show with some production value. We explore the Nick Jr classic, Eureeka's Castle, from its obscure origins to its influence on just about every preschool show of the 90s!

Hawkee
04-26-2022, 03:09 AM
I remember Eureeka's Castle and watched it during my childhood and I always thought it was a very cute show and very well done for it's time. I remember the intro very well because the giant would be stomping around until he said "Oh yeah my castle music box" and then he wound it up and the theme song would start. With characters like Magellan The Dragon and the bat "I don't remember the name of the bat but he was really funny" and Eureeka herself really made the show come to life and children's shows like Eureeka's Castle are hard to find today and Nick Jr. should've had more preschool oriented shows like this today because TV really lacks good programming that young children can watch. Another fact about this show was that one of the head writers of Eureeka's Castle was author RL Stine and I found it odd that he began as a head writer for Eureeka's Castle before writing horror novels for teens and the Goosebumps books
Bestie

TMC
06-05-2026, 08:34 PM
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Before Goosebumps terrified an entire generation, R.L. Stine helped write one of the strangest, sweetest, and most forgotten (https://lostmediawiki.com/Eureeka%27s_Castle_(partially_found_Nick_Jr._puppet_series;_1989-1991)) Nick Jr. shows ever made: Eureeka’s Castle (https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Series/EureekasCastle). And somehow, that is only the beginning.

This episode dives into the bizarre, magical, and surprisingly emotional history of Eureeka’s Castle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eureeka%27s_Castle), Nickelodeon’s early preschool puppet show full of dragons, spells, crash-landing bats, Moat Twins, singing fish, lost tapes, Henson-trained puppeteers, and yes — Luther Vandross as a wizard.

We’ll look at how Eureeka’s Castle (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0220895/) became one of Nick Jr.’s first big original shows, how R.L. Stine became its head writer before Goosebumps took over school book fairs everywhere, why the puppetry was so much more advanced than people remember, and how performers connected to Sesame Street, Elmo, and Bear in the Big Blue House helped bring the castle to life.

But this is also a story about lost media. Many original versions of Eureeka’s Castle (https://thecarbonfreeze.com/2021/05/22/i-want-to-talk-about-eureekas-castle-some-more/) are difficult to find today, and the show’s strange afterlife has turned it into one of those childhood memories people half-remember like a dream. Was it real? Why did it disappear? And why does it still matter so much to the people who grew up with it?