Fox made Bob’s Burgers exchange the sex of a favorite Belcher family member for fans

Most animated programs have a general idea of what their characters will be when they start to launch, but in the case of the Fox family “Bob’s Burgers”, they actually worked upside down. The series started with a casting in mind, then created members of the Belcher family inspired by these distribution members and their specific talents. It’s a fairly unique way to create a television show, but it worked. The actors of the voice each bring both to the table and the show really uses a mixture of written script and improvisation to give life to the Belchers, something that very few animated shows would even try.
H. Jon Benjamin is perfect as a patriarch who gropes but loving from the family, Bob, while John Roberts somehow manages to change his voice to Pitch perfect for the woman of Bob vineyard, Linda. It is not super unusual for the actors of the voice to express characters of different sexes (Nancy Cartwright as Bart Simpson, for example), so Roberts expressing Linda is not too strange.
What East A little unusual, however, is that Tina Belcher was originally written as a boy, but that her sex changed afterwards. In an interview with It’s Nice that the creator of the series Loren Bouchard revealed the origins of one of the most loved characters in the series, from the selection of an actor of the voice to the conception of the character to ultimately change their sex. Just like deciding to launch first, the genre exchange was a bit of genius, creating not only one of the best characters in the series, but in the whole history of animated comedy.
Ummm … Uhhh … it’s Tina!
In the interview, Bouchard explained that he had ideas about whom the characters would be based on their actors in the voice, but that the leaders of Fox took notes who led Dan Mintz to be the voice of Tina Belcher that we know and love it all now:
“I have been working with Jon Benjamin who has been playing Bob for over 20 years […] I knew I wanted him as a father and we built the family around him. I knew that John Roberts, who plays Linda, could make that voice, and that Kristen Schaal should be Louise […] Eugene Mirman, Gene voice, is an actor with whom I have been working for a long time, I knew he would be great. The only person I didn’t know was Dan Mintz. Jon Benjamin recommended it by saying: “You must really hear the voice of this guy, it’s so funny”, and we threw her like Tina. Although originally we threw him as as a boy, it was only after the pilot episode and Fox’s comments that we realized that the character was not quite there. So we kept the voice and the actor, but we changed sex. He was delighted! “”
Tina is a 13 -year -old girl who loves horses and writes a fanfiction about her friends, and there is something more hilarious in the possibility of having the voice of an adult man who was not really changed at all. It’s deep, it’s embarrassing and it’s perfect.
Tina is much more than a simple vocal casting gadget
Although it may seem difficult for an adult man to express a teenager, Mintz said that Tina’s particular way to look at the world makes her really universal. In an interview with Phoenix New Times, Mintz said that even if he was initially anxious to play a female character, but because “Tina is so simple, I think she is easier to play for a man”. Although he imagines the sexuality of a woman as “super complex and difficult to understand”, Tina is relatively simple – “she is just attracted by this and knows what she wants.” (Butts. What she wants is butts.)
Mintz admits that people could have been attracted to Tina at the beginning because of the “gadget” to get her voice out of a teenager, but he thinks that writing has finally made her so much more.
“And I think, in many ways, she started as the least manufacturer’s kind of character and she ended up being the most obvious … I think people relate to someone who is just a little invisible to the world, but you know, want to make a link with people.”
Belchers are not always fully understanding, but there is love and acceptance at the heart of the family that makes “Bob burgers” much more than average sitcom. Tina is often the most poorly understood in the group, making it a real favorite of fans for reasons far beyond her voice or even her “erotic friend fiction”. Almost everyone felt like an awkward foreigner at some point, and Tina captures this feeling perfectly – brand groans and everything.
How a voice has shaped a character
Changing the kind of Tina without changing his voice made the character more unique and also helped to highlight his clumsiness. His two brothers and sisters have more acute voices (just like his mother), while Benjamin has a deep and fluid register which also helped him to express an international archeur Superspy Sterling on “Archer” of FX. It is therefore logical that at least one of the Belcher brothers and sisters have a deeper voice. Tina’s voice really distinguishes her from other teenage girls in animated comedies, which are generally sparkling or sarcastic. On the other hand, Tina is in a way a mumbled and growling mess that just wants to be left alone to think of the butts. Girl, the same thing.
Are you looking for more Tina to love? Then consult our list of the 12 best episodes of Tina from “Bob’s Burgers”! (Index: the incredible “Disco Death Death Dance vampire” cut.)


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