Ned's Newt

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A Canadian/German animated series by Nelvana.

When young Ned Flemkin scraped enough money to buy a pet - a newt (the only animal he could afford) he called Newton, he did not expect that the special "Zippo" newt food he fed it would cause Newton to grow regularly, if temporarily, into a humanoid, 6-foot-tall friendly trickster with a penchant for humorous Shapeshifting.

The series follows Ned's life in his school (where he deals with his Love Interest Linda, ditzy best friend Doogle, and local Rich Bitch Rusty) and in his everyday life, focusing on the zany misadventures he gets through with (and usually because of) Newton to help him.

Tropes used in Ned's Newt include:

"If newts are born from eggs, why do I have a belly-button?" (beat) "Is a poorly-drawn 'x' an inny or an outy?"

  • Lightning Can Do Anything: Including set up the Freaky Friday Flip in "Newt's Ned".
  • Limited Wardrobe: Everyone. One episode lampshades this by having Mrs. Flemkin tell Ned to change his clothes; he proceeds to pull his orange shirt and blue pants inside out, somehow turning them into a blue shirt and orange pants, and wears them for the rest of the episode.
  • Literal-Minded: Newton, at times.
  • Love Makes You Dumb: A lot of times when Ned is around Linda he turns into a drooling imbecile.
  • Noodle Implements: A bicycle pump and a rubber duck can seemingly solve all problems. Newton never got the chance to use the method, though.
  • Official Couple: Ned and Linda.
  • Only Child Syndrome: All of the kids seem to be only children.
  • Only Sane Man: Ned, very much so.
  • The Other Darrin: Harland Williams was replaced as Newton for the last few episodes, for undisclosed reasons.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: As long as Newton is wearing human clothes, no one seems to notice that he's a 6-foot tall, blue-skinned freak.
  • Plot Hole: In the pilot, Ned pays exactly $1.65 (all of the change in his piggy bank) for Newton; the pet store owner actually rips him off, because the price list said $1.49.(*Cough* 11% sales tax *cough*.) However, in a later episode, Ned loses his "lucky penny", described as such because it was his change when he bought Newton, even though we were explicitly shown the original transaction.
  • Quirky Town: Friendly Falls, the show's setting.
  • Rich Bitch: Rusty McCabe, a rare male example.
  • Screw the Rules, I Have Money: Rusty. The town mayor is his parents' old friend, and is more than eager to bend the rules of the great city scavenger hunt in his favor ("Remote Possibility"). Same happens when he takes Linda for a date to an amusement park owned by his parents, and inexplicably seems to win all the time. ("Carnival Knowledge")
  • Straight Man: Ned, to Newton.
  • Suspiciously Specific Denial: Newton, when he's impersonating a human, will often describe himself as "not a newt at all".
  • Talking Animal: Newton.
  • TV Never Lies: Ned's parents believe this.
    • As shown in "The Show Must Go Off", the ENTIRE TOWN thinks this.
  • Two-Timer Date: One episode has Ned inadvertently find himself on a date to practically every girl in the school (largely because of Newton). Newton is little help, since he just cites the example of the "sea newt" which mates with hundreds of females before they gang up and eat him.
  • Unusually Uninteresting Sight: A Running Gag is for Ned's parents to enter his room just as he's talking to Newton, upon which Newton quickly transforms into something supposedly innocuous... like the Venus of Milo, or "the big metal thingy for affixing a ship." Ned's parents comment on this, but never seem to mind.
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: Newton. Into pretty much anything (often into a pop culture reference).
  • Whole-Plot Reference: Several episodes take this form, including one to Citizen Kane ("Citizen Ned").
  • Why Do You Keep Changing Jobs?: The old guy from the pet store, who also seems to work everywhere else in the city.