

I really paid attention to it and really revering it. Even after 20-something years, we were all thrilled to be in the room together. “Having known each other, the chemistry was really fun. Plus Tom, Doug and I were also on Camp Lazlo, which was a Joe Murray show,” he said. But Tom, Doug, Charlie and myself were there and it was like The Who getting back together after 25 years. “Jill Talley and Linda came in to do separate sessions, as well as Steve Little. And the joy of being able to inhabit this character 20 years later returned just as quickly, particularly when everyone was working together in the recording studio again. In returning to this breakout role and being able to work with his friends again, the Yonkers native was quick to point out that no one missed a beat.

I remember the genesis of it all being August 2016, with those guys sitting at a table and saying we were doing it.

“I was told they were writing a story for Rocko and maybe it was going to be a movie. “I see these guys walk in and I asked, ‘What’s going on here? Is something maybe going on with Rocko?’,” Alazraqui recalled. The return of the series is something Alazraqui immediately embraced when he ran into Murray, friend and former castmate Doug Lawrence and series staff writer Martin Olson at HOME Restaurant in the Silverlake neighborhood of Los Angeles back in August 2016. Twenty-two years after it ceased airing original episodes in 1996, the show is set to return via Rocko’s Modern Life: Static Cling, a one-hour TV special featuring all the original voice talents and creator Joe Murray serving as the executive producer. Throughout the series’ 52 episodes, the extensive use of satirical social commentary, clever innuendo and double entendres appealed to both children and adults, with the latter consisting of a large college-age fan base. The Nickelodeon animated sitcom originally ran from 1993 to 1996 and centered on the exploits of an anthropomorphic Australian-immigrant wallaby named Rocko as well as his friends, all who lived in the fictional town of O-Town. But for the former stand-up comic, it all began with him providing the voice and personality of the title character of Rocko’s Modern Life.

According to the Internet Movie Database, Carlos Alazraqui has 317 acting credits, the majority of them featuring him as a prominent voice-over artist.
