Aaron Springer
Aaron Springer (born September 5, 1973) is an American cartoonist, animator, writer, director, artist, and voice actor best known for his contributions to acclaimed animated television series and his creation of the Disney XD original series Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer (2017), in which he also voiced the titular character.[1][2] His career spans multiple studios, including work as a writer and storyboard artist on SpongeBob SquarePants (1999–2012; 2018–present), where he helped shape episodes with his distinctive humorous style.[3] Springer has earned recognition for directing innovative short-form animation, including a Primetime Emmy Award in 2014 for Outstanding Short-Format Animated Program for the Mickey Mouse episode "O Sole Minnie," produced by Disney Television Animation.[4][5] Springer's entry into animation began in the mid-1990s as an intern on the Turner Animation feature Cats Don't Dance (1997), where his portfolio caught the attention of director Brad Bird.[6] He later joined Spümcø in the late 1990s, contributing to projects under John Kricfalusi before transitioning to Nickelodeon, where he served as a writer and director on SpongeBob SquarePants and The Ren & Stimpy Show spin-offs.[7] By the early 2000s, his talents extended to Cartoon Network, including writing for Samurai Jack (2002–2003), and he continued to build his reputation through storyboard revisions and visual effects on various animated productions.[3] Throughout the 2010s, Springer directed and wrote for Disney's revival of Mickey Mouse shorts (2013–2019), earning multiple Annie Award nominations for his direction and contributing to the series' fresh take on classic characters.[8] He also voiced characters in projects like SpongeBob SquarePants and his own Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer, a series that premiered in 2017 and followed a young inventor's underground adventures with friends.[2] As of 2025, employed by Walt Disney Television Animation, Springer remains active in the industry, including recent work on SpongeBob SquarePants, blending eccentric humor with inventive storytelling across writing, directing, and voice work.[3][9][10]Early life and education
Childhood and influences
Aaron Springer was born on September 5, 1973, in San Diego, California.[11] Raised in a supportive environment that encouraged creativity, Springer developed an early passion for cartoons and illustration. From a very young age, he immersed himself in children's books by Richard Scarry, whose detailed, whimsical worlds of anthropomorphic characters and bustling scenes captivated his imagination.[12] He also frequently watched Peanuts television specials and Rankin/Bass stop-motion productions, such as holiday classics featuring puppets and claymation, which introduced him to the magic of animated storytelling and inspired his fascination with movement and character design.[12] These early exposures fostered habitual drawing practices, as Springer spent much of his childhood sketching scenes from his favorite books and shows, often recreating characters and narratives in his own style. This self-directed artistic exploration, beginning around age one, laid the foundation for his lifelong dedication to animation.[12] By his pre-teen years, these influences had solidified his interest in pursuing formal animation training.Academic background
Aaron Springer attended the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) in the early to mid-1990s, pursuing a bachelor's degree in animation. His early passion for children's books, such as those by Richard Scarry, and classic cartoons motivated him to enroll at CalArts, where he could hone his skills in a structured animation program.[12] During his three-year tenure at CalArts, Springer focused primarily on classes in animation, storyboarding, and design, which formed the core of his curriculum. In animation courses taught by instructor Kevin Johnson, whom Springer described as "great" and highly knowledgeable, he developed foundational techniques essential for character movement and timing. Storyboarding classes emphasized narrative structure and visual sequencing, while design instruction came from a faculty member noted for expertise in dynamic aesthetics, including a unique background in karate that influenced creative approaches. These courses provided Springer with rigorous training that bridged artistic expression and practical animation production.[12] Springer's time at CalArts culminated in the development of a strong portfolio, featuring works like his second-year project "Baby's New Formula," which showcased influences from studios such as Spümcø. This portfolio proved instrumental in securing his first professional opportunity: an internship at Turner Feature Animation on the 1997 film Cats Don't Dance. The portfolio impressed key figures at Turner, including director Brad Bird, who was involved in development projects there, highlighting how Springer's CalArts education directly prepared him for entry into the animation industry.[12]Career
Early career at Spümcø and initial projects
Springer's entry into the animation industry began as an intern artist on the Turner Animation feature Cats Don't Dance (1997), where his portfolio impressed director Brad Bird.[6] During his studies at the California Institute of the Arts, Aaron Springer entered the professional animation industry in the late 1990s through an entry-level position at John Kricfalusi's Spümcø studio, where his CalArts training helped secure the opportunity via a personal connection.[12] Initially handling tasks like assembling presentation boards and coloring cels, Springer quickly advanced to more creative roles, contributing as an animator from 1997 to 1998.[13][12] Springer's first major industry credit came as an animator on Björk's "I Miss You" music video, directed by Kricfalusi and produced by Spümcø in 1997, which provided his initial high-profile exposure in animation.[14] In addition to animation duties, he contributed storyboards and layouts for the project, including animating the sequence of Björk sliding down a dinosaur's back.[12] This collaboration marked a significant early milestone, blending his emerging skills with Spümcø's distinctive, irreverent style.[15] At Spümcø, Springer took on multifaceted roles as an animator, storyboard artist, and layout artist on pioneering web-based projects, notably the online series The Goddamn George Liquor Program (1997–1998), recognized as one of the first animated series produced exclusively for the internet.[16][13] His work helped shape the short episodes featuring the boisterous character George Liquor and his nephew Jimmy, emphasizing exaggerated humor and dynamic visuals that defined Spümcø's output during this period.[16] These initial efforts at the studio solidified Springer's foundational experience in independent animation production.[13]Nickelodeon and SpongeBob SquarePants
Aaron Springer joined Nickelodeon Animation Studio in 1999, shortly after his initial experiences at Spümcø, where he served as a writer, director, and storyboard artist on the animated series SpongeBob SquarePants from its debut through season 8, spanning 1999 to 2012.[3][17] In this role, he contributed to over 70 episodes, shaping the show's early comedic tone through collaborative writing and visual storytelling.[9] Springer's directing and storyboarding efforts on key episodes, including "Band Geeks" (season 2) and "SB-129" (season 1), emphasized surreal humor—such as time-travel mishaps and absurd musical performances—and dynamic action sequences that amplified the series' chaotic energy.[18] His expressive, loose line work in storyboards often highlighted exaggerated character expressions and fluid chase scenes, influencing the visual rhythm of many installments.[13] Beyond the television series, Springer worked as a storyboard artist on The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (2004), contributing to its adventurous narrative structure and character designs, including voicing the minor role of the Laughing Bubble.[19] He later returned for The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run (2020) as head of story, overseeing the integration of episodic humor with the film's road-trip plot involving SpongeBob's quest to rescue Gary.[17][20]Contributions to Cartoon Network series
Aaron Springer joined the production team at Cartoon Network in the early 2000s, bringing his expertise in dynamic animation and storytelling honed from previous projects. He served as a storyboard artist and writer on Samurai Jack during seasons 2 and 3 (2002–2003), contributing to episodes that emphasized high-energy action sequences and innovative visual narratives under creator Genndy Tartakovsky.[21] His storyboard work helped shape the series' distinctive minimalist style and fluid fight choreography, while his writing credits included key episodes that advanced the protagonist's mythic journey.[3] In 2003, Springer extended his involvement to Dexter's Laboratory, where he worked as a writer during the series' final season, focusing on scripts that blended inventive humor with sibling rivalry themes central to the show's appeal.[3] This role allowed him to collaborate on stories that highlighted the titular character's scientific mishaps, contributing to the program's enduring legacy in comedic animation.[22] Springer continued his Cartoon Network tenure with The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy from 2005 to 2007, acting as a writer and storyboard artist on multiple episodes, including segments that amplified the series' macabre comedy and supernatural elements.[3] His contributions emphasized exaggerated character dynamics and whimsical horror, aligning with the show's irreverent tone and helping to sustain its popularity through clever visual gags and plot twists. One of Springer's most notable independent projects for the network was the development of the Korgoth of Barbaria pilot in 2006, an Adult Swim production he wrote and directed.[23] This unaired episode parodied post-apocalyptic fantasy tropes with ultra-violent humor and a Conan-inspired protagonist, showcasing Springer's ability to pivot toward mature, edgy content while drawing on his action-oriented experience from Samurai Jack.[24] Though not greenlit for a full series, the pilot garnered a cult following for its bold animation style and satirical edge.[23]Disney Television Animation period
During his time at Disney Television Animation from the early 2010s to the mid-2010s, Aaron Springer contributed as a storyboard artist on the acclaimed series Gravity Falls, working on episodes during its 2012–2013 run.[25] His prior experience at Cartoon Network helped refine his skills in crafting narrative-driven animation for Disney's adventure-oriented shows. Springer also served as a storyboard artist for Wander Over Yonder in 2013–2014, including key segments that emphasized the series' whimsical, space-faring humor.[26] From 2013 to 2015, Springer expanded his role as a director and writer for the Mickey Mouse shorts, helming several episodes that revived the character's slapstick legacy with modern flair.[27] These contributions earned him recognition, including an Annie Award nomination for Outstanding Achievement in Directing in an Animated TV/Broadcast Production in 2014.[28] Springer's tenure culminated in creating, executive producing, and voicing the lead character Billy Dilley in Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer, an original Disney XD series that premiered on June 3, 2017.[29] The show, centered on a young inventor's underground adventures, aired its 13 episodes from June 3 to June 15, 2017, and was canceled after one season.[2]Warner Bros. Animation and recent projects
In the late 2010s, Aaron Springer joined Warner Bros. Animation, where he contributed as a storyboard artist to various projects reviving classic franchises. He worked on Looney Tunes Cartoons from 2020 to 2023, providing storyboards and writing for segments such as "Crumb and Get It," which highlighted his signature blend of slapstick humor and dynamic visual pacing. His involvement helped maintain the series' fast-paced, anthology-style format across its run on HBO Max. Springer also served as a storyboard artist for the direct-to-video film Trick or Treat Scooby-Doo! in 2022, contributing to its Halloween-themed mystery plot and character-driven gags within the Scooby-Doo universe. This project exemplified his ability to integrate whimsical animation with light horror elements, aligning with Warner Bros.' efforts to refresh Hanna-Barbera properties. In 2025, Springer returned to Paramount Animation as a storyboard artist for The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants. Concurrently, he expanded into voice acting, reprising his role as Billy Dilley—originally from his Disney XD series Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer—in a 2025 episode of the Disney Channel's Chibiverse crossover anthology.[30] This appearance served as a precursor to broader crossover voice work, bridging his past Disney contributions with multiverse-style narratives. During his Warner Bros. tenure, Springer developed the unproduced adult animated pilot Snail Riders of Zongdar in 2021, which was ultimately passed on despite its adventurous premise involving giant snails in a fantastical world.[31]Notable creations and roles
Original television series and pilots
One of Aaron Springer's notable original projects is the adult animated pilot Korgoth of Barbaria, which he created and wrote for Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block. Premiering on June 3, 2006, the 23-minute episode follows the brutish barbarian Korgoth and his sidekick Fwip in a dystopian, post-apocalyptic world overrun by mutants and mad scientists, delivering a violent black comedy that satirizes 1970s sword-and-sorcery fantasy tropes like those in Conan the Barbarian.[23] Directed by Aaron Springer, the pilot was produced at Cartoon Network Studios with a deliberately crude, sketchy animation style to evoke underground comics and emphasize its raw, over-the-top action sequences.[32] Although it received strong initial acclaim for its irreverent humor and bold visuals—earning an 8.3/10 rating from over 3,900 user reviews on IMDb—the project was not greenlit for a full series due to concerns over its extreme content and production costs.[23] Over time, Korgoth of Barbaria developed a dedicated cult following among animation fans, often cited as a "lost classic" for its uncompromised edge, with online communities and retrospectives highlighting its influence on later adult animated comedies.[33] Shifting to family-friendly animation, Springer created Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer, an original series for Disney XD that premiered on June 3, 2017. The show centers on 12-year-old science enthusiast Billy Dilley—voiced by Springer himself—and his reluctant lab partners, prankster Zeke and know-it-all Marsha, who become trapped in a bizarre underground realm called "The Subterran" after Billy's science fair invention malfunctions, leading to weekly escapades involving eccentric creatures like rock monsters and insect civilizations.[2] Drawing from Springer's background in absurd humor on shows like SpongeBob SquarePants, the series structure features 13 episodes, each consisting of two 11-minute segments and approximately 22 minutes long overall, blending educational STEM elements with slapstick comedy and exploratory adventures in procedurally varied subterranean biomes.[13] Produced at Disney Television Animation, it originated from a 2014 pilot and aimed to capture the inventive spirit of classic kids' sci-fi like Land of the Lost, but received mixed reviews for its frenetic pacing and niche appeal, culminating in a 3.3/10 IMDb rating from 610 users.[2] The series concluded after one season on October 14, 2017, with its short run attributed to low viewership ratings on Disney XD, which struggled to compete with established competitors like Cartoon Network during that period. Beyond these, Springer has pursued other unproduced original concepts, including Snail Riders of Zongdar, a 2021 pitch developed with Pete Browngardt for Warner Bros. Animation. Envisioned as an adult-oriented series, it depicted nomadic warriors riding colossal snails across the vast, dune-filled planet of Zongdar, incorporating satirical adventure tropes with themes of survival, tribal rivalries, and hallucinatory desert lore to explore exaggerated heroism in a surreal sci-fi western setting.[34] The project's creative vision emphasized bold world-building and irreverent character dynamics, but it faced industry skepticism toward high-concept adult animation pitches post-streaming shifts, ultimately not advancing to production despite internal buzz.[35]Voice acting and other contributions
Aaron Springer has made notable contributions as a voice actor, particularly in projects he helped create or develop. He provided the voice for the titular character, Billy Dilley, in the Disney XD animated series Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer (2017), where his performance captured the character's enthusiastic and inventive personality across all 13 episodes (26 segments). Springer reprised the role in the 2025 Disney Channel crossover event Chibiverse, voicing Billy in the episode "Journey to the Center of the Chibiverse," which integrated characters from various Disney animated properties.[30] In addition to lead roles, Springer has taken on smaller voice parts in established series. He voiced the "Laughing Bubble" in the 2004 feature film The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, a brief but memorable comedic element during a bubble-blowing sequence. For Disney's Mickey Mouse shorts (2013–2019), he contributed voices to multiple episodes, including a news reporter in "Goofy's Grandma" (2014) and a cable car driver in "Cable Car Chaos" (2015), often delivering quirky, situational dialogue to enhance the slapstick humor. Beyond voice acting, Springer's early career included layout artistry for internet animations in the late 1990s, where he designed scene compositions and visual flow for short online projects, helping pioneer digital animation distribution.[12] He also earned producer credits on several unaired pilots, serving as executive producer for developments like the Billy Dilley pilot (2014) and Baloobaloob's Fun Park (2009), overseeing creative and production aspects to pitch innovative concepts to networks.[36]Filmography
Television credits
Aaron Springer's television credits span multiple studios and roles including writer, director, storyboard artist, and voice actor. His work is organized chronologically below, focusing on key series and shorts.| Year(s) | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1999–2012, 2018–2020, 2023–2025 | SpongeBob SquarePants | Writer, director, storyboard artist, storyboard director | Contributed to numerous episodes across seasons 1–9 and later; including recent seasons as of 2025, including directing and writing segments like "As Seen on TV" (Season 4) and "Band Geeks" (Season 2); involved in over 50 writing and directing credits per episode listings.[3][37] |
| 2001–2003 | Samurai Jack | Writer, storyboard artist | Storyboarded and wrote 7 episodes, including contributions to Seasons 2–3.[38][3] |
| 2002–2003 | Dexter's Laboratory | Writer | Wrote 2 episodes in Seasons 3–4.[39][3] |
| 2005–2007 | The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy | Story, storyboard artist | Contributed stories and storyboards for multiple episodes in Seasons 5–6, including "The Firebird Sweet" and "The Loser From the Earth's Core."[40][3] |
| 2012 | Gravity Falls | Director | Directed 7 episodes in Season 1, including "Little Dipper."[25][3] |
| 2013–2019 | Mickey Mouse | Writer, director, storyboard artist, voice actor | Wrote, directed, storyboarded, and voiced in multiple shorts, including "Mickey Monkey" and "Goofy's Grandma"; approximately 20 episodes total.[41][3] |
| 2014 | Wander Over Yonder | Story, writer, director, additional voices | Directed and wrote segments like "The Helper"; voiced additional characters in 1 episode.[26][3] |
| 2017 | Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer | Creator, writer, director, voice actor (Billy Dilley) | Emmy-nominated series; 1 season.[2] |
| 2023 | Looney Tunes Cartoons | Writer, storyboard artist, character designer | Credited on the short "Crumb and Get It."[42][3] |
| 2024 | The Patrick Star Show | Writer, storyboard artist | Episode: "Too Many Patricks" (Season 2).[43] |
| 2025 | Chibiverse | Voice actor | Voiced Billy Dilley in 1 episode, "Journey to the Center of the Chibiverse."[44][3] |
Feature film credits
Aaron Springer's involvement in feature films primarily centers on the SpongeBob SquarePants franchise, where his television work on the series paved the way for expanded roles in theatrical releases.[3] He served as a storyboard artist for The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (2004), contributing to the visual storytelling of the underwater adventure that grossed over $140 million worldwide.[45] In addition to storyboarding, Springer provided the voice for the character Laughing Bubble in the film.[46] For The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run (2020), Springer took on the role of head of story, overseeing the narrative structure during production of the live-action/animated hybrid that explored SpongeBob's origin and received a limited theatrical release amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] Springer returned to the franchise as a storyboard artist for the upcoming The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants (2025), marking a reunion with original crew members for this fourth installment directed by Eric Bauza and produced by Nickelodeon Movies.[3]| Year | Film | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2004 | The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie | Storyboard artist; Voice (Laughing Bubble)[45][46] |
| 2020 | The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run | Head of story[3] |
| 2025 | The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants | Storyboard artist[3] |