Baymax!
Baymax! is an American computer-animated comedy miniseries of six short episodes created by Don Hall and produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, which premiered exclusively on Disney+ on June 29, 2022.[1][2] The series centers on Baymax, the huggable and inflatable healthcare companion robot first introduced in the 2014 feature film Big Hero 6, as he ventures through the futuristic city of San Fransokyo to diagnose and treat everyday medical ailments faced by its residents.[3][4] Each self-contained episode highlights Baymax's programmed priority to provide care, covering practical health topics such as severe allergies, urinary tract infections, dental issues, and menstrual cycles through a blend of humor and factual guidance.[4][5] Marking Walt Disney Animation Studios' inaugural foray into a dedicated animated series format, Baymax! earned acclaim for its accessible health education and endearing character focus, achieving an 86% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes based on professional reviews praising its informative yet lighthearted execution.[2][6]Premise
Series Concept
Baymax! is an American animated comedy series produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, serving as a spin-off from the 2014 feature film Big Hero 6. The series centers on Baymax, the inflatable healthcare companion robot originally created by Tadashi Hamada to provide medical assistance and emotional support. Departing from the superhero team dynamics of the film, the narrative shifts focus to Baymax's core programming as a personal nurse, where he scans for distress signals in the fictional city of San Fransokyo and intervenes to address everyday health concerns among its residents.[2][7] Premiering on Disney+ on June 29, 2022, the six-episode miniseries was conceived by Don Hall, the director of Big Hero 6, who aimed to return Baymax to his foundational role as a caregiver rather than a combatant. Hall described the initial pitch as exploring Baymax's "original purpose" of helping individuals with personal ailments, emphasizing non-violent, problem-solving interventions that highlight themes of empathy and practical wellness. Each self-contained story introduces new human characters facing relatable issues, such as menstrual discomfort, mental health struggles, or physical injuries, with Baymax deploying his diagnostic tools, adhesive bandages, and gentle demeanor to facilitate resolutions.[8][2] The concept underscores Baymax's autonomous operation outside the oversight of Hiro Hamada or the Big Hero 6 team, portraying him as a roving helper attuned to vocal cues of need, such as cries for aid. This setup allows for episodic explorations of human vulnerabilities without reliance on high-stakes action, aligning with Walt Disney Animation Studios' first foray into a Disney+ original animated series format. While praised for its wholesome tone and character fidelity, the series has drawn commentary on its inclusion of diverse health topics, though these are presented through Baymax's objective, data-driven lens rather than advocacy.[2][7]Format and Episode Structure
Baymax! is structured as a miniseries comprising six standalone short episodes, each running between 7 and 11 minutes in duration, excluding credits.[9][10] The format emphasizes bite-sized, self-contained narratives designed for quick viewing, similar to other Disney+ anthology-style shorts from feature films.[11] This approach allows for focused explorations of healthcare themes without an overarching plot or recurring character arcs beyond Baymax himself.[12] Each episode adheres to a consistent structure: it opens with Baymax's signature greeting, "Hello, I am Baymax, your personal healthcare companion," followed by his deployment to assist a new civilian in San Fransokyo facing a specific medical or emotional challenge.[13] Baymax diagnoses the issue using his sensors and programming, often employing inventive, low-tech solutions alongside compassionate dialogue to resolve both physical symptoms and underlying psychosocial factors.[14] Episodes conclude with Baymax scanning the patient for contentment, typically eliciting a positive response, and a brief moral or educational takeaway on health topics such as period management, allergies, or mental wellness.[15] This repetitive yet varied template prioritizes humor derived from Baymax's literal-mindedness and inflatable design, interspersed with heartfelt moments of empathy.[16] The absence of serialization enables episodic independence, with no direct continuity between stories; Baymax resets to address isolated cases, reinforcing his role as a ubiquitous community caregiver rather than a hero in prolonged conflicts.[17] Production choices, including the short runtime, facilitate accessibility for younger audiences while embedding subtle public health messaging, such as destigmatizing bodily functions.[18] All episodes were released simultaneously on Disney+ on June 29, 2022, encouraging binge viewing of the compact season.[10]Production
Development and Conception
Baymax! originated as a spin-off concept from the 2014 Walt Disney Animation Studios feature film Big Hero 6, where the character Baymax was introduced as an inflatable healthcare robot designed by Tadashi Hamada.[19] The series' creator, Don Hall—who co-directed Big Hero 6 and conceived the fictional city of San Fransokyo—pitched the idea to refocus on Baymax's core function as a personal healthcare companion, distinct from the superhero team dynamics explored in the prior Big Hero 6: The Series (2017–2021).[8] This conception emphasized standalone stories of Baymax assisting individual patients in everyday medical scenarios, drawing inspiration from procedural medical dramas but prioritizing the robot's compassionate, non-judgmental approach over action-oriented plots.[20] The series was formally announced on December 10, 2020, during Walt Disney Company's Investor Day presentation, marking it as the first television project produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios for Disney+.[19] Hall described the initial spark as a desire to "return Baymax to what he was created to do," envisioning short-form episodes that highlight relatable, real-world-inspired ailments and solutions, such as social anxiety or menstrual health, to promote themes of care and vulnerability.[8][21] Development involved collaboration with screenwriter Cirocco Dunlap, who refined the patient-focused narratives, and opportunities for emerging directors within the studio to helm episodes, ensuring a balance with ongoing feature productions like Raya and the Last Dragon and Encanto.[20][21] This approach elevated the project beyond Hall's original procedural pitch, incorporating heartfelt elements amplified by voice actor Scott Adsit's performance and the animation team's emphasis on polished, self-contained shorts suitable for Disney+'s streaming format.[8] Producers Bradford Simonsen and Roy Conli oversaw the effort, aiming to leverage Baymax's inherent appeal as a huggable, empathetic figure to deliver accessible, educational content without relying on the broader Big Hero 6 ensemble.[21] The conception thus prioritized Baymax's canonical origins as a nurse robot, avoiding superhero tropes to ground the series in practical healthcare themes.[20]Writing and Thematic Choices
The writing for Baymax! was led by Cirocco Dunlap, who scripted all episodes, leveraging Baymax's literal and uncomplicated demeanor to infuse humor into patient interactions while highlighting real-world reluctance to accept medical aid.[16] Episodes follow a consistent procedural structure, with each approximately eight-minute short focusing on Baymax identifying, diagnosing, and resolving a single patient's health concern in San Fransokyo, often against initial resistance that underscores themes of denial in care-seeking.[16] This episodic format enabled parallel direction by multiple filmmakers, streamlining production while preserving narrative focus on interpersonal dynamics.[16] Creator and director Don Hall drew from his childhood affinity for medical dramas to reposition Baymax as a non-combative hero, emphasizing diagnostic persistence and empathetic intervention over action-oriented exploits.[22] Thematically, the series prioritizes compassion as the core of heroism, portraying healthcare as an accessible act of community support that requires no superpowers, with Baymax's innocence driving unexpected resolutions to ailments like sprains, allergies, and hygiene mishaps.[22][16] Producer Roy Conli characterized this approach as "Disney at its best: heart and humor," aiming to inspire viewers toward everyday helpfulness.[23] By centering patient-Baymax relationships, the writing avoids broader ensemble plots, instead using standalone vignettes to model proactive wellness without judgment.[22]Casting Decisions
Scott Adsit reprised his role as the titular healthcare robot Baymax, a character he first voiced in the 2014 film Big Hero 6.[24] Ryan Potter returned as Hiro Hamada, Baymax's young inventor and occasional companion in the series' narratives.[24] Maya Rudolph also reprised her voice work as Aunt Cass, Hiro's guardian, ensuring vocal familiarity for recurring elements from the feature film.[24] These reprises were confirmed in a Disney+ trailer released on May 20, 2022, highlighting the return of the original principal voice cast to align the shorts with the established Big Hero 6 universe.[25] For the series' episodic human characters, new actors were cast, including Emily Kuroda as the title patient Kiko Tanaka in the short "Kiko," Dichen Lachman as Wendy Makimura in "Sofia," and Sarah-Nicole Robles as Sofia in the same episode.[24] [26] Additional voices featured actors such as Lilimar, Zeno Robinson, Jaboukie Young-White, and Alex Blue Davis for various one-off roles across the seven shorts.[24] The full cast was detailed in promotional materials ahead of the series' June 29, 2022, premiere on Disney+, with no reported changes or recasts from initial announcements.[24] This approach prioritized franchise continuity for core characters while introducing diverse talent for the anthology-style patient interactions central to each episode.[26]Animation Techniques
Baymax! employs three-dimensional computer-generated animation techniques, aligning with the style established in the 2014 feature film Big Hero 6, to render characters, environments, and effects in a futuristic setting. Produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, the series leverages proprietary modeling, rigging, and shading tools to depict Baymax's vinyl-like, inflatable form with realistic subsurface scattering and deformable surfaces that simulate soft robotics.[27][28] Central to the animation is Baymax's minimalist expressiveness, relying on subtle eye movements—"two blinky eyes"—and body deformations described as "squishy squishy" to communicate compassion and humor without complex facial rigging. Producer Bradford Simonsen highlighted this efficiency: "Our animation team is so amazing. What they’re able to do with two blinky eyes and some ‘squishy squishy’ is absolutely amazing." This constrained approach, adapted from the film's "un-animation" philosophy of sparse motion to evoke empathy, suits the seven-minute episodes focused on problem-solving scenarios.[29] For supporting elements, animators integrate dynamic crowd simulations and environmental interactions in San Fransokyo, using layered textures for architectural hybrids of Japanese and American influences, while optimizing render times for the short-form production pipeline. The technique prioritizes emotional clarity over action spectacle, enabling Baymax's interventions to feel intimate and grounded amid the city's vibrancy.[2]Music and Sound Design
The original score for Baymax! was composed by Dominic Lewis, known for prior works including The King's Man (2021) and Peter Rabbit (2018).[30] Lewis's contributions consist of instrumental tracks tailored to the series' episodic structure, emphasizing Baymax's compassionate and problem-solving role across its six 10-minute installments.[31] The Baymax! (Original Soundtrack) album, released digitally by Walt Disney Records on June 29, 2022, includes 18 tracks totaling approximately 30 minutes, such as "Baymax" (0:33), "Water Phobia" (0:39), "Let's Go Kiko" (1:34), and "The Lucky Cat" (1:00).[31] These pieces blend whimsical orchestration with subtle electronic elements to evoke the healthcare robot's gentle demeanor and the everyday predicaments he addresses in San Fransokyo.[32] Sound design elements in Baymax! enhance the animation's comedic and procedural sequences, utilizing effects for Baymax's inflation, scanning, and mobility to reinforce his vinyl robot physiology, consistent with the character's established audio profile from the 2014 film Big Hero 6.[33] Specific production credits for Foley and mixing in the series remain uncredited in public records, aligning with Walt Disney Animation Studios' integrated audio workflow for short-form content.[34]Cast and Characters
Voice Cast
Scott Adsit reprises his role as the titular healthcare robot Baymax, providing the character's signature calm and empathetic demeanor across all episodes.[9] Ryan Potter returns as Hiro Hamada, Baymax's young inventor companion who activates and guides the robot in various scenarios.[24] Maya Rudolph voices Aunt Cass, Hiro's guardian, appearing in supporting capacities.[9] The series introduces additional voice talent for episode-specific human characters receiving Baymax's assistance, emphasizing diverse patient stories. Emily Kuroda portrays Kiko Tanaka in the premiere episode focused on period care.[35] Lilimar Hernandez voices Sofia, a girl dealing with anxiety in the second episode.[24] Zeno Robinson lends his voice to Ali, featured in an episode addressing food allergies.[35] Jaboukie Young-White voices Felony, a character in the low blood sugar storyline.[36]| Actor | Character |
|---|---|
| Scott Adsit | Baymax |
| Ryan Potter | Hiro Hamada |
| Maya Rudolph | Aunt Cass |
| Emily Kuroda | Kiko Tanaka |
| Lilimar Hernandez | Sofia |
| Zeno Robinson | Ali |
| Jaboukie Young-White | Felony |
| RiiJun | Yachi |
| Aimee Garcia | Penny |
Character Designs and Roles
Baymax, the titular character, is an inflatable healthcare companion robot featuring a soft, white vinyl body with rounded, huggable contours engineered for patient comfort and minimal intimidation during medical interactions. His design incorporates a translucent exterior revealing subtle internal carbon fiber skeleton and servos, black circular eyes for expressive minimalism, and modular attachments like eye care tools or dental scanners that adapt to episode-specific needs, animated in 3D CGI with bouncy, fluid physics to emphasize his gentle, non-aggressive nature. Created by Tadashi Hamada as a personal nursebot capable of scanning vital signs and performing over 10,000 procedures, Baymax's primary role in the series entails autonomously or Hiro-activated interventions across San Fransokyo, addressing physical ailments, emotional distress, and preventive care with data-driven diagnostics and empathetic dialogue, such as prioritizing privacy in sensitive consultations.[39][40] Hiro Hamada, the teenage robotics genius, retains his original slim physique, spiky black hair, and casual hoodie attire in recurring appearances, designed to convey youthful ingenuity amid the series' futuristic urban backdrop. Voiced by Ryan Potter, Hiro's role is facilitative, involving the activation of Baymax via a neural transmitter chip and occasional problem-solving support, as seen in episodes where he addresses deployment logistics or familial health crises, underscoring his evolution from the feature film into a more supervisory figure.[37][38] Aunt Cass, Hiro's aunt and café proprietor, is depicted with her energetic posture, voluminous curly hair, and practical apron ensemble, reflecting her bustling homemaker archetype in the blended Japanese-American aesthetic of San Fransokyo. Voiced by Maya Rudolph, her episodic role centers on embodying relatable adult vulnerabilities, such as work-related exhaustion or pet care dilemmas, prompting Baymax's assistance and highlighting themes of work-life balance within family dynamics.[37][38] Guest characters, unique to each of the six episodes premiering June 29, 2022, feature bespoke designs tailored to diverse demographics and health scenarios, including varied skin tones, hairstyles, and contemporary attire integrated with subtle cyberpunk elements like holographic accessories. Examples include Kiko Tanaka, an office worker with menstrual symptoms voiced by Emily Kuroda, whose professional skirt suit underscores urban stress; or Sofia and supporting figures in hygiene-focused narratives, serving roles as patients who benefit from Baymax's unbiased, evidence-based guidance on topics like product selection for bodily functions. These designs and roles facilitate standalone stories emphasizing Baymax's versatility in public health outreach, from dental emergencies to mental wellness, without recurring narrative arcs.[37][2]Episodes
Episode Summaries
Episode 1Baymax encounters resistance from Cass Hamada, Hiro's aunt, who sustains a back injury from overexertion while preparing to reopen the Lucky Cat Café after pandemic-related closures; Baymax diagnoses the strain and insists on rest and proper care, ultimately helping her recover through vinyl massage therapy to resume her duties.[41] Episode 2
Baymax addresses elderly neighbor Kiko's chronic foot pain and reluctance to seek help, stemming from her fear of dependency after losing her husband; he performs a diagnostic scan revealing plantar fasciitis and guides her through strengthening exercises and emotional encouragement to rebuild mobility and confidence.[41] Episode 3
Middle schooler Sofia grapples with puberty-induced changes including her first period, anxiety about disclosure, and family dynamics; Baymax provides factual education on menstrual health, supplies hygiene products, and supports her in navigating embarrassment by explaining biological processes without judgment.[41] Episode 4
Young chef Mbita discovers a peanut allergy after a reaction during family meal preparation; Baymax identifies the allergen via testing, advises dietary adjustments, and assists in reformulating a traditional recipe to safely share cultural heritage food with relatives.[41] Episode 5
Stray cat Yachi ingests a wireless earbud, causing digestive distress; Baymax pursues the feline across San Fransokyo, administering a non-invasive laxative solution to expel the object while highlighting risks of foreign body ingestion in pets.[41] Episode 6
Baymax experiences a low battery during a citywide alert; his prior patients—Cass, Kiko, Sofia, Mbita, and others—collaborate in a relay to locate and recharge him using a portable defibrolator, underscoring community reciprocity in healthcare scenarios.[41]
Thematic Episodes
The episodes of Baymax! are designed as standalone vignettes, each centering on a specific health or wellness challenge encountered by diverse residents of San Fransokyo, with Baymax providing diagnostic scans, practical interventions, and emotional encouragement to resolve the issue. Released simultaneously on Disney+ on June 29, 2022, the six shorts highlight everyday medical concerns ranging from physical injuries to phobias and allergies, underscoring Baymax's programming to prioritize patient care without judgment.[42][43] In "Cass", Baymax responds to Aunt Cass Hamada's ankle sprain incurred while managing the Lucky Cat Café amid overwork, administering treatment and temporarily operating the business to enforce rest, thereby addressing themes of injury recovery and the risks of neglecting personal health for professional demands.[44][45] "Kiko" features Baymax aiding elderly resident Kiko, who suffers back pain from avoidance of physical therapy due to aquaphobia; he guides her to confront the fear through gradual exposure at a community pool, promoting hydrotherapy for mobility improvement.[46][47] "Sofia" depicts Baymax supporting middle-school student Sofia during her first menstrual period, which occurs unexpectedly at school; he educates her on physiological changes, procures sanitary products via a pharmacy visit involving community input, and assists in managing discomfort to enable participation in a talent show.[48][49] "Mbita" involves Baymax treating sushi vendor Mbita for a severe fish allergy triggered during food preparation, using an EpiPen and dietary adjustments while inadvertently facilitating Mbita's romantic pursuit of a customer, integrating allergy management with subtle social confidence-building.[50][51] "Yachi" shifts to veterinary assistance as Baymax pursues a stray cat named Yachi who has swallowed a Bluetooth earphone, navigating the animal's resistance to extract the object non-invasively after a citywide chase, illustrating challenges in treating uncooperative patients.[52][53] The finale, "Baymax", reverses roles as prior patients—including Cass, Kiko, Sofia, Mbita, and Yachi—collaborate to rescue Baymax from a construction site peril after his healthcare chip malfunctions, reinforcing communal reciprocity in caregiving.[54][55]Release
Premiere and Distribution
Baymax! premiered exclusively on Disney+ on June 29, 2022, with all six episodes released simultaneously as a limited series.[1] This binge-release format aligned with Disney+'s strategy for short-form animated content, allowing subscribers immediate access to the complete season without weekly drops.[3] The series is distributed worldwide via Disney+, Disney's primary streaming platform, targeting family audiences in regions where the service operates.[56] No theatrical or broadcast television distribution occurred, positioning Baymax! as a direct-to-streaming production from Walt Disney Animation Studios, consistent with post-2020 shifts in media consumption toward on-demand viewing.[7] Availability remains confined to Disney+ subscriptions, with no reported licensing to other platforms as of its launch.[57]Marketing and Promotion
The series was first teased through an official trailer released on November 12, 2021, via Disney's YouTube channel and Disney Video platforms, highlighting Baymax's role as a healthcare companion in San Fransokyo and announcing a summer 2022 premiere on Disney+.[58] [59] A second trailer followed on May 20, 2022, coinciding with National Streaming Day, which featured additional footage of Baymax's episodic adventures and confirmed the exact release date of June 29, 2022, for all six episodes.[60] [61] Promotion emphasized the series' connection to the 2014 film Big Hero 6, positioning Baymax as a standalone hero focused on everyday medical assistance, with key art and clips shared across Disney's official social media accounts, including Disney D23's Twitter and Facebook pages.[62] [63] Disney+ press materials described the show as introducing new characters needing Baymax's "signature approach to healing," targeting family audiences with short-form, comedy-driven healthcare scenarios.[7] Physical promotions included a giant inflatable Baymax installation at Disney's Hollywood Studios park in early July 2022, shortly after the series launch, to draw attention to the Disney+ content.[64] Merchandise tie-ins were limited but featured Baymax-themed apparel, such as T-shirts depicting scenes from the series alongside Big Hero 6 elements, available through retailers like Amazon starting around the release period.[65] Overall, marketing relied on digital trailers and streaming platform integration rather than extensive traditional campaigns, aligning with Disney+'s strategy for short-form animated originals.Reception
Commercial Performance and Viewership
Baymax! generated moderate pre-release anticipation, ranking as the fifth most anticipated new television series for June 2022 according to data from Whip Media's TV Time app, which tracks viewer engagement and interest. Post-premiere audience demand for the series has remained below average in multiple international markets. Parrot Analytics reported demand at 0.1 times the average TV series in Japan, 0.4 times in France, and 0.6 times in India over recent 30-day periods, indicating limited sustained viewer interest relative to broader streaming content.[66][67][68] Specific streaming viewership metrics, such as hours watched or Nielsen streaming rankings, have not been publicly disclosed by Disney for Baymax!. The series does not appear in reported top lists of most-streamed Disney+ animated content as of late 2022. User-generated ratings provide a proxy for reception, with IMDb aggregating a 7.2/10 score from 9,368 votes as of October 2025.[9] Commercial performance data, including direct revenue impact or merchandise sales tied to the mini-series, remains unreported. Promotional trailers achieved notable YouTube views, with the official trailer surpassing 8.7 million and a second trailer exceeding 12 million, suggesting initial promotional reach but not correlating to confirmed viewership conversion.[58][60]Critical Evaluations
Baymax! received generally positive evaluations from critics, earning an 86% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on seven reviews.[6] Reviewers praised the series for its wholesome tone and fidelity to the character's origins in the 2014 film Big Hero 6, highlighting Baymax's role as a gentle healthcare provider rather than a superhero.[69] Critics commended the animation quality and episodic structure, noting the crisp visuals and entertaining physical comedy that align with the franchise's style. IGN awarded it an 8/10 score, emphasizing the "lovely" interactions between Baymax and San Fransokyo residents, as well as the effective blend of humor and light action in short, self-contained stories.[69] Common Sense Media gave it 4 out of 5 stars, describing the episodes as "thoughtful" and "gentle," with Baymax's problem-solving fostering empathy and education on everyday health issues like allergies, dental care, and emotional support.[4] Forbes called it a "charming" and "wonderfully animated" set of vignettes, particularly appreciating the middle episodes for their emotional depth and ties to the broader Big Hero 6 world.[70] Some evaluations pointed to limitations in narrative ambition and franchise integration. The Forbes review noted that while breezy and whimsical, the series "doesn't do altogether that much," functioning more as standalone shorts than substantive expansions, with only select episodes adding meaningful lore.[70] JoBlo acknowledged the vibrant animation and positive lessons per episode but critiqued the format as not justifying extended investment beyond quick viewing.[11] Decider observed that the focus on Baymax alone in early episodes creates a narrower scope compared to the ensemble-driven original film and its spin-off series, potentially limiting appeal for viewers seeking deeper continuity.[5] Conservative-leaning outlets expressed reservations about thematic elements, with The Collision labeling it a "head-scratching slog" that prioritizes normalizing certain adult-oriented ideologies over child-friendly entertainment, arguing the health-focused plots veer into ideological territory at the expense of fun.[71] Plugged In highlighted Baymax's patient-satisfaction emphasis as potentially overemphasizing comfort over clinical necessity, though it affirmed the physical care depictions as accurate and non-exploitative.[49] These critiques underscore a divide, where mainstream sources valued the educational intent, while others saw it as diluting the character's core appeal.Awards and Nominations
Baymax! earned recognition in major animation awards, particularly from the Children's & Family Emmy Awards and the Annie Awards.[72] In the 2nd Children's & Family Emmy Awards held in 2023, the series received four nominations, including Outstanding Children's or Young Teen Animated Program, Outstanding Writing for an Animated Children's or Young Teen Program, and Outstanding Editing for an Animated Program.[73] It won two of these: Outstanding Writing for an Animated Children's or Young Teen Program for the episode "Sofia," and Outstanding Editing for an Animated Program.[74] The series also garnered three nominations at the 50th Annie Awards in 2023: Best TV/Media – Limited Series for the episode "Sofia," Best Direction – TV/Media for Lissa Treiman's work on "Sofia," and Best Writing – TV/Media for Cirocco Dunlap's script for "Sofia."[75] It did not win any Annie Awards.[72]| Award | Year | Category | Outcome | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children's & Family Emmy Awards | 2023 | Outstanding Children's or Young Teen Animated Program | Nominated | — |
| Children's & Family Emmy Awards | 2023 | Outstanding Writing for an Animated Children's or Young Teen Program | Won | Episode: "Sofia" |
| Children's & Family Emmy Awards | 2023 | Outstanding Editing for an Animated Program | Won | — |
| Annie Awards | 2023 | Best TV/Media – Limited Series | Nominated | Episode: "Sofia" |
| Annie Awards | 2023 | Best Direction – TV/Media | Nominated | Lissa Treiman, "Sofia" |
| Annie Awards | 2023 | Best Writing – TV/Media | Nominated | Cirocco Dunlap, "Sofia" |