The ninth season of The Fairly OddParents premiered on March 23, 2013 with the episode "Fairly OddPet" which aired after the 2013 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards. Nickelodeon renewed the show for a ninth season on March 14, 2012, during its upfront. The season ended on March 28, 2015 with the episode "The Fairy Beginning".
Production
The season was produced by Billionfold Inc., Frederator Studios, and Nickelodeon Animation Studio. This season features episodes 127-152, and Timmy Turner gets a fairy dog named Sparky. Recording for the ninth season began in June 2012 and ended in March 2013.[1] This is the longest season with the most episodes.[1] It is the second season to air after a year-long hiatus, after the 2006 cancellation. It is also the first season produced fully for high definition and widescreen presentation.
Timmy adopts a mischievous and magical fairy dog named Sparky. However, owning a fairy dog proves to be a much bigger challenge than Timmy could have ever predicted.
Timmy doesn't want his dad to be scout leader anymore, and wishes for Dinkleberg to be scout leader.
Cosmo loses his memory and mistakenly thinks his job is to grant wishes for Timmy's father. They instantly cause chaos and Timmy, Wanda, Poof and Sparky must stop it.
Crocker grades on a bell curve so Timmy wishes everyone was dumber than him. A meteor threatens Earth and with everyone mistaking it for a giant muffin. So, Timmy is the only one smart enough to stop it.
Foop becomes Vicky's anti-fairy godparent. Vicky and Foop terrorize Timmy and the kids of Dimmsdale. Foop tells Vicky that the reason Timmy has thwarted her all these years is because he has fairy godparents. If they can destroy the fairies, no one will be able to stop them.
Due to several of Timmy's wishes causing effects on the news reports, Chet Ubetcha quits his job. Timmy's dad becomes the new(s) reporter and chaos ensues.
Timmy falls in love with a girl named Missy and wishes to become emo to impress her. However, he stops caring about everything and his fairies become at risk.
Timmy's house gets filled with fairy "dust" from wishing, so Timmy and his fairies try to clean it up. Meanwhile, Mr. and Mrs. Turner are taken to a fake spa by a disguised Jorgen.
Dad is upset because everyone thinks he's boring. Timmy wishes that his dad's life would be as exciting as Jason Bored's, an international secret agent.
After being kicked out of the Buxaplenty's "Fancy Shmancy Country Club" thanks to Cosmo, Timmy wishes to look like a rich kid in order to get back inside. Meanwhile, Wanda and Sparky's brains are switched.
136a
10a
"Dog Gone"
Gary Conrad
Story by : Alec Schwimmer Teleplay by : Kevin Arrieta, Ray DeLaurentis, Will Schifrin, Sindy Spackman & Kevin Sullivan
Timmy's dad refuses to sell Sparky to his boss, and he makes his life miserable at work in response. Timmy and Sparky attempt to make up a plan in order to solve the issue.
When Timmy discovers that his ancestor could have been rich if he made the right decision, Timmy wishes that his ancestor did make the right decision. While the Turner family basks in their riches, the whole town is a dump and Timmy's fairies get taken away (except for Sparky) because he's no longer miserable.
137a
11a
"Cosmonopoly"
Michelle Bryan
Ray DeLaurentis, Will Schifrin, Kevin Sullivan & Becky Wangberg
Timmy, his dad and the fairies get trapped in a board game created by Cosmo and must find a way to get out before Timmy's mom throws the game in a woodchipper.
The Dads from the episodes "Add-a-Dad" and "Invasion of the Dads" return to take Timmy to their workplaces. When that proves to be too much for Timmy, he wishes for a clone of himself for each Dad. But when the Timmys want Timmy's fairies (apparently thanks to Cosmo), Timmy must save them.
Catman mistakenly thinks Sparky is his old nemesis, Dogman, and tries to get rid of him. To prevent this, Timmy brings the real Dogman in an attempt to convince that Sparky isn't him.
Timmy, Timmy's Dad, and Crocker become detectives and investigate a string of robberies all over Dimmsdale following a robbing of the Turners' house. Their actions, however, end up doing more harm than good.
Timmy, his dad, Cosmo and Mr. Crocker get tired of their respective mothers'/wives' nagging, so Mr. Turner wishes the universe was without women for 24 hours. However, this turns out to have consequences, as they are unable to survive properly without the women. Worse yet, a group of alligator-like aliens called the Snobulacs arrive to Earth and blame them for their females disappearing.
Mr. Crocker tries to transform into Timmy with his DNA replicator, the "Turner-Me-Into-Turner-Ator", but due to his mom spitting her DNA on a gum with Timmy's DNA due to one of her allergies, he transforms into a fusion of Timmy Turner and Mrs. Crocker. When he arrives at Timmy's house, Cosmo immediately mistakes him for Timmy from the "future", and Mr. Crocker pretends to be so, leaving Timmy to prevent himself from becoming a monster in a week.
After a trip to the 70's with Timmy, Wanda and Poof, Cosmo loses his wand. In an homage to Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, Timmy and his fairies try to find it or else he can no longer be a fairy godparent.
Timmy, Cosmo, Wanda, and Poof (all in fish form) get flushed down the toilet, and must find their wands in the sewer to get back home. Meanwhile, Catman adopts a new superhero identity after ending up getting flushed as well.
146
20
"Fairly Old Parent"
Michelle Bryan & Gary Conrad
Ray DeLaurentis, Will Schifrin, Alec Schwimmer, Kevin Sullivan & Becky Wangberg
Crocker disguises himself as a Spellementary school teacher to steal magic from the kids and Poof begins to learn how to speak when he goes through "prooferty".
On Cosmo and Wanda's anniversary, they go to see their former godkids with Timmy. However, they alter the past and wind up losing their jobs as fairy godparents. Timmy and Sparky must fix the timeline or else they'll never see Cosmo and Wanda again.
150
24
"The Fairy Beginning"
Ken Bruce and Michelle Bryan
Ray DeLaurentis, Will Schifrin, Alec Schwimmer & Kevin Sullivan
^ abPucci, Douglas (July 28, 2014). "Friday Cable Finals". TV Media Insights. Cross Mediaworks. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
^ abPucci, Douglas (July 24, 2014). "Wednesday Cable Finals". TV Media Insights. Cross Mediaworks. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
^ abPucci, Douglas (July 29, 2014). "Monday Cable Finals". TV Media Insights. Cross Mediaworks. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
^ abPucci, Douglas (July 31, 2014). "Wednesday Cable Finals". TV Media Insights. Cross Mediaworks. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
^"Archived copy". tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com. Archived from the original on July 29, 2014. Retrieved September 1, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^Pucci, Douglas (August 4, 2014). "Friday Cable Finals". TV Media Insights. Cross Mediaworks. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2015.