[NOTE: The following article is a press release issued by the aforementioned network and/or company. Any errors, typos, etc. are attributed to the original author. The release is reproduced solely for the dissemination of the enclosed information.]
BEA GETS PROMOTED IN A NEW EPISODE OF "FISH HOOKS,"
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 ON DISNEY CHANNEL
"Fish at Work" - Bea gets a job promotion, however, her excitement is short-lived after she discovers her first responsibility is to let one of her co-workers go. After putting each employee through a series of tests, she ultimately decides the best thing to do is find them all new jobs in a new episode of Disney Channel's "Fish Hooks," airing FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 (9:15 - 9:30 p.m., ET/PT).
"Fish Hooks" stars Chelsea Kane ("Dancing with the Stars") as Bea, Kyle Massey ("Cory in the House") as Milo and Justin Roiland ("The Sarah Silverman Program") as Oscar.
"Fish at Work" was written by Tim McKeon, Meghan McCarthy, Nick Confalone and Neal Dusedau and directed by Bill Reiss and Carl Greenblatt.
Missed an episode? Been wanting to catch up? This series is also available on:
DESCRIPTION: (from Disney Channel's press release, October 2011) Season two of the imaginative, eye-catching animated hit series "Fish Hooks," will premiere FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4 (9:30-10:00 p.m., ET/PT) on Disney Channel. Since its September 2010 debut, "Fish Hooks" has been one of TV's top animated series among Kids 6-11 and Tweens 9-14.* "Fish Hooks" features a talented voice cast including Chelsea Kane ("Dancing with the Stars," "JONAS") as Bea, Kyle Massey ("Dancing with the Stars," "Cory in the House") as Milo, and Justin Roiland ("The Sarah Silverman Program") as Oscar. Upcoming episodes will introduce guest characters, including a new crush for Oscar, voiced by Felicia Day ("The Guild"), a Rat King outside the tanks voiced by Wallace Shawn ("Toy Story," "The Incredibles") and a new marching band conductor voiced by Doug Brochu ("So Random!"). Season two will continue to follow best fish friends Bea, Milo and Oscar as they tackle everyday tween life from friendship, dating and sports, to more atypical situations like giant lobsters, babysitting an ornery catfish and learning to ride a bucking scorpion.