She-Ra: Princess of Power
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She-Ra: Princess of Power
Summary
She-Ra: Princess of Power is an animated television series[1]. It draws 1,373 Wikipedia views per month (animated_television_series category, ranking #249 of 2,014).[2]
Key Facts
- She-Ra: Princess of Power is the creator of Princess of Power — creator (P170): Lou Scheimer[3].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's instance of is recorded as Princess of Power — instance of (P31): animated television series[4].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power was directed by Princess of Power — director (P57): Gwen Wetzler[5].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's composer is recorded as Princess of Power — composer (P86): Q2056096[6].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's genre is Princess of Power — genre (P136): science fiction television program[7].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's genre is Princess of Power — genre (P136): comedy television series[8].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's based on is recorded as Princess of Power — based on (P144): He-Man and the Masters of the Universe[9].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power followed Princess of Power — follows (P155): He-Man and the Masters of the Universe[10].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power was followed by Princess of Power — followed by (P156): The New Adventures of He-Man[11].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power was produced by Princess of Power — producer (P162): Lou Scheimer[12].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's production company is recorded as Princess of Power — production company (P272): Filmation[13].
- The original language of She-Ra: Princess of Power was Princess of Power — original language of film or TV show (P364): English[14].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power was distributed by Princess of Power — distribution format (P437): video on demand[15].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's original broadcaster is recorded as Princess of Power — original broadcaster (P449): broadcast syndication[16].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's country of origin is recorded as Princess of Power — country of origin (P495): United States[17].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power comprises Princess of Power — has part(s) (P527): She-Ra: Princess of Power, season 1[18].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power comprises Princess of Power — has part(s) (P527): She-Ra: Princess of Power, season 2[19].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power began on September 9, 1985[20].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power ended on December 2, 1986[21].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's characters is recorded as Princess of Power — characters (P674): She-Ra[22].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's distributed by is recorded as Princess of Power — distributed by (P750): Westinghouse Broadcasting[23].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's distributed by is recorded as Princess of Power — distributed by (P750): Netflix[24].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's number of episodes is recorded as {'amount': '+93'}[25].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's takes place in fictional universe is recorded as Princess of Power — takes place in fictional universe (P1434): Masters of the Universe universe[26].
- She-Ra: Princess of Power's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'She-Ra'}[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
She-Ra: Princess of Power was produced by Princess of Power — producer (P162): Lou Scheimer[12]. It was directed by Princess of Power — director (P57): Gwen Wetzler[5]. It is the creator of Princess of Power — creator (P170): Lou Scheimer[3].
Publication
The original language of She-Ra: Princess of Power was Princess of Power — original language of film or TV show (P364): English[14]. Genres include Princess of Power — genre (P136): science fiction television program[7] and Princess of Power — genre (P136): comedy television series[8]. It was distributed by Princess of Power — distribution format (P437): video on demand[15].
Adaptations and Inspiration
She-Ra: Princess of Power followed Princess of Power — follows (P155): He-Man and the Masters of the Universe[10]. It was followed by Princess of Power — followed by (P156): The New Adventures of He-Man[11].
Why It Matters
She-Ra: Princess of Power draws 1,373 Wikipedia views per month (animated_television_series category, ranking #249 of 2,014).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]