Season One is the first season of Clone High. It premiered on Teletoon in Canada on November 2nd, 2002 with the episode "Escape to Beer Mountain: A Rope of Sand" and concluded on March 2nd, 2003 with the episode "Changes: The Big Prom: The Sex Romp: The Season Finale". (Due to a hasty production decision, however, the season's 11th episode, "Snowflake Day: A Very Special Holiday Special", was held off and released in April 14th, 2003, technically making that the season one finale). In The United States, it premiered on MTV on January 20th, 2003 with the episode "Escape to Beer Mountain: A Rope of Sand" and due to it being cancelled, concluded with the episode "Litter Kills: Litterally", ended on July 14th, 2004, leaving three episodes unaired in that country. This was the final season of the show's original run, before its cancellation. The series would not get a second season until 2021-22, when the reboot aired with a second season.
Episodes
Screenshot | Title | # | Airdate (CAN) | Airdate (USA) |
Escape to Beer Mountain: A Rope of Sand | 01 | November 2, 2002 | January 20, 2003 | |
Abe is hopes to make a move on Cleo at JFK's party. However he can only come to the party if he brings the beer. Meanwhile, Joan tries to win Abe's heart, by starting up a Teen Crisis Hotline. Gandhi accidentally agrees to help with the hotline, but ditches work for the party. All the while, Principal Scudworth plans to crash the party so as to better understand the students. | ||||
Episode Two: Election Blu-Galoo | 02 | November 3, 2002 | January 27, 2003 | |
JFK and Abe both run for School President and despite knowing nothing about politics, JFK trails ahead in the lead, leaving Abe in the dust. Meanwhile, Scudworth gets the school a corporate sponsor, X-Stream Blu. | ||||
A.D.D.: the Last D is for Disorder | 03 | November 10, 2002 | February 3, 2003 | |
Gandhi's dreams of being a solid gold dancer are put on hold, when he's diagnosed with A.D.D., which is treated as a stand-in for AID's. Meanwhile, Joan starts hearing religious voices, just like her clonemother. | ||||
Film Fest: Tears of a Clone | 04 | November 17, 2002 | February 10, 2003 | |
The film fest comes to Clone High and Abe, Joan, Gandhi, Cleo, and JFK all submit their own indie films to the contest. Meanwhile, Scudworth has The Board of Shadowy Figures over to dinner. | ||||
Sleep of Faith: La Ru D'Awakening | 05 | November 24, 2002 | February 17, 2003 | |
In the wake of the PXJTs, Abe gets addicted to staying awake. Meanwhile, Gandhi befriends a truck driver, who helps him practice for the test. | ||||
Homecoming: A Shot in D'Arc | 06 | December 1, 2002 | February 24, 2003 | |
Clone High will be playing basketball against Gesh High, and when Joan learns that girls aren't allowed to join the team, so she goes in disguise as a boy named John and gets in. Meanwhile, Gandhi and Genghis Khan kidnap the Gesh school mascot. | ||||
Plane Crazy: Gate Expectations | 07 | December 8, 2002 | March 3, 2003 | |
Cleo gets accepted into O-Town, where she cheats on Abe with Ashley Angel. Meanwhile, Gandhi makes a rap song and sneaks it into Cleo's pocket, in hopes that Angel will find it and discover his musical talent. | ||||
A Room of One's Clone: The Pie of the Storm | 08 | December 15, 2002 | N/A | |
Joan's house gets destroyed in a hurricane so she and Toots have to live in Cleo's house. Meanwhile, Scudworth gets a robot dog, which makes Mr. Butlertron jealous. | ||||
Raisin the Stakes: A Rock Opera in Three Acts | 09 | January 12, 2003 | March 10, 2003 | |
In a 1960s-70s-rock-opera-style musical episode, Abe gets addicted to raisins and joins a raisin-smoking hippie club. Meanwhile, Scudworth builds a massive fence around Exclamation Point, to keep out all the raisin-dealers. | ||||
Litter Kills: Litterally | 10 | January 19, 2003 | July 14, 2003 | |
One of the clones is going to die in this episode. Either Abe, Joan, Gandhi, Cleo, JFK, or the newly introduced Juan Ponce De Leon, who lives every day as though it is his last but it's a mystery, who's going to die. Meanwhile, Joan sees Juan Ponce De Leon's refuse-related death as a sign that there's too much litter and starts a campaign to try and get everybody to clean it up. | ||||
Snowflake Day: A Very Special Holiday Special | 11 | April 13, 2003 [1] | N/A | |
On the very first ever Snowflake Day in history, since the abolition of religiously-specific holidays, Abe has trouble finding a store bought material object for Cleo, that's expensive enough for her to like. Meanwhile, Joan tries to ruin Snowflake Day for all of Exclamation Point, with the help of a homeless girl who looks like Mandy Moore but she totally isn't. I promise. | ||||
Makeover Makeover Makeover: the Makeover Episode | 12 | January 26, 2003 | N/A | |
In part one of the season finale, the prom comes up, so Joan and Gandhi get makeovers from Abe and JFK, respectively so that people will actually go out with them. Meanwhile, Scudworth gets a visit from his old rival, John Stamos. | ||||
Changes: The Big Prom: The Sex Romp: The Season Finale | 13 | March 2, 2003 | N/A | |
In part two of the season finale, Abe asks "J-Cl" out to the prom, while Gandhi is forced to go STAAAAAAAAAAAAAAG!!! Meanwhile, The Secret Board of Shadowy Figures discovers Principal Scudworth's evil plan and they go down to the school to destroy him. |
Trivia
- This is the only season of the show's original run.
- In America, Clone High was cancelled in the middle of this season, due to the Gandhi controversy, leaving the episodes "Snowflake Day: A Very Special Holiday Special", onward, unaired in that country.
- Before the show's cancellation, the episode "A Room of One's Clone: The Pie of the Storm", didn't air in America for some reason and was skipped over.
- In Canada, due to the episode not lining up with Christmas in the airing schedule, "Snowflake Day: A Very Special Holiday Special" was skipped over and intended to air on the Christmas of the following year. Due to several complaints from fans, Teletoon decided to air the episode early, in the middle of the year, on April 13, 2003.
- At this point, the season finale, "Changes: The Big Prom: The Sex Romp: The Season Finale", had already aired a month ago, technically making this the true season one finale.