From Ancient History onwards, BoJack wears his Philbert costume rather than his robe during this sequence, reflecting how he wears his suit even when not filming and is becoming one with the character. In Season 5, Gina Cazador appears in the house, standing in the living room and then eating an apple in the kitchen, from BoJack the Feminist until Head in the Clouds (as the following episode uses the Philbert theme song instead and ends BoJack's relationship with Gina). Her possessions remain in the house for the remainder of the season. So, she starts appearing in the theme sequence from Commence Fracking onward.Īfter Beatrice Horseman moves into the house at the end of Thoughts and Prayers, she and her possessions appear starting in Underground she last appears in Lovin that cali lifestyle!! as BoJack puts her in a home at the end of that episode. The room remains without any visitor and littered with garbage from the party for his fake Oscar nomination up to Season 4's Hooray! Todd Episode!, in which Todd gets the place fixed, and Hollyhock moves in. The huge glass panel in the living room has been shattered near the end of Season 3 in That's Too Much, Man! as BoJack drove his new Tesla through it in the previous episode. She is last seen in Yes And, in which the two break up. She sits on the couch and then flies away from the deck in the scene. In Season 2, starting from Still Broken, Wanda Pierce appears in BoJack's living room as she has moved in with him. Todd is last seen in It's You in which he moves out of BoJack's house after learning BoJack had sex with Emily. BoJack lets Todd use his living room as Cabracadabra's headquarter from Old Acquaintance onward. Princess Carolyn is last seen in BoJack's place in Best Thing That Ever Happened in which she gets fired by BoJack. Peanutbutter to Labrador Peninsula in the next episode, and later has a falling-out with BoJack in It's You. Diane is last seen there in Stop the Presses as she accompanies Mr. Todd is living in his house Princess Carolyn is his on-and-off girlfriend and Diane is the ghost writer of his autobiography. In the beginning of the series, the main characters Princess Carolyn, Diane Nguyen and Todd Chavez hang around in his living room. BoJack has put on a bathrobe and he drifts past his kitchen as he takes a sip from a mug.
He then passes through his living room while Horsin' Around plays on his TV (in The Light Bulb Scene, the first episode of Season 5, it changes to a tribute to Ralph Carney, who died December 16, 2017. Much of the remaining sequence shows BoJack's face in a locked perspective in the center of the screen as he transitions to different scenes.īoJack leaves his bedroom where two framed magazines featuring him from his Horsin' Around years are outside. It cuts to BoJack lying in his bed when his eyes spring open from sleep. The theme sequence begins with a shot of BoJack's House at sunrise, and it zooms from the bottom of the cliff onto BoJack's deck.
Characters may or may not be around, depending on how involved are they with BoJack's life.
There is an alternate version that plays near the end of Escape from L.A while BoJack Horseman returns to Hollywoo from Tesuque.īoJack's actions, the background and its characters may change episodically and seasonally during the theme sequence, according to the development of the show's story. Theme Sequence VisualsīoJack’s Theme is the opening theme music for each episode, with the exception of Escape from L.A., The Showstopper, A Horse Walks into a Rehab, and Sabrina's Christmas Wish. Bright liked it, stating in an interview “ we knew it was right when we heard it.” Netflix approved of the track, and it became the opening theme of BoJack Horseman. Patrick sent Bright the track he and Ralph had composed together. Bright asked Patrick if he would be interested in composing an opening theme for the show. However, Noel Bright, one of the executive producers in the show, contacted Patrick Carney, as he was a Black Keys fan. The musical score was not originally intended for BoJack Horseman. He then sent it to Ralph, who added tenor sax and fleshed out the rest of the sound. Patrick created the score while testing out his equipment by starting with a click track on a Roland Jupiter-4 keyboard, and he layered in sound from an arpeggiator and drums. Patrick Carney, the drummer for The Black Keys, composed BoJack's Theme with his uncle Ralph Carney.