
In addition to toys and the like, a soundtrack CD - which also featured the Teen Titans theme - was released to coincide with the show's premiere in 2004. The show also got a considerable amount of tie-in merchandise. In between episode segments, live-action vignettes featuring the real Ami and Yumi would air as well. Additionally, while the show took the band to all sorts of different locations - including a millennium into the future - there were a few other recurring characters, such as evil land developer Edwin Blair, alpha nerd King Chad and young obsessive stalker fan Harmony. A good portion of the show's conflict stemmed from Ami and Yumi's drastically different personalities, with Ami being cheerful and bubbly, and Yumi being a bit rougher around the edges. The pop-rock artists were joined on this journey by their greedy but caring manager Kaz Harada, voiced by Keone Young, and his mortal enemies Tekirai and Jang-Keng - Ami and Yumi's pet cats. RELATED: How the '90s Anime Boom Changed Western Cartoons The show followed fictionalized, highly-exaggerated versions of Ami and Yumi - voiced by Janice Kawaye and Grey DeLisle, respectively - as they traveled the world in their tour bus, playing various gigs and getting into increasingly bizarre misadventures along the way. Created by Register and featuring another original theme by Ami and Yumi themselves, Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi premiered on Cartoon Network in November of 2004, a little over a year after Teen Titans first hit the airwaves. Then-Cartoon Network Vice President Sam Register - who also served as an executive producer on Teen Titans - evidently saw even greater potential in the network's business relationship with Puffy AmiYumi and proposed the idea of a cartoon based on the band that would help them grow their fanbase outside of Japan. If the Japanese theme played, that meant it was one of the season's various standalone/one-off episodes, which were generally (but not always) more humorous offerings. If the English theme played, that meant the episode was part of the main story arc for that particular season. What's more, the version of the theme that played before a given episode actually gave viewers an idea of what to expect. Puffy AmiYumi recorded two versions of the Teen Titans theme - one in English and one in Japanese.
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RELATED: Teen Titans: Every Batman Easter Egg in the Beloved Animated Series After all, in addition to being an absolute banger in and of itself, the song was also utilized in a rather unique way that's never really been replicated. And easily one of its most iconic elements is its opening theme. Teen Titans has gone on to become one of DC's most beloved animated TV shows of the last two decades, especially among those who grew up with it.

Following the release of more albums and some work in the world of Japanese television, the duo was tapped to create the theme song for the anime-inspired DC Comics-based animated series Teen Titans, which premiered on Cartoon Network in July of 2003.

Diddy - was formed in Tokyo by Ami Onuki and Yumi Yoshimura in 1995, with the duo dropping their first album in 1996. Puffy - known in the United States as Puffy AmiYumi to avoid legal trouble with rapper Sean "Puffy" Combs, aka Puff Daddy/P. If that sounds oddly specific, it's because that's exactly what happened with the Japanese pop/rock duo Puffy. For instance, you could land a gig recording a theme song for an animated series based on a comic book and later end up serving as the inspiration for an entirely new cartoon. You can chart a course, obviously, but sometimes one opportunity leads to another one presenting itself in a way you likely hadn't quite anticipated. When you embark on a creative project, you never really know where it will lead.
