Fans have long theorized that Jerry is actually a villain keeping the girls busy solving minor crimes while he profits off their technology. While the official stance denies this, our sources confirm that Season 7 will explore a "Jerry-bot" decoy—suggesting the real Jerry has secrets even WOOHP doesn’t know. The Crossover That Almost Broke the Internet Rumors have swirled for years about a crossover. You heard the whispers: Totally Spies vs. Kim Possible . According to a production memo obtained in this Totally Spies exclusive , Disney and Marathon Media sat down at a table in 2005. The plot was simple: Shego teams up with Tim Scam to steal the "Morphing Grid," forcing Ron Stoppable to ask the WOOHP girls for help because Kim is trapped in a time warp.
Today, we have an exciting that dives deep into the vault. We are unlocking never-before-seen production notes, character arcs that almost happened, and what the future holds for Jerry’s favorite agents. The Genesis of an Intersphere Miracle To understand the weight of this Totally Spies exclusive report, we have to go back to 2001. French producers Vincent Chalvon-Demersay and David Michel wanted to create a show that parodied James Bond while celebrating "girl power." The result? A show that lasted six seasons (and counting), spawned video games, a feature film, and a seventh season currently in production. totally spies exclusive
Stay tuned to this channel for more exclusive spy files. Fans have long theorized that Jerry is actually
For over two decades, the trio from Beverly Hills has been saving the world—one stiletto kick and lipstick gadget at a time. If you grew up in the 2000s, you know the names: Sam, Clover, and Alex. But for the uninitiated, Totally Spies! was more than just a cartoon. It was a cultural phenomenon that blended high-stakes espionage with the very real, very relatable anxieties of teenage mall culture. You heard the whispers: Totally Spies vs
He recruits teenagers. Sixteen-year-olds. He sends them into comas (the "Virtual Reality" episode), allows them to be brainwashed (Season 2’s "Evil Spies"), and rarely provides hazard pay. In one discarded script draft (which we are revealing here for the first time), Alex actually quits WOOHP to go to college. The draft lasted three pages before the writers realized that without the trio, there is no show.