Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
For the history of Transformers, check out the post here.
Transformers: Rescue Bots Academy is the sequel spin-off of Transformers:
Rescue Botsand an adaptation of the Hasbrotoyline of the same name. The
series picked up where its predecessor left off: a new academy had been built with
the purpose of training new Rescue Bots to carry out the mission of protecting
and rescuing humans from various emergencies; both natural and of their own
making.
Optimus recruits Hot Shot.
At the conclusion of Rescue Bots, the Rescue Bots team had been
dispersed around the world on various assignments by Autobot leader Optimus
Prime (Peter Cullen in that series).
Rescue Bot leader Heatwave (Paul Guyet) was left in charge of the academy and
training the new recruits. However, his teammates—police bot Chase (Frank
Cwiklik), helicopter bot Blades (Michael
Hansen) and construction bot Boulder (Keyon
Williams)—would pop in from time to time to teach classes based on their
particular interests or areas of expertise. Other faculty members would come to
include headstrong and reckless Tyrannosaurus
RexdinobotGrimlock (Terrence
Flint), sometimes joined by his friends and fellow dinobots Sludge (Billy
Bob Thompson), an Apatosaurus, Snarl (Mark
Ashton), a Stegosaurus, and Slash (Alex
Hairston), a Velociraptor; ambulance bot
Rachet (Todd Perlmutter), chief medical officer; science expedition
vehicle/bot-sized microscope Perceptor (Jeremy
Levy), a science and intelligence officer; and elite Autobot operative and
sports car Bumblebee (Levy); as well as Optimus (Hiro
Diaz in the pilot, Jake Tillman after reprising the
role from Cyberverse) himself. Additionally, a robotic crash test dummy
with a limited A.I., named Tough Luck Chuck (Perlmutter), served as a stand-in
for human victims in holographic rescue simulations.
Wedge, Hoist, Hot Shot, Whirl and Medix with Bumblebee, Chase, Heatwave and Blades.
Comprising the academy’s first class was Whirl (Courtney Shaw), a police
helicopter with an enthusiastic love of learning and rules; Hoist (Alan
Trinca), a tow truck that was an aspiring inventor and mechanic (he created new
tool attachments for he and his teammates to use); Medix (Adam Adrianopolous),
an emergency response car who dealt purely in logic; and Wedge (Mason Hensley),
a payloader that was created as a Decepticon until he was
recruited by Optimus, and who had a tendency to geek out over his idol,
Bumblebee. Optimus would also go on to recruit Hot Shot (Pierce Cravens), an
ATV who was primarily proficient at playing the game of Cube on Cybertron. Hot Shot, with an
attitude to match his name, had a hard time fitting in with the other rescue
recruits but gradually found his place among them. Optimus bestowed upon him an
ancient Cybertronian artifact known as the Mul-T-Cog, which allowed him
to assume the additional forms of a jet plane and a hovercraft, but initially
restricted him to only being able to change into one vehicle form per day
forcing him to choose which one wisely. These recruits were based on characters
that had appeared previously, but received significant changes to their
overall designs and personalities for the series.
Classic Heatwave (top) vs. his Academy design.
Although set in the same continuity
as Rescue Bots, Rescue Bots Academy had a number of changes made in its
production. For starters, the series wasn’t produced by longtime Hasbro
partner, DHX Media (now WildBrain).
Instead, it was done by Boulder
Media Limited, an animation studio Hasbro took over
outright to work on all of their media projects. Rescue Bots Academy was
the first Transformers series they began work on, but it ended up being
released after the second: Cyberverse. While the designs on previously
established characters were similar, there were notable differences in the
proportions of their bodies, boot-like feet and designs of their optics (aka
eyes, which went from being tiny orbs in a void to orbs more akin to human-like
eyes). Other characters, like Bumblebee, were represented in their “evergreen”
design: a unified design choice Hasbro implemented for the toyline that didn’t
tie them into any particular iteration of the franchise, allowing them to
remain on shelves for longer periods. The recruits were also rendered as being
shorter than the senior Bots, although still bigger than an average person. The characters were designed by Keith Byrne.
Cody returns to help part-time at the academy.
A major difference was the
diminished role of human characters in the series, with a greater focus placed
on the Bots and their training at the academy. In Rescue Bots, the Bots
operated on the small island of Griffin Rock, Maine
in partnership with the Burns family--a family of rescuers tasked with keeping
the citizenry safe before and since the Bots arrived--before building the
academy on the mainland. Despite the Burnses being sent on the assignments with
their Rescue Bot partners, only the youngest of the Burns family, Cody
(Andy Zou),
ever appeared on the show; depicted as older and studying to be a paramedic.
His father, Chief
Charlie Burns, was mentioned and represented as a bust
in Heatwave’s office, and their ancestor in statue form. The academy itself was
controlled by an A.I. named Elma
(voiced by Kath
Soucie), which took on a holographic form modeled after a
noted scientist. It was completely absent from this series; the academy run
with more typical sci-fi interfaces and controls.
Wes and Wedge rescue some workers.
As
the series progressed, however, other humans from Griffin Rock began to make
appearances including Cody’s best friend Frankie Greene
(Kaitlin Becker);
her father and resident scientist Doc Greene (Guyet); accident-prone truck
driver Jerry (Perlmutter); helicopter-helmeted Mr. Harrison
(Levy); frequent citizen in distress Mrs. Rubio;
reporter Huxley Prescott (Perlmutter); bumbling Mayor Luskey (Guyet); and
reformed twin tech-thieves turned tech-inventors Evan
(silent) and Myles
(Perlmutter). A new human character, Wes (Xander Crowell),
was introduced as a Teen
Pioneer (the Griffin Rock version of Scouts) who idolized
Wedge. As the production utilized a non-union New York-based voice cast, none
of the returning characters could be voiced by their original actors.
Class is in session.
Transformers: Rescue Bots Academy
debuted on Discovery
Family on January 5, 2019 after the first two episodes aired
as a sneak peek on December 8. Originally, the series was set to debut in the
fall of 2018, but a poster
released that October indicated the push back. Unlike its predecessor, the
series was comprised of 11-minute episodes, with two airing each half hour. It
was aired in an hour-long block, with reruns of the previous week’s episodes
making up the second half (after the initial debut, which aired four all-new
episodes). The series was developed and written by Transformers veteran Nicole Dubuc,
who also served as story editor, executive producer and wrote the theme song. Fellow
veterans Brian
Hohlfeld , Kevin Burke
and Chris
“Doc” Wyatt also wrote for the series, with Burke and
Wyatt serving as executive producers. Additional writers included Jodi Reynolds,
Ciarán
Morrison, Mick
O’Hara, Nathan
Cockerill, Marc
Seal,
Danny Stack,
Ben Ward,
Fionn Boland
and Peter
A. Dowling, who was also a story editor. The theme was composed
by Doug
Califano and performed by Zach Allen. The rest of the series’
music was composed by Califano, Stuart Kollmorgen,
Kieffer
Infantino and Matt Mahaffey.
Hot Shot and his new combicannon.
Renewed for a second season, the
dynamic of the series was changed slightly by pairing up the recruits with
teacher tutors: Whirl with Chase, Medix with Blades, Wedge with Bumblebee, Hot
Shot with Heatwave, and Hoist with Grimlock (which did wonders for his fear of
dinosaurs). Four additional Mul-T-Cogs were discovered and given to the
recruits, allowing Whirl to become a squad car; Hoist to become a dinobot after
Grimlock; Medix a rescue helicopter; and Wedge a sportscar after Bumblebee. Hot
Shot gained a new firetruck form after Heatwave, and was able to master his Cog
so that he could transform into any form without restriction. The recruits also
received new tools chosen by their spark via the Sparksayer,
an ancient Cybertronian relic: Hoist gained a plasma cutter, Medix a magnetic
power projector, Whirl a polyvisor that allowed her to examine things more
closely, Wedge an auger, and Hot Shot a combicannon used by mixing and
projecting compounds.
Meet the new class: Snarl, Brushfire, Sludge, Laserbeak and Slash.
In 2020, word came that production
on Rescue Bots Academy had concluded, with series director Pete Slattery
announcing on
his Twitter that the series was ending with the
second season. The series left with an open ending, seeing the recruits
graduate their second year while Slash, Sludge, Snarl, bird-like reformed
Decepticon Laserbeak
(giving the series a larger presence of Decepticons than its predecessor), and Brushfire
(Bimini Wright),
an Autobot that had been operating independently in Australia, were invited to
join the academy as new first year students. Additionally, the academy had
received a recent expansion when Cybertronian TitanCitadel Secundus
(Cwiklik), a city-sized transformer, ended his centuries-long exile in space
and came to reside on Earth as a new wing to the school. Although it ran a
shorter time, the series ended with 104 episodes just like its predecessor,
tying it for the longest-running Transformers series. Its conclusion
also marked the end of what was known as the “Aligned continuity family”,
a short-lived attempt to create a singular continuity and direction for the
brand by Hasbro.
The 16 blind bag mini figurines featuring the recruits, Bumblebee, Optimus and Chase.
The Rescue Bots Academy toyline
included many figures that were reworkings of earlier releases in the Rescue
Bots series. The first two figures in 2018 were part of the smaller-sized
Rescan toyline. VTOL Hot Shot and Snow-Plow Wedge were included as part of the
original Rescue Bots line with Academy just being added to the
packaging. They were reworked versions of previous Bumblebee
and Boulder
figures, respectively. The next two figures, hovercraft Hot Shot and Medix,
received all-new packaging for Academy. This Hot Shot was a reworking of
Heatwave’s fireboat
mode.
The official Academy line began in 2019 and featured 8 waves of figures;
3 of them featuring repeats of previous figures. A multi-pack without Medix was
released in 2019, and a triple pack of Bumblebee in three forms was released in
2021. Three waves of large-sized features were released beginning in 2019,
featuring only the new recruits across them. Hoist and Wedge received Command
Center figures with light-up tools and command center trailers. As part of the Flip Racers
line, Optimus was released as a launcher trailer with his own figure and as a
jumbo jet with Bumblebee, and Bumblebee was released with Hot Shot. Only Whirl
received her own separate figure in the line. 12” figures of Hot Shot,
Bumblebee and Heatwave were also released. In 2019, a wave
of blind bag figurines were released dedicated to the
characters from the show.
Whirl, Wedge, Medix and Hoist in their primary vehicle modes.
While there haven’t been any home
video releases of Rescue Bots Academy to date, a number
of episodes have been released to the official Transformers
Kids
channel on YouTube,
with many edited together in compilations that omit the intro and end credits.
Additionally, it has been made available for streaming on Netflix, DirectTV, and Spectrum OnDemand.
Streaming rights could also be purchased on the iTunes
store and Amazon
Prime Video.
EPISODE
GUIDE: Season
1: “Recruits
Part 1” (1/5/19) – Optimus Prime recruits Hot Shot for the Rescue Academy, but
Hot Shot questions what he could possibly bring to the team. “Recruits
Part 2” (1/5/19) – Optimus gives Hot Shot the Mul-T-Cog and he’s able to
finally prove he belongs while on a mission to rescue Cody. “If
at First…” (1/5/19) – Hoist is encouraged to invent new tools to improve his
team’s rescue abilities but becomes dejected when they fail miserably. “Tough
Luck Chuck” (1/5/19) – Hot Shot finds himself babysitting Chuck when he becomes
badly damaged. “Whirl’d
View” (1/12/19) – Whirl’s attention to procedure and detail save the recruits
when they get caught in a snowstorm. “Plan
Bee” (1/12/19) – Gardening teaches the recruits that even the smallest rescue
matters in an ecosystem. “The
Bot Who Cried Rescue” (1/19/19) – Wedge is put in charge of practicing the
recruits’ response time to emergencies, but his desire for perfection leads to
some problems. “Mount
Botmore” (1/19/19) – Hot Shot’s decision to add the recruits to a monument of
the Rescue Bots may just provide the solution to a dam about to burst. “Mission
Inaudible” (1/26/19) – Hoist is put in charge of a mission but is too
indecisive to make any decisions on his own. “Glitch”
(1/26/19) – Medix’s adherence to logic is put to the test when a real rescue
continually goes wrong. “Five
into Four” (2/2/19) – Noticing that there are only 4 Rescue Bots, the recruits
believe one of them will end up cut. “Rescue
Promo” (2/2/19) – Whirl takes on finishing the Rescue Bots recruitment video on
her own, but finds her results keep being unusable. “Blame
Game” (2/9/19) – Forced to miss a Cube game due to a botched exercise he blames
on his teammates, Hot Shot goes out on a solo rescue to show off his skills. “Medix
Surprise” (2/9/19) – The recruits try to change Medix’s dislike of surprises by
finding him the right kind. “The
TX3000” (2/16/19) – Hot Shot is afraid to admit he never used a certain rescue
tool before, causing him to almost botch a dangerous rescue. “Little
Bot Peep” (2/16/19) – Unwilling to miss out on the action, Hoist keeps leaving
his stasis pod before he’s fully recuperated. “Driving
a Wedge” (2/23/19) – Thinking a construction bot doesn’t have much to offer,
Wedge continually avoids a visiting Wes. “The
Big, Small Rescue” (2/23/19) – The recruits head into space to save a tiny
planet. “Battle
of the Bots” (3/16/19) – Wedge worries he doesn’t have the skill to win the
challenge he just made with Hot Shot. “About
a Rock” (3/2/19) – Hot Shot brings back a sample from an asteroid that ends up
being an alien, now loose in the academy. “Dog
Stray Afternoon” (3/9/19) – The recruits decide to keep a dog that follows them
back from a mission. “Lucky
Ducky” (3/9/19) – Cody loans Hot Shot his lucky rubber duck to help combat his string
of bad luck. “The
Secret of Flight” (3/16/19) – Blades is called in to help Hot Shot master his
flying abilities. “Go
Team, Go!” (3/2/19) – The recruits aren’t interested in Whirl’s attempts to
teach them cheerleading routines to inspire them on rescues. “Screen
Time” (3/23/19) – Cellphones prove a distraction for the recruits at an
inopportune time as Wes ends up trapped in a mine. “Fright
at the Museum” (3/23/19) – A visit to a museum has everyone thinking Whirl’s imagining
a crime in progress. “Space
Case” (9/7/19) – The recruits are on their own as they head into space to find
out what happened to the Rescue Bots on their last mission. “All
at Sea” (9/7/19) – An underwater clean-up mission turns into danger thanks to
the recruits competing with each other. “All
Washed Up” (9/7/19) – Hoist invents a cleaning droid to keep the school clean,
but everyone tinkers with it causing it to go haywire. “Who’s
Teaching Who?” (9/7/19) – The recruits are allowed to teach the Rescue Bots to
prove learning can be fun, which ends up backfiring when a rescue occurs. “Balloon
Up a Tree” (9/14/19) – A simple removal of a balloon from a tree ends up not
being so simple. “The
Mystery of Dragon Mountain” (9/14/19) – A simulation that pits the recruits
against a dragon teaches them that the obvious answer isn’t always the right
one. “Hack
Attack” (9/21/19) – Hot Shot causes his computer game to merge with Chase’s
simulation, pitting the recruits against giant hedgehogs. “Life
of the Party” (9/21/19) – Medix attempts to develop a sense of humor which ends
up causing a rescue to go wrong. “Tyrannosaurus
Wrecked” (9/28/19) – The recruits try to help Hoist overcome his fear of
dinosaurs when Grimlock comes to teach. “Dino
Hard” (9/28/19) – Hoist stays behind when Grimlock takes the others to Dino
Island, but the island ends up coming to him when a triceratops goes through
and damages the Ground Bridge. “Buddy
Cop” (10/5/19) – Hot Shot finds himself partnered with the worst partner for
their stealth exercise: Grimlock. “Escape
from Penguin Island” (10/5/19) – An electrical storm hampers the recruits’
ability to adequately rescue a colony of penguins. “All
that Glitters” (10/19/19) – Hoist cheats to get a chance to pick the location
for their next sim: the Old West. “Dig
Fest” (10/19/19) – Wedge ends up ignoring their mission to find pieces of a
crashed satellite to compete in a construction vehicle rally. “Trick
or Treat” (10/26/19) – Cody takes the Bots out for
their first Halloween, but Wedge's desire to be like Bumblebee ends up putting
humans at risk when a real emergency happens. “Monster
Savings” (10/26/19) – Believing the monster in a commercial to be real, Medix
heads to Milford to save the city. “Tune
Out” (11/2/19) – Hoist can only remember an important code by humming a tune,
and unfortunately it turns out to be catchy and puts their missions in
jeopardy. “Metal
Munchers” (11/2/19) – A field trip puts the recruits in contact with a swarm of
metal-eating Scraplets. “Bee
Prepared” (11/9/19) – Wedge flounders in his attempts to impress a visiting
Bumblebee. “Whirl’s
Wise-Bot Quest” (11/9/19) – Blades turns Whirl onto a wise guru that could help
her overcome her doubts when she struggles with a tricky maneuver. “Flying
Hunk-A-Junk” (11/16/19) – Improper disposal of their trash in space causes it
to gather into a massive ball that could destroy the Earth. “Into
the Depths” (11/16/19) – The recruits head into the deep sea to rescue an unmanned
submersible, but the dark waters make communicating difficult. “Milford
Goes to the Dogs” (11/23/19) – Hoist tries out his new communication system
while they investigate why dogs act strangely near the school. “The
Ice Wave” (11/23/19) – The recruits try to come to terms with a sim they can’t
beat. “Best
Bots Forever Part 1” (11/30/19) – Hot Shot decides to quit the team in order to
help his old friend’s team in Cube. “Best
Bots Forever Part 2” (11/30/19) – Hot Shot discovers his new team isn’t very
team-like, while his old team struggles to carry on without him. Season
2: “Back
to School” (3/21/20) – For their second year the recruits are teamed-up with
teacher tutors, and not everyone is happy about their pairings. “Mission
Dinobot” (3/21/20) – Hoist ends up having to go on a space ship retrieval
mission with Grimlock and his dinobot pals. “In
Training” (3/28/20) – Hot Shot takes offense at being assigned chores by
Heatwave rather than any kind of real training. “Medix
Steps Up to the Bat” (3/28/20) – Hot Shot gets blamed when a bat Medix brought
to Cybertron gets loose and ends up causing trouble. “Robo-Cody”
(4/4/20) – The recruits mistakenly believe Cody wanted to be just like them and
build him a faulty robo-suit. “Heatwave’s
Shiny Coat” (4/4/20) – To teach Medix that he can’t plan for everything, Blades
has him watch an unpredictable dog. “Acting
Out” (4/18/20) – Everyone is excited to participate in Griffin Rock’s “Play in
the Park” except for Wedge, who feels acting has nothing to do with rescue
work. “Need
to Know” (4/18/20) – Wedge thinks learning math and science aren’t important
until Bumblebee brings him on a mission that needs them. “Trouble
Cubed” (4/25/20) – Things get out of hand when Hot Shot “borrows” Grimlock’s cube,
necessitating asking for Grimlock’s help. “My
Favorite Rescue” (4/25/20) – As a reward for doing well in training, the
recruits are allowed to choose to engage in their favorite rescue sim. “The
Great Energon Rush” (5/2/20) – Hoist and the dinobots go prospecting for
Energon and end up trapped in the ancient mine. “The
Vault of the Primes” (5/2/20) – The recruits must complete an ancient sim in
order to gain access to a Cybertronian Vault. “Wild
Ghost Chase” (5/9/20) – Whirl is tasked with investigating the paranormal with
her reluctant partner, Medix. “Little
Plot of Horrors” (5/9/20) – Medix decides to find a plant-like alien a new
home, but Earth’s environment causes it to grow out of control. “Museum
Mystery” (5/16/20) – When a new exhibit goes missing, Chase believes
supposedly-reformed crooks Evan and Myles are behind the theft. “Partners”
(5/16/20) – The recruits are called on to help in the rescue of Cody’s friend
Frankie, who’s trapped with some kids inside of a dome that’s shrinking by the
minute. “Critical
Condition (5/23/20) – Despite his best intentions in improving his teammates,
the others find Medix’s observations to be overly harsh and critical. “Fun
Droids” (5/23/20) – Malfunctioning droids turn an amusement park into a death
trap. “Power
Up and Energize” (5/30/20) – Hot Shot is unhappy with the new tool his spark
supposedly chose for him and convinces Wedge to swap. “Shall
We Dance?” (5/30/20) – Cody helps the recruits work on their grace and balance
with ballet lessons. “Mul-T-Change
of Pace” (6/6/20) – Hot Shot sets out to learn how to unlock the full potential
of his Mul-T-Cog. “Five
Little Rescue Bots” (6/6/20) – Whirl relies on her powers of observation as her
teammates disappear one-by-one on a training mission. “Good
Advice” (6/20/20) – Medix learns that his good advice is sometimes hard to take
himself. “Campfire
Fright” (6/20/20) – A spooky camp story has Hot Shot believing the noises in
the school are from the creature in the tale. “Small
Cogs” (6/27/20) – Hot Shot convinces the recruits to don their new Mul-T-Cogs
before they’re ready to handle them. “Big
Wheels” (6/27/20) – The recruits think hard on what their new alternate forms
should be, particularly Hot Shot. “The
Empty City” (6/13/20) – The recruits think a distress signal came from Hot Shot’s
old teammates when they ended up trapped in an old space city, but it was
coming from the city itself! “First
Responder” (6/13/20) – Wedge must choose between going to Wes’ first responder
test or to a rescue-a-thon with Bumblebee. “How
to Train Your Scraplet” (6/13/20) – The recruits are assigned to train five
Scraplets. “Helicopter
Heroes” (6/13/20) – Whirl gets distracted by how much attention Medix receives
in his helicopter mode. “Brushfire”
(6/1/20) – The recruits meet up with Australian Autobot Brushfire as wildfires
rage out of control and send kangaroos on stampedes in fear. “The
Ties that Bind” (6/1/20) – Whirl rescues a powered-down Scorch and ends up
spending all day towing him back to the school. “Bot
Blog” (6/2/20) – Whirl posts an embarrassing video of Hot Shot to the new bot
blog, but before she can take it down it goes viral. “The
Icebot Cometh” (6/2/20) – Wedge refuses to use anything other than his sportscar
form to deal with a runaway train. “More
Than Meets the Eye” (6/3/20) – Figuring out how to deal with a Decepticon they’ve
rescued causes Wedge to reveal a big secret. “Things
That Go Bot in the Night” (6/3/20) – Hoist investigates mysterious damages
around the school, and all the clues point to a dinobot culprit. “Medix
Gets Schooled” (6/4/20) – When Perceptor seems more interested in the other
recruits, Medix tries to get himself noticed. “Rescue
Teens” (6/4/20) – The recruits find themselves jealous over some teens who
become famous rescue heroes. “Enter
the Flood” (6/5/20) – Dealing with a flood on a distant planet causes the
recruits to constantly interfere with the local wildlife. “Wizard
of Botz” (6/5/20) – Believing her streak of good student reviews might end,
Whirl tries to avoid hers by any means. “The
Tracker” (6/8/20) – Whirl enlists the help of Slash to track down Huxley
Prescott when he goes missing. “One
of Our Dragons is Missing” (6/8/20) – Failing to deal with a small problem in
Hero Hall gives Hoist and Hot Shot the larger problem of a dragon attacking
Milford. “Dino-mite
Duo” (6/9/20) – Sludge and Snarl find themselves having to deal with a rescue
when all of the Rescue Bots are away. “The
Lonely Titan” (6/9/20) – Wanting some alone time Wedge volunteers for a solo
mission on Citadel Secundus, which ends up being companionship for the lonely
Titan. “X
Marks the Bot” (6/10/20) – Hot Shot gains an appreciation for humans when he
discovers a Cybertronian treasure is really a Cybertronian peril. “Making
Tracks” (6/10/20) – Hot Shot learns teaching can be difficult when Bumblebee
makes him Wedge’s speed coach. “Don’t
Be Alarmed” (6/11/20) – The recruits learn their new homemade sires can affect
some alien creatures. “Powerless”
(6/11/20) – The recruits are challenged to complete a rescue without relying on
their Power-Up tools. “Griffin
Rock Rocks!” (6/12/20) – The recruits must stay out of sight from the visiting
crowds while attempting to rescue Medix’s favorite DJ during his performance. “Bot
Battle” (6/12/20) – It takes a bot battle to make Hot Shot realize he may have
underestimated Chuck. “Space
Party” (6/15/20) – While the Bots all celebrate the end of year two on
Secundus, an anti-energon field knocks them all out leaving just Hot Shot and
Whirl to stop Secundus from crashing into Earth. “Crash
of the Titan” (6/15/20) – Working together with their allies, the recruits get
Secundus safely to Earth and Optimus welcomes a new class of recruits to begin
their training at the school.