Welcome to
El Bosque Escondido: Home of The Missmas.
A vibrant, animated tale of magic, matriarchy, pan dulce, and the wildest miniature village you’ve never seen.
The Magic Returns to Saturday Mornings
Remember the golden age of Saturday morning cartoons? We are bringing that nostalgic magic back with a fresh, hilarious, and culturally rich twist.
Welcome to our new show “The Missmas”, a magical world hidden deep within an uncharted cave, blossoming into a lush, secret oasis where no human or beast can tread. Here, among giant agave plants, vibrant cempasúchil (marigolds), and miniature homes crafted from colorful painted adobe and hollowed-out terracotta pots, thrives a unique and magical society.
Forget everything you know about your regular garden gnomes, elves and fairies.
Meet the Village
The Missmas are a fierce, vibrant community of tiny, brown-skinned female gnomes adorned in woven rebozos, embroidered huipiles, and folklorico dresses. They ride giant monarch butterflies like majestic steeds and live in a bustling, harmonious matriarchy. Leading the charge are our colorful heroines:
– La Jefa (The Mama Missma): The wise, deeply respected curandera of the village, wrapped in a beautifully embroidered rebozo. She holds the secrets of ancient magic and herbal remedies.
– La Fuerte: The undeniable muscle of the community. A die-hard Lucha Libre fan who never takes off her tiny luchador mask, always ready to lay the smackdown on any threat.
– La Romántica: The soulful heartbeat of the village, constantly strumming mariachi ballads on her tiny Spanish guitar to narrate the village’s daily drama.
… And Then There’s Nomito
In a village of extraordinary women stands exactly a one male gnome: Nomi (or “Nomito”).
Nomi tries incredibly hard to be the quintessential sensitive, modern man of the 2020s, often sporting pink attire and tapping into his feelings. However, as the village’s master baker, kneading heavy pan dulce dough by hand every morning has left himin great shape. Despite his modern aspirations, he is traditionally masculine at heart—solidified by his eternal, oversized mustache, his tiny charro suit, and a sombrero. He is the ultimate gentleman, never a machista, and is fiercely—and hilariously—protected by the Missmas in the village.
Trouble in Paradise
Life in El Bosque Escondido isn’t just fresh sweet bread and butterfly rides. The Missmas must constantly outwit a bizarre cast of interlopers:
– El Chupas: By day, a greedy, bumbling (and surprisingly vegetarian) chupacabras obsessed with eating the Missmas’ magical, delicious, beauty-preserving “Turuduru” fruit. But when the full moon rises, he mutates into a Nahual—a handsome, aristocratic, dark-sorcerer human whose bizarre obsession is hunting the Missmas just to smell their hair.
– El Ruko: An old, party-loving human treasure hunter seeking lost Aztec gold. After a wildly intoxicating night led to him falling into a subterranean river, the current washed him onto the shores of the Missmas village. Now, he wanders the jungle, unable to remember exactly how to get back to the village (or if it was just a tequila-fueled dream), driven by legends passed down by his indigenous grandfather—the only other human to ever see a Missma.