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(The Channel Awesome logo is shown, followed by the title sequence. Open on NC sleeping on the couch, snoring and all, surrounded by various pop culture memorabilia of all kinds. Lying on the floor, and are wide awake, unable to sleep because of NC's snoring; from their perspective, it sounds like all kinds of loud noises: a jackhammer, an elephant trumpet, a Tarzan yell, a Howie Long scream, and a. Suddenly, outside, the moon explodes, turning into a sun, looking like the one from Teletubbies, and NC is wide awake and smiling; he puts on his glasses) NC: MORNING! (brushes his hand in front of his friends' faces, to their annoyance) Wake up, wake up, wake up, wake up, it's Saturday morning!
Tamara: (groggily) Critic, we didn't get much sleep. NC: Too excited for your bowl of (takes two bowls of.) Lucky Frosted Cocoa Trix! (gives them to his friends) It's part of a complete breakfast!
Malcolm: (disgusted) From where, Dairy Queen's dumpster? NC: Now, don't be like that. I poured you each a bowl of that last Saturday in preparation for this! Tamara: You mean this has been out for a week?!
NC: It helps open up the flavors. (Malcolm looks toward his bowl, looking rather sick; the cereal is a very moldy green) Tamara: (giving NC her bowl) I had a big dinner. Malcolm: (doing likewise) And I'm vegetarian. I'm pretty sure that used to be alive. NC: (shrugs) Suit yourself.
(eats the cereal himself) Tamara: Okay, Critic, can you explain why we're up at dick o'clock in the morning? NC: (laughs with his mouth full) I forgot at your humble age, you know of the ritual of Saturday morning. (Shots of kids watching TV are shown) NC (vo): You see, Saturday morning used to be a special time for kids, we often have friends sleepover the night before and then wake up to the majesty of television: (A collage of Saturday morning cartoon shows is shown) Saturday morning cartoons, each one filled with brain-rotting material coaxing us to buy teeth-rotting material. Unfortunately, TV did its job too well, and the following generation said, (Cut to a shot of 24/7 kids' channels: HBO Family, Starz Kids & Family, Nicktoons, Boomerang, etc.) 'Let's just have this shit raise our kids 24/7.' Thus, every second of every goddamn day was already Saturday morning cartoons, and they got rid of them years later.
Society sucks! Malcolm: Okay, we're not ten years old; we had Saturday morning cartoons, too. Tamara: We're just wondering why we're here this Saturday morning? NC: Oh, well, that's because we're paying homage of the best in Saturday morning awesomeness, 'Fox Kids'! (A montage of clips of various Fox Kids shows is shown) NC (vo): In 1990, the then-still-young Fox Network aired its Saturday Morning lineup of shows called 'Fox Kids'. It included bumpers, PSAs, catchy songs, and, of course, some of the best kids shows to ever aired on TV.
Eventually branching out to Monday through Friday as well, Fox Kids lasted twelve years, an unbelievable run when you consider its counterpart, (image of.) the, lasted only seven years. While half of these shows can still be viewed today, some of them have sadly never gotten a DVD release or were never aired again. So keep in mind, we're not going to look at every single show that aired on Fox Kids, because, like I said, this is twelve years of material. We're just going to look at the most unique, inspired,. (hesitates slightly) memorable parts of the greatest Saturday morning line up there was. NC: So, with our sugar-coated poison in hand. Tamara: (pointing to her right).younger kids wanting to watch what the older kids are watching.
(Suddenly, and from 'Top 5' come in) Heather: Hey, guys! Walter: Can we watch the show, too? Malcolm.and an overprotective parent who thinks if it's not Sesame Street, it's bad for them. (Barney Walker walks in and speaks to Walter and Heather) Barney: I'm sorry, kids, but you're too young to see this kind of stuff. Heather: (disappointed) I'm older than half of them over there!
Barney: Shoo, shoo. (NC, Malcolm and Tamara wave good-bye as Walter and Heather leave in disappointment) Walter: I hate you! You're not even my real father!
Barney: (to NC and his friends) Kids, are you enjoying Saturday morning? NC, Malcolm and Tamara: (in unison) Yes, Dad. (Malcolm and Tamara roll their eyes as they say this) Barney: That's good, I'm going to make some waffles on the stove just for you. NC, Tamara, and Malcolm look puzzled) Malcolm: Do.do we have a stove? (They jump by the sound of an explosion of the stove and hear Barney scream) NC: We'll.figure out how that happened later. This is Fox Kids!
(As he eats the cereal, the intro to Fox Kids plays; NC, Malcolm and Tamara dance and sing along) Singer: ♫ Sit back, chill out, see what all the talk's about, everybody knows. ♫ Plucky Duck: (Singing) ♫ It's on FOX! ♫ Singer: ♫ There's Tiny Toons and Dynamo, Plucky Duck with his own show! ♫ Malcolm: What was that? NC: I-I, it was complicated, we'll get to it when we get to it. Singer: ♫ Everybody knows it's on FOX! Now Batman's gonna show you, he's the greatest superhero!
The Cat, Taz and Bobby, Super Dave, Tom and Jerry. ♫ Tamara: That doesn't rhyme. NC: Keep going, keep going! Singer: ♫ Dog City, X-Men, too, Merrie Melodies, Beetlejuice, everybody kno-o-o-ows (Everybody knows.) they're on FOX! Bugs Bunny: It's on FOX!
Plucky: It's on FOX! Joker: It's on FOX!
Platypus Brothers: It's on FOX! Singer: ♫ Oh! Big surprises, fresh new faces, now you know the cool places, everybody kno-o-o-ows, everybody knows.
♫ NC, Malcolm and Tamara: IT'S ON FOX! (An explosion occurs as we transition into the list of shows to come). Contents Bobby's World (The opening titles for this are shown) NC (vo): Let's start with one of their earliest staples, Bobby's World. Malcolm: Oh, I've seen this.
It's like if Calvin and Hobbes were made by Ned Flanders. NC: Hey, it's a lot more than that. Tamara: It sounds pretty accurate. NC: Yeah, okay, it's pretty accurate. NC (vo): Bobby's World was based off of a little boy voice that comedian Howie Mandel did for his popular stand-up. (Cut to a clip of Howie at stand-up) Howie: (doing the exact voice) If my parrot friend can't sing. I'm gonna kill that one, too!
Bobby: That's my name! (giggles) NC (vo): And because the 90s were a strange time where crude comedians got kid-friendly shows, (posters of Waynehead, Life with Louie, Camp Candy, Little Rosey and Rick Moranis in Gravedale High are shown) he was given one of his own.
Just look at how awkward he is in the live-action openings. Howie: Hi, everyone, I'm Howie, welcome to Bobby's World! And you know what I really hate? Of course you don't, because you don't know me. You know what I hate? NC: (as Howie) GERMS! God, I hate germs!
NC (vo): While certainly aimed at a younger demographic than the other Fox Kids shows, Bobby's World showcased the imagination of a little boy misinterpreting what adults say. Either that, or he swallowed all his mother's NyQuil. Either way, neat.
The characters included Howie as his father, with the Jew-fro, rat-tail haircut. NC (vo): The cast of Fargo as his mother. Martha: Now you need to go upstairs and wash your face and hands before we leave for aunt Ruth, don't ya know. NC (vo): His older brother representing the 90s trying to kill the 80s, and his older sister representing the 80s refusing to die. Along with Uncle Ted, who gives an obligatory fart joke.
Bobby: How come you can make bubbles without putting your face in the water? Uncle Ted: Tell ya what, Bobbo, let's just keep that our little secret, okay?
NC: (smiling widley) NC (vo): Bobby had children's fantasies often based on movies a kid his age wouldn't see yet. Looks like somebody read the kid-friendly version of Die Hard. (The book A Die Hard Christmas: The Illustrated Holiday Classic is shown) Tamara: So, was it any good?
Hypnotizingly unoffensive. NC (vo): It's for little kids, so it's simple, but imaginative. It even had possibly the first Saturday morning character get pregnant, and we actually see her progression throughout the season. Little touches like that make it stand out just enough.
And I guess kids thought the same thing, because it was surprisingly one of Fox's longest-running shows. Add a catchy-as-hell theme song, and you have a decent start to the Fox Kids lineup. (The show's title is shown) Tom and Jerry Kids Tamara: That's cool and all, but how about some more violent stuff?
NC: Well, you're in luck, 'cause this network also had Tom and Jerry. Tamara: I retract that 'yes'.
Singer: ♫ Talkin' bout the Tom and Jerry Kids ♫ (Clips from the show are shown) NC (vo): Yeah, another strange trend in kid shows for a while (Pictures of Muppet Babies, The Flintstone Kids, Yo, Yogi, and A Pup Named Scooby-Doo are shown) was just making famous characters younger. Because if there's anything better than seeing someone brutally dismembered and maimed, it's.
Seeing it happen to them as children? Malcolm: (grins) Finally, somebody gets it!
(NC and Tamara turn and stare at him strangely) Malcolm: (still grinning) I have issues! NC (vo): It was pretty much the same thing as the regula r Tom and Jerry cartoons, except it was done with kids, so the slapstick wasn't nearly as violent, and therefore, not nearly as funny.
Granted, it had other characters, too, like Spike and his son Tyke, Droopy and his son Dripple. In fact, how are Tom and Jerry younger if their counterparts are the same age?
And how is (Picture of James Bond and M from Skyfall ) Skyfall a prequel if M is in Goldeneye? Also, how did (Picture of Minions on a dinosaur from the 2015 movie is shown) Minions exist with dinosaurs millions of years ago?! Tamara: (Puts her hand on NC's shoulder) This is a road you don't want to go down on. (Malcolm puts his hand on NC's other shoulder. Both start shaking their heads on him while he looks around with a worried look with ominous music playing. Cut to Barney shaking his head at him as well. He soon snaps out of his worried state) NC: (confused) Okay, I'll never bring it up again- Tamara: Never.
(Clips from the show are played again) NC (vo): Much like Bobby's World, this was obviously meant for smaller children, so it was tamer and more gentle than previous versions. Malcolm: So, not good. NC (vo): But for little kids, it gets the job done, I guess. I mean, it is better than other outings Tom and Jerry have had recently.
(The poster for is shown, and then various faces of the cartoon Willy Wonka while speaking ominously) Never forget those faces. It lasted a few seasons, though, so it obviously had its fans. It's not the cat and mouse team we remember, but it's not obnoxious either. It wasn't harmful enough to be Tom and Jerry, but it was harmless enough to be a decent distraction for little kids.
Singer: ♫ Tom and Jerry Kids! ♫ Chorus: ♫ The Tom and Jerry Kids New Show! ♫ Peter Pan and the Pirates NC: But let's get to something more grisly and adult: Peter Pan and the Pirates. Let me explain! (Opening intro is shown with the theme music playing) NC (vo): We all know the classic book, play, and, but few adaptations of Peter Pan ever captured the darker and surprisingly more adult take of the original J.M. Barrie story than this one. I know that sounds strange, but this was actually a really great show.
There were ideas that took concepts from the original book and pushed them even further. For example, Peter steals the pirates' shadows, and what happens? They walk upside down because they've lost their anchor to the ground. That's so creatively strange, but it weirdly makes sense. In another episode, Peter is gone for too long and forgets about everybody because he's distracted by Wendy's future daughter in the real world, who he brings back to Neverland to meet her future mother, despite them being roughly the same age. Jane: Bye, Uncle Michael, Uncle John.
(to Wendy who is crying) Why are you sad? Wendy: Because I learned today that I shall have to leave Neverland sometime. But I'm happy, 'cause when I do, I'm going to have a daughter as wonderful as you. NC (vo): It's super surreal, but it's also surprisingly adult. It's kind of like the ending of (Picture of Peter and adult Wendy from this animated movie is shown) where young Peter meets older Wendy.
That's a lot of people's favorite part in that movie, and this show is mostly comprised of scenes like that. The characters all have fleshed-out personalities, with Peter always hungry for mischief, the Lost Boys and pirates all having distinct character traits, and in my opinion, the best Captain Hook ever portrayed played by the only actor who could perfectly portray him. NC: Literally, the first perfect thought that comes into your head is who plays him! Malcolm and Tamara: Tim Curry.
NC: You're goddamn RIGHT, Tim Curry! Captain Hook: If I must die, I will encounter darkness as a bride and hug it in my arms. NC (vo): This is the first Captain Hook that has dimension to him. Yes, he's an angry screamer and a scoundrel, but he prides himself on being a gentleman and a sophisticate. One minute, he's ready to stab your heart, but the next, he might let you go if you make him laugh with a reading of Shakespeare.
Captain Hook: Ugh, dear Bard, they give you death by inches. Oh, Shakespeare, give thanks that you aren't here to witness this atrocity. NC (vo): He was an egotist, but still valued his bizarre ethics. It made him both funny and intimidating at the exact same time.
And nowhere is the series' complexity shown best than in its series finale, where Peter decides he does want to grow up, and he starts to wither away into an old man, unaware that he's actually taking Neverland with him. So you could argue Hook was portrayed even before Hook was doing it. It's surprisingly intense and unbelievably well done. It lasted for only one season, but it resulted in a ton of episodes and had a pretty good life in reruns.
Criminally, though, there is no DVD release of it. If you're able to find it on YouTube or anywhere else, definitely watch as many of them as you can.
It's a cannonball of imagination waiting for you. (The show's title is shown again) Attack of the Killer Tomatoes Malcolm: That's all fine and good, but what about the poor people who demand a series about demonic fruit? (NC and Tamara stare at him) I had no segue into the show. Singers: ♫ Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! ♫ (Attack of the Killer Tomatoes clips are shown) NC (vo): So, um, because we apparently demanded it, Attack of the Killer Tomatoes was given its own cartoon series. Based on the B-movie comedies, it did have some of the original characters like Igor, Tara, that parachute guy (Wilbur), and even John Astin reprising his role as the mad scientist who made the evil vegetables.
Malcolm: Fruit. NC: It's 2018, nobody uses that term anymore. NC (vo): It certainly had the strangeness of the films down, but it didn't have much more beyond that.
The plot is similar to the movies. In that, a mad scientist wants to take over the world with the tomatoes and his failed experiments, Tara and F.T., and Tomato War veteran, Wilbur, tries to stop them. He gets help from the main lead, a boy who was not in the movies (Chad), and you can clearly see why.
He's pretty bland and forgettable, and the animation doesn't do him or any of the other characters any favors. Chad: (Is talking with Tara and for some reason she keeps turning her head back and forth) You know you're supposed to stay away from salt!
If someone sees you- NC (vo): What is up with this girl? Is the binary code on her neck being hacked? (as Tara, in a robotic voice) Must blackmail George Clooney with Return of the Killer Tomatoes footage. (Clip of said movie) Matt Stevens (Clooney): Yo! NC (vo): Look at this scene: she has to lean over to talk to F.T., but look how she does it.
Tara: (It looks like she's almost upside down when she talks to F.T.) It's Igor! Gangreen- NC (vo): What the hell? Is this part of the joke, or is it just poorly animated?
The whole show is kind of like this, leaving you with no idea what's intentional and what isn't. Even the dialogue you can't figure out what they're aware of and what they're not. Tara: Being a luscious, ripe tomato can be hard on a girl.
(Everyone looks uncomfortable with what she just said) NC: Whatever you're thinking, erase it from your heads. Tamara: I had a line about her being saucy, but never mind.
NC (vo): I guess on a level of bizarre awkwardness, I can see this entertaining a few, but for many kids, the most memorable part of the show was the theme song, but, goddamn, that's a catchy theme song. Singers: ♫ Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! ♫ Beetlejuice NC: But not all of the Fox Kids shows started off on Fox Kids. (Opening title is shown with Danny Elfman's theme music) NC (vo): A charming story about a dead man who befriends an underage girl he was going to marry. (A still from the live action movie is shown) Malcolm: (cheerfully) Finally, somebody who gets it! NC: Do I have to worry about you? Malcolm: You might.
(Clips from the show play) NC (vo): Beetlejuice had only the slightest connection to the movie, which was surprisingly welcomed as it allowed for a lot of wild and inventive designs. Granted, in the movie, everybody looks the way they do because they died that way, here. Well, I don't know how the shit they were supposed to die to look like this.
Tim Burton himself helped design the show, and it certainly shows in all the strange people and creatures. It had little in terms of plot, but it had a lot in terms of visual and gross-out humor. At the time especially when there wasn't much in terms of dark or macabre cartoons, this one gave us a small, but still memorable taste of the enjoyably morbid. It was a waste of time, but it was a fun waste of time.
(End of the theme is shown) Little Shop NC: But I know what you're thinking, 'If Beetlejuice got a cartoon, why not Little Shop of Horrors?' Tamara: Because no one was thinking that. NC: Just for that, the plant raps! Tamara: NOOOOOOOO- NC: (while Tamara is still yelling) YEEEEEEEE- (Cue the cartoon opening and title card) Singers: ♫ Little Shop, Little Shop.
Take me to the- ♫ NC (vo): Little Shop is based on the musical interpretation about the man-eating plant, except Seymour is now a little boy, the plant raps instead of sings, and absolutely none of it looks completed. (A clip from the episode Bad Seed is shown) Junior: (Rapping) ♫ You got boxes on rubber that skid on snow! / If this place weren’t so sorry, it’d be a big joke! / That's why I'm outta here!
You know what I'm sayin'? ♫ Malcolm: This looks more like the bumpers you see before they go to commercial. NC: You don't give those bumpers enough credit. NC (vo): The focus of the show is the plant (Junior) is trying to get Seymour to win the girl (Audrey) and defeat the bully (Paine Driller), while also running a plant shop that's constantly infested with bad musical numbers.
Mushnik: (singing) ♫ My business is a bust. Business, what a joke.
♫ Other flowers in the shop: (singing) ♫ Shooby-doo-ba ♫ NC: God, I wish this had. NC (vo): Why's he even shocked the plant is talking? The flowers act as backup singers all the time! Not even sure if the plant is talking, his lips move so rarely.
Junior: (his lip movements are exactly how NC stated) 'C' is for 'commuter train.' Many parts are edible. NC (vo): I guess I can give credit that for a show that had a budget of monkey feces, the backgrounds are at least creatively simple. I mean, I'm sure the layout artist had two minutes to color these on Mario Paint, but there is at least a little structure in between the poorly animated sections. Oh, God, he's having a stroke.nope, it's just a bad show. Junior: (Rapping) ♫ Now something's gone bad, it's a crime and disgrace / You got stones for ground, walls in your face ♫ NC (vo): The writing doesn't make any sense either.
The girl in the show is obsessed with a refrigerator. I'm going to repeat that.
The girl in the show is obsessed with a refrigerator. And they never explain why. Audrey: It's the most beautiful thing I've ever seen! (She hugs the fridge) I think it's really cool. Seymour: Women.
(NC and Malcolm awkwardly turn to Tamara) Tamara: Hey, my love of refrigerators has nothing to do with my gender! Now, if you'll excuse me. (She gets up and hugs the fridge while crying) Tamara: (sobbing) Oh, I love you so much! Oh, you're so good to me. I love you so much.
Malcolm: Clearly, Little Shop of Horrors was ahead of its time. NC (vo): Like I said, this has little redeeming value, but I'm sorry, I have to reference a Little Shop of Horrors cartoon show in the 90s where the plant raps! I know you think it's a crime it exists, but it's an even bigger crime to act like it doesn't exist. The show lasted only 13 episodes before it was yanked, and you can see why this fertilizer didn't get far. Junior: (Rapping) ♫ Word!
♫ Taz-Mania Malcolm: I'm noticing a pattern of characters that most likely wouldn't make a good show. NC: Not making a good show? Tamara: Were there any existing characters that would allow for clever writing or intelligent dialogue? (After a beat, we're shown to a clip of, of all things, the Tasmanian Devil, making his signature unintelligible noises and raspberrying at the viewer. Malcolm and Tamara, understandably, look confused) NC.Yes, really. Singers: ♫ Taz in Taz-Mania!
Down in Taz-Mania! Come to Taz-Mania! ♫ (Cut to clips of Taz-Mania ) NC (vo): Warner Bros. Was given the task of turning one of their most profitable Looney Tunes, the Tazmanian Devil, into a hit show. How do you do that, though, when his dialogue is mostly.
(In another clip, Taz once again makes his signature noises as he destroys a box) NC (vo): Well, they ingeniously make everyone else very well-spoken, even to the point of it being ridiculously overwritten. Man: Accumulate a portfolio, start with a net yield no less that 36 percent per annum. Hugh: There's nothing like a paper in a recliner craft chair for a man after a tough day of doing whatever it is I do for a living.
Molly: To rekindle the lost flame that connects our souls with the true harmony of the universe. Daniel Platypus: Now I am in a quandary. Timothy Platypus: Technology's the culprit here.
Daniel: Science be blamed. NC (vo): Because of this, not only did Taz-Mania have a distinct sense of humor, but its writing was surprisingly ahead of its time, along with other shows like Duckman and Simpsons.
(Cut to Malcolm and Tamara with more baffled looks on their faces) NC.Yes, really. NC (vo): Based in the land down under where Wakko Warner sings the theme song. Singer (Jess Harnell): ♫ Welcome to the land that's way under, down under ♫ NC (vo).Taz lives with his talkative family, interacting with his talkative friends and partaking in the conversations as little as possible. Much like the other Warner Bros. Shows, there's a lot of fourth wall breaking, a lot of slapstick and like I said, surprisingly a lot of talking, again, from a show where the main character talks like this.
(Taz makes his unintelligible noises again) NC (vo): Though not talked about by many, Taz-Mania still had an impressive four-year run. It had good animation, good timing and actors who had to talk a surprising mouthful for a show about a Tasmanian Devil. Daniel: Ferociously intense, not that he's likely to make much progress, given his choice of methodology. (Cut to a scene where Taz tries to hide his pet turtle Dog from his mom) Jean: Got a house to show, a career seminar to attend, some charity work to do and a dinner party to prepare, so my schedule's pretty much open.
NC (vo): It's so strange this would be both as funny and as worthy as it is, but maybe that's part of a bigger joke in general; that the most dialogue-focused slapstick children's show was around this guy. Timothy: Shall we pause to consider this irony? Daniel: Maybe later. NC (vo): Sadly, there's only a few DVD releases of this show; it honestly deserves a lot more. The episodes you can find, though, are a ton of laughs and had a lot more work put into them than they probably deserved.
To put it short, Taz-Mania is a heck of a spin. Chorus: ♫ Come to Taz-Mania!
♫ (Taz makes his signature noises for a final time before the theme ends) Tiny Toon Adventures (and The Plucky Duck Show) (Cut to a clip from where Jerry is watching TV) Jerry: (Talking on the phone) Nothing, I'm, uh, watching, uh, Tiny Toons here on Nickelodeon. (Cut to Kramer looking out the window) Jerry: (off-screen) Very innocent wholesome quality. (Singing) ♫ The wheels on the bus go round and round, round and round, round and round ♫ (Cut to NC, Malcolm and Tamara with blank looks on their faces) Tamara: What was that about?
NC: Oh, well, Tiny Toons is up next. Malcolm: But what did that have to do with it? NC: Because that scene always bothered me; it wasn't on Nickelodeon, it was on Fox Kids, and they didn't do stuff like sing The Wheels on the Bus Go Round and Round, it had good writing, it was a good show! SHAME ON YOU, SEINFELD, SHAME ON YOU! Tamara: Oh, my God, okay! NC: I'm sorry, I just.
I.never had an outlet to talk about that clip, it always bothered me, i-it always got so many things wrong about that clip, it was a good, decent show, it just has been building it up for a while, it's-! Malcolm: Critic. Critic, it's not your fault. Malcolm: It's not your fault. NC: (confused) I know.
Malcolm: It's not your fault. NC: (Looking distressed) Don't do this to me, man.
Malcolm: It's not your fault. NC: (Getting even more distressed) Don't do this to me, man! Not you, not you, man! Malcolm: It's not your fault. Malcolm: It's not your fault. (NC finally breaks down and cries on Malcolm's shoulder, with Malcolm comforting him) Tamara: Tiny Toons!
(NC keeps crying loudly while the theme for Tiny Toons begins) Buster Bunny: ♫ We're tiny! ♫ Babs Bunny: ♫ We're toony! ♫ All: ♫ We're all a little loony! ♫ (Clips from the show are followed) NC (vo): So having a very successful run in syndication, Fox Kids bought Tiny Toons and ran it from its third season on. It was one of the few shows based on the younger versions of popular characters that branched out not only to be successful and funny, but also obtained its own identity over time. Characters like Elmyra, Montana Max and Furrball were all very different from their counterparts, Elmer, Yosemite Sam and Sylvester. The nice thing is while in syndication, there was definitely a lean towards being more kid-friendly, but when it went to Fox, they broke out more of the classic Looney Tunes humor with celebrity jokes, in-jokes, satire, a.Buster that sounded eerily close to the Cryptkeeper.
Buster (Charlie Adler): (As the Cryptkeeper) Toons from the Crypt! (laughs maniacially, sounding accurately like the Cryptkeeper) NC (vo): It played well, so well that one of the most popular characters, Plucky Duck, was given his own show that same year.
Tamara: Yeah, so what was that? NC: It's.complicated. (Clips from The Plucky Duck Show follow) NC (vo): You see, the first episode of the spin-off was.actually hilarious. They're acknowledging he's getting his own show, but he abandons it to try and be Batman in Tim Burton's next movie.
It's amazing how funny it is. The violence, the satire, the celebrity in-jokes. Sean Young: (pops out of the lit.