Disney Afternoon



(We start off with the opening before dissolving into the Nostalgia Critic's living room)

(NC runs in, followed by Tamara Chambers and Malcolm Ray)

NC (wearing a no fear shirt and carrying a Marvel? backpack): Oh boy! Oh boy! Oh boy! Oh boy! Oh boy! (sits down and reaches into his backpack to pull out baseball and Ninja Turtles trading cards) Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! It's my favorite time of the day!

Tamara: Critic, I don't think the girls in the 90s wore this many hair products. I look like...Punky Brewster's recycling bin.

Malcolm: And why are my pants this baggy?

(Malcolm's pants are so baggy he's stepping on the knees)

Tamara: Also, why are all the logos on the back?

(She and Malcolm take off their jackets to reveal shirt with the logos "MAGICAL MOTHER FUCKER" on Tamara's shirt and "YOU'RE KILLING ME SMALLS" on Malcolm's shirt)

NC: It's all part of the experience. Now sit down before it starts!

Malcolm: Before what starts? You're just pressing play on the DVD player.

NC: You don't understand! This is the Disney Afternoon! There's a certain ritual to this: We act like we just got back from school, throw our belongings on the ground for our mothers to pick up, surround ourselves in high-fructose corn syrup, and reward ourselves for dealing with the mental scars of the tremendously flawed education system.

Tamara: Wait! A-Aren't you talking about Disney's One Saturday Morning on ABC?

NC: Fuck Disney's One Saturday Morning! That was just a carbon-copy cartoon-caust comparison compared to the Disney Afternoon!

Malcolm: Hey! Pepper Ann was good.

NC: Okay, maybe one.

Tamara: And Recess was decent.

NC: Yeah, if you wanna get technical...

Malcolm: And Kim Possible.

NC: Well, Kim Possible, obviously.

Tamara: And Proud Family.

NC: Whose dissin' The Proud Family? Nobody's dissin' The Proud Family while I'm around!

Malcolm: And there was also that other show, um...Doug. (NC's expression changes wild rapidly as he stares at Malcolm)  Yeah, that was a pretty good cartoon series. You can't deny that must've had some sort of impact on your life--

(Smash cut to Malcolm and Tamara sitting with NC. Malcolm's got a black eye and rubbing his jaw, blood leaking out the corner of his mouth

NC (after punching Malcolm): What you're both missing is that the Disney Afternoon had a timeless sense of magic and wonder that was the perfect welcome-home from a long day of schoolhouse popularity or awkward social punishment. So, if there's no other comparisons to "lesser forms of art"... (turning to look at Malcolm who is covering his chin with his hand).

Malcolm: (whimpering) I can't feel my teeth...

NC: We'll go ahead and get started!

(The intro to Disney Afternoon begins)

NC (excitedly): Oh my god! Here we go! Here we go! (He puts his arms around Malcolm and Tamara excitedly)

Singer (while NC dances with his friends): Step right up and come on in! It's where the fun begins! There's so much to do! Getting ready just for you! Everybody's busy bringing you a Disney Afternoon! Can you feel the fun! Well, come on and feel the buzz because everybody's busy! Just a little busy! Bringing you a Disney Afternoon!

NC (vo): *(Clips from the Disney Afternoon shows playing) For the first time ever from 1990-1997, Disney took some of its hit Syndicated shows and ran them with all new material in a two hour block called the Disney Afternoon. Sure, their were some reruns and specials featurning the old classic Dinsey cartoons before then, but this is the first time Disney put a slew of new programming back to back in one glorious line up. Most of it timeless (Gargoyles ); some of it not so much (Quack Pack and the Mighty Ducks), but we'll get to that when we get to that.

NC: Lets take a look at Disney's first installment Gummi Bears

Singer: (clips from The Gummi Bears opening playing) Gummi Bears bouncing here and there and everywhere. High Adventure that's beyond compare-

NC (vo): (Clips from the show) And yes the first thing you are thinking pops into everybody's head too. Why and/or how do you make a show based on a fruit snack, whose head and limbs you disturbingly bite off? Well, despite such a distracting commercial tie-in, the show, surprisingly, wasn't that bad. Alot of that had to do with its bright colours, fantasy focused environment, and a theme song sung by the most easily exciteable group ever. Just listen to how into it these guys get; it's impossible not to get sucked in yourself.

(The group also dances along to the theme)

Singer: High adventure that's beyond compare. They are the Gummi Bears. (NC mouths the words) Magic and mystery are part of their history. Along with the secret of Gummi Berry juice. Magic is growing, they take pride in knowing. They'll fight for what's right, whatever they do! Gummi Bears, bouncing here and there and everywhere. High adventure that's beyond compare. They are the Gummi Bears. They are the Gummi Bears!

NC: Little known fact, the singer actually died on that very last note, he was into it.

(The snippet is played, an explosion happening at the word "bears." NC and Malcolm take their hats off while Tamara takes a scrunchie off as a caption says "R.I.P. Guy Who Took Gummi Bears Too Seriously."

NC (vo): The show centers around a boy named Cavin. He lives in a kingdom trying to be conquered by a group of ogres led by an egotistical Duke.

Duke Sigmund Igthorn: King Gregor's castle will be nothing but a big pile of gravel! Get moving! Time is money! Or it would be if I were paying you!

NC (vo): Truth be told, I always thought the Duke through most of my childhood was just (picture of) Skeletor before he lost his flesh. In fact, maybe this all takes place in the same universe and Skeletor's just the Duke's ghost.

(The Duke is standing on the catapult, holding a boulder)

Duke: Come on! Forward! (his legs are giving out) Uh-oh! (and the boulder drops on him)

(One lightning crash and we now have Skeletor)

Skeletor: Oh, damn it! Now what flamboyant spectable am I going to chase--(he looks over and sees He-Man) Hellooo...

NC (vo): Cavin stumbles across the group of enchanted cereal mascots and learns of their secret weapon that can defeat the Duke: A liquid that gives them super strength and jumping abilities called ....

Tummi: Gummi Berry Juice.

Sunni: Gummi Berry Juice.

Grammi: Gummi Berry Juice.

Singer: Gummi Beary Juice.

NC (vo): You know couldn't you come up with a better name for such a gigantic source of power? Woudn't the force lose a little bit of it's magic if it was called something different.

Yoda: You must use the yummy muffy puffy.

Luke: Right.

NC (vo) So it's a constant battle between our loveable plush toys and the evil monsters and sorcerers that plague the land. The show had an innocence to it that made it silly, but still pretty enjoyable. But maybe alot of the shows intrigue came from the fact that it sounded like most of the bears ate your favourite cartoon characters. Like (picture of) Garfield......

Tummi: He's more homesick then we are.

NC (vo): (picture of) Tigger,

Zummi: Oh no, oh no, of course not Cubbi, that's just a story.

NC (vo): (Picture of) Natasha,

Grammi: Gruffi Gummi, you have the manners of a billy goat.

NC (vo): Tony Curtis,

Gruffi Gummi: Don't you tell me who I like and who I don't like.

NC (vo): And of course Nicholas Cage.

(Scene from Wickerman where Nicholas Cage, in a bear costume, punches a woman)

NC (vo): This is the way the teddy bears have their picnic bitch! (punches the woman)

NC (vo): Honestly the show worked suprisingly well, I'm kind of wondering if Disney maybe should consider doing other shows based on bitesized treats.

NC (vo): (mimicking Singer): Dorito's! Getting cheese crumbs on your goddamn clothes! They are the Dorito's!

Singer: They are the Gummi Bears!

NC: But that was only the first show in the line up. Next was the always popular DT.

Tamara (confused); Why don't you just say the title?

NC: Because I have (turns his head towards Tamara) literally 24 years after its release have just now gotten the theme song out of my head and I don't want to risk putting it back in my head by possibly saying the title once more.

Malcolm: You mean DuckTales?

(NC quickly turns his heads toward Malcolm as the theme song starts)

Singer: DuckTales! Woo-oo! Everyday-

(NC has blood on his hand and is waving it around while Malcolm lays unconscious on the couch in the background)

NC: As many of you know, I've talked about this show several times in the past in both my Raiders of the Story Arc and of course my Top 11 Catchiest Themes.

Tamara (concerned): Should we call an ambulance?

NC (calmly): It's too late for him, (back to the audience), So I won't waste too much time on this one.

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) But we can talk a little bit about it. The show centered around Scrooge McDuck looking after Hewey, Dewey, and Lewey, as their parents, once again, refuse to take any responsibility for them, and all the adventures and crazy characters they encounter finding treasures. It's sort of like Indiana Jones meets (picture of) Duckula, does anyone remember that? I don't care. Despite the fact that the focus of the story is continuing to reward the one percent, the show still kicks ass even years later, giving us all sorts of memorable secondary characters like Launchpad, that witch duck (Magica DeSpell), that inventor duck (Gyro Gearloose), the chubby woodchuck duck (Doofus), and robo duck (Gizmoduck).

NC: Hey, I said the characters were memorable, not the names.

NC (vo): It's still smart, it's still creative, and it's still incredibly likeable. It has just as much charm now as it did back then. But surely there must be another Disney title that also made an unbelievably good Capcom game?

Singer: C-C-C-Chip and Dale's Rescue Rangers

Ash Williams: Yeahhh babbbbyyyy!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) Now we're talking. Chip and Dale's Rescue Rangers was the famous chipmunk duo forming a team to help them save anyone in danger. Think of them as an anti-Pinky and The Brain.

Chip: (Shakes Gadget's hand) I'm Chip.

Dale: (Shakes Gadget's hand) And I'm Dale.

NC (vo): You know Chip and Dale of course, but on top of that, there was Gadget, Zipper, and Montery Jack. And while these characters were memorable and extremely likeable, it did suddenly make me realize the traditional team formula that lingered over most kid shows: For example, you have the inventor (Gadget), you have the muscle (Montery Jack), you have the leader (Chip), you have the goof off (Dale), and of course, the little cute one that's just so darn adorable (Zipper). But, let's be fair, this is when that formula was just starting to be put into effect. And give the show credit for putting two popular characters on a team instead of just keeping it two people, whose real voices sound like Babs Bunny and the crazy taxy guy, fighting over the same woman.

Chip (real voice): I've gotta hand it to you, Gadget, you were right about Tom after all.

Dale (real voice): I always believed in you.

(NC, Malcolm, and Tamara shudder)

NC (vo): Most of their time was spent fighting off evil schemes, usually from the diabolical Fat Cat.

Fat Cat: Hello, my galvanized feline friend.

NC (vo): And, surpisingly, he has no political tie-ins despite the fact that his name is in fact Fat Cat. Though I guess he does look a touch like (picture of) Christopher Christy.

Fat Cat: My million dollar dinner gone down the drain!

NC (vo): While we're on the subject, did you know that Chip and Dale were actually modeled after (picture of) Indiana Jones and (picture of) Magnum PI? God, wouldn't that have been a totally different show if it matched their personalities, too?

Chip (voiced by Indiana Jones): You stood up to be counted with the enemies of everything that the Grail stands for; Who gives a damn what you think!

Dale (voiced by Magnum PI): Hey! Did you come here just to abuse me?

NC (vo): The characters allowed for a lot of inventive storylines and ideas, like Gadget, being the rodent equivilent of MacGyver. I mean, good god, just look at half the things she makes.

Chip: Geez, Gadget? Didn't you put any brakes on this thing?

Gadget: Don't be silly, Chip! Of course I did! But they fell off a few blocks back!

NC: Hey, Tamara, can you make a car out of a skateboard and a hair dryer?

Tamara: (sulkily) No! All I can do is a Chevy pick-up truck sculpted out of rubber and ice.

NC: You're an insult to the craft!

NC (voiceover): A lot of the characters lent their way to learning some good lessons too, like always be yourself, have confidence in your work...don't...join...cults...Yeah, there was actually an episode about the dangers of following a cult, and I, I think like most kids around my age, found out what a cult was by watching this episode. Hey, it's better than finding out...other...ways. (Picture of Newsweek: Special Report: The Cult Of Death)

Myron: He had more cheese weggies than he could count, but he's far richer in spirit now that he's giving up all his wealth to be fizzed.

NC (voicover): It's actually a pretty clever social satire. A group of mice mistake a Cola commercial, you know the ones that always say you don't belong unless you buy our product, and they turn it into a literal interpretation.

Pop Top: Ah, we were all lost once, before we found the Cola Cult.

NC (vo): And I'll be damned if I can't remember one algebraic equation from all my days of school, but yet, years later, I still remember every fucking word of the Coo-Koo Cola song.

Singer: Come along, you belong. Feel the fizz of Coo-Koo Cola.

(NC waves his hands in the air while Tamara rolls her eyes. NC lifts Tamara and Malcom's arm, who yelps in pain, and waves them along with his arms)

NC (vo); It was cute, it was clever, it had characters we could never forget; it was a whole lot of fun.

Singer: C-C-C-Chip n Dale!

NC (vo): After Chip n Dale wrapped up, we then moved onto a show with a familiar character who's a bumbling pilot with his gigantic plane and the timeless environment that he inhabited in. I'm talking of course about the Jungle Book.

Singer: (Title screen of Talespin appears) Bum bum bum bum bum let's begin.

NC (vo): (Clips from the show are showing) Talespin is arguably one of the stranger set ups. Not because of the plot itself about a delivery pilot who battles air pirates along with his sidekick Kid, but.... why the Jungle Book characters? It's like having the cast of Bambi in a film noir, it doesn't add up. Well, maybe part of it is that, suprisingly, Jungle Book, after inflations, was the fourth highest grossing Disney film at that time, so I guess they figured It made sense to give them their own show. But even then, there's only three characters that ever made it in: (picture of) Baloo, (picture of), Louie, and (picture of) Shere Khan. Where are the other guys? Wouldn't it be great to see (picture of) Kaa in there? Or (picture of the monkeys and vultures) Kaa? But then again, to their credit, maybe that's all they needed, as the rest of the characters stood on their own quite nicely. Kid was sort of the everyday kid you wanted to be, especially when he was flying around on that glider thing. He's kind of like an adorable Green Goblin. I mean, (picture of Green Goblin from Sam Raimi's Spider-man) more adorable then he already is.

Kid: Baloo told me never to talk to strangers and I've never met anybody stranger then you.

Don Karnage: Cute kid.

NC (vo): There was Rebecca, who ran the business, who a lot of people didn't like, but honestly I think she is a perfect comic foil. Just look at all these reactions when Baloo tries to disguise his friend as a scientist.

Wildcat: Geundghta! Bon joy! How ya doing?

Rebecca (unamused): What are you doing in that get up?

Wildcat: You have me confused with someone entirely not myself. I'm Dr. Sven Vileent Gesundheit, BVD.

Rebecca (smiling): You mean PHD?

Wilcat: Uh, T-t-that too.

NC (vo): She even plays along in finding ways to teach Baloo a lesson for trying such a lazy scheme.

Rebecca: Hiiiii, just checking to see if you've landed on.... Maaaars yet?

Baloo: Yeah, and it's bad time here.

Rebecca (On radio) You should be out there exploring, collecting specimens! Now, don't you dare come back without a cargo hold full of plants and animals. Oh, and while I have you..... (Baloo whines)

NC (vo): I don't know, she never bothered me. What did bother me though was her kid Molly, who was sort of like a (picture of) Webby 2.0

Molly: I'm not Molly! I'm Danger Woman, here to inspect my secret headquarters.

NC (vo): She was just as annoying, just as cutesly pandering, and just as inconsistant in her appearances. Sometimes Rebecca needed a sitter for her; other times she was nowhere to be seen. Where the hell did she go in the middle of those episodes?

(An open door is shown with a sign by it that says "Daycare for Filler". An animation of Molly is thrown through the door and a crashing sound is heard).

NC (vo): I think she was just an unused Gummi Bear that they decided to fit in somewhere.

Molly: You stay away from my mommy! (kicks the guy)

Rebecca: Molly!

NC (vo): Needless to say, any episode that featured her definitely needed more air missles falling in her direction.

Molly: Just wait till you tune in next in week. Same danger time (nuke drops) same danger-- (explosion)

NC (vo): And then, of course, there's Don Karnage.

Don Karnage: Don Karnage knows all that a field pirate needs to know, you know?

NC (vo): Oh, how does one describe Don Karnage? Imagine if Ricky Ricardo got fed up with his wife, took his Caribbean van, and just started robbing the shit out of people. You got pretty much as hilarious a villain as you can conceive.

Don Kanarge: (various scenes) Fetch me the nasty bird! Idiots! You are my worm for catching the early bird ha ha! (Don Karnage crashes into a wall) What a lousy place for a wall.

NC (vo): How is it this guy never got a spin-off show? He's fucking hilarious. And I know what you're thinking; yeah he's a pirate, he's a bad guy, so that wouldn't be good for kids, but.... hey, pirates were kind of the first forms of democracy. I mean, come on, all those pirates have different accents, and hell, I think Don Kanage has like eight different accents in his one voice.

Don Kanarge: You had better get that annoying bird back here if you ever want to see sociable insecurity!

NC (vo): It's teaching kids about being together with all sorts of different races, even if you are a million different races in one somehow. It can work. Disney, make it happen!

Baloo: Oh, little britches, say it isn't so.

NC (vo): For such a strange combination of characters and timelines, Talespin had a great feel, charming characters and enough air battles to keep any kid happy.

Singer: Ah ha ha Talespin!

NC: But sadly, this would spell the end for Disney's phenomenal run.

Malcolm: What, you didn't like Darkwing Duck?

NC: How dare you indicate I don't like Darkwing Duck! (pulls out a gun) Do I have to get out my "people who don't like Darkwing Duck" gun? (Malcom shakes his head no) I was talking about the fact that they never did a good Disney Afternoon and Capcom game again. (Footage of the Talespin video game) I mean, come on. Baloo's head is the size of a plane? That's just dumb.

Tamara: Well, then why don't you just explain what Darkwing Duck is for those who don't know. (NC glares at Tamara and turns the gun on her) Which is obviously... not.... me.

Singer: Darkwing Duck! (the title appears) When there's trouble, you call DW. Darkwing Duck--

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) He is the terror that flaps in the night. He is the noun that verbs your other noun. He is Darkwing Duck! Yeah, a funny superhero was really nothing new, but part of what made Darkwing Duck so great was that the majority of the time, he wasn't doing it because he thought it was right; he did for the exact opposite reason any superhero should: he did it for fame and fortune. Really think about that. We see a ton of egotistical funny villains (pictures of Hades, Gaston, and Captain Hook), but Disney has never really had a hero that was full of himself. Constantly looking for attention and even sometimes endangering the mission so that he can get all the glory.

Darkwing Duck: I had it all under control! Lemme guess, "You've come to help." Everyone jumping on my crime-fighting band-wagon. I'm not flying anywhere with "laughing boy" here.

NC (vo): Yeah, we've had a side character here and there (pictures of Pete and Timon), but this is a main character--a main Disney character--the focus of good morals, and yet he constantly comes across as 100% egotistical in every single scene he's in. He even provides his own narrations out loud like a little kid.

Darkwing Duck: He had washed the city clean of crime like a... damp mop. No, that's not very dramatic.

NC (vo): But maybe that's why we indulged him so much. It wasn't as much a nasty need for attention as much as like a little kid looking for attention. Trying to be the center by being the hero and technically following his dreams. Even if it is misguided, it's still well meaning.

Darkwing Duck: I should've worked with the team!

Gosslyn: But, Dad, the team needs you. They've been captured

Darkwing Duck: Oh, perfect, some team they turned out to be. I guess I'll have to go save them

NC (vo): You, of course, had side characters, like an excitable tomboy daughter named Gosslyn, the return of DuckTales character Launchpad...

Launchpad: Fake? Wrestling's fake?

NC (vo): And a slew of pretty inventive baddies, including a shocking rodent named Megavolt, a crime boss named Steelbeak who I always thought was (picture of) Fowlmouth grown up. Maybe he lost his break by swearing to Columbian drug lords or something, and his archnemesis Negaduck.

Negaduck: That's the end of Darkwing Duck

NC : Litttle known fact: Jim Cummings' voice as Negaduck kills five puppies every single time he speaks.

Negaduck: I get... the loot.

Villains: Why?

Negaduck: Because I said!

Villains : Oh yeah. That makes sense when you put it that way

NC (vo): Also, in my opinion, Darkwing was the first time we had a legitimately unique kid character in the Disney Afternoon. Not that the past ones were bad, but they were just kind of the typical nice kind of troublemaking generic kids. There is only one Gosslyn. She is wild, she is funny, she is always part of the action.

Gosslyn: (various scenes) You get your own copy work out of it! You better call off Winnie The Ghoul right now! You aren't taking that lying down are you, Launchpad? (smacks Launchpad on the back and he falls over) Oh i guess you are.

NC (vo): And she compliments Darkwing perfectly, seeing as how he has the dreams and ego of a little kid and she literally is a little kid. So there's a legitimate connection as well as an arc for him to learn to be a parent.

Darkwing Duck: Wherever there's an evildoer evildoing, I'll be there.

Gosslyn: Great, dad!

NC (vo): The show was also great at satirizing everything supehero oriented while still being it's own thing. How many of those analogies did he make up to describe how fearsome he is?

Darkwing Duck: (various scenes) I am the metal key on the Sardine can of Justice! I am the hair in the lens of your projector! I am the wrong number that wakes you at 3 am! I am the parking meter that expires while you shop! I am the tube of Cadmian yellow that's impossible to open!

NC (vo): Darkwing Duck was one of the Disney Afternoon's best shows ever.

Darkwing Duck: Let's get dangerous!

Singer: Darkwing Duck! Better watch out, you bad boys! Darkwing Duck!

NC (vo): Before, sadly, it's inevitable decline.

Malcolm: Decline? What do you mean decline?

NC: Well, like any ongoing series that we love, what goes up must eventually come down........but we'll worry about that in the second half! For now, what do you say we all watch commercials while eating some Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle fruit snacks!

Tamara: Eww, you held onto those since the 90s?

NC: Oh no, they're current!

Tamara: Oh, well, the heck with that. I'm going to reconnect with My Little Pony

NC: Ohhh, you held onto that since childhood?

Tamara: No, it's.... current

Malcolm: Well, I'm going to reconnect with my nostalgia by playing with my Transformer.

Tamara: Did you get that out of your attic?

Malcolm: No....it's...current

NC: Well, let's do something that's not current by watching children's cartoons while talking.....over....them. (All three frown) Nothing's changed.

(The title screen appears to lead into commercial)

(Return from commercial)

Malcolm: So, you're saying the Disney Afternoon went downhill after Darkwing Duck. Does that mean you hate Goof Troop?

NC: No!

Malcolm: (relieved) Oh, good. (Tamara looks relieved as well)

NC: Ish. (Malcom and Tamara stare at him)

Singer: We're the Goof Troop, and we'll always stick together! Yeah, we're the Goof Troop!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) Goof Troop by no means is a bad show. It centers around Goofy and his son Max living in suburbia living next to Pete and his family: PJ, Peg, and Pistol. It still had a lot of funny character's humorous situations, and a big deal of heart

NC: But that is was back when Disney was trying to be......KEWWWLLL!

Singers: Gotta be getting Gooofy!

NC (vo): Just look at this mucic video that premiered with the first episode and tell me you're not getting that vibe.

Singers: Gotta be gettting Goofy! (Goofy Laughs)

Rapper: Cool and slick isn't always it! Sometimes you gotta Goof just a little bit!

NC (vo): Oh, yeah, all the kids are going to be doing the....Goofy this week. I get the feeling the Mad Hatter's (scene of Mad Hatter dancing from Tim Burton's Alice In Wonderland) going to steal a move or two from this. This is total jiggyness.

Singers: Gotta be getting Goofy! (Goofy laughs continously)

Kazaam: Let's green egg and ham it.

NC (vo):  Aside from maybe Kid wearing a backwards hat, which even then you can argue keeps the hat on better when he is flying, the past Disney shows had a timeless feel just trying to tell good stories with good characters

Singers: Gotta be getting Goofy!

NC (vo): (Sigh) and aside from this.... wonderbread! Their is still very strong indication that Goof Troop was the first time the Disney Afternoon was trying to be "hip" and "with it" (mocking the 90s attitude) Give them the shades, have him ride a skateboard, have him be totally embarassed by his dorky dad because the 90's are sooo anti-authority!

Elder woman: Bubble Tape is not part of a well-balanced diet!

NC (vo): Because of that, Max is not exactly the most interesting character. He's sort of just some 90's stereotype kid who we saw in most shows and movies around them

Max: No problem! First step: Two-hundred Gorilla burger

NC (vo): He's cool, but he can screw up, he has attitude, but possesses a good heart; he has a rocking hairstyle, baggy clothes, and he is into anything EXTREME!!!!

Max: I feel like I am losing the cherry on my sundae, the foam of my root beer.

NC (vo); But to the shows credit, he's not annoying, per se; there's just not much to him. For me, the real focus on the show was Pete's family. I wish the show was just based on these guys. This where the real comedy gold was.

Pete: Playing sick, eh? (grabs PJ and pulls him along) well you can't fool me see? I was a fool way before you were born!

NC (vo): You have an overbearing father (Pete), a competely neurotic son (PJ), a half-kind, but half-threatening mother (Peg), and a psychotic little daughter (Pistol). Seriously who names their kid Pistol?

Pete: Now go out there and uphold the family IQ!

NC (vo): I loved these guys, I wanted more of them. In fact, why couldn't they have the title of the show? Call it Pete...Beat. Okay, the title needs work, but you get the idea. I think because shows like Home Improvement and Family Matters were just as popular with kids as they were with adults, there's this big push to throw away the wild imaginative worlds and stick to the all-to-comforting, all-to-boring realms of suburbia. And what fun is that in an animated show, at least for kids? I mean, what kind of adventures ever happen in suburbia?

(cut to the climactic neighborhood/convention chase scene with the Critic and Casper from his Casper review)

Casper: (laughs)

NC: Caspeeeeeeeeeeeer!

(cut back to the Critic and his friends in the living room)

NC: (pauses while looking at both Malcolm and Tamara awkwardly) Except that.

NC (vo): But again, as everyday cartoon shows go, Goof Troop still got a few laughs and had enough enjoyable characters to keep it afloat.

Singers: Report to the Goof Troop! Bob-a-loo bop boppa loo wop! Yeah!

(Goof Troop title screen transitions to Bonkers title screen)

NC (vo): Bonkers, on the other hand...

Singers: Bonkers. Yeah, totally nuts!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) While more city-based than suburban-based, Bonkers' problem wasn't that the location was horrendously passe, it's that the idea was horrendously passe.

NC: Now, tell me if this setup sounds familiar. (clears throat) A toon and a cop...

Malcolm and Tamara: Roger Rabbit.

NC: Yeah!

NC (vo): You don't really need an explanation after that, do you? As soon as you throw in a toon and a cop, that's the first thing you're gonna think of. But, hey maybe it'll be cool, like remember how great it was to see all those famous cartoon characters walking around? With Disney's endless line of unforgettables, surely we'll see some of them here, right?

NC: Well...

NC (vo): ...I saw the Mad Hatter in the opening, I saw Dumbo for a second, they're watching Darkwing Duck on TV...that doesn't count! And literally, there's a whole episode where Mickey Mouse is kept in a carrier cage the whole time, and you never see him! And I mean never see him.

Mickey: Roll over boy roll over!

Dog: Peace of cake

Mickey: Okay now here's a hard one: play dead!

Nc (vo): What is the purpose of having Mickey Mouse on your show if you're never going to show him? Did Mickey just want more money? Would he not come out of his traile unless they doubled his Salary?

(Cut to a trailer with the subtitle "Mickey's Trailer")

Mickey: Tell those sons of bitches unless they want to animate a fifth finger for me to flip them off  I want more dough! Ho-ho

NC (vo); And surely Bonkers, the main character of the show, would in no way be so annoying, you'd rather smash a hammer against your ears to experience a more pleasant sound.

Bonkers: Electrocute me, burn me to a crisp, and blow up the police station! Where did I go wrong? Ohhh how did I fail my pet?

(NC, Malcolm, and Tamara cover their ears and groan)

NC (vo): Yes Bonkers was kind of a mix between (picture of) The Garbage Pale Kids and (picture of) Snarf, yet somehow they thought audiences would want to return to this!

Bonkers: We have to guard a corkscrew from that nasty imposter! How could those little monsters do this to me? I trusted them!

NC (vo): Even the side characters, one of them being a stick in the mud cop, who has no sense of humor

Tamara and Malcolm: Roger Rabbit!

NC: I know! I know!

NC (vo): It's a little confusing because at least in Roger Rabbit it was live action and animation; here...it's all animation, so the wonder if it doesn't really stick out. I mean, yeah you get the idea that all of the drawing people are supposed to be real people, but let's say they come across a cartoon of (picture of) Aladdin. You wouldn't know which one was supposed to be the toon and which one was supposed to be real would you?

NC: Which is why I'm sorry to say kids, their will never be an Aladdin and Bonkers crossover

Audience and Tamara: Awwwww!

(NC, Malcolm, and Tamara lower their heads. Malcolm elbows the couch)

NC (vo): Even Animaniancs who shared the same timeslot with it took a pretty mean dig at it every once in a while.

Slappy Squirrel: Ahh no wonder you like that Bonkers show. That junks rotting out your brain there.

NC (vo): It wasn't funny, it wasn't creative, pretty much everything about it had alread been done before. It was a show that was in desperate need of an eraser.

Singer: Wherever you are! Bonkers!

NC: And thus, Disney would never do anything different, anything original, or anything ground breaking ever again...

(The Gargoyles Title screen appears)

NC: Yeah, okay one!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) Gargoyles, like DuckTales, I've talked about many times before, so I won't dwelve to much, but looking back at the other shows Disney was turning out and how safe they were playing it for awhile, it hit me more and more just what a unique risk Gargoyles kind of was for them. It was their first straight on serious show and their TV animation, which hadn't really done anything quite this heavy and dramatic, stepped up it's act and really gave something that most Disney shows weren't doing at that time, and debatably, haven't really done since. It didn't need a hip hop theme song or popular catch phrases to be badass, it just had to be badass to be badass! And that came from it's strong heroes, its complex villains, and its dark grim style. Also, have the cast of every Star Trek series ever made helps to. It was a fantastic show and we loved every single minute if it. Why? Because never once did it ever rely on any sort of cheap Disney gimmicks.

NC: We had Aladdin for that.

Singer: (Aladdin Title screen appears) Arabian Niiiight! Like Arabian daaaaays!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) I'll try not to step on too many toes as I know a lot of people like this show, and, in all fariness, it's not a bad idea for a show. Aladdin offered a lot of great scenarios that could be taken right out of Arabian Nights and I also gave cutos that I actually do remember a lot of characters they created. I remember Abis Mal, Mirage, Sadira, Chaos, that....other Aladdin with the girly lips (Monzerath). These were all cool creations that left memorable impressions. Strangely enough, the problems with the show were more centered on the main characters. Even though their popularity had made a ton of money in the past. But lets be honest, what made a lot of the original movie so great was its imgaination and its humour. Here we have the imagination, but instead of Robin Willaims' improversations, we get...

Genie: Hold it! Did you risk Abu on a bet? (transforms into a Godfather and talks like him) My sole respect to the Simmion family!

NC (vo): Homer Simpson bombing at stand up. And yes that is Homer's voice Dan Castanella clearly giving it his all, but the script he is handed gives him very little to work with. Aladdin and Jasmine are strong enough to hold a movie, but here, their so bland that you could replace them with an empty shell and Michael Eisner saying "That's you your're doing that". The monkey still sounds like a choking Donald Duck and, by Jesus on broadway, there is way too much Gilbert Godfreid on this show.

Iago: Could we leave the bird a little dignity?! Must be that new cream rinse I'm using! An abismal fries my gizzard!

NC (imitating Gilbert Godfreid): Why do people keep casting me as irritatingly annoying birds?!

NC (vo): The animation too is a little strange as half of it is trying to be realistic like Gargoyles, but then the other half is trying to be cartoony like Bonkers, so you end up with big expressionless eyes (freeze frame on Aladdin with wide eyes. An arrow points to the eyes saying "Did he just die?") on what looks like stretchy erasers. Look at these: they look more like flesh coloured plato then they do Aladdin. I'm not even sure it makes sense: In the movie they say they have to marry in three days, but, they still not hitched in the show. And if Aladdin is allowed to live in the palace now, how come he's still wearing the clothes he wore as a thief? Does Jasmine just really like the Middle Eastern male stripper look? I guess a show based on a movie goes, it could have been a lot worse, but, trying to capture that Disney movie feel seems to work better when you can expand with your main characters; not be restricted by them. (Back to wide eye Aladdin) God he looks unnatural.

Singer: Come on down, stop on by, hop a carpet and fly to another Arabian Night!

NC: But not all Disney shows based on Disney movies had to be bad, they just had to have annoying theme songs.

Timon and Pumbaa: (Title screen appears) Hakuna matata yeah!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) There's not really too much to say about Timon and Pumbaa either. Not because it's bad, on the contrary, it delivers exactly what it promises: It's Timon and Pumbaa in hijinks, goofy situations and silly scenarios, and that's about all you needed and that's about all it delivered. The animation was fine, the timing was decent, and it never felt like it had to be too restricted to their environments, they could still do fun cartoony things that fun  cartoons usually do; it's totally serviceable. Hell, I dare say they're a lot funnier here than they are in the movie.

Timon and Pumbaa: Hakuna matata Timon and Pumbaa!

NC (vo): But sadly for every Timon and Pumbaa, their's a Schnookums and Meat

Malcolm: Scnookums and what?

Tamara: Yeahh I don't remember that

NC: Well that's because we're starting to get into the half seasons

NC (vo): You seee as the Disney Afternoon started to lose its audience,it took one other timeslot and would constantly alternate between shows. So, Tuseday at four could be Bonkers, but Wednesay at four could be Gargoyles, and Friday a four could be Legend of Zelda- I mean Shnnokums and Mat. Thsi was part of thier attempt to throw stuff at the wall to see what sticks.

Tamara: And did Schnookums and Meat stick?

NC: If by stick you mean, I would like to impale them on something very sharp. Just look at this intro and tell me if it reminds me you of anything, anything familiar at all?

(Shows clips from the intro)

Tamara and Malcolm: Ren and Stimpy

NC: Yeah!

NC (vo): (Clips from the show play) If you thought Bonkers ripping off Roger Rabbit was bad, this was just.... uncomfortable. From the surreal animation, to the paint drop background, to the semi-realistic stills, to the fact that it's a cat and god damn dog! It was pretty fucking panful. It's like watching a kid dance well and then another less  talanted kid says he can do the same thing, and then ends up copying a terrible cartoon show. And let me tell you, if you thought Bonkers was annoying take a listen to this:

Meat: I protect the house from intruders

Schnookums: Oh yeah, well I think you're too stupid to know otherwise.

Meat. Okay! I am not stu-I am not stu-

(NC is galring at the screen, Tamara turns and sees Malcolm lying on the couch)

Tamara: Hey did you hit him again!

NC: (Looks at Malcolm) No i think he just reacting to the sound of their voices

Malcolm: Soooo horribleee!

NC (vo): The animation is still Disney too. Even though they are trying to be different, it's still clearly out of their comfort zone. It still looks a little too polished and safe to be anything like the all out insanity Ren and Stimpy gave us. The creator of the show went on to do "Eek the Cat", which also had a Ren and Stimpy feel to it, but still was unqiue enough to be called it's own show. This is the equivalent of a video game reviewer seeing another video game reviewer and trying to do the exact same thing, but not even coming close to- fill in your own punch line here.