I love that the bit showcases a member of the production team with an important, but easily forgotten job. That just makes the whole bit meta-wholesome, I love it.
@@MSCDonkeyKong yeah, but consider this... Someone decided "yeah, this is "ugly" enough" for that specific scene. And who do you think was in charge of depicting that "ugliness"? //Sorry, beforehand, for mediocre English//
2:28 was my favorite because of two things; 1; once in a lifetime reference 2; billy was awoken by grins mumbling, realized what he was saying and got so much serotonin from those few words that he began to sing the rest of the song.
I don't remember Billy and Mandy having soo many crossovers I only know abo6 KND but now ik Scooby and Ed edd and Eddy had some screen time to I can truly say cartoon Network was THE channel of my childhood
There was an entire episode called "Modern Primates" dedicated to the trope of finding a frozen, yet still alive caveman and showing him around the advanced civilization. The caveman Billy found was none other than Fred Flintstone. There also was an episode "Here Thar be Dwarves!" in which Billy runs into Yogi and Boo Boo while going on a picnic. The weird part though, and I kid you not, is that they looked and acted like a bunch of stoners. XD!
My all time favorite quote from the episode where Mandy ends being stuck in a tree, so Grim and Billy try to get help from a druid. Druid: I will now demonstrate how to talk to a tree. Now listen up, you worm eating puke! Don't give me any guff or I'll feed ya to the woodchipper! Grim: So what did the tree say? *Druid bonks Grim on the head with his staff* Druid: Trees don't talk.
Actually "the amazing world of gumball", gets very dark, one time Darwin killed his bully's parents by accident. They were bombs, and he sent a sorry cake with sparklers. He also joked about getting the bully's mother deported, and his father arrested, all for a joke but ended up doing the worse thing imaginable leaving the bully with just his girlfriend.
@@Jakexsists not really the economy. More as people who are getting too soft thus we ,who have a sense of what humor is, have to suffer because mr scarves and glasses got offended because someone spoke their mind
I don't speak japanese, so don't quote me on this But i believe what mandy says in japanese is something along the lines of "his eyes still aren't fixed"
"kare dome ha, madaki chigai da" The second part is "まだき違いだ" means "(he was) wrong just now/earlier" roughly That "kare dome ha" baffles me because i think "me" there is 目 for eyes and 彼 "kare" is him So probably 彼の目は、まだき違いだ" which is "his eyes are still wrong" literally まだき is a strange word that's very uncommon at least from my observations
彼の目は、まだキチガイだ。 _Kare no me wa, mada kichigai da_ Literal: “He still has the eyes of madness” or “He still has the eyes of a madman.” Contextual: “His eyes are still crazy.” (I opted for the katakana キチガイ as opposed to the kanji 気違い or 気狂い as the kana form appears to be the most common variant)
One thing I used to really love about classic Cartoon Network was how all of the animators would collaborate at one point or another. Man TV just isn't the same
Ok the "Your mother has a job and is a respected member of the community" line is even better if you put in his response "Nobody talks about my mom that way!"
Shoutout to the guy who left the "No! It's my gum" without any context. Although the man who phonetically wrote out what Billy said before his teeth clicked has my eternal respect. Meanwhile, I only have quotes like "What's wrong, Boogie? (Bak bak bak! Bakhaha bakhaha bakha!) Are ya? (Bakhaha!) Are ya? (Bakhaha! Bakahaha) Are ya? (Bak bak bak) Ya? (Bak beeeek) Are ya scared like some sorta small, tasty bird?"
I don't why but the clip at 1:25 *is killing me with laughter.* It's like, that's me when I tell a snobby customer to leave, they start having a tantrum and I'm telling my colleagues to not pay him attention
2:28 Letting the days go by, letting the water hold me down. Letting the days go by, water flowing underground. Into the blue again, after the money’s gone. Once In A Lifetime, water flowing underground.