I've been wanting to make a part 2 for a while, and thank you for the support, this video had to get reedited 4 times to get past the youtube censors. It even made it once! No, there won't be a part 3 because there is no season 3.
@@toddsimmons6452Yeah there were lots of homosexual theme between Peter and Jim I think it could be a parody of DC comics Batman relationship with Robin back in the 40s and 50s.
@@ReaverTheSurvivalist hate to break it to ya, but all governments have a dodgy past. The US is just the only one where you’re ALLOWED to call it out on it.
@@teddyroo12 One thing I tend to have a problem with, and that's the overuse of Jeff Bennett (mostly in the imitation department). His voice is too distinct to be replace anyone (like Kowalski from Madagascar, as the two movies and Christmas short already gave him a distinct voice). There's also the matter of how he portrays kid characters. When I look at Peter Puppy, I think of how a little kid would sound, like Tails or Mega Man; here, Peter Puppy sounds like an obnoxious teenager who wants to end his suffering. But when used right, he definitely got the job done. Raj from Camp Lazlo definitely has a fitting voice, for a young elephant that migrated from India. His voice of Dexter's Dad (despite being a Phil Hartman immitation) does give off the vibe of a father who is unaware of how much of a genius his son is. His Foghorn Leghorn isn't that bad either, and definitely gave more credibility in the Southener dialect. His Johnny Bravo voice really stood the test of time, especially when it was a very good Elvis impression for an OC character. And lastly, he also did the voice of Baleog the Fierce from Lost Vikings (in the Sequel on PS1), who, unlike the Heroes of the Storm voice (along with his fellow Vikings, Erik the Swift and Olaf the Stout), gives off a better tone and personality when you hear "Baleog the Fierce". Why am I bringing up Jeff Bennett? Well, at 2:36: You can definitely hear his John Cleese imitation begin to crack and can't stay consistent over a joke like a Super Hero Home for retired people, and it ended up making me think of his Kowalski voice (which I didn't like, honestly).
@@robbiewalker2831 I think I can understand that... though I do love how the John Cleese voice gets more and more tired as the series reaches its conclusion, like in the last episode where he's just about out of fucks to give. That was pretty funny
@@KoboldGamer naw even by then it wasnt...hence the jokes in the show lol. Its a trait of the 'neoliberal' era, which was started by Reagan ironically enough
"I have eaten my words and have found them bitter as the lingering regret of a failed love affair." This writing is both the pure gold and savage realism we need today. XD
@@rvh1702 Wow! Deducing my ENTIRE LIFE based simply on my Avatar, without any prior knowledge of my social circle, occupation, financial standing, or previous accomplishments? You must have an AMAZING grasp of people if that's all you need just to figure people out! Bravo to you good sir.
I don't know why people think that PC culture wasn't a thing in the 90s. It was a thing as far back as the 60s. Look up The Smothers Brothers, for instance.
@@qty1315 Because the only ones who tolerated that SJW bs in the 90s was those around you. Whereas today some Twitter crybaby will make up a scenario and tweet about it for arguments to catch fire across the user platform and shared elsewhere.
@@rayminishi689 If that were true, why did the president call out PC culture in a speech? Why was The Simpsons always referencing PC culture? Why did every CD have a warning label for offensive content?
@@rayminishi689 PC was pretty big in the early 90s. Cultural marxists have been pushing it since at least the 60s. It gained a bit of traction when they started taking a dump on traditional culture in media with shows like Roseann and Married with Children. During the Anita Hill/Clarence Thomas media circus, we find the origin of "Sexual Harassment" as a well known common phrase along with, ironically, a certain amount of normalizing of pornography. The Rondey King media event and its following riots were directly related to the PC nonsense of the time. By the time the mid-90s rolled around, there was a very 'Africa the motherland' sort of fad being pushed. African influenced colors and patterns were popping up everywhere and there was a very forced attempt at a cultural shift as well as attempts to generate hostility between Blacks and Whites by the U.S. media organizations. Keep in mind these organizations have never been ran by Whites or Blacks. Bends seen as fringe just a few years prior like Public Enemy with a very militant racial message didn't even raise an eyebrow any longer. Myths about the severity of slavery were rampant and the language was under constant attack by the 'Politically Correct' People just got along too well, race relations were far better in the 90s than now. Most people just didn't buy into it. Things would have to wait a bit longer for the children of the 90s, raised on this subversive stuff, to come of age. That is what we have now. It has been a drawn out plan and if you read older books and magazines from sources like archive (dot) org, you realize this sort of thing goes back to at least 1880. Society as a whole has been desensitized just a bit at a time and the cumulative effect has gotten us to the ultra polarized society we live in now. The push in the 90s was probably harder than it is now but people were more resistant to the marxist delusions that make up the entire PC concept. People born in the 90s and later seem to be much more weak willed or able to form the sort of bonds that humanity has always relied on. They were influenced far more than any other generations by the minds of organizations who have ulterior motives that fly in the face of the well-being of their own society. If we can't get people to unplug from their constant connection to the flow of information from the internet, we have no chance as a species.
It would've been even better if it went like this: Jim: *gasp* RUSH LIMBAUGH! Peter: No, *OUR* insect with a giant butt! Jim: Oh, Queen Slug-For-a-Butt! Right.
@@randomreviews4278 they keep changing the name of the superhero elderly home because people were finding it overly offensive much to the narrator's frustration.
@@hubertberrum6242 some people like the in-game voice, I’m surprised they found an actor who sounded more like the 16-bit EWJ compared to the HD remake.
That monkey trapped in the body of an ape joke has such multi-layered complexity and relevancy to this day. I don't think they took it down because of the copyright strike, man.
That's it, Doug TenNapel definitely had someone who was trans or an ally slipping stuff into the show back then, there's no other explanation. He probably allowed it all because it went over his head; but the real question is, did they do it just for fun? or in retaliation to red flags he was already showing back then?
Doug Tennapel is a schmo for hating this. This cartoon was probably one of the best cartoon adaptation of a game out of the bunch that were either cheesey or lame. This at least tried
@@frog9304 no, I just that he's a jerk because he's a right-wing Christian like you said. Wait I'm confused, what the hell you're trying to say, I'll listen
You know as a kid, I was laughing so hard at Jim saying and doing stupid things that I didn't realize that Peter was forced in women clothes a lot. I wonder why?
I thought it was Jim trying to live vicariously through Peter because he’s too afraid of being trans in the spotlight as a superhero, gender norms and toxic masculinity type of shit.
@christopherjordan6235 Adult jokes don’t generally need to always be implied swears, sex jokes, and the like. It can just be jokes only adults would understand much better than children would
The thing I love about the national debt gag is that there is not quite enough time to read it - the episode aired at a time where simply pausing it to read what it said was a lot harder to do, so you had to wait for it to cut back and give you a good look at it.
5:30 this was done so well 😁 I like how the eyes compliment both the mad doctor and the chimpanzee on his head. Like how his eyes looked when he grabbed his tail 🤣
Not only were the jokes great, as well as the gags, but it definitely had world-class voice actors on this, and it was fun to watch 7:14-7:19 also, this cracks me up!!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I like to think that Jim increasingly gets more insane with each falling cow after every episode up until the events of 3D. There’s only so much plot armor a worm can go through…
00:13 There their minds are not one. They do not even share a head, only their bodies was mixed. But very good the comment of "I have never felt so violated" XDDD 03:00 That's an excellent disguise!, that can fool me ;D
I mean if you've ever seen Fritz The Cat (which came out like 20 years before EWJ) then you'd know all this stuff was still going on back then lol, it's just that people like pretending it wasn't so they can keep talking about age old issues like they're new
I remember watching Earthworm Jim on channel 4 back in the 90s when I was a kid and enjoyed watching , I'm really happy that the series is on complete DVD and got it so I can enjoy watching the episodes since the series is no longer broadcast on TV anymore. I still wished more of my 90s cartoons there were broadcast on channel 4 are finally released onto complete DVD at last like Space Cats, Creepy Crawlers, Super Dave, Hammerman, and The Adventure of Hyperman.
2:30 was geniusly funny on your part because for 4 whole seconds i forgot this show was early-mid 90s and i thought they were doing a but by showing the definition of flapper on a damn google search lmao
6:14: I know, the coin only has one face on both sides. The Reaper called heads, found out it’s Tails on both sides, so Monkey-for-A-Head got punished.
Given the time this came out, the one with the chimpanzee as a monkey is way too close to predicting today. edit: And the one about the elderly changing name for it. Even commented on nobody having any humor.