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The Powerpuff Girls "Meat Fuzzy Lumkins" Craig McCracken: Yes: No: The Powerpuff Girls fight to stop Fuzzy Lumpkins' plot to turn everything into meat. Note 1: This episode was included as a bonus toon on various Cartoon Network Video releases throughout the series run. Note 2: First pilot to The Powerpuff Girls. February 20, 1995 () [3] 2
Produced by in 2002 for Nickelodeon Australia, this short consists the narrator teaching the kids about seemingly gross bodily fluids and unwanted symptoms, which include earwax, stinky feet, nose snot, etc. It lasted for 10 episodes. In the U.S., it re-aired on Nicktoons in 2002. [5]
Image credits: drawerofdrawings Lastly, D.C. Stuelpner shared with us the most rewarding aspects of being a comic artist: “A lot of my work-for-hire art jobs never see the light of day.
The Zit: A man pops a zit and all of his innards burst out. An animated adaptation of Tom Bunk's comic from MAD issue #345. Spy vs. Spy: Black Spy places what appears to be a giant lit stick of dynamite behind White Spy. White Spy snips off the "fuse", which turns out to be the tail of a lion hidden inside of the "dynamite".
The 25 Grossest Pimple-Popping Videos of All Time Tom Pfeiffer / VolcanoDiscovery Even though pretty much every single dermatologist and skincare expert on the planet says that you shouldn't pick ...
Zits is a comic strip written by cartoonist Jerry Scott and illustrated by Jim Borgman about the life of Jeremy Duncan, a 17-year-old [2] high school junior (he was 15 when the comic started). The comic debuted in July 7, 1997 [ 3 ] in over 200 newspapers, and by 1998 it was included in "more than 1,700 newspapers worldwide in 45 countries and ...
Why the famed skin doctor has learned to delegate household tasks — and what her kids think of her pimple-popping videos. As 'Dr. Pimple Popper,' Dr. Sandra Lee has found TV fame treating gnarly ...
As of May 1995, it was reported that Shnookums & Meat had a rating of 4.1/16 among kids 2–11, 4.3/18 among kids 6–11, and 1.7/13 among teenagers. [10] Kopp had claimed in an interview with Animato! that these numbers would've been enough to justify a renewal on a competing network, citing Fox Kids as an example. [ 1 ]