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The SpongeBob History Song featurette; Animated shorts: "Separation Anxiety" "Surfing Dreams" "SpongeBoard" "Balloons" "Juiceman" "Traffic" "The Outfit" Bollywood Bob music video; How To Make SpongeBob SquarePants featurette "The Clash of Triton" shorts "SpongeGod" "Neptune's Origins" Release dates: Region 1: Region 2: Region 4: December 8 ...
In the SpongeBob SquarePants episode titled “Earworm”, SpongeBob gets the “Musical Doodle” song stuck in his head, giving him an earworm, which ultimately turns out to be an actual worm, which is removed by his friends singing or playing other songs.
SpongeBob keeps trying to stop Sandy from going, but she persists. They find the worm and Sandy successfully ties it in a knot and gets her tail back. SpongeBob reveals that the "worm" is actually the tongue of the real worm, and the worm is huge. Sandy and SpongeBob sprint away and it gives chase.
Wormy may refer to: Wormy (comic strip), a comic strip by David A. Trampier that appeared in Dragon magazine "Wormy", an episode of season 2 of SpongeBob SquarePants; Wormy, a character from the comic book Owly by Andy Runton; Wormy, a character from the movie The Sin of Harold Diddlebock played by Jimmy Conlin; Wormy Marrons, a 1940s Dick ...
Tom Kenny, SpongeBob's voice actor, considers "Band Geeks" one of his favorite episodes. [16] In a 2009 review, Michael Cavna of The Washington Post ranked the episode at No. 5 in his "The Top Five SpongeBob Episodes: We Pick 'Em" list. He said "Squidward's mix of artistic aspiration in the face of goading, humiliation and unrelenting sub ...
Pink wishes she never journeyed to Bikini Bottom with the “SpongeBob SquarePants” song, “We’ve Got Scurvy.” The Grammy-winning singer revealed which of her singles she considers her best ...
SpongeBob, the title cheery yellow character, appears outside his pineapple-shaped home, while Mr. Krabs, SpongeBob’s cranky boss, is at the Krusty Krab restaurant he runs.
The characters of SpongeBob SquarePants have appeared throughout popular culture. In 2007, the Amsterdam-based company Boom Chicago created a SpongeBob parody called "SpongeBob SquarePants in China", in which a stereotypically Chinese Patrick refuses to go to work and advocates freedom of speech, rights of leisure, and income. [65]