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Only songs with dog characters are included in this section. Not metaphorical dogs or songs with "dog" in the title. Apollo, from various Coheed & Cambria songs, whose name appears in the titles of their third and fourth albums; Arrow, from Harry Nilsson's single "Me and My Arrow", also featured in The Point! "Atomic Dog" by George Clinton
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 17 January 2025. Online horror fiction Creepypastas are horror -related legends or images that have been copied and pasted around the Internet. These Internet entries are often brief, user-generated, paranormal stories intended to scare, frighten, or discomfort readers. The term "creepypasta" originates ...
Pornographic parody films of horror films (10 P) S. Scary ... (1 C, 42 P) Pages in category "Parodies of horror" ... The Woman in the House Across the Street from the ...
A Lassie-like character; a parody of other fictitious animal shows. Cheddar Pembroke Welsh Corgi: Brooklyn Nine-Nine: Captain Holt and his husband, Kevin's, dog; a police sitcom about the detectives of Brooklyn's 99th precinct. Chester Pomeranian: The Nanny: C.C. Babcocok's dog; about a woman who becomes a nanny for three children of a Broadway ...
Stray Dogs is an American horror comic series written by Tony Fleecs with art by Trish Forstner, told from the viewpoint of dogs. It was first published by Image Comics as 5 individual issues in 2021; a trade paperback was published in 2021.
Despite its feminine name a male dog and one of the family's pets. [61] Louie generic Overboard: Chip Dunham: Captain Crow's pet. Lucky generic Hawkeye: Barton's dog. Mammoth Mutt Chihuahua: Krypto the Superdog: Jerry Siegel: A dog who can inflate her body enormously. Marmaduke Great Dane: Marmaduke: Brad Anderson: The Winslow family's ...
Now, get ready for “Steamboat Willie” horror films. The 1928 version of Mickey Mouse entered the public domain on Monday, and indie horror producers are wasting no time in capitalizing on it.
The authors parody the original titles with puns or other wordplay. Characters are caricatured, and lampooned with joke names. These articles typically cover five pages or more, and are presented as a sequential storyline with caricatures and word balloons.