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A dog who gets an injection of a special serum giving him strength, speed and intelligence in fighting evil. Rivets generic Rivets: George Sixta The family dog; the strip first appeared in The Saturday Evening Post in 1944. Rocket generic Chacha Chaudhary (Indian) Pran Kumar Sharma: Chacha Chaudhary's dog. Rocky generic Rocky (Swedish) Martin ...
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
Douglas Yancey "Doug" Funnie (voiced by Billy West in the Nickelodeon series and by Thomas McHugh in the Disney series) is depicted as an unlucky, average, self-conscious, naïve, and occasionally sensitive 11-(later 12)-year-old boy who wants to fit in with the crowd, but is very creative and imaginative, and has a strong sense of right and wrong, making him more likely to stand out.
First, dinner time inexplicably moves back an hour (which is seven hours in dog years). Two days later, the humans start freaking out. — Ashley Mayer (@ashleymayer) November 5, 2024
Met a drunk girl earlier who had a “half therapy dog” bc it had gone through part of the therapy dog training and then just decided to become a regular dog — Karen, Esq. (@comradeflirty ...
Woof — it’s been a looooooong week. If you feel like you’ve been working like a dog, let us offer you the internet equivalent of a big pile of catnip: hilarious tweets about pets.
The following is a list of comic strips.Dates after names indicate the time frames when the strips appeared. There is usually a fair degree of accuracy about a start date, but because of rights being transferred or the very gradual loss of appeal of a particular strip, the termination date is sometimes uncertain.
Henry appears (and speaks) alongside Betty Boop in the Fleischer Studios animated short Betty Boop with Henry, the Funniest Living American (1935). During the period of 1946 to 1961, Dell Comics published 61 issues of a color comic book titled Carl Anderson's Henry. Henry spoke in the comic book, as did the other principal characters.