OR I WOULD SAY IF A KID GOT A GUN, A SKATEBOARD, A NUCLEAR DEVICE OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT THERE SHOULD BE SOME KIND OF PRECAUTION TO PREVENT ALL OF THAT... BUT NOT THIS KIND OF KID SHOW... THERE IS SOME ARRANGEMENTS THAT MAKE THIS CARTOONS HIGH ABOVE THE LEVEL... WATCH IT IF YOU DARE BUT DON'T SAY I DON'T WARN YOU CAUSE IT SURELY BLOWN YOUR HYPERACTIVE OFF!!!
1. Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil
Also known as Kick Buttowski
Genre: Action/Adventure/Comedy
Created by: Sandro Corsaro
Country of origin: United States
Original language(s): English
No. of seasons: 2
No. of episodes: 103 segments
(52 whole episodes) (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s): Sandro Corsaro/Chris Savino
Running time: 22 minutes
Production company(s): Chris Savino Productions
Disney Television Animation
Disney XD Original Productions
Mercury Filmworks (animation production)
Broadcast
Original channel: Disney XD
Picture format: 1080i (16:9) (HDTV)
Audio format: Dolby Digital 5.1
Original run:February 13, 2010 – December 2, 2012
Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil (often referred to as simply Kick Buttowski) is an Emmy Nominated animated television series created by animator Sandro Corsaro, about a young boy named Clarence "Kick" Buttowski , who aspires to become the world's greatest daredevil. It became the fourth Disney XD original series and the first animated series. The show premiered on February 13, 2010, with two episodes airing the first day.
Main characters
Clarence Francis "Kick" Buttowski: The main character, a 10-year old amateur, thrill-seeking often reckless daredevil. His main goal out of life is to embrace each day as if it were his own personal "action movie." He's rather short and wears a signature daredevil outfit; a white jumpsuit with red stripes down the sleeves, a white helmet with a red stripe, and yellow boots and gloves. Some of his more notable catchphrases are "Show time," "Fail? I don't do fail," "Aw, biscuits,", "Biscuits", and "Chimi-chunga". He's the middle child in his family. His middle name was announced in "Rank of Awesome", a reference to his original name, Francis Little. He's picked on by his older brother, Brad Buttowski, who often refers to him as "dillweed". He has 3 arch rivals: Kendall Perkins, Ronaldo & Gordie Gibble, but it's shown in certain episodes that Kick may actually like Kendall, such as in "Dancing With the Enemy" in which he compliments her as "elegant" at the end of their dance, in "Hand in Hand" in which he compliments and flirts with her and later blushes when they get unstuck and in "Rocked" in which Kendall appears as a beautiful woman in Kick's dream. Also at the end of "Detained" it is shown that Kendall had written with her favorite pink pen "I ♥ K.B." on a locker (K.B = Kick Buttowski, it's unknown if he sees this before it's erased). His birthday is February 22. His eyes are blue according to "Those Who Camp Do?", It's shown that he's a prodigy at ping pong (As seen in "Bad Table Manners"). Kick is left handed, as shown in "For The Love Of Gunther" and "Morning Rush".
Gunther Magnuson: Kick's 12-year old best friend and stunt coordinator who is overweight, worries a lot, and is easily distracted by shiny objects. It is also shown that Gunther can whistle very well. Gunther, unlike Kick, does not enjoy living on the edge, and can drink a very large amount of Cheetah Chug without getting sick. He is of Nordic descent. He wears blue shorts and shirt with a red cap and what appear to be orange Crocs (sandals). In "For The Love Of Gunther" he has a crush on Jackie Wackerman. He is shown to love a puppet named Lady La La in "Kyle Be Back".
Bradley "Brad" Buttowski: Kick's elder brother and the main antagonist of season 1 and a secondary antagonist of season 2 of the series. He bullies and insults Kick, and is in charge when their parents are away. Brad also has very poor personal hygiene and thinks he is popular. He's very similar to that of Vicky or Francis from The Fairly OddParents, Terrance from Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, or even Donnie from Robotboy. He is 15 years old after he took his drivers test and failed a consecutive number of times. His favorite phrase is "Dillweed", which he uses to refer to Kick and "Yeah, Brad" which is his catchphrase.
Read all about it.HERE
Dangerous liasons...
everyday is a survival day... Thinking of how to make a ramp high enough to reach the sky, or falling off with deafening styles... Adrenaline's is what this boy's dreaming off all the time inherited from his...mother? It take skills, courage and determination to achieve full spectacular show to bleak world record ashamed! Evel knievel watch your ground!
everyday is a survival day... Thinking of how to make a ramp high enough to reach the sky, or falling off with deafening styles... Adrenaline's is what this boy's dreaming off all the time inherited from his...mother? It take skills, courage and determination to achieve full spectacular show to bleak world record ashamed! Evel knievel watch your ground!
2. Dennis The Menaces
Format: Animated series
Created by: DIC Entertainment
Hank Ketcham Enterprises
DFS Program Exchange
Crawleys Animation (co-producer, season 2)
Country of origin: United States
No. of episodes: 78 (234 segments)
Production
Running time: 22 Minutes
Broadcast
Original channel: syndication (season 1)
CBS (season 2)
Original run: September 22, 1986 – March 26, 1988
Dennis the Menace is an American animated series produced by DIC Entertainment (with season 2 co-produced by Crawleys Animation), based on the comic strip by Hank Ketcham.
The young blond boy with a cowlick and a mischievous personality, Dennis the Menace, gets into numerous scrapes and adventures with his dog Ruff and his friends Joey, Margaret, Gina, Tommy, PeeBee and Jay.
Dennis is an impulsive, angel-faced little devil who is always getting into scrapes which end up tormenting his hapless next-door neighbor, Mr. Wilson (though Dennis always means well). Dennis finds himself involved in all kinds of wild adventures (some of which are fantasy-based like the international espionage and trips into the past stories) but always manages to save the day.
Characters:
Dennis Mitchell, a well-meaning but trouble-prone boy.
Henry Mitchell, father to Dennis and Alice's husband.
Alice Mitchell, Henry Mitchell's wife and Dennis's mother.
Mr. George Wilson, the Mitchells' neighbor, often exasperated with Dennis's antics.
Mrs. Martha Wilson, a loving, grandmotherly type who enjoys Dennis's company.
Joey McDonald, Dennis's best friend.
Tommy Anderson, Dennis's other best friend.
Margaret Wade, Dennis's friend and occasional nemesis, a goody-goody girl in the neighborhood.
Gina Gillotti, Dennis's tomboyish, yet warm and feminine friend.
PeeBee Kappa, Dennis' friend and resident genius and technology freak. His name is a play on Phi Beta Kappa.
Jay Weldon, Dennis's "too-tall" friend who loves to play basketball.
Ruff, the Mitchells' family dog.
For more.HERE
Dangerous liasons...
Now this is the boy you don't want to mess with...
A kind of kid neighbour whose don't has enough attentions and had chosen you as a father's figure.... He'll shower you loves and affections until your life turn to... miserable? But you know it's just a fun times laughing out loud for him making you scream on top of your lung!
3. Johnny Quest
Now this is the boy you don't want to mess with...
A kind of kid neighbour whose don't has enough attentions and had chosen you as a father's figure.... He'll shower you loves and affections until your life turn to... miserable? But you know it's just a fun times laughing out loud for him making you scream on top of your lung!
3. Johnny Quest
Genre: Adventure/Science fiction
Format: Animated series
Created by: Doug Wildey
Directed by: William Hanna/Joseph Barbera
Country of origin: United States
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes; 26 (List of episodes)
Production
Producer(s): William Hanna/Joseph Barbera
Running time: 25 minutes
Production company(s) :Hanna-Barbera
Distributor: Screen Gems
Warner Bros. Television Distribution
Broadcast
Original channel: ABC
Original run: September 18, 1964 – March 11, 1965
Jonny Quest – often casually referred to as The Adventures of Jonny Quest – is an American animated science fiction adventure television series about a boy who accompanies his scientist father on extraordinary adventures. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for Screen Gems, and created and designed by comic book artist Doug Wildey.
Inspired by radio serials and comics in the action-adventure genre, it featured more realistic art, characters, and stories than Hanna-Barbera's previous cartoon programs. It was the first of several Hanna-Barbera action-based adventure shows – which would later include Space Ghost, The Herculoids, and Birdman and the Galaxy Trio – and ran on ABC in prime time on early Friday nights for one season in 1964–1965.
After spending two decades in reruns, during which time it appeared on all 3 major US television networks of the time, new episodes were produced for syndication in 1986 as part of The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera's second season. Two telefilms, a comic book series, and a more modern revival series, The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest, were produced in the 1990s.
Jonathan "Jonny" Quest is an 11-year-old American boy who lost his mother at an early age. Though unenthusiastic in his schooling, he is intelligent, brave, adventurous, and generally athletic with a proficiency in judo, scuba diving, and the handling of firearms. He takes on responsibility willingly, attending to his studies, and treating adults with respect.
Characters:
Dr. Benton C. Quest is Jonny's father and a scientific genius who works for the U.S. government. He is considered to be "one of the three top scientists in the world," with interests and technical know-how spanning many fields. Raising Jonny and Hadji as a single father, he is conscientious and decent, though willing and able to take violent decisive action when necessary for survival or defense. Benton Quest was voiced by John Stephenson for five episodes, and by Don Messick for the remainder of the series.
Roger T. "Race" Bannon is a special agent, bodyguard, and pilot from Intelligence One. Governmental fears that Jonny could "fall into the wrong hands" resulted in Bannon's assignment to guard and tutor him. Race was born in Wilmette, Illinois, to John and Sarah Bannon.[10] He is an expert in judo, having a third-degree black belt as well as the ability to defeat noted experts in various martial arts, including sumo wrestlers. The character was voiced by Mike Road, with his design modeled on actor Jeff Chandler. The name is a combination of Race Dunhill and Stretch Bannon from an earlier Doug Wildey comic strip. The surname Bannon is Irish (from 'O'Banain') meaning "white".
Hadji Singh is a streetwise 11-year-old Calcutta orphan who becomes the adopted son of Dr. Benton Quest and also Jonny's best friend.[14] Rarely depicted without his bejeweled turban and Nehru jacket, he is proficient in judo, which he learned from an American Marine. The seventh son of a seventh son, Hadji seems to possess mystical powers (including snake charming, levitation, magic, and hypnotism) which may or may not be attributed to parlor trickery. The Quests meet Hadji while Dr. Quest is lecturing at Calcutta University; he saves Dr. Quest's life (by blocking a thrown knife intended for the doctor with a basket lid) and is subsequently adopted into the Quest family.[15] Though slightly more circumspect than Jonny, he can reliably be talked into participating in most any adventure by his adoptive brother. He is voiced by Danny Bravo. In the sequel series The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest, Hadji is revealed to be an Indian prince, and is given the last name Singh.
Bandit is the name of Jonny's pet, a small white dog. He has been so named because his eyes have a black, mask-like coloration around them. This coloration is occasionally instrumental in foiling antagonists. Though unable to speak, in the manner of some other Hanna-Barbera cartoon dogs, he seems uncannily able to understand human speech and is capable of complex facial expressions. Don Messick provided Bandit's vocal effects, which were combined with an archived clip of an actual dog barking.[citation needed] Creator Doug Wildey wanted to have a monkey as Jonny's pet, but he was overruled by Hanna-Barbera.Wildey has also said that Bandit was intended to be a bulldog.[16] However, Bandit does not actually conform to any breed standard. His tail is too long for any bulldog variant. He is too small to be an English Bulldog, unless he remains a puppy throughout the series. His ears are floppy, so he does not conform to the breed standard for a French Bulldog. In many ways he resembles a pug, except that pugs have a distinctive curved tail.
Jade is Race's old love interest. She is a soldier of fortune type spy and is also a recurring character. In one episode, it shown that Jade knows how to detect who a man really is by kissing them. She is as intelligent as she is cunning. Jade is voiced by Cathy Lewis.
The Quests have a home compound in the Florida Keys (on the island of Palm Key), but their adventures take them all over the world. The Quest team travels the globe studying scientific mysteries, which generally end up being explained as the work of various bad guys. Such pursuits get them into scrapes with foes that range from espionage robots and electrical monsters to Egyptian mummies and pterosaurs. Although most menaces appeared in only one episode each, one recurring nemesis is known as Dr. Zin, an Asian criminal mastermind.With yellow skin and a diabolical laugh, Zin was an example of the Yellow Peril villains common in Cold War-era fiction.The voices of Dr. Zin and other assorted characters were done by Vic Perrin. Race's mysterious old flame, Jade, appears in two episodes, as do the characters of Corbin (an Intelligence One agent) and the Professor (a scientist colleague of Dr. Quest's). The 1993 made-for-TV feature Jonny's Golden Quest included in its plotline the concept that Race and Jade had been briefly married years earlier, but it also depicted Race and Hadji in place with the family at Mrs. Quest's death, in direct contradiction to explicit statements in the original series.
Jonny Quest became a target of parental watchdog group Action for Children's Television (ACT) for its multiple onscreen deaths, murder attempts, use of firearms and deadly weapons, depictions of monsters, and tense moments. Reruns were taken off the air in 1972, but returned to Saturday morning, in edited form, sporadically afterward.Read More.HERE
Dangerous liasons...
Format: Animated series
Created by: Doug Wildey
Directed by: William Hanna/Joseph Barbera
Country of origin: United States
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes; 26 (List of episodes)
Production
Producer(s): William Hanna/Joseph Barbera
Running time: 25 minutes
Production company(s) :Hanna-Barbera
Distributor: Screen Gems
Warner Bros. Television Distribution
Broadcast
Original channel: ABC
Original run: September 18, 1964 – March 11, 1965
Jonny Quest – often casually referred to as The Adventures of Jonny Quest – is an American animated science fiction adventure television series about a boy who accompanies his scientist father on extraordinary adventures. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for Screen Gems, and created and designed by comic book artist Doug Wildey.
Inspired by radio serials and comics in the action-adventure genre, it featured more realistic art, characters, and stories than Hanna-Barbera's previous cartoon programs. It was the first of several Hanna-Barbera action-based adventure shows – which would later include Space Ghost, The Herculoids, and Birdman and the Galaxy Trio – and ran on ABC in prime time on early Friday nights for one season in 1964–1965.
After spending two decades in reruns, during which time it appeared on all 3 major US television networks of the time, new episodes were produced for syndication in 1986 as part of The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera's second season. Two telefilms, a comic book series, and a more modern revival series, The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest, were produced in the 1990s.
Jonathan "Jonny" Quest is an 11-year-old American boy who lost his mother at an early age. Though unenthusiastic in his schooling, he is intelligent, brave, adventurous, and generally athletic with a proficiency in judo, scuba diving, and the handling of firearms. He takes on responsibility willingly, attending to his studies, and treating adults with respect.
Characters:
Dr. Benton C. Quest is Jonny's father and a scientific genius who works for the U.S. government. He is considered to be "one of the three top scientists in the world," with interests and technical know-how spanning many fields. Raising Jonny and Hadji as a single father, he is conscientious and decent, though willing and able to take violent decisive action when necessary for survival or defense. Benton Quest was voiced by John Stephenson for five episodes, and by Don Messick for the remainder of the series.
Roger T. "Race" Bannon is a special agent, bodyguard, and pilot from Intelligence One. Governmental fears that Jonny could "fall into the wrong hands" resulted in Bannon's assignment to guard and tutor him. Race was born in Wilmette, Illinois, to John and Sarah Bannon.[10] He is an expert in judo, having a third-degree black belt as well as the ability to defeat noted experts in various martial arts, including sumo wrestlers. The character was voiced by Mike Road, with his design modeled on actor Jeff Chandler. The name is a combination of Race Dunhill and Stretch Bannon from an earlier Doug Wildey comic strip. The surname Bannon is Irish (from 'O'Banain') meaning "white".
Hadji Singh is a streetwise 11-year-old Calcutta orphan who becomes the adopted son of Dr. Benton Quest and also Jonny's best friend.[14] Rarely depicted without his bejeweled turban and Nehru jacket, he is proficient in judo, which he learned from an American Marine. The seventh son of a seventh son, Hadji seems to possess mystical powers (including snake charming, levitation, magic, and hypnotism) which may or may not be attributed to parlor trickery. The Quests meet Hadji while Dr. Quest is lecturing at Calcutta University; he saves Dr. Quest's life (by blocking a thrown knife intended for the doctor with a basket lid) and is subsequently adopted into the Quest family.[15] Though slightly more circumspect than Jonny, he can reliably be talked into participating in most any adventure by his adoptive brother. He is voiced by Danny Bravo. In the sequel series The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest, Hadji is revealed to be an Indian prince, and is given the last name Singh.
Bandit is the name of Jonny's pet, a small white dog. He has been so named because his eyes have a black, mask-like coloration around them. This coloration is occasionally instrumental in foiling antagonists. Though unable to speak, in the manner of some other Hanna-Barbera cartoon dogs, he seems uncannily able to understand human speech and is capable of complex facial expressions. Don Messick provided Bandit's vocal effects, which were combined with an archived clip of an actual dog barking.[citation needed] Creator Doug Wildey wanted to have a monkey as Jonny's pet, but he was overruled by Hanna-Barbera.Wildey has also said that Bandit was intended to be a bulldog.[16] However, Bandit does not actually conform to any breed standard. His tail is too long for any bulldog variant. He is too small to be an English Bulldog, unless he remains a puppy throughout the series. His ears are floppy, so he does not conform to the breed standard for a French Bulldog. In many ways he resembles a pug, except that pugs have a distinctive curved tail.
Jade is Race's old love interest. She is a soldier of fortune type spy and is also a recurring character. In one episode, it shown that Jade knows how to detect who a man really is by kissing them. She is as intelligent as she is cunning. Jade is voiced by Cathy Lewis.
The Quests have a home compound in the Florida Keys (on the island of Palm Key), but their adventures take them all over the world. The Quest team travels the globe studying scientific mysteries, which generally end up being explained as the work of various bad guys. Such pursuits get them into scrapes with foes that range from espionage robots and electrical monsters to Egyptian mummies and pterosaurs. Although most menaces appeared in only one episode each, one recurring nemesis is known as Dr. Zin, an Asian criminal mastermind.With yellow skin and a diabolical laugh, Zin was an example of the Yellow Peril villains common in Cold War-era fiction.The voices of Dr. Zin and other assorted characters were done by Vic Perrin. Race's mysterious old flame, Jade, appears in two episodes, as do the characters of Corbin (an Intelligence One agent) and the Professor (a scientist colleague of Dr. Quest's). The 1993 made-for-TV feature Jonny's Golden Quest included in its plotline the concept that Race and Jade had been briefly married years earlier, but it also depicted Race and Hadji in place with the family at Mrs. Quest's death, in direct contradiction to explicit statements in the original series.
Jonny Quest became a target of parental watchdog group Action for Children's Television (ACT) for its multiple onscreen deaths, murder attempts, use of firearms and deadly weapons, depictions of monsters, and tense moments. Reruns were taken off the air in 1972, but returned to Saturday morning, in edited form, sporadically afterward.Read More.HERE
Dangerous liasons...
A boy with a gun is surely a dangerous thing... Although it's a fictional spy mission but surely a cartoon depict
factual life need to watch out for. Imagine a boy shooting, firing, running for his life in intense classic battle of good against evil not to mention racist type villain hounding upon you... Beware of the Cold War-era.
factual life need to watch out for. Imagine a boy shooting, firing, running for his life in intense classic battle of good against evil not to mention racist type villain hounding upon you... Beware of the Cold War-era.
4.Johnny Test
Genre Comedy
Comic science fiction
Format Animated television series
Traditional cel animation(season 1) Flash animation (Adobe Flash) (season 2-present)
Created by Scott Fellows
Developed by Aaron Simpson
Country of origin United States
Canada
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 117[3] (whole)
234 (segments) (List of episodes)
Running time 11 minutes (segments)
22 minutes (whole)
Production company(s) Warner Bros. Animation (season 1-2)
Cookie Jar Entertainment (season 3-5)
DHX Media (season 6-7)
9 Story Entertainment (season 7-present)
Broadcast
Original channel Kids' WB (2005–2008)
The CW4Kids (2008)
Cartoon Network (2008–present)
Teletoon (2006-present)
Picture format 480i SDTV (Season 1-5) 1080i HDTV (Season 6-present)
Original run September 17, 2005 – present
Johnny Test is an American/Canadian animated television series. It premiered on Kids' WB, on The WB Television Network, on September 17, 2005. It was introduced to Cartoon Network UK on January 12, 2006 as a sneak preview on Jungle Saturdays Block, and then on June 5, 2006, added to its daily lineup. Despite the merger of the UPN and that programming block's parent channel into The CW Television Network, the show still continued to air on Kids' WB, on The CW, with its second and third seasons, through October 28, 2006, to March 1, 2008.[4] The series currently airs in the United States on Cartoon Network, as of January 7, 2008, and in Canada on Teletoon, as of October 28, 2006.
The series revolves around the adventures of the title character, Johnny Test, an 11-year-old suburban boy who lives with his super-genius 13-year-old twin sisters, Susan and Mary, both of whom are scientists. They reside in the fictional town of Porkbelly, which is alternately located in Ontario, British Columbia, or California, depending on the flag displayed at Johnny's school. Johnny is often used as a test subject for his genius twin sisters' inventions and experiments, which range from gadgets to superpowers. Their experiments often cause problems that he must resolve, and he must sometimes fight villains in the process. He occasionally saves the world with his sisters' inventions. Read More.HERE.
Dangerous liasons...
He's got a twin genius sisters committed of nuclear testing... And whose the guinea pig is? You guess is right as the boy soon to be man chosen as the main subject for blown-up or shooting into space or chemical reaction to create a super-soldier boy... Of course for sibling's bondage the boy must comply for anything his sister creation for. Despite any warning or precaution the boy servitude for a better world so called... Johnny Test... You named it.
5.Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids
Also known as:
The New Fat Albert Show
The Adventures of Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids
Created by: Bill Cosby/Ken Mundie
Directed by: Hal Sutherland
Creative director(s): Don Christensen
Presented by: Bill Cosby
Country of origin: United States
No. of seasons: 8
No. of episodes: 110 + 4 specials
Production
Executive producer(s): Bill Cosby
Producer(s): Lou Scheimer
Norm Prescott (1972–84)
Production company(s) Filmation
Distributor: Group W Productions (syndicated)
Broadcast
Original channel: CBS (1972–84), first-run syndication (1984–85)
Original run: September 9, 1972 – October 27, 1973
September 6, 1975 – October 30, 1976
September 8, 1979 – September 16, 1981
September 1, 1984 – August 10, 1985
Chronology
Preceded by: Hey, Hey, Hey, It's Fat Albert (1969)
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids is an animated series created, produced, and hosted (in live action bookends) by comedian Bill Cosby, who also lent his voice to a number of characters, including Fat Albert himself. Filmation was the production company for the series. The show premiered in 1972[1] and ran until 1985 (with new episodes being produced on an "on and off" basis during that time frame). The show, based on Cosby's remembrances of his childhood gang, centered on Albert (known for his catchphrase "Hey hey hey!"), and his friends.[2]
The show always had an educational lesson emphasized by Cosby's live-action segments, and in early episodes the gang would usually gather in their North Philadelphia junkyard to play a rock song (summarizing the lesson of the day) on their cobbled-together instruments at the end of the show.[2]
Characters:
The Cosby Kids:
"Fat" Albert Jackson is based on Cosby's childhood friend Albert Robertson. The main character in the series, he is the heart and soul (and often the conscience) of the Junkyard Gang. Though depicted as being obese, he is shown to enjoy sports, often playing in different games with the rest of the gang. Civic-minded and wise beyond his years, Fat Albert works hard to maintain integrity in the gang and with others, and is the lead singer as well as bagpipe-accordion (made from a funnel, radiator and an airbag) player in the Junkyard Band.
Mushmouth is a chinless, slack-jawed simpleton wearing a red knit hat and a blue scarf who always speaks in virtual Ubbi Dubbi, tantamount to an overdose of novocaine in the mouth, which Cosby would later use in the "Dentist" monologue from his 1983 film, Himself. He plays a homemade bass guitar in the Junkyard Band.
"Dumb" Donald is a lanky but dimwitted fellow. He always wears a green long-sleeved jersey three sizes too big, and a pink stocking cap covering his entire face except his eyes and mouth. In the Junkyard Band, he plays a trombone made out of plumbers' pipe and a morning glory horn from an old Victrola.
William "Bill" Cosby is a character based on Cosby himself. Like the others, Bill is an all-around good athlete, but more often he spends his time trying, though not always successfully, to keep his little brother Russell out of trouble. Like Fat Albert, Bill is usually the voice of reason in the gang, although at times a little more stubborn. He also acts as Fat Albert's second-in-command. In the Junkyard Band, he plays homemade drums made from a discarded foot-pedal trash can using spoons for sticks.
Russell Cosby is Bill's younger brother (based on his real-life brother—whom he often talked about in his routines) and the smallest and youngest of the Junkyard Gang. He always wears a heavy jacket, boots and a Ushanka winter hat regardless of the weather. Russell has a penchant for making blunt observations (much to his older brother's consternation). Russell often insults and antagonizes Rudy, usually when Rudy is being his typical arrogant self. His catchphrase is "No class." He plays the xylophone in the Junkyard Band (made out of empty cans and a discarded coat rack).
"Weird" Harold is a tall, skinny, beady-eyed kid who always wears a beige dress blazer, a brown sock on one foot and a red sock on the other, and is usually clumsy. In the Junkyard Band, he plays a harp made from bedsprings, and on occasion plays a "dressmaker dummy" in the percussion section. (In the film adaptation, he is called "Old Weird" Harold, like he was in Cosby's stand-up routines, rather than Weird Harold.)
Rudolph "Rudy" Davis is a sharp dressed, smooth talking, somewhat antagonistic huckster whose smart-aleck attitude gets him into trouble more often than not. In fact, Rudy's poor attitude and dismissive demeanor is often the catalyst for a typical plot's conflict. But inside he has a good heart and often learns his lesson. In the Junkyard Band, he plays a makeshift banjo, whose parts include a broomstick handle and sewing-thread spool to hold the strings. However, when shown playing apart from the others, Rudy plays an electric guitar (personalized with a big "R"). He wears an orange flat cap, purple vest, pink tuxedo, regular bell-bottom jeans, and boots. Rudy's personality in the Fat Albert movie is much different as he is portrayed as a shy, kind-hearted, gentleman who falls in love with the female lead Doris .
Bucky as his name indicates, has a large overbite. He is shown to be really fast and flexible. Bucky plays a stovepipe organ in the Junkyard Band.
During each episode, Fat Albert and his friends (aka The Junkyard Gang), dealt with an issue or problem commonly faced by young urban children, ranging from stage fright, first loves, medical operations, and personal hygiene to more serious themes (though toned down for younger children) including vandalism, stealing, racism, smoking, being scammed by con artists, sexually transmitted diseases, child abuse, kidnapping, drug use, gun violence and death.
At the end of most episodes (with some exceptions in the case of particularly serious themes), the gang would sing a song about the theme of the day. This sequence, similar to those seen in other Filmation shows including The Archie Show, has often been parodied. The musical sequence was dropped during the Brown Hornet/Legal Eagle years.Read More.HERE
Dangerous liasons...
It's a gangs thing... They talked about real problem, vandalism, theft, racist and all about that unkind things...
It's so dangerous because you could get influences but not without consequences... Are we should close one eye and pretend nothing happens while the world revolves around negatives attitudes? Watch it and be cool cause it's was a Bill Cosby's show...
Some other worth mentions... SouthPark?, Totally Spiez, Phineas_and_ferb?, Richie Rich?, Johnny_Bravo?...
Comic science fiction
Format Animated television series
Traditional cel animation(season 1) Flash animation (Adobe Flash) (season 2-present)
Created by Scott Fellows
Developed by Aaron Simpson
Country of origin United States
Canada
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 117[3] (whole)
234 (segments) (List of episodes)
Running time 11 minutes (segments)
22 minutes (whole)
Production company(s) Warner Bros. Animation (season 1-2)
Cookie Jar Entertainment (season 3-5)
DHX Media (season 6-7)
9 Story Entertainment (season 7-present)
Broadcast
Original channel Kids' WB (2005–2008)
The CW4Kids (2008)
Cartoon Network (2008–present)
Teletoon (2006-present)
Picture format 480i SDTV (Season 1-5) 1080i HDTV (Season 6-present)
Original run September 17, 2005 – present
Johnny Test is an American/Canadian animated television series. It premiered on Kids' WB, on The WB Television Network, on September 17, 2005. It was introduced to Cartoon Network UK on January 12, 2006 as a sneak preview on Jungle Saturdays Block, and then on June 5, 2006, added to its daily lineup. Despite the merger of the UPN and that programming block's parent channel into The CW Television Network, the show still continued to air on Kids' WB, on The CW, with its second and third seasons, through October 28, 2006, to March 1, 2008.[4] The series currently airs in the United States on Cartoon Network, as of January 7, 2008, and in Canada on Teletoon, as of October 28, 2006.
The series revolves around the adventures of the title character, Johnny Test, an 11-year-old suburban boy who lives with his super-genius 13-year-old twin sisters, Susan and Mary, both of whom are scientists. They reside in the fictional town of Porkbelly, which is alternately located in Ontario, British Columbia, or California, depending on the flag displayed at Johnny's school. Johnny is often used as a test subject for his genius twin sisters' inventions and experiments, which range from gadgets to superpowers. Their experiments often cause problems that he must resolve, and he must sometimes fight villains in the process. He occasionally saves the world with his sisters' inventions. Read More.HERE.
Dangerous liasons...
He's got a twin genius sisters committed of nuclear testing... And whose the guinea pig is? You guess is right as the boy soon to be man chosen as the main subject for blown-up or shooting into space or chemical reaction to create a super-soldier boy... Of course for sibling's bondage the boy must comply for anything his sister creation for. Despite any warning or precaution the boy servitude for a better world so called... Johnny Test... You named it.
5.Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids
Also known as:
The New Fat Albert Show
The Adventures of Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids
Created by: Bill Cosby/Ken Mundie
Directed by: Hal Sutherland
Creative director(s): Don Christensen
Presented by: Bill Cosby
Country of origin: United States
No. of seasons: 8
No. of episodes: 110 + 4 specials
Production
Executive producer(s): Bill Cosby
Producer(s): Lou Scheimer
Norm Prescott (1972–84)
Production company(s) Filmation
Distributor: Group W Productions (syndicated)
Broadcast
Original channel: CBS (1972–84), first-run syndication (1984–85)
Original run: September 9, 1972 – October 27, 1973
September 6, 1975 – October 30, 1976
September 8, 1979 – September 16, 1981
September 1, 1984 – August 10, 1985
Chronology
Preceded by: Hey, Hey, Hey, It's Fat Albert (1969)
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids is an animated series created, produced, and hosted (in live action bookends) by comedian Bill Cosby, who also lent his voice to a number of characters, including Fat Albert himself. Filmation was the production company for the series. The show premiered in 1972[1] and ran until 1985 (with new episodes being produced on an "on and off" basis during that time frame). The show, based on Cosby's remembrances of his childhood gang, centered on Albert (known for his catchphrase "Hey hey hey!"), and his friends.[2]
The show always had an educational lesson emphasized by Cosby's live-action segments, and in early episodes the gang would usually gather in their North Philadelphia junkyard to play a rock song (summarizing the lesson of the day) on their cobbled-together instruments at the end of the show.[2]
Characters:
The Cosby Kids:
"Fat" Albert Jackson is based on Cosby's childhood friend Albert Robertson. The main character in the series, he is the heart and soul (and often the conscience) of the Junkyard Gang. Though depicted as being obese, he is shown to enjoy sports, often playing in different games with the rest of the gang. Civic-minded and wise beyond his years, Fat Albert works hard to maintain integrity in the gang and with others, and is the lead singer as well as bagpipe-accordion (made from a funnel, radiator and an airbag) player in the Junkyard Band.
Mushmouth is a chinless, slack-jawed simpleton wearing a red knit hat and a blue scarf who always speaks in virtual Ubbi Dubbi, tantamount to an overdose of novocaine in the mouth, which Cosby would later use in the "Dentist" monologue from his 1983 film, Himself. He plays a homemade bass guitar in the Junkyard Band.
"Dumb" Donald is a lanky but dimwitted fellow. He always wears a green long-sleeved jersey three sizes too big, and a pink stocking cap covering his entire face except his eyes and mouth. In the Junkyard Band, he plays a trombone made out of plumbers' pipe and a morning glory horn from an old Victrola.
William "Bill" Cosby is a character based on Cosby himself. Like the others, Bill is an all-around good athlete, but more often he spends his time trying, though not always successfully, to keep his little brother Russell out of trouble. Like Fat Albert, Bill is usually the voice of reason in the gang, although at times a little more stubborn. He also acts as Fat Albert's second-in-command. In the Junkyard Band, he plays homemade drums made from a discarded foot-pedal trash can using spoons for sticks.
Russell Cosby is Bill's younger brother (based on his real-life brother—whom he often talked about in his routines) and the smallest and youngest of the Junkyard Gang. He always wears a heavy jacket, boots and a Ushanka winter hat regardless of the weather. Russell has a penchant for making blunt observations (much to his older brother's consternation). Russell often insults and antagonizes Rudy, usually when Rudy is being his typical arrogant self. His catchphrase is "No class." He plays the xylophone in the Junkyard Band (made out of empty cans and a discarded coat rack).
"Weird" Harold is a tall, skinny, beady-eyed kid who always wears a beige dress blazer, a brown sock on one foot and a red sock on the other, and is usually clumsy. In the Junkyard Band, he plays a harp made from bedsprings, and on occasion plays a "dressmaker dummy" in the percussion section. (In the film adaptation, he is called "Old Weird" Harold, like he was in Cosby's stand-up routines, rather than Weird Harold.)
Rudolph "Rudy" Davis is a sharp dressed, smooth talking, somewhat antagonistic huckster whose smart-aleck attitude gets him into trouble more often than not. In fact, Rudy's poor attitude and dismissive demeanor is often the catalyst for a typical plot's conflict. But inside he has a good heart and often learns his lesson. In the Junkyard Band, he plays a makeshift banjo, whose parts include a broomstick handle and sewing-thread spool to hold the strings. However, when shown playing apart from the others, Rudy plays an electric guitar (personalized with a big "R"). He wears an orange flat cap, purple vest, pink tuxedo, regular bell-bottom jeans, and boots. Rudy's personality in the Fat Albert movie is much different as he is portrayed as a shy, kind-hearted, gentleman who falls in love with the female lead Doris .
Bucky as his name indicates, has a large overbite. He is shown to be really fast and flexible. Bucky plays a stovepipe organ in the Junkyard Band.
During each episode, Fat Albert and his friends (aka The Junkyard Gang), dealt with an issue or problem commonly faced by young urban children, ranging from stage fright, first loves, medical operations, and personal hygiene to more serious themes (though toned down for younger children) including vandalism, stealing, racism, smoking, being scammed by con artists, sexually transmitted diseases, child abuse, kidnapping, drug use, gun violence and death.
At the end of most episodes (with some exceptions in the case of particularly serious themes), the gang would sing a song about the theme of the day. This sequence, similar to those seen in other Filmation shows including The Archie Show, has often been parodied. The musical sequence was dropped during the Brown Hornet/Legal Eagle years.Read More.HERE
Dangerous liasons...
It's a gangs thing... They talked about real problem, vandalism, theft, racist and all about that unkind things...
It's so dangerous because you could get influences but not without consequences... Are we should close one eye and pretend nothing happens while the world revolves around negatives attitudes? Watch it and be cool cause it's was a Bill Cosby's show...
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