These are the complete filmographies for the cartoon shorts series created by American animation producer Fred Seibert from 1995 through 2022, at Hanna-Barbera Cartoons and his animation production companies Frederator Studios and FredFilms. [1]
What A Cartoon! was producer Fred Seibert's first cartoon incubator, featuring 48 original animated shorts. Produced during Fred Seibert's presidency of Hanna-Barbera, [2] and exhibited on Cartoon Network. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired.
The spin-off series were Dexter's Laboratory, Cow and Chicken, Johnny Bravo, I Am Weasel, Courage the Cowardly Dog, and The Powerpuff Girls.
No. | Title | Episode | Created by | Hanna-Barbera | Cartoon Network Studios | Plot | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 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 | Dexter's Laboratory | — | Genndy Tartakovsky | Yes | No | Dee Dee and Dexter battle turning each other into animals, using Dexter's latest invention. Note 1: First short to become a series after being deemed most popular through a vote held in 1995. Note 2: This episode was nominated for an Emmy. Note 3: First pilot to Dexter's Laboratory . | February 26, 1995 [3] [4] |
3 | Yuckie Duck | "Short Orders" | Pat Ventura | Yes | No | Yuckie Duck works as a cook and waiter in a dirty restaurant, and delivers unappealing orders to the demanding customers. | March 5, 1995 [5] |
4 | Dino | "Stay Out!" | Hanna-Barbera (original character) | Yes | No | The Flintstones' pet, Dino, tries to keep the house cat outside for the night. Note: First spin-off episode to The Flintstones . | March 19, 1995 [3] [6] |
5 | Johnny Bravo | — | Van Partible | Yes | No | Johnny Bravo tries to score with a zookeeper girl by capturing a runaway gorilla. Note: First pilot to Johnny Bravo . | March 26, 1995 [7] |
6 | Sledgehammer O'Possum | "Out and About" | Patrick Ventura | Yes | No | A trouble-making possum named Sledgehammer frustrates a dog's plans to enjoy a quiet summer day out. | April 2, 1995 [3] [8] |
7 | George and Junior | "Look Out Below" | Tex Avery (original characters) | Yes | No | Classic duo George and Junior attempt to fix a lightbulb an angry pigeon keeps breaking. Note: This short was a re-imagining of the original George and Junior cartoons. | April 9, 1995 [3] [9] |
8 | Hard Luck Duck | — | William Hanna | Yes | No | After venturing away from Harley Gators watch, Hard Luck Duck is a hungry fox's target to be cooked. | April 16, 1995 [3] [10] |
9 | Shake & Flick | "Raw Deal in Rome" | Michael Rann, Eugene Mattos, and George Johnson | Yes | No | A flea named Flick has a personal agenda with a local performer, a poodle named Shake, in an anachronistic Rome setting where the two constantly try to one up each other. Note: This short was nominated to be adapted into a series but it lost to Johnny Bravo. | June 18, 1995 [11] |
10 | The Adventures of Captain Buzz Cheeply | "A Clean Getaway" | Meinert Hansen | Yes | No | Captain Buzz Cheeply and his robot sidekick, Slide, must escape a planet full of "Blubnoids" who have abnormally sized foreheads but small-sized brains whilst trying to do their laundry. | June 25, 1995 [12] |
11 | O. Ratz with Dave D. Fly | "Rat in a Hot Tin Can" | Jerry Reynolds and Russ Harris | Yes | No | A rat named O. Ratz and his fly companion, Dave D. Fly, try to find a place to stay for the night during winter in the city. | July 2, 1995 [13] |
12 | Pfish and Chip | "Short Pfuse" | Butch Hartman, Michael Rann, and Eugene Mattos | Yes | No | Pfish (a shark) and Chip (a short-tempered lynx) attempt to stop the squeaky-laughing Mad Bomber while the Chief naps. | July 9, 1995 [14] |
13 | The Fat Cats | "Drip Dry Drips" | Jon McClenahan | Yes | No | Brothers Louie and Elmo set a laundry business, expecting to earn some cash. They get a request from the President, but accidentally destroy his suit. | July 16, 1995 [15] |
14 | George and Junior(uncredited) | "George and Junior's Christmas Spectacular" | Tex Avery (original characters) | Yes | No | George and Junior are forced to deliver one of Santa's presents after they fail to mail in one of his letters. | July 23, 1995 [16] |
15 | Yoink! of the Yukon | — | Don Jurwich, Jerry Eisenberg, and Jim Ryan | Yes | No | The mounted police has its uniforms stolen, so Yoink and Sergeant Farnsworth Farflung are sent to retrieve them. | July 30, 1995 [17] |
16 | Yuckie Duck | "I'm on My Way" | Patrick A. Ventura | Yes | No | Yuckie Duck works as a paramedic, but does more harm than good to his patients. | August 6, 1995 [18] |
17 | Mina and the Count | "Interlude with a Vampire" | Rob Renzetti | Yes | No | Vlad the Count is forced to play with Mina after a mix-up in the schedule with his victims. Note: Pilot to the Mina and the Count shorts which are featured on Season 2 of Oh Yeah! Cartoons , making it the only short to appear in both cartoon variety shows. | November 5, 1995 [19] |
18 | Cow and Chicken | "No Smoking" | Dave Feiss | Yes | No | The Devil (later known as the Red Guy) kidnaps Chicken, who must be saved from damnation of smoking by Super Cow (who is his sister, Cow). Note 1: This episode was nominated for an Emmy. Note 2: Pilot to Cow and Chicken . | November 12, 1995 [20] |
19 | Boid 'n' Woim | — | C. Miles Thompson | Yes | No | A worm named Mr. Woim hitchhikes in the middle of the California desert alongside a bird named Mr. Boid. While driving there, Woim crashes Boid's car and they begin to hallucinate. | January 1, 1996 [21] [22] |
20 | Jof | "Help?" | Bruno Bozzetto | Yes | No | A cat that pricks his finger while sewing asks for help at the hospital, but its personnel do more harm then good. | January 14, 1996 [23] |
21 | Podunk Possum | "One Step Beyond" | Joe Orrantia and Elizabeth Stonecypher | No | Yes | A possum acquires an abandoned farm with three chickens to lay eggs for him, and has to defend them from a fried chicken titan, Major Portions. | January 21, 1996 [24] |
22 | The Powerpuff Girls | "Crime 101" | Craig McCracken | Yes | No | The Powerpuff Girls aid the bumbling Amoeba Boys in becoming able criminals. Note: Second pilot to The Powerpuff Girls. | January 28, 1996 [25] |
23 | Wind-Up Wolf | — | William Hanna | Yes | No | The Big Bad Wolf creates a robot minion wolf to attempt to finally get the Three Little Pigs. Note: William Hanna's final cartoon short. [26] | February 4, 1996 [27] |
24 | Hillbilly Blue | — | Michael Ryan | Yes | No | Crawdad Eustace is fed-up with being treated as food and goes with possum pal Mordechai on a cross-country trip to New Orleans. | February 11, 1996 [28] |
25 | Courage the Cowardly Dog | "The Chicken from Outer Space" | John R. Dilworth | Yes | No | Courage tries to stop an alien chicken's plans to invade Earth while in his owners' farm. Note 1: This short was nominated for an Oscar. Note 2: Pilot to Courage the Cowardly Dog . | February 18, 1996 [29] |
26 | Pizza Boy | "No Tip" | Robert Alvarez | Yes | No | Pizza Boy must deliver a pizza to Antarctica safe and sound under five minutes, or else he will receive no tip. | February 25, 1996 [30] |
27 | Gramps | — | Mike Ryan and Butch Hartman | Yes | No | Gramps tells his grandchildren about his battle against invading aliens. | March 3, 1996 [31] |
28 | Dexter's Laboratory | "The Big Sister" | Genndy Tartakovsky | Yes | No | Dexter prevents giantess Dee Dee from attacking the whole city. Note 1: This episode was nominated for an Emmy. Note 2: Second pilot to Dexter's Laboratory. | March 10, 1996 [32] |
29 | Bloo's Gang | "Bow-Wow Buccaneers" | Mike Milo and Harry McLaughlin | Yes | No | Bloo and his dog friends sneak out of their owner's houses at midnight to set on a pirate adventure in the city. | March 17, 1996 [33] |
30 | Jungle Boy | "Mr. Monkeyman" | Van Partible | No | Yes | Jealous King Raymond attempts to taint hero Jungle Boy's reputation after he begins to lose fame. | October 9, 1996 [34] |
31 | Godfrey & Zeek | "Lost Control" | Jason Butler Rote and Zac Moncrief | No | Yes | A giraffe named Godfrey and a pig named Zeek leave their zoo home and visit a residual water treatment plant to retrieve the remote control they accidentally flushed down the toilet. | October 16, 1996 [35] |
32 | Tumbleweed Tex | "School Daze" | Robert Alvarez | No | Yes | A Wild West outlaw needs to finish the fourth grade and deal with his obnoxious class rival, Little Timmy. | October 23, 1996 [36] |
33 | Buy One, Get One Free | — | Charlie Bean, Carey Yost, and Don Shank | No | Yes | A man named Reilly gets a cat named Flinch in order to impress a female cat lover named Sofie and threatens the cat that if there is a scratch on anything while he's away, he will send him to the violin factory. It won't be easy when Sophie leaves Flinch a feline playmate named Fix that only wants to party. | October 30, 1996 |
34 | The Kitchen Casanova | — | John McIntyre | No | Yes | A first-time cook named Jesse is preparing a dinner for his date. Trouble arises when the wind flips the pages from his cookbook. | November 6, 1996 [37] |
35 | The Ignoramooses | — | Mike Milo and Harry McLaughlin | No | Yes | Two moose believe they are going to be adopted by a rich hunter due to tracking collars that a biologist put on them (they think they are pet collars), and wreak havoc in his mansion. | November 13, 1996 [38] |
36 | Johnny Bravo(uncredited) | "Johnny Bravo and the Amazon Women" | Van Partible | Yes | No | Johnny Bravo is left stranded in an island filled with beautiful giant women. Note: Second pilot to Johnny Bravo. | January 1, 1997 [39] |
37 | Pfish and Chip | "Blammo the Clown" | Butch Hartman, Michael Rann, and Eugene Mattos | No | Yes | The bomb squad, Pfish and Chip, face yet another clown bomber, Blammo. It isn't easy when they have to watch and protect the chief's teddy bear whilst trying to stop the clown. | January 8, 1997 [40] |
38 | Awfully Lucky | — | Davis Doi | No | Yes | A greedy guy named Luther discovers the Paradox Pearl, which brings him good luck, but not without consequences. When Luther tries to turn it in to the city museum for ten million dollars, he finds out just how harsh the consequences are. | January 15, 1997 [41] |
39 | Strange Things | — | Mike Wellins | No | Yes | A robot finds a job as a janitor. He must remember that if it says "Don't Touch", don't touch. Note: The series' only computer-animated short. | January 22, 1997 [42] |
40 | Snoot's New Squat | — | Jeret Ochi and Victor Ortado | No | Yes | Snoot, the flea-like alien, finds a new home on a neurotic neat-freak dog, Al. Note: A reference to the popular movie Forrest Gump is made by Snoot when Al runs away. Snoot morphs into a girl and shouts the same way as Jenny does to Forrest. | January 29, 1997 [43] |
41 | Larry and Steve | — | Seth MacFarlane | No | Yes | Steve, a homeless dog, is adopted by dimwit Larry (the only man to understand dog) and lives disaster after disaster when Larry takes him shopping. Note: Episode's style developed into MacFarlane's Family Guy . | February 5, 1997 [44] |
42 | Sledgehammer O'Possum | "What's Goin' on Back There?!" | Patrick A. Ventura | Yes | No | Sledgehammer O'Possum takes shelter from the cold in a mailbox, much to the dismay of a mailman named Ethel who will stop at nothing to make him leave. | February 12, 1997 [45] |
43 | The Zoonatiks | "Home Sweet Home" | Paul Parducci, James Giordano, and R.J. Reiley | No | Yes | A bear named Bill, a monkey named Knuckles and a turtle named Shelby try to enter the all-star Hackensack Zoo after feeling unwanted at the circus. | February 19, 1997 [46] |
44 | Swamp and Tad | "Mission Imfrogable" | John Rice and Achiu So | Yes | No | Swamp and Tad, two frog guards who work on Planet Marsh, are sent by the King to get a package on Earth. | February 26, 1997 |
45 | Dino | "The Great Egg-Scape" | Hanna-Barbera (original character) | Yes | No | Dino takes care of a baby dinosaur and tries to prevent him from growing. Note: Second and final spin-off episode to The Flintstones. | March 5, 1997 [47] |
46 | Malcom and Melvin | — | Ralph Bakshi | No | Yes | Melvin is an alienated loser until he meets Malcom, a trumpeter cockroach who has a huge talent. Note: The creator Bakshi disowned both shorts upon release. | November 26, 1997 [48] |
47 | The Worm(uncredited) | "Tales of Worm Paranoia" | Eddie Fitzgerald | No | Yes | Johnny is a peaceful and forgiving worm until a human steps on him repeatedly. As a result, the worm becomes paranoid and angered at the human race, seeking revenge. Note: Style reminiscent of John Kricfalusi's The Ren & Stimpy Show ; he is listed with a "Special Thanks" credit. | November 27, 1997 [49] |
48 | Malcom and Melvin(uncredited) | "Babe! He... Calls Me" | Ralph Bakshi | No | Yes | Melvin's saga continues as his partnership with Malcom is compromised by an urban superhero's intrusion. Meanwhile, Melvin's mother aids a criminal after being unable to meet with her son. Note: The creator Bakshi disowned both shorts upon release. | November 28, 1997 [50] |
Oh Yeah! Cartoons was Fred Seibert's second cartoon incubator and Frederator Studios' first production, with 99 original shorts exhibited on Nickelodeon. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired.
The series spin-offs were The Fairly OddParents, ChalkZone, and My Life as a Teenage Robot.
Season | Segments | Episodes | Originally aired | Hosted by | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||||
1 | 39 | 13 | July 19, 1998 | October 18, 1998 | N/A | |
2 | 39 | 13 | September 18, 1999 | December 18, 1999 | Kenan Thompson | |
3 | 24 | 8 | March 23, 2002 | August 30, 2002 | Josh Server |
This section needs an improved plot summary.(January 2020) |
Hosted by various school kids from Brooklyn.
No. | Title [51] | Created by | Original air date [52] [53] [54] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1a | "ChalkZone" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | July 19, 1998 | |
A young boy named Rudy Tabootie discovers ChalkZone, a world made of living chalk drawings. He meets up with Snap, one of his creations, and teams up with him to defeat a monster. | ||||
1b | "Slap T. Pooch in What is Funny?" | Bill Burnett and Vincent Waller | July 19, 1998 | |
Slap T. Pooch attempts to ask the audience watching him how he can make him and his cartoon funny. | ||||
1c | "Jelly's Day" | Bill Burnett and Greg Emison | July 19, 1998 | |
When Jelly is visited by her weird cousin Hargus, she decides to take him to the beach. Coming Attraction = Cat & Milk-Man | ||||
2a | "F-Tales" | Rob Renzetti | July 26, 1998 | |
In a fairy-tale parody of The X-Files, Fauna Fox and Chic Little attempt to protect The Three Little Pigs from the Big Bad Wolf. | ||||
2b | "25-Cent Trouble / Teddy & Art" | Alex Kirwan | July 26, 1998 | |
Little Teddy and his panting dog Art decide to spend twenty five cents on an action robot in a supermarket vending machine. Teddy and Art end up chasing the robot from mess to mess as the robot grows bigger and bigger by the minute. | ||||
2c | "Cat & Milk-Man" | Miles Thompson | July 26, 1998 | |
A thirsty cat tries to steal milk from a milkman, who won't let the cat interrupt his deliveries. Coming Attraction = Jamal the Funny Frog: Mind the Baby, Jamal | ||||
3a | "Jamal the Funny Frog: Mind the Baby, Jamal" | Pat Ventura | August 2, 1998 | |
Jamal the Frog is responsible for watching his sister Polly. | ||||
3b | "Thatta Boy" | Alex Kirwan | August 2, 1998 | |
Cyborg kid hero Thatta Boy and his sidekick Zio team up with his girlfriend Polly to fight evil. | ||||
3c | "Hobart: The Weedkeeper" | Bill Burnett and Greg Emison | August 2, 1998 | |
Hobart goes to extremes to impress his girlfriend Okra by buying her a puppy to replace the toaster that she walks. After chasing the escaped puppy into the septic system, Hobart comes across a crazy gremlin, a gigantic hungry tree frog, and a large mosquito. Coming Attraction = Pete Patrick, P.I.: What About Lunch? | ||||
4a | "Protecto-5000" | John Eng | August 9, 1998 | |
Kenny, an intergalactic Protecto-5000 robot bodyguard who has been on Earth for hundreds of millions of years, takes up the position of a school janitor. He soon befriends a new student named Nadya, and protects her from the hassles that come with transferring to a new school. | ||||
4b | "Ask Edward: All About Babies" | Rob Renzetti | August 9, 1998 | |
Dog brothers Edward and Emo, after hearing their parents consider having another child, state their own ideas about the mystery of where babies come from. | ||||
4c | "Pete Patrick, P.I.: What About Lunch?" | Vincent Waller | August 9, 1998 | |
Kid detective Peter Patrick and talking cat sidekick Persian Puss attempt to solve the mystery of a missing dog. Coming Attraction: Max's Special Problem | ||||
5a | "Max and His Special Problem" | Dave Wasson and Chris Miller | August 16, 1998 | |
Max, a not-so-efficient worker in a very efficient office, sneezes hard enough that his brain ejects from his head. Max then goes through a series of gags to try and reinsert his brain. | ||||
5b | "Tutu the Superina" | Bill Burnett and Sally Rousse | August 16, 1998 | |
Tutu, a superhero ballerina, tries to stop a pair of criminals who kidnap, sell, and torment animals. | ||||
5c | "Blotto" | Byron Vaughns | August 16, 1998 | |
In a short told through song, a drop of ink creates Blotto, who sings about the ink world he lives in and hopes to win the charms of the grouchy Dotto. Dotto is soon won over by the Balloon Goon, the villain of a comic book next to the paper she and Blotto are drawn on, and Blotto tries to free Dotto from the Goon's clutches. Coming Attraction: Olly & Frank | ||||
6a | "Tales from the Goose Lady: Jack and the Beatstalk" | Dave Wasson | August 23, 1998 | |
The Goose Lady bothers siblings Dot and Randy as her talking wand Juanito tells a version of Jack and the Beanstalk, wherein Jack is a beatnik who hopes to acquire a giant's magic coffee machine. | ||||
6b | "Twins Crimson and Those Amazing Robots" | Carlos Ramos | August 23, 1998 | |
Rambunctious twins Bene and Beck Crimson are forced to go out and play by their mother. They suddenly discover a jungle in their backyard that is being torn down to make way for a futuristic city called Metroplex. The twins then come face to face with powerful robots, and they work together with the jungle's animals to fight back against them. | ||||
6c | "Olly and Frank" | Bob Boyle | August 23, 1998 | |
Child prodigy Olly regularly has his love interest Daisy May stolen from him by the beefy bully Bratwurst. Hoping to get revenge on Bratwurst, Olly creates Frank, a monster with the brain and body of a dog. Olly soon finds out that training his creation is no easy task. Coming Attraction: A Cop & His Donut | ||||
7a | "APEX Cartoon Props & Novelties" | Larry Huber | August 30, 1998 | |
A pair of cartoon villains sneak into the APEX factory, where all the great cartoon devices are made. They also, unfortunately, experience them all first hand. | ||||
7b | "A Cop and His Donut" | Rob Renzetti | August 30, 1998 | |
A rookie cop investigates a bank robbery where his veteran partner is injured. He then ends up meeting his partner's partner: a living, talking donut. The donut and the rookie are then forced to work together to capture the bank robbers. | ||||
7c | "Enchanted Adventures" | John Eng and Bill Burnett | August 30, 1998 | |
A knight with a transforming sword must match wits with an evil sorcerer to save his village from a plague. Coming Attraction: Super Santa: Jingle Bell Justice | ||||
8a | "The Fairly OddParents" | Butch Hartman | September 6, 1998 | |
A ten-year-old boy named Timmy Turner ends up receiving two wish granting fairy godparents named Cosmo and Wanda, and he uses them to help him get even with his evil babysitter, Vicky. | ||||
8b | "Hobart: Deep Sea Diva" | Bill Burnett and Greg Emison | September 6, 1998 | |
Hobart and Okra learn about the topsy-turvy life of Hobart's pet goldfish. | ||||
8c | "Super Santa: Jingle Bell Justice" | Mike Bell | September 6, 1998 | |
The villainous Bedlam Bunny, angered at being made into something cute instead of cool, invents a ray gun that turns toys evil. It's up to Santa Claus and his wife Emma, revealed to be superheroes, to stop the bunny before his toy army overruns the city. Coming Attraction: That's My Pop: There's A Dinosaur In The House | ||||
9a | "Kitty the Hapless Cat" | Zac Moncrief | September 13, 1998 | |
A talking cat named Kitty recounts the many, many times he's been adopted into a home, only to end up having it go horribly wrong. | ||||
9b | "That's My Pop: There's A Dinosaur In The House" | Pat Ventura | September 13, 1998 | |
Genius Naomi tries to keep her father from finding out that a dinosaur is in the house. | ||||
9c | "Hubbykins & Sweetie Pie" | Rob Renzetti | September 13, 1998 | |
In a silent short, Sweetie Pie grows frustrated at the antics of her careless and slovenly husband Hubbykins. When Hubby tries to get out of doing his share of the chores and go bowling, his wife snaps and chases him around the house to teach him a lesson. Coming Attraction: Hey Look! | ||||
10a | "The Man with No Nose" | Larry Huber | September 20, 1998 | |
Urp is an alien stranded on Earth, and has spent the last 8 years being showcased as "The Man with No Nose" in a circus sideshow. He soon meets a young boy in the circus that offers to help him find a way to power his ship and return to his planet. | ||||
10b | "Youngstar3" | Miles Thompson | September 20, 1998 | |
The Youngstar-3, consisting of Youngstar, his grandpa Old Man, and super-powered robot Shero, attempt to fight a giant fish monster that emerges from the depths of the ocean. | ||||
10c | "Hey Look!" | Harvey Kurtzman (adapted by Vincent Waller) | September 20, 1998 | |
Two guys go on a job hunt with no experience and get into one mess after another. Coming Attraction: ChalkZone: The Amazin' River | ||||
11a | "ChalkZone: The Amazin' River" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | September 27, 1998 | |
Rudy and Snap travel down a river to a mine filled with magic chalk. | ||||
11b | "Tales from the Goose Lady: Hamsel and Grande" | Dave Wasson | September 27, 1998 | |
The Goose Lady and Juanito return, keeping Dot and Randy awake all night by telling them a version of Hansel and Gretel, who are depicted as overweight gluttons who keep eating the innocent witch's gingerbread house. | ||||
11c | "The Feelers" | Bill Burnett | September 27, 1998 | |
The Feelers, an all-insect rock band, are tired of performing on the streets and living in obscurity. The band's singer, Mitzi Moth, believes that getting their music to humans' ears will solve their problems, so she has the band sneak into a recording studio to hopefully have their music played on the radio. Coming Attraction: Max and the Pigeon Incident | ||||
12a | "Max and the Pigeon Incident" | Dave Wasson | October 18, 1998 | |
After being told not to leave his office, Max goes on an adventure to chase after the pigeon who steals his pencil. | ||||
12b | "Zoomates!" | Seth MacFarlane | October 18, 1998 | |
In this canned laughter-heavy cartoon, an animal rights activist named Helen orders the head of the local zoo to free the zoo's animals. To prove her beliefs have merit, she has three of the zoo's animals, Mark the Polar Bear, Paul the Alligator, and Warren the Ostrich, move into an apartment in the hopes that the trio can adapt to human life. | ||||
12c | "Microcops" | John Eng | October 18, 1998 | |
Officer Jones is the microscopic product of an anti-flu capsule ingested by a sick man. When the other antibodies are captured by the flu bug making the man sick, Jones must seek out the bug and exterminate it himself. Coming Attraction: Planet Kate | ||||
13a | "Planet Kate" | Jamie Mitchell | October 11, 1998 | |
A young girl named Kate Moon meets a quintet of extraterrestrial dogs, and ends up joining them in their search for an ancient city where their people used to live. | ||||
13b | "Fathead" | Vince Calandra | October 11, 1998 | |
In order to pass a test of manhood, an intelligent caveboy named Fathead must steal the egg of a Tyrannosaurus rex. |
Hosted by Kenan Thompson.
No. | Title [51] | Created by | Original air date [52] [53] [54] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1a | "Chalkzone: Rudy's Date" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | September 18, 1999 | |
Snap, Rudy and his friend Penny try to gather parts to an erased formula. | ||||
1b | "A Kid's Life" | Ken Kessel | September 18, 1999 | |
1c | "The Fairly OddParents: Too Many Timmys!" | Butch Hartman | September 18, 1999 | |
Having been left alone with a demanding, "injured" Vicky babysitting him and using him as a servant, Timmy wishes up a bunch of clones to do his chores for him. However, when they scare Vicky out of her mind and chaos ensues, Timmy must wish them away. | ||||
2a | "The Fairly OddParents: Where's the Wand?" | Butch Hartman | September 18, 1999 | |
While Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda are playing games, Wanda's wand accidentally ends up with Vicky, who uses Wanda's wand as a prop for her fairy costume at her High School costume party, and Timmy must get back the wand since it is granting Vicky's wishes. | ||||
2b | "Magic Trixie" | Alex Kirwan | September 18, 1999 | |
A young girl tries a magic trick with no success, but at a magic show, she outshines the magician. | ||||
2c | "Tales from the Goose Lady: Humpty Dumpty" | Dave Wasson | September 18, 1999 | |
While making them missing out on their science exam, The Goose and Juanito tell Dot and Randy the story of a chicken laying a popular Humpty Dumpty instead of a golden egg. | ||||
3a | "Tales from the Goose Lady: Little Pigs Three" | Dave Wasson | September 25, 1999 | |
3b | "Freddy Seymore's Amazing Life" | Tim Biskup | September 25, 1999 | |
3c | "Jamal the Funny Frog: His Musical Moment" | Pat Ventura | September 25, 1999 | |
4a | "ChalkZone: Snap Out of Water" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | October 2, 1999 | |
Snap accidentally travels outside of ChalkZone and into Rudy's classroom. | ||||
4b | "Earth to Obie" | Guy Vasilovich | October 2, 1999 | |
Lacking attention from his parents, ten year old Obie fantasizes. In this story, Obie confronts his cereal addiction when he accompanies his mom on a trip to the grocery store. | ||||
4c | "Mina & The Count: The Ghoul's Tribunal" | Rob Renzetti | October 2, 1999 | |
Vlad the Vampire Count is brought to court when it's found out that he's friends with a human girl named Mina. | ||||
5a | "ChalkZone: Secret Passages" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | October 9, 1999 | |
Snap helps Rudy and Penny find a Chalkzone portal that leads to their school in order to retrieve the class hamster. | ||||
5b | "Kid from S.C.H.O.O.L." | Bob Boyle and Bill Riling | October 9, 1999 | |
Jake Slade, the top agent at Benedict Arnold High School, must stop the nefarious plot of Simon Cerebellum to become Prom King with his wide array of gadgets. | ||||
5c | "Mina & The Count: The Vampire Who Came to Dinner" | Rob Renzetti | October 9, 1999 | |
Mina invites The Count to have dinner with her family. | ||||
6a | "The Fairly OddParents: Party of 3" | Butch Hartman | October 16, 1999 | |
Vicky tries to get proof of Timmy having a party at his house while Mr. and Mrs. Turner are out, but fails miserably. | ||||
6b | "The Forgotten Toy Box: The Curse of the Werebaby" | Mike Bell | October 16, 1999 | |
In a parody of The Twilight Zone , the short's host, Mr. Beasley (a doll whose dialogue begins after pulling his string) anthologizes a tale of a cursed baby doll that transforms a selfish adult man who still acts like a baby into a werebaby (an adult sized baby) as punishment for not acting his age. | ||||
6c | "Jelly's Day: Uncle Betty's Strange Rush" | Greg Emison and Bill Burnett | October 16, 1999 | |
Uncle Betty comes to visit in the museum of stuff from outer space where Jelly visit, but he gets a strange rash. | ||||
7a | "ChalkZone: ChalkDad" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | October 23, 1999 | |
Rudy gets creative on his dad’s specials board, but his dad hates Rudy’s drawings and ideas. Feeling rejected, Rudy escapes to Chalkzone. There he runs into his Chalkdad, who turns out to be just as fussy, ordering Rudy to help him by drawing his restaurant. Despite the fact that his Chalkdad hates the design, the restaurant turns out to be the hottest business in Chalkzone. | ||||
7b | "A Dog & His Boy" | Carlos Ramos | October 23, 1999 | |
7c | "Mina & the Count: Playing a Hunch" | Rob Renzetti | October 23, 1999 | |
The Count tries to hide Mina from his servant Igor. | ||||
8a | "The Fairly OddParents: The Fairy Flu" | Butch Hartman | October 30, 1999 | |
Cosmo and Wanda have caught the fairy flu and whenever they sneeze, their magic effects everything around them. This is problem trouble for Timmy, who has been invited to a birthday party for Tootie, Vicky's younger sister. Tootie, unlike her sister, is madly in love with Timmy, worsening the situation. | ||||
8b | "Lollygaggin'" | Guy Vasilovich | October 30, 1999 | |
Lolly discovers that her little lies have been growing in her closet and are out to haunt her. | ||||
8c | "Tales from the Goose Lady: The Tortoise & the Hairpiece" | Dave Wasson | October 30, 1999 | |
9a | "ChalkZone: Chalk Rain" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | November 6, 1999 | |
A Chinese dragon causes havoc in Chalkzone. | ||||
9b | "The Dan Danger Show" | Butch Hartman | November 6, 1999 | |
On TV, he is brave jungle explorer Dan Danger; in real life, however, he is extremely meek and frightened of just about everything. Dan's fear of flying gets the better of him when he is sent to take a trip via airplane. | ||||
9c | "Mina & The Count: My Best Friend" | Rob Renzetti | November 6, 1999 | |
After a bully mocks Mina after telling her class about her vampire friend, Vlad tries to teach Mina how to scare him. | ||||
10a | "The Fairly OddParents: The Temp" | Butch Hartman | November 13, 1999 | |
Cosmo and Wanda must go to the Fairy Academy to have their Godparenting License renewed, and their drill instructor is the toughest fairy in the universe, Jorgen Von Strangle. While they are absent, Timmy gets a substitute godparent, Jeff, who can only make toys; it turns out that Jeff is a runaway elf from the North Pole. | ||||
10b | "Herb" | Antoine Guilbaud | November 13, 1999 | |
A monster in a diaper provides a five-star meal to the entire school and wins the students' favor. | ||||
10c | "Jamal the Funny Frog: Milk Dreams" | Pat Ventura | November 13, 1999 | |
Polly is overcome with a thirst for milk while Jamal enters her dreams to save her. | ||||
11a | "The Fairly OddParents: The Zappys" | Butch Hartman | November 20, 1999 | |
Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda are nominated for a Fairy World award show, but Jorgen Von Strangle, the toughest fairy in the universe, uses his power to "persuade" the judges; in a subplot, Timmy's left buck tooth is loose. | ||||
11b | "Let's Talk Turkey" | Vincent Waller | November 20, 1999 | |
Thom Turkey he sells his way out of a hot pot by peddling processed "Phlab" meat. | ||||
11c | "Tales from the Goose Lady: Three Bears and a Blondie" | Dave Wasson | November 20, 1999 | |
Dot and Randy are off to the Natural History Museum for a field trip, but The Goose and Juanito are at it again with a story of Goldilocks and the 3 bears where the father plans horribly to eat Goldilocks. | ||||
12a | "ChalkZone: Rapunzel" | Bill Burnett and Larry Huber | December 4, 1999 | |
Rudy, Penny, and Snap watch a stage production of Rapunzel starring Queen Rapsheeba. | ||||
12b | "Zoey's Zoo" | Amy Ellyn Anderson and David Burd | December 4, 1999 | |
An animal loving girl named Zoey tries to adopt some Ocelots but ends up getting too many. | ||||
12c | "My Neighbor Was a Teenage Robot" | Rob Renzetti | December 4, 1999 | |
After accidentally throwing the baseball into the window of a house next door, Brad Carbunkle sends his brother, Tuck, to retrieve the ball, but he meets a beautiful robot girl named XJ9 (she calls herself "Jenny"), who gives him the baseball, scaring him. Then, he tells his brother there is a robot inside, but he does not believe him. Jenny belongs to a scientist named Dr. Nora Wakeman, who wants her to save the world, but she meets Brad, sneaks out, and then hangs out, but Tuck is still afraid of her. | ||||
13a | "Jelly's Day: Auntie Broth's Makeover" | Greg Emison and Bill Burnett | December 18, 1999 | |
Jelly takes her Aunt Broth to the mall for a makeover. The only problem is no one can touch her because she laughs hysterically and people have to run for cover. So, Jelly decides to perform open brain surgery right in the salon. | ||||
13b | "Terry & Chris" | John Reynolds | December 18, 1999 | |
Problems are caused when a boy brings in a parrot with him. | ||||
13c | "Mina & The Count: Frankenfrog" | Rob Renzetti | December 18, 1999 | |
Mina brings a school's dissection frog back to life. |
Hosted by Josh Server.
No. | Title [51] | Created by | Original air date [52] [53] [54] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1a | "The Fairly OddParents: Super Humor" | Butch Hartman | June 6, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) | |
Timmy, wanting to be a superhero, tries out superpowers. | ||||
1b | "The Boy Who Cried Alien" | Guy Vasilovich | June 6, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) August 30, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
1c | "Jamal, the Funny Frog: Dentist" | Pat Ventura | June 6, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) | |
2a | "Super Santa: South Pole Joe" | Mike Bell | March 30, 2002 | |
2b | "Sick and Tired: Bug Bite" | Andre Nieves and Ric Delcarmen | March 30, 2002 | |
Two roommates and plumbers named Sick and Tired have to retrieve a ring from their neighbor's sink, but an annoying mosquito makes the task difficult for them. | ||||
2c | "Tales from the Goose Lady: The Ugly Duck-Thing" | Dave Wasson | March 30, 2002 | |
3a | "The Fairly OddParents: Scout's Honor" | Butch Hartman | April 6, 2002 | |
Cosmo and Wanda try to help Timmy capture Bigfoot to earn his Squirrel Scout badge in capturing a mythical creature. | ||||
3b | "Skippy Spankerton" | Eric Bryan and Michelle Bryan | April 6, 2002 | |
3c | "Jamal, the Funny Frog: Beach" | Pat Ventura | April 6, 2002 | |
4a | "Super Santa: Vegetation" | Mike Bell | April 13, 2002 | |
4b | "Elise" | Guy Vasilovich | April 13, 2002 | |
4c | "A Kid's Life: Picture Perfect" | Ken Kessel | April 13, 2002 | |
5a | "The Fairly OddParents: The Really Bad Day!" | Butch Hartman | June 9, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) | |
For one day in a certain number of years, a fairy godparent has to be "bad," and it is Cosmo's turn to do so. However, Cosmo fails constantly at being "bad." Timmy and Wanda try to help him, enlisting help from conqueror Genghis Khan to teach him how to be bad, but soon, Cosmo plans to blow up the Earth. | ||||
5b | "Baxter & Bananas" | Zac Moncrief | June 9, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) July 12, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
5c | "Tales from the Goose Lady: The Fisherman, the Fisherman's Wife and the Fish" | Dave Wasson | June 9, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) August 2, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
6a | "Dan Danger: Danger 101" | Butch Hartman and Steve Marmel | March 23, 2002 | |
6b | "The Tantrum" | John Fountain | March 23, 2002 | |
6c | "Super Santa: Naughty" | Mike Bell | March 23, 2002 | |
7a | "Dan Danger: A Lighter Shade of Danger" | Butch Hartman and Steve Marmel | June 10, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) July 19, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
7b | "The Kameleon Kid" | Jamie Diaz and Russ Mooney | June 10, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) July 26, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
7c | "Jamal the Funny Frog: Camping" | Pat Ventura | June 10, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) August 16, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
8a | "Dan Danger: A Date with Danger" | Butch Hartman and Steve Marmel | June 10, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) August 23, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
8b | "The Semprini Triplets" | Pat Ventura | June 10, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) August 9, 2002 (Nickelodeon) | |
8c | "Tales from the Goose Lady: Dot and Randy's Sad Tale of Woe" | Dave Wasson | June 10, 2002 (Nicktoons TV) |
The original 39 Random! Cartoons shorts were supervised by series creator Fred Seibert and produced by Eric Homan and Kevin Kolde as Frederator Studios's third cartoon incubator. Exhibited on Nickelodeon. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired.
Spin-off series were Adventure Time (Cartoon Network), Fanboy & Chum Chum (Nickelodeon), and Bravest Warriors (Cartoon Hangover and Cartoon Hangover Select on VRV).
No. | Title | Created by | Cast | Series/Short | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1a | "Solomon Fix" | Doug TenNapel | Rob Paulsen as Solomon Fix John DiMaggio as Mumpy Maurice LaMarche as Klemp Elijah Runcorn as Ned Doug TenNapel as Chipmunk #1 & 2 | Short | December 6, 2008 | |
A teddy bear named Solomon Fix is assigned to protect a child named Ned, only that the child finds him lame. | ||||||
1b | "MooBeard the Cow Pirate" | Kyle Carrozza | Billy West as MooBeard / Value Guy Erica Luttrell as Sailor Bird / Road Show Announcer Dave "Gruber" Allen as Darkblade of Fire Kyle Carrozza as Ungus the Unpleasant / Cow Eating Gentleman | Short | December 6, 2008 | |
A cow pirate named MooBeard along with his companion Sailor Bird searches the treasure of the lost island of Hookamookapookalap. | ||||||
1c | "Two Witch Sisters" | Niki Yang | S. Scott Bullock as Dorothy / Hummingbird Dee Bradley Baker as Carrot / Seymour Candi Milo as Bee Niki Yang as Baby Rabbit | Short | December 6, 2008 | |
Twin witch sisters are causing magic-induced havoc at a park. | ||||||
2a | "The Finster Finster Show: Store Wars" | Jeff DeGrandis | Billy West as Finster 1 Charlie Adler as Finster 2 Tress MacNeille as Finsters' Mom | Short | December 7, 2008 | |
Two Finsters battle anthropomorphic frozen chickens in the supermarket. | ||||||
2b | "Adventure Time" | Pendleton Ward | Zack Shada as Penn John DiMaggio as Jake / Ice Clops Paige Moss as Princess Bubblegum John Kassir as Ice King / Fire Element Dee Bradley Baker as Lady Rainicorn / Snow Golem Pendleton Ward as Abraham Lincoln / Old Man | TV series | December 7, 2008 | |
In this precursor to what would become the critically acclaimed full-length series, Finn (known as "Penn" in the short) and Jake battle the Ice King to save Princess Bubblegum. | ||||||
2c | "Mind the Kitty" | Anne Walker Farrell | Dee Bradley Baker as the Duck/Tabby Jeff Bennett as Punky Rodger Bumpass as Lemurman Lynne Maclean as Tabby's Mom | Short | December 7, 2008 | |
Three teens have to babysit a psychotic kitten girl. | ||||||
3a | "Ivan the Unbearable" | Andrew Dickman | Jeff Doucette as Ivan the Unbearable/Olaf Maurice LaMarche as Bjorn/Working Troll #1 Tress MacNeille as Ma Andrew Dickman as Filthy Viking/Working Troll #2 | Short | December 13, 2008 | |
A clumsy Viking gets hiccups that causes destruction. | ||||||
3b | "Boneheads" | Hiroshi Chida | John Kassir as Bone/Soldier Flies Dee Bradley Baker as Roccos/Audrey/Antarctic Bull Snail/Rex Hadley Hudson as Striker (uncredited) | Short | December 13, 2008 | |
Roccos and Bone search for babanas. | ||||||
3c | "Tiffany" | Adam Henry | Jessie Flower as Peggy Colleen Villard as Tiffany David Busch as Dad/Jockey/Racetrack Announcer | Short | December 13, 2008 | |
A doll must help her friend overcome a fear of horses. | ||||||
4a | "Call Me Bessie!" | Diane Kredensor and Dana Galin | Audrey Wasilewski as Bessie Fred Stoller as Al Dee Bradley Baker as Senor Swampy/Turkey/Dolphins | Short | December 20, 2008 | |
A cow enrolls her elephant friend in a scuba-diving class... but her friend does not want to go! | ||||||
4b | "Teapot" | Greg Eagles | Greg Eagles as Teapot/James Brown Clock/Silkbone/Blind Guy/Body Guard Cathy Lewis as Bouche Hilda Boulware as Mother's Voice Chara Hammonds as Video Vixen#1 & 2 deMann as Announcer | Short | December 20, 2008 | |
Two African-American kids that are fans of rap music are going to meet a famous rapper. | ||||||
4c | "Hornswiggle" | Jerry Beck | René Auberjonois as Hornswiggle/Apeman #2 Jeff Bennett as Zan-Tar/Apeman #1 Maurice LaMarche as Birdsdorf, Apeman #3 Cheryl Chase as Nurses #1 & 2 | Short | December 20, 2008 | |
A crazy rhino meets his hero, Zantar. He tries to help but physically hurts him. | ||||||
5a | "Hero Heights" | Raul Aguirre Jr. and Bill Ho | Jessica DiCicco as Smart Alec/Plasma Tot Annie Mumolo as Strikeout Hynden Walch as Olympia/Ms. Chic Raul Aguirre as Razorklaw Becky Thyre as Electricia Karen Malina White as Mindy 500 | Short | December 27, 2008 | |
In a town where everyone's a superhero, two best friends fight over the new girl in town. | ||||||
5b | "Yaki & Yumi" | Aliki Theofilopoulous | André Sogliuzzo as Yaki/Contest Judge Candi Milo as Yumi/Octopus Dude Aliki Theofilopolous as Sweet Little Girl/Fortune Fish/Kid #1 | Short | December 27, 2008 | |
A bat and a dragon participate in a dance competition. | ||||||
5c | "Gary Guitar" | Bill Plympton | Lloyd Floyd as Gary Guitar Becky Poole as Vera Violin Stephen Largay as Danny Drum | Short | December 27, 2008 | |
A guitar tries to make the perfect picnic for his girlfriend, a violin. | ||||||
6a | "Krunch and the Kid" | Adam Henry | Kevin Michael Richardson as Krunch/Rastamon/Alarm Clock/Announcer Colleen Villard as Skippy/Little Girl/Some Kid Mark Hamill as Frank Karen Henry as Perky Tour Guide | Short | January 3, 2009 | |
A monster named Krunch has trouble performing on a TV show after his pet frog dies. | ||||||
6b | "Bradwurst" | Angelo Di Nallo and Jason Plapp | Tom Kenny as Bradwurst/Jerry Raphael Sbarge as Willy Jeff Bennett as Charlie J. P. Manoux as Gus | Short | January 3, 2009 | |
A grumpy sausage sabotages his friends' party. | ||||||
6c | "Dr. Froyd's Funny Farm" | Bill Burnett and Jaime Diaz | Robert Cait as Dr. Froyd Nika Futterman as Lulu Candi Milo as Nurse Duckett Charlie Adler as Bossy LeCow/Raging Bullfrog | Short | January 3, 2009 | |
Dr. Froyd needs someone to test out a science experiment, but none of the animals on his funny farm want to! | ||||||
7a | "The Bravest Warriors" | Pendleton Ward | Charlie Schlatter as Chris Tara Strong as Beth Dan Finnerty as Wallow Rob Paulsen as Danny Polly Lou Livingston as Slippy Napkins Noah Nelson as Professor Brain Dog 7 | Web series | January 10, 2009 | |
Four human teens, Chris, Beth, Wallow and Danny, save the brain dogs from the tickle monster in outer space. | ||||||
7b | "Giovanni and Navarro, The Dangerous Duck Brothers: Saps at the Wheel" | Pat Ventura | Jim MacGeorge as Giovanni Chuck McCann as Navarro Jeff Bennett as Dog | Short | January 10, 2009 | |
Two ducks want to break a dangerous record. | ||||||
7c | "Sparkles and Gloom" | Melissa Wolfe and Anne Walker Farrell | Kari Wahlgren as Sparkles/Mom/Leprechaun Jessica DiCicco as Gloom/Fuzzy Animal Kevin Michael Richardson as Dad / Announcer / Zit / Applause Fish Annie Mumolo as Pixie / Little Prince / Munchie | Short | January 10, 2009 | |
Sparkles and Gloom, two daughters of a handsome prince and an evil witch, have their powers switched before the talent show at the Geevil School, the good and evil school, where good and evil are best friends. | ||||||
8a | "The Infinite Goliath" | Erik Knutson and Mike Gray | Kevin Michael Richardson as Infinite Goliath/Hondo/Mechaneck Alanna Ubach as Roger/Mrs. Abbott/Samantha S. Scott Bullock as Mr. Abbott/Dr. Carnage/Timmy | Short | January 17, 2009 | |
The Infinite Goliath, a super villain released on parole, moves into a neighborhood. | ||||||
8b | "Kyle + Rosemary" | Jun Falkenstein | Wil Wheaton as Kyle/Sir Horace Jentle Phoenix as Rosemary/Lunarella Alexander Polinsky as Harold/Elf Charlie Schlatter as Willy/Gnome/Martin/Dwarf Aliki Theofilopoulous as Crimson | Short | January 17, 2009 | |
A geek and a goth who play MMORPG games must break their shells to be together. | ||||||
8c | "Garlic Boy" | John R. Dilworth | Gary Littman as Garlic Boy Gerrianne Raphael as Garlic Boy's Mom Erik Bergmann as Garlic Boy's Dad Betsy Beutler as Parsley Lloyd Floyd as Fungus John R. Dilworth as Twin #1/Twin #2 | Short | January 17, 2009 | |
An anthropomorphic garlic with a healing tonic wants to do good for folks. | ||||||
9a | "Flavio" | Mike Milo | Rob Paulsen as Flavio Robert Costanzo as Bossman Stephen Stanton as Mr. Frank John Mariano as Leonardo da Vinci/Mayor | Short | January 24, 2009 | |
An Italian goat wishes to be an inventor. | ||||||
9b | "SamSquatch" | Adam Muto | Max Burkholder as SamSquatch Daran Norris as Conrad Conard Dee Bradley Baker as Nessie, Karl, Momsquatch Ja'net DuBois as Mom | Short | January 24, 2009 | |
A cryptid hunter finds a Bigfoot named SamSquatch. | ||||||
9c | "Girls on the Go: First Date" | Aliki Theofilopoulous | Danica McKellar as Kat Frankie Ingrassia as Tess Quinton Flynn as Spencer Applebaum/Spencer Spencerson/Student LaTonya Holmes Aliki Theofilopoulos | Short | January 24, 2009 | |
Katerina Metropolis is a hopeless romantic teenager that daydreams about meeting the perfect boy. But how will she manage after she winds up on the worst date of her life? | ||||||
10a | "Victor the Delivery Dog" | Niki Yang | E.G. Daily as Victor/One-Eyed Bird/Co-Worker #1 Jennifer Hale as Victor's Mom/Express Mail/Co-Worker #3 S. Scott Bullock as Gi/Raffe/Co-Worker #2 Fred Tatasciore as Mr. Papier | Short | January 31, 2009 | |
Victor has to make deliveries before dinnertime. | ||||||
10b | "The Bronk and Bongo Show: Losing Patients" | Manny Galán and Alan Goodman | Steve Purnick as Bronk/Dinosaur Joel McCrary as Bongo/Skeleton Adam Busch as Jerry/Orderly Jeff Bennett as Patient/Geezer/Workman Manny Galan as Angry Erik Alan Goodman as Ted Strawberry Head | Short | January 31, 2009 | |
Bronk and Bongo are a couple of dogs who are mistaken to be world-famous German doctors in this madcap, zany romp. | ||||||
10c | "Thom Cat" | Mike Gray | Jim Meskimen as Thom Cat/Neighbor John/Stumpy Annie Mumolo as Melissa/Rusty/Patch | Short | January 31, 2009 | |
A talking cat (surprising to everyone) helps a troubled girl from a bully. | ||||||
11a | "Sugarfoot" | Erik Knutson | Charlie Schlatter as Sugarfoot Dee Bradley Baker as Socko and Delivery Man Jennifer Hale as Ms. Penelope | Short | April 4, 2009 | |
A boy who is a fan of cowboys and dinosaurs goes to a field trip to a museum with both of his interests while dealing with a bully. | ||||||
11b | "Dugly Uckling's Treasure Quest" | Guy Vasilovich | John Kassir as Dugly Uckling/Kung Pao Bunny Carlos Alazraqui as Quiggins/Bobblehead James Sie as Narrator/Monkeybutt | Short | April 4, 2009 | |
Dugly Uckling and his ragtag crew are out to solve the mystery of the Golden Bobblehead. Battling their way through the swamp, jungles, and killer mosquitoes, they come to a place where only Dugly's nonsensical logic can save the day. | ||||||
11c | "Dr. Dee & BitBoy" | Jun-Kyo Seo, Kong-Yo Kang, and Larry Huber | Phil Nee as Dr. Dee/Bomba Brett Pels as Zero (Bitboy)/Flower Wicky/Shop Owner Jennie Kwan as Myang Myang/Bitgirl/Edu Maurice LaMarche as Pickle Cop/Elecaptain Sam/Dog Catcher Charles Kim as Black Violet Lloyd Sherr as Narrator | Short | April 4, 2009 | |
Two kids and a scientist in a dog suit stop a corporation from creating a donut addiction. | ||||||
12a | "Super John Doe Junior" | Lincoln Peirce | Jim Connor as Super John Doe John Zee as Mayor Marc Graue as Anchorman Betsy Foldes as Mom Kimberly Brooks as Super John Doe, Jr. David Shaughnessey as Blimey Sandy Fox as Robin Andy Morris as Evil Butthead | Short | April 11, 2009 | |
The son of a superhero, who has no powers, decided to take his dad's place and fight against his nemesis. | ||||||
12b | "6 Monsters" | Fred Seibert and Alan Goodman | Jeff Bennett as Grandpa/Gaillard Chuck McCann as Buck John DiMaggio as Roy Nika Futterman as Cathy Teresa Ganzel as Lulu | Short | April 11, 2009 | |
Adventures of six monsters in middle school presented in traditional animation, computer generated imagery, Flash animation and digital ink and paint. | ||||||
12c | "Ratz-A-Fratz" | Jim Wyatt and Karl Toerge | Jess Harnell as Crank/Man at Cookie Nook June Foray as Mall Walker/Old Man #1/Man at Garbage Can Debi Derryberry as Pop Singer/Teen at Cookie Nook Scott Fresina as Urban Jim Wyatt as Cyrus Don Cameron as Swuawk/Old Man #2 | Short | April 11, 2009 | |
Three hungry rats must escape a security guard. | ||||||
13a | "Lance & Zoopie: Squirly Town" | Doug TenNapel | Stephen Root as Lance Bobcat Goldthwait as Zoopie Keone Young as Flashback Lance & Zoopie | Short | August 16, 2009 | |
A sly hyperactive squirrel takes his germaphobe strait-laced friend on an adventure to clear his aching head. | ||||||
13b | "Fanboy" | Eric Robles | David Hornsby as Fanboy Nancy Cartwright as Chum-Chum Don LaFontaine as Announcer Jeff Bennett as Fanman, Lenny Kevin Michael Richardson as The Ice Monster | TV series | November 28, 2009 | |
Two kids in superhero costumes purchase their favorite drink and end up creating an ice monster. | ||||||
13c | "HandyCat: Bees-ness As Usual" | Russ Harris and G. Brian Reynolds | Rob Paulsen as Handycat/Drillbit June Foray as Woman | Short | December 20, 2009 | |
On their first day on the job, a handyman feline and his dog try to get rid of some pesky bees in hoping for a second job. |
The Meth Minute 39 had 39 original short cartoons and one bonus short, and was Frederator's fourth cartoon incubator. Production supervision was by series creator Fred Seibert, all individual cartoons were created by Dan Meth and produced by Carrie Miller, for exhibition on Channel Frederator. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired. [55]
The spin-off series was "Nite Fite." [56]
Episode | Title | Creator/Director | Air Date |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Internet People | Dan Meth | September 5, 2007 |
2 | Sex Machine | Dan Meth | September 28, 2007 |
3 | Is Rush Heavy Metal? "Nite Fite" | Dan Meth | October 11, 2007 |
4 | Dog Video Dating | Dan Meth | October 18, 2007 |
5 | Mike Tyson's Brunch Out!! | Dan Meth | October 23, 2007 |
6 | The Music Nerds | Dan Meth | November 1, 2007 |
7 | Ultra and the Lazer Hearts | Dan Meth | November 8, 2007 |
8 | Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett Visits His Accountant | Dan Meth | November 15, 2007 |
9 | Beef and Stu in "PEZ Power" | Dan Meth | November 21, 2007 |
10 | Cavalcade of Laffs | Dan Meth | November 29, 2007 |
11 | Watermelon Nights | Dan Meth | December 4, 2007 |
12 | The Craigs | Dan Meth | December 13, 2007 |
13 | Seasons Greetings From The Meth Minute 39 | Dan Meth | December 20, 2007 |
14 | Beef & Stu in "Mustard Water" | Dan Meth | December 27, 2007 |
15 | P-COK Hip Hop Video | Dan Meth | January 3, 2008 |
16 | Sid and Nancy in "Hotel Heartbreak" | Dan Meth | January 10, 2008 |
17 | Drinking & Drawing | Dan Meth | January 17, 2008 |
18 | Foreign Cartoon About Hands | Dan Meth | January 23, 2008 |
19 | Endless Poop in "Cavalcade of Laffs 2" | Dan Meth | January 30, 2008 |
20 | Space Cowboy on Mars | Dan Meth | February 7, 2008 |
21 | Rejected Kid-Show Ideas! Not For Kids! | Dan Meth | February 14, 2008 |
22 | Bob Meets The Beatles | Dan Meth | February 20, 2008 |
23 | The Music Nerds Do Karaoke | Dan Meth | February 28, 2008 |
24 | Hollywood Stars in Japanese Commercials: Japandering | Dan Meth | March 6, 2008 |
25 | Fake Reality Show: The Palms | Dan Meth | March 13, 2008 |
26 | Space Cowboy on the Moon | Dan Meth | March 20, 2008 |
27 | Wang Warriors | Dan Meth | March 27, 2008 |
28 | The Craigs Phone It In | Dan Meth | April 3, 2008 |
29 | XXXX | Dan Meth | April 10, 2008 |
30 | Stu's Song | Dan Meth | April 17, 2008 |
31 | Ultra & the Lazer Hearts: Throat Duel! | Dan Meth | April 24, 2008 |
32 | Emomelon Days | Dan Meth | May 1, 2008 |
33 | XXXX | Dan Meth | May 8, 2008 |
34 | Fan Fiction | Dan Meth | May 15, 2008 |
35 | Viewer Calls | Dan Meth | May 22, 2008 |
36 | Space Cowboy on Earth | Dan Meth | May 29, 2008 |
37 | Company Picnic | Dan Meth | June 5, 2008 |
38 | If The Meth Minute Never Ended: The Meth Minute 39 Thousand | Dan Meth | June 12, 2008 |
39 | We Were the Meth Minute | Dan Meth | June 19, 2008 |
Bonus | Secrets of the Space Cowboy | Dan Meth | June 26, 2008 |
Bonus | The Stoic Squirrel in the Big City | Dan Meth | July 10, 2008 |
There were 11 Too Cool! Cartoons, Frederator Studios' fifth cartoon incubator, produced by Eric Homan and Kevin Kolde at Frederator Studios in Burbank. Exhibited at Cartoon Hangover. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired.
Spin-off series were Bee & PuppyCat (Cartoon Hangover and Netflix) and Dead End: Paranormal Park (Netflix).
Episode | Title | Creator | Director | Air Date | Cast |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
101 | Our New Electrical Morals | Mike Rosenthal | Kenny Pittenger | April 4, 2013 | Fred Tatasciore, Johnny Hawkes, Audrey Wasilewski, Kari Wahlgren |
102 | Rocket Dog | Mel Roach | Mel Roach | May 2, 2013 | Mel Roach, Josh Lawson, Steven Blum, Kari Wahlgren |
103 | Ace Discovery | Tom Gran & Martin Woolley | Tom Gran & Martin Woolley | May 30, 2013 | Ako Mitchell, Hugo Harold-Harrison, Eric Meyers, Doireann Ní Chorragáin, Martin Woolley |
104 | Bee and PuppyCat: Part 1 | Natasha Allegri | Larry Leichliter | July 11, 2013 | Allyn Rachel, Kent Osborne, Tom Kenny |
105 | Bee and PuppyCat: Part 2 | Natasha Allegri | Larry Leichliter | August 9, 2013 | Allyn Rachel, Frank Gibson, Marina Sirtis |
106 | Doctor Lollipop | Kelly Martin | Aliki Grafft | September 12, 2013 | Chris Diamantopoulos, Dee Baker, Rose McGowan, Jason Marsden, Travis Willingham |
107 | Dead End | Hamish Steele | Mel Roach | June 26, 2014 | Zack Pearlman, Cameron Goodman, Stefan Marks, Maria Bamford |
108 | Chainsaw Richard | Christopher Reineman | Tom King | July 17, 2014 | Tyler Merna, Ashly Burch, Eric Bauza, River Jordan |
109 | Manly | Jesse Moynihan & Justin Moynihan | Jesse Moynihan & Justin Moynihan | July 31, 2014 | Jill Bartlett, Joey Richter, Steve Agee, Roger Craig Smith |
110 | SpaceBear | Andy Helms | Dave Ferguson | August 14, 2014 | Rodger Bumpass, Christopher Curry, Ogie Banks, Josh Keaton |
111 | Blackford Manor | Jiwook Kim | Jiwook Kim | August 28, 2014 | Ashly Burch, Martin Rayner, Billy West |
The 12 GO! Cartoons was Frederator Studios' sixth cartoon incubator, produced by Eric Homan and Kevin Kolde, in conjunction with Sony Pictures Animation. [57] Exhibited at Cartoon Hangover and Cartoon Hangover Select [58] on Ellation's VRV subscription platform. The shorts are listed in the order that they originally aired. [59]
Spin-off series will be announced in the second half of 2018.
No. | Title | Directed by | Created and Written by | Release date | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Summoning" | Natasha Allegri | Elyse Castro | November 7, 2017 | [60] | |
Claire the witch needs troll fat for her brew, so she ends up going on an adventure with her cat Edgar. | ||||||
2 | "Boots" | Larry Huber | David Cowles & Alison Cowles | November 21, 2017 | [61] | |
Boots desires the chair discarded by her neighbor Chad, but does not want him to notice. | ||||||
3 | "City Dwellers" | Grant Kolton | Grant Kolton | December 5, 2017 | [62] | |
Dog walkers Bruce and Biff are asked by Nina to avoid certain areas since her dog Marty is a ninja. When they get distracted by a sandwich shop, Marty goes on the loose, and they have to retrieve him. | ||||||
4 | "Rachel and Her Grandfather Control the Island" | Jonni Peppers | Jonni Peppers | December 19, 2017 | [63] | |
Rachel and her grandfather want to take over the island by installing surveillance equipment robots out of their trash cans, but they first have to convince the president to get rid of the law banning trash cans. | ||||||
5 | "Nebulous" | Larry Huber | Brent Sievers | January 2, 2018 | [64] | |
A trio of space delivery folks stop by a grease planet for food. | ||||||
6 | "Welcome to Doozy" | Kathleen Good | Kate Tsang & Jennifer Suhr | January 16, 2018 | [65] | |
Ex tries to impress her work crush Skeletim with a bento, but when it gets enchanted by her friend Lou, it becomes an out-of-control monster. | ||||||
7 | "Both Brothers" | Larry Huber | Juris Lisovs | January 30, 2018 | [66] | |
Brothers Tod and Klod are upset that the snow park is closed because the weather is too nice, so they tell the sun to go away. However, when the sun does just that, it gets really cold and the crowd becomes angry. The two brothers try to apologize to the sun. | ||||||
8 | "The Bagheads: Get Trashed" | Michelle Bryan | D.R. Beitzel | February 13, 2018 | [67] [68] | |
Paperbag-faced siblings Artemis and Elbow compete over who has to take out the trash using the rule that if their addition to the trash stack falls to the floor they lose. | ||||||
9 | "Tyler & Co." | Gabe Janisz | Gabe Janisz | February 27, 2018 | [69] [70] | |
Tyler the Liger has a enough box tops to become the Mayor of Cereal Town, but he needs to find a way out of the house that has been locked by its upside down door to mail them in. | ||||||
10 | "Kid Arthur" | Larry Huber | Joel Veitch & David Shute | March 13, 2018 | [70] | |
Arthur and his friend/arch-nemesis Mordred continue their battle while trying to do a test in school. | ||||||
11 | "Thrashin' USA" | Tom King | Rory Panagotopulos | March 27, 2018 | [70] | |
While on his way to the skate park, skater Pau gets trapped in his grumpy next door neighbor Mrs. Tracy's house and is force to do her skateboard arena of death by her. | ||||||
12 | "Pottyhorse" | Larry Huber | Damien Barchowsky & Jeff Drake | April 10, 2018 | [70] | |
Pottyhorse the town's sheriff and only toilet has to find a way to stop a poopsteorid from hitting the town. |
Frederator Digital's Mini-Series are produced by Carrie Miller and executive produced by Fred Seibert. Originally exhibited on Cartoon Hangover Select on the VRV subscription platform, they are all available on Cartoon Hangover on YouTube.
No. | Title | Created by | Cast | Series/Short | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1–5 | "Slug Riot" | Mike Rosenthal | Glenn Wool: Slug Riot DeAnne Smith: Georgia Justin McElroy: Very Deadward Desiree Burch: Shannon Kerry Shale: Additional voices | Shorts | April 16, 2018 | |
"Slug Riot" tells the story of legendary, self-destructive guitarist Slug Riot. His little sister Georgia desperately wants to reform the band, but Slug Riot just wants to come home to rot. | ||||||
1–6 | "Chris P. Duck" | Ralph Kidson | Chris: Alex Brooker Tracey: Diane Morgan Roger Matt King | Shorts | July 26, 2018 | |
Chris finds a lost phone and immediately becomes best friends with it. Tracey wants to kill it before it's human host shows up and destroys them all. | ||||||
1–3 | "(not) Hero" | Liz Chun | Ashton Frank: Heromy Adam Hess: Loman Liz Chun: Missie Kimberly Persona: Seer Additional voices: Kerry Shale | Shorts | June 13, 2018 Jun 13, 2018 | |
In a world where you're destined to be the hero, what happens when you'd rather (not)Hero? Heromy's about to find out. |
Oh Yeah! Cartoons is an American animated anthology series that aired on Nickelodeon. Created by Fred Seibert, it was produced by Frederator Incorporated and Nickelodeon Animation Studio, running as part of Nickelodeon's Nicktoons lineup. In the show's first season, it was hosted by a variety of schoolchildren, and the second season was hosted by Kenan Thompson of All That and Kenan & Kel, and later Josh Server of All That in the third and final season. Bill Burnett composed the show's theme music.
What a Cartoon! is an American animated anthology series created by Fred Seibert for Cartoon Network. The shorts were produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions; by the end of the run, a Cartoon Network Studios production tag was added to some shorts to signal they were original to the network. The project consisted of 48 cartoons, intended to return creative power to animators and artists, by recreating the atmospheres that spawned the iconic cartoon characters of the mid-20th century. Each of the shorts mirrored the structure of a theatrical cartoon, with each film being based on an original storyboard drawn and written by its artist or creator. Three of the cartoons were paired together into a half-hour episode.
Frederator Studios is an American animation television production studio founded by Fred Seibert in January 1997. It is a division of Frederator Networks, Inc., itself apart of Kartoon Studios' Canadian holding company Wow Unlimited Media. The studio's slogan is "Original Cartoons since 1998."
Frederick G. Seibert is an American television producer and media proprietor.
Random! Cartoons is an American animated anthology series that aired on Nicktoons. Much like Oh Yeah! Cartoons, it was created by Fred Seibert and produced by Frederator Studios and Nickelodeon Animation Studio. It premiered on December 6, 2008, and ended on December 20, 2009.
Ape Escape is a series of animated shorts developed by Frederator Studios, Hawaii Film Partners, Project 51 Productions and Showcase Entertainment which aired on Nicktoons in 2009. It is based on Sony Computer Entertainment's Ape Escape video game franchise, with characters and designs based on Ape Escape 2 in particular, and focuses around Specter's attempts to take over the world with his monkey army.
Hard Luck Duck is a What a Cartoon! animated cartoon directed by William Hanna, produced by Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, and broadcast as a part of World Premiere Toons on Cartoon Network on April 16, 1995. The cartoon involves Hard Luck Duck, after venturing away from Harley Gator 's watch, is a hungry fox 's target to be cooked.
Lawrence "Larry" Huber is an American television producer, writer, and animator who is known for his long history as a producer at Hanna-Barbera, Ruby-Spears, and Nickelodeon. Huber began his animation career in 1969 while working on Hanna-Barbera's The Perils of Penelope Pitstop. He went on to work for Ruby-Spears for 15 years. Returning to Hanna-Barbera in 1990, Huber worked on 2 Stupid Dogs and Fish Police. He was hired by Buzz Potamkin to supervise production on Cartoon Network's World Premiere Toons in 1995.
"Rude Removal" is an episode in the second season of Cartoon Network's animated television series Dexter's Laboratory. Hanna-Barbera produced it in 1997 as part of the second season, but was left unaired due to foul language. In the segment, Dexter and Dee Dee are accidentally split into two pairs, one polite and one rude, with each respectively having British and New York accents. The latter is depicted as using profanity with bleep censorship. The segment was only screened at some animation festivals before finally being released online by Adult Swim on January 22, 2013.
Cartoon Hangover is a Frederator-operated YouTube channel and adult animation brand that launched in February 2012 as part of the YouTube Original Channel Initiative. The channel is part of the Channel Frederator Network.
The Channel Frederator Network is an American animation, video game and pop culture Multi-Channel Network (MCN) founded by cartoon producer and serial media entrepreneur Fred Seibert and managed by Frederator Networks.
Too Cool! Cartoons is a series of adult animated shorts on the YouTube channel Cartoon Hangover. It was created by Fred Seibert and produced by Frederator Studios. The series premiered on April 4, 2013, with the short Our New Electrical Morals. It was planned to feature 39 shorts but ended up releasing only 11 shorts.
Bee and PuppyCat is an American animated television series created and written by Natasha Allegri. The series revolves around Bee, an unemployed woman in her early twenties, who encounters a mysterious creature named PuppyCat. She adopts this apparent cat-dog hybrid, and together they go on a series of temporary jobs to pay off her monthly rent. These bizarre jobs take the duo across strange worlds out in space. The original series was produced by Frederator Studios with the animation initially outsourced to South Korean studio Dong Woo Animation.
Frederator Networks, Inc. is a media company founded by Fred Seibert. It makes and distributes cartoons, often on Channel Frederator, and through its in-house animation studio Frederator Studios. It is the largest distributor of independent animation online.
Dino: Stay Out! is a 1995 American animated short film and a spin-off of The Flintstones starring Dino, the Flintstone family's pet dinosaur. Directed by Joseph Barbera and produced by Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, it originally aired as part of What a Cartoon! on Cartoon Network on March 19, 1995.
Dino: The Great Egg-Scape is a 1997 American animated short film and a spin-off of The Flintstones starring Dino, the Flintstone family's pet dinosaur. Directed by Joseph Barbera and produced by Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, it originally aired as part of What a Cartoon! on Cartoon Network on March 5, 1997.
Go! Cartoons, stylized as GO! Cartoons, is a series of animated shorts produced by Frederator Studios and Sony Pictures Animation. The series premiered on November 7, 2017, with the short The Summoning. It features 12 shorts, airing on VRV and Cartoon Hangover's YouTube channel. Go! Cartoons is Frederator Studios' sixth cartoon "incubator" series since 1998.
These are the filmographies for the cartoon shorts series created by American animation producer Fred Seibert at and the animation production company he founded, Frederator Studios. His previous shorts series –What A Cartoon!– was produced while he was president at Hanna-Barbera.