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The "biologically unfunny" CRITTTTER & GWIZ are SILVER!!! (Pets Talk Post)

A Call for a Siftquisition: MycroftHomlz (Parody Talk Post)

Dancing Dog & Trainer Duo ~ Crazy Cool!

The Most Intense Interview You Will Ever Witness... EVER

Excited Pug Ruins Kodak Moment

How much money would it take for you to kill a puppy?

lucky760 says...

*promote

(Thanks to Persephone's Siftography of MLx which made me aware of this video.)

This reminds me of a video on YouTube that is really difficult to watch. It's linked at the bottom of the video summary on this post and should only be viewed by persons lacking a weak stomach or a strong love of canines.

Humans vs. slides

Clearasil: may turn you into a MILF or cougar hunter

dag says...

Comment hidden because you are ignoring dag. (show it anyway)

OK, got it, thanks Krupo -so it's like a MILF, but maybe not a mom - but still with the ILF thing. That reminds me. I had the idea of starting a line of clothing for canines, (little t-shirts and such) I was going to call it DILF.


Trailer: Dog bitch slaps hooker and shoots up smack

Love Has No Boundaries

choggie says...

...proof that an improperly weened feline, can suck on a dogs neck with no fear of recourse, from an equally as disturbed, canine, trapped in the same home with a dysfunctional owner....

UUUGGHHH!
Nasty. Cute is a perception-based descriptive, whose use is over-used and un-meaningful, in the white-hot light of truth!

Classic Underdog Cartoon from 1967

winkler1 says...

UnderDog seems very hard to find... sorta remember watching it as a kid.

In 1960, handling the General Mills account as an account executive with the Dancer Fitzgerald Sample advertising agency in New York, W. Watts Biggers teamed with Chet Stover, Tread Covington and artist Joe Harris in the creation of television cartoon shows to sell breakfast cereals for General Mills. The shows introduced such characters as King Leonardo, Tennessee Tuxedo and Underdog. Biggers contributed both scripts and songs to the series. When Underdog became a success, Biggers and his partners left Dancer Fitzgerald Sample to form their own company, Total Television, with animation produced at Gamma Studios in Mexico. At the end of the decade, Total Television folded when General Mills dropped out as the sponsor in 1969.

Underdog was an anthropomorphic superhero parody of Superman and similar heroes with secret identities. The premise was that "humble and lovable" Shoeshine Boy, a cartoon dog, was in truth the superhero Underdog. George Irving narrated, and comedy actor Wally Cox provided the voices of both Underdog and Shoeshine Boy. When villains threatened, Shoeshine Boy ducked into a telephone booth where he transformed into the caped and costumed hero, destroying the booth in the process when his super powers were activated. Underdog almost always spoke in rhyme:

When Polly's in trouble, I am not slow,
So it's hip! hip! hip! and away I go.

Underdog's most frequent saying when he appeared was:

    There's no need to fear, Underdog is here.

The majority of episodes used a common template when Underdog first reveals himself. A crowd of people look up in the sky would say: "Look in the sky. It's a bird! It's a plane!" After which one a woman exclaims, "It's a frog!" Another onlooker responds "a frog?" To this, Underdog replies with these words:

    Not bird, not plane, not even frog, it's just little old me, (at this point, Underdog crashes into something) Underdog.

Underdog usually caused a lot of collateral damage. Whenever someone complained about the damage, Underdog replied:

    I am a hero who never fails.
    I cannot be bothered with these details.

The villains almost always managed to menace Sweet Polly Purebred (voiced by Norma McMillan), an anthropomorphic canine TV reporter as part of their nefarious schemes; she was a helpless damsel in distress most of the time, and had a habit of singing in a somewhat whining tone of voice, "Oh where, oh where has my Underdog gone?", which she sings to the tune of the song "Oh Where Has My Little Dog Gone" when in jeopardy. Recurring villains included Simon Bar Sinister, a mad scientist with a voice reminiscent of Lionel Barrymore, his assistant Cad and Riff Raff, an anthropomorphic wolf gangster based on the noted actor George Raft. Other villains include The Electric (Slippery) Eel, Battyman, and Overcat.

Unlike Superman, Underdog's super powers are not a natural part of his physical makeup. When he is not Underdog, he is incognito as a shoeshine boy and hurriedly dresses in a phone booth like Superman when trouble calls; he must take an "Underdog Super Energy Vitamin Pill" to ignite his powers (like Mister Terrific). He keeps one of these pills inside a special ring he wears at all times. Several episodes show Underdog losing the ring and being powerless, since he must take another pill as his super powers begin to fail. When the series was syndicated in the 1980s and 1990s, the scenes of him taking his energy pill were edited out. Animation fans lambast this as a form of political correctness, as they believe the scenes were removed in order to prevent any glorification of drug use

Bouncing puppy

Simpsons - Why must you turn my office into a house of lies?

Simpsons - Why must you turn my office into a house of lies?

The Amazing Cataglyphis Ant

dag says...

Comment hidden because you are ignoring dag. (show it anyway)

Yeah we have canines, BNSA, SwampGirl, Deputy Dog, conan (I think that's a poodle)
Daphne used to be a cat.
Snake represents the reptiles well.

Fish and worms seem to be a bit under represented.



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