Oh Yeah Cartoons Jamal the Funny Frogh

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Subsequently leaving Hanna-Barbera in late 1996 to form Frederator Studios, Fred Seibert was still in love with the idea of making Animated Anthology shows in gild to showcase new, upwards-and-coming talent. Having just finished upwards the What A Cartoon! Evidence over at Cartoon Network, where he produced 39 animated shorts that led to the creation of five successful television series, Seibert called upwards Nickelodeon to see if they were interested in their own equivalent program. Considering that this was the person who helped the competition of a sudden become a threat to the popularity of their Nicktoons brand, their answer was obvious. And so Oh Yes! Cartoons was born.

Different What A Drawing (whose shorts were later compiled into a half-hour show, afterward initially airing by themselves under the "World Premiere Toons" banner), OYC was a half-hour show from the start; diverse live-action hosts were used (some other departure from WAC) — real schoolhouse kids for the showtime season, Kenan Thompson for the 2d and Josh Server for the 3rd.

In some ways, Oh Aye! Cartoons was more successful than its predecessor, producing over a hundred shorts, some of which became short mini-series within the program itself, such as Rob Renzetti's Mina and The Count. On the other hand, less full-length serial were actually greenlit from this large batch of content. Whereas WAC had five full-length shows come out of it, OYC had Nickelodeon make only three of its shorts into series:

  • The Adequately OddParents, created by Butch Hartman. Greenlit from a series of ten Oh Yeah! Cartoons shorts, the testify would proceed to go the network's second longest-running scripted series, with over 270 segments beyond ten seasons, as well as several tv set movies.
  • ChalkZone, created by Bill Burnett and Larry Huber. note The duo served as producers for OYC, with Burnett also composing the anthology'southward theme music. The duo also made several other shorts for the serial, together or with unlike collaborators, in addition to the ChalkZone shorts. Greenlit from a series of eight Oh Yep! Cartoons shorts and lasting 40 half-hours (consisting of 136 segments) across iv seasons.
  • My Life every bit a Teenage Robot, created by Rob Renzetti. Greenlit from the short "My Neighbor was a Teenage Robot" and lasting 39 half-hours (75 segments) over three seasons. The original curt was developed when Nickelodeon declined making the aforementioned Mina and the Count into a full-length series, with Teenage Robot taking the place of an additional Mina drawing.

A few other noteworthy creators who created Oh Yeah! Cartoons shorts and eventually got their own solo projects unrelated to it include Seth MacFarlane (Family Guy), Dave Wasson (Fourth dimension Squad) and Carlos Ramos (The Ten'southward). Other noteworthy creators include Mike Bell, Alex Kirwan, Tim Biskup, Pat Ventura, Steve Marmel, Zac Moncrief, and Vincent Waller, who would reappear as writers and directors for several pop and influential animated series in the post-obit decades, such as SpongeBob SquarePants.

Random! Cartoons was a like Nickelodeon anthology show that was originally intended equally a 4th season of Oh Yeah! Cartoons, simply was retooled into existence its ain affair at the last minute, known mainly for giving birth to Fanboy and Chum Chum, Hazard Time and Bravest Warriors (the kickoff of the three being the just one to have the serial as well produced by Nickelodeon, equally Adventure Time was picked up by Cartoon Network instead after Nickelodeon rejected information technology and Frederator Studios produced a Bravest Warriors series with no interest from Nickelodeon equally part of their Drawing Hangover YouTube channel).

Compare the Nickelodeon Animated Shorts Program, Nickelodeon'due south own animation incubator fabricated without the interest of Frederator, which has its shorts periodically uploaded online.


The Shorts:

    open up/close all folders

    Season 1 Shorts

  • ChalkZone
  • Slap T. Pooch: What Is Funny?
  • Jelly's Day
  • The F-Tales
  • Teddy and Art: 25¢ Trouble
  • True cat and Milkman
  • Jamal the Funny Frog: Mind the Baby, Jamal
  • Thatta Male child
  • Hobart: The Weedkeeper
  • Protecto 5000
  • Ask Edward past Rob Renzetti
  • Peter Patrick, Private Investigator
  • Max and his Special Problem by Dave Wasson
  • Tutu the Superina
  • Blotto
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: Jack & the Beanstalk
  • Twins Crimson
  • Olly & Frank
  • Apex Cartoon Props
  • A Cop & His Donut
  • Enchanted Adventures
  • The Fairly OddParents
  • Hobart & the Merman
  • Super Santa
  • Kitty the Hapless Cat
  • That's My Pop
  • Hubbykins vs. Sweetiepie
  • The Man with No Nose
  • Youngstar iii
  • Hey Look!
  • ChalkZone: The Amazin' River
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: Hamsel and Grande
  • The Feelers
  • Planet Kate
  • Fat Head
  • Max & the Pigeon
  • Zoomates
  • Microcops

    Season ii Shorts

  • ChalkZone: Rudy's Engagement
  • A Child's Life
  • The Fairly OddParents: Too Many Timmys!
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: The Little Pigs 3
  • Freddy Seymore's Astonishing Life
  • Jamal the Funny Frog: His Musical Moment
  • The Fairly OddParents: Where's the Wand?
  • Magic Trixie
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: The Egg Who Would Be King
  • ChalkZone: Snap Out of H2o
  • Earth to Obie
  • Mina and The Count: The Ghoul's Tribunal annotation Mina and the Count was originally role of Cartoon Network'southward What A Cartoon! Show.
  • ChalkZone: Secret Passages
  • Kid from S.C.H.O.O.L.
  • Mina and The Count: The Vampire Who Came to Dinner
  • The Fairly OddParents: Political party of Three!
  • The Forgotten Toybox: Expletive of the Were Babe
  • Jelly's 24-hour interval: Uncle Betty Comes to Visit
  • ChalkZone: ChalkDad
  • A Domestic dog & His Boy
  • Mina and The Count: Playing a Hunch
  • The Fairly OddParents: The Fairy Flu!
  • Lollygagin
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: The Tortoise & the Hairpiece
  • ChalkZone: Chalk Rain
  • The Dan Danger Prove!
  • Mina and The Count: My Best Friend
  • The Fairly OddParents: The Temp!
  • Herb
  • Jamal the Funny Frog: Milk Dreams
  • Jelly'south 24-hour interval: Aunt Broth's Makeover
  • Terry & Chris
  • Mina and The Count: FrankenFrog
  • The Fairly OddParents: The Zappys!
  • Allow'due south Talk Turkey
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: Goldie Locks
  • ChalkZone: Rapunzel
  • Zoey'due south Zoo: Lots of Ocelots
  • My Neighbor Was a Teenage Robot

    Flavor 3 Shorts

  • The Fairly OddParents: Super Sense of humor
  • The Boy Who Cried Alien!
  • Jamal the Funny Frog: Dentist
  • The Dan Danger Evidence!: Danger 101!
  • The Tantrum
  • Super Santa: Naughty
  • Super Santa: South Pole Joe
  • Sick -Due north- Tired: Bug Bite!
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: The Ugly Duck Thing
  • The Fairly OddParents: Scouts Honor
  • Skippy Spankerton: Hot Tamale Monster Pic Madness!
  • Jamal the Funny Frog: Beach
  • Super Santa: Vegetation
  • Elise Mere Mortal
  • A Kid's Life: Picture Perfect
  • The Dan Danger Show!: A Lighter Shade of Danger!
  • Kameleon Kid
  • Jamal the Funny Frog: Camping
  • The Fairly OddParents: The Really Bad Day
  • Baxter and Bananas: Monkey See Monkey Don't
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: A Fisherman, A Fisherman's Wife, and a Fish
  • The Dan Danger Show!: A Engagement with Danger!
  • The Semprini Triplets
  • Tales from the Goose Lady: Dot and Randy's Distressing Tale of Woe

Tropes applying to Oh Aye! Cartoons include:

  • Accidental Pervert: In "Max and the Pigeon Incident", Max accidentally steps into the girls' bath and gets attacked by a woman who accuses him of existence a "sicko".
  • Aesop Amnesia: The championship character of the Dan Danger shorts keeps on having to learn non to be a wimpy coward. Every time he resolves to exist braver from at present on, he gets back to being easily frightened by the about fiddling things.
  • Affectionate Parody: Rob Renzetti's The F-Tales, a satire of The Ten-Files in which a vixen and a chicken investigate Fairy Tale stories.
  • Alliterative Family unit:
    • Bene and Beckette from "Twins Crimson and Those Astonishing Robots" are twins whose names both starting time with B.
    • The titular characters of "The Semprini Triplets" all have names starting with M (Melvin, Melinda and Malcolm).
  • Alliterative Name: Some shorts characteristic characters whose names are alliterations.
    • "Peter Patrick, P.I." stars a Kid Detective named Peter Patrick and his fez-wearing feline sidekick Persian Puss. They both address each other equally "P.P."
    • The title character of "Skippy Spankerton: Hot Tamale Monster Movie Madness".
    • The pb vocaliser of the titular insect rock ring in "The Feelers" is named Mitzi Moth.
  • Almighty Janitor: The titular character of "Herb" is a schoolhouse janitor who helps the local students with their issues, even managing to create high-quality cuisine for the entire schoolhouse when the principal demands him to exercise so with the ulterior motive of finding an excuse to burn down him.
  • Amazing Technicolor Population:
    • Jelly from the Jelly's Mean solar day shorts has pale purple skin and her cousin Hargus has yellowish-dark-green peel.
    • The titular characters of "The Semprini Triplets" take majestic (Melvin), cherry (Melinda) and blue (Malcolm) peel.
  • Amazing Technicolor Wild fauna: "Apex Cartoon Props & Novelties" follows the mishaps of a blue wolf and a purple possum.
  • Blithe Adaptation: The short "Hey Wait" is an adaptation of a series of comic strips of the same proper name that Harvey Kurtzman made in the 1940's.
  • Anthropomorphized Anatomy: The short Microcops is set inside a human's body which is portrayed this way. Namely, the brain is a command eye, the bowels is a sewer, the heart is a motor, and there is an lift system to various parts of the trunk.
  • Ascended Fanboy: Magic Trixie has the titular Trixie go from a massive fan of magic to being the banana of a famous magician while discovering her own immense natural talent to being a headlining magician over the course of her short.
  • Attack on the Heart: In "Microcops", the issues infitrates the homo's heart and plugs a DJ turntable into information technology, giving the man heart palpitations past turning upwards the speed. Jones so inadvertently makes the palpitations worse by attacking the bug with electrical blasts, until one of them destroys the turntable, bringing the pulses back to normal speed.
  • Bad Santa: Santa's rival South Pole Joe in Super Santa, though he'due south more a Bad Santa because he's completely incompetent rather than evil.
  • Badass Santa: Super Santa depicts Santa Claus as a superhero.
  • Banana Skin: In the Super Santa short "Vegetation", Santa removes the peel from a giant mutant banana and ends upward slipping on it.
  • Battle Couple: Super Santa and Emma Claus both fight crime.
  • Bee Afraid: In "The Feelers", one of the members of the titular rock band of anthropomorphic insects is a bee named Stinger who plays the bass guitar. While not exactly evil, he is established to have a atmosphere, has to exist restrained by Mo Skito when he expresses the urge to sting in response to being aggravated by two humans singing a cheesy romantic duet and is encouraged by Mitzi Moth at the end of the short to go Crusty's attention by stinging him in the rear.
  • Assertive Their Own Lies: Edward from the brusk "Ask Edward: All About Babies" tells a big lie to his blood brother almost babies coming from eggs laid past the Delivery Stork at the North Pole, just ends upward actually believing it when they find an egg virtually the business firm later on Edward claimed it was impossible for their parents to have another baby.
  • Big Brother Bully: It's established in the Dan Danger short "A Lighter Shade of Danger" that Dan's older brother Stan tried to scare him by lying to him that there were monsters in the cupboard, which persuaded Dan to lift heavy objects in forepart of the closet door enough times that he adult the muscular build he has today.
  • Large Friendly Dog: "Ollie and Frank", where a Child Prodigy named Ollie creates a huge Frankenstein dog he names Frank. Frank is shown to be very loyal and friendly to his master.
  • Big "NO!": In the Super Santa short "Vegetation", Dr. Blood-red Miranda yells "No" after his mutated vegetables are returned to normal.
  • Bird-Poop Gag:
    • In "Max and the Pigeon Incident", the titular pigeon poops on the papers on Max'south desk in addition to doing so on Max'due south head at the finish of the short.
    • "Kameleon Kid" at 1 point had the title graphic symbol plow into a bird and poop on the keen who tormented him earlier.
  • Erudite Infant: Jamal the Funny Frog's little sis Polly is able to speak in complete sentences even though she's a tadpole.
  • Encephalon with a Manual Control: The encephalon in Microcops is portrayed equally a command and control middle. The virus issues later takes over the subconscious, making the host human action similar a chicken.
  • Brown Bag Mask: "Fuzzy Bunny Presents: A Child'south Life" at 1 point shows Suzy Cornhusk wearing a paper bag over her caput when she's tormented by the anthropomorphized blackheads on her nose.
  • Bumbling Dad: "That's My Pop" was about a Child Prodigy bear girl named Naomi and her idiot father.
  • Military camp Straight: The titular graphic symbol of the Dan Danger shorts adores cute animals and at one bespeak fantasizes about having his show retooled to be about tea parties, but he dates a female police officer in the episode "A Date with Danger".
  • Catchphrase: Slap T. Pooch in "What is Funny?" repeatedly states "Was that funny? I don't know! I'm asking!"
  • Circling Birdies: "Blotto" ends with the titular graphic symbol stunned with stars spinning around his head afterwards he is hit on the head by his love interest Dotto.
  • Corrupted Character Copy: Chicken Footling is ane of Agent Mulder from the X-Files. He believes there are paranormal conspiracies behind strange going-ons, merely he's also paranoid to the point of thinking that his Amanuensis Scully and regular civilians are backside it all.
  • Crazy Jealous Guy: The title character of the short "Blotto" lets the Airship Goon have it when he sees that the jerk is trying to lure his love interest Dotto.
  • The Cuckoolander Was Right:
    • At the stop of The F-Tales, Chicken Picayune turns out to be right about the heaven falling later spending near of the brusque coming off as some kind of paranoid conspiracy nut.
    • The premise of "Freddy Seymoure's Astonishing Life" is that he spends the brusque telling outlandish and unbelievable stories, similar being given a crown by an conflicting king as a advantage for saving his planet past solving a giant puzzle sphere and beating a wrestler past tricking him into devouring his ain body. When his dad asks him what happened to his necktie and he answers that a monster ate it, information technology turns out that in that location actually is a monster ruining Freddy's dad's wearing apparel, which implies that Freddy didn't brand up his other stories either.
  • Dance Party Ending: "The Feelers" ends with the titular rock band of anthropomorphic insects dancing to their ain song afterwards Mr. Katzeneisner orders Crusty to find the Feelers due to liking their music.
  • Dartboard of Detest: Elmer Scrooge is seen throwing darts at a picture of Santa thumb-tacked to the wall of his prison prison cell while in jail at the terminate of the Super Santa curt "Naughty".
  • Death Course: In the Dan Danger short "Danger 101", Dan has to make upwards for a solar day of gym course he missed when he was a kid by returning to his one-time schoolhouse and going through a dangerous obstacle course, which includes a flamethrower, a guillotine and a quicksand pit. He manages to endure it by pretending he's in Puppy Boondocks.
  • Disney Decease: Mitzi Moth appears to get killed by bug spray in "The Feelers", but eventually comes back to life when Crusty plays the Feelers' recorded song in front of Mr. Katzeneisner and Mo Skito sheds tears over her body.
  • Dodgy Toupee: Elmer Scrooge from the Super Santa short "Naughty" has a very obvious powdered wig on his head, which he ends upwardly losing later on he's defeated and put in jail.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: The short "The Feelers" at one point has Mitzi Moth bang confronting a lightbulb with an entranced look on her face up. Mo Skito stops her and informs her that she knows this isn't skillful for her. The scene is easy to read as a reference to drug addiction.
  • Donut Mess with a Cop:
    • "A Cop and his Donut" was almost a cop existence partners with a sentient donut.
    • Used for a joke in the Dan Danger short "A Date with Danger", where Dan is on a date with a female person police officer and she is impressed when the dinner he orders for them turns out to exist a plate of donuts. It is besides pointed out how cliche the stereotype of law enforcers liking donuts is.
  • Dr. Fakenstein: The short "Elise: Mere Mortal" featured an eccentric orthodontist named Dr. Toothinstein.
  • Dumb Muscle: Bolivar of the coiffure of alien dogs in "Planet Kate" is the largest and strongest of the group likewise every bit the dumbest.
  • Easily Thwarted Alien Invasion: In "The Boy Who Cried Alien", Floyd spends the entire short delivering paranoid ramblings of an imminent conflicting invasion. By the time the aliens finally testify up, they turn out to be really small and Floyd obliviously eats them with his cereal before they tin can even begin their conquest.
  • Swallow the Photographic camera: "The Forgotten Toybox: Curse of the Werebaby" has the photographic camera zoom in on the titular werebaby's mouth as he puts a police car in it.
  • Elephants Are Scared of Mice: "Tutu the Superina" has the Vile Woman imprisoning and tormenting animals. I of the captives shown is an elephant frightened by a wind-up toy mouse.
  • Elvis Lives: Used as a background gag in "The Feelers" during the titular insect stone band'southward song "Drop Me Off in Hollywood", where Elvis has a cameo among various unnamed celebrities.
  • Embarrassing Old Photo: In the brusque "Baxter and Bananas: Monkey See, Monkey Don't?", Bananas threatens to show the people at Baxter's house an embarrassing baby picture.
  • Every Episode Ending: With the exceptions of Planet Kate and Fathead, every brusk ends with a clip of a graphic symbol (or multiple characters) from the short (usually but non always the protagonist) appearing in the Oh Yeah! Cartoons logo while shouting the bear witness's title (though the one for "Max and his Special Problem" and "Max and the Dove Incident" instead has Max enhance a finger while going "Uh" and and so shrugging).
  • Expy:
    • The titular characters of "The Semprini Triplets" are breathy ersatzes of the Warner siblings, particularly due to being a trio of rubber hose cartoon characters whose shtick involves playing pranks on people who try to screw them over.
    • The protagonists of "The F-Tales" are parodies of Agents Mulder and Scully.
  • Confront–Heel Plough: "Thatta Boy" has Thatta Boy's sidekick Polly decide to alter allegiances and become a villain near the end of the short.
  • The Faceless: Mr. Shuttlecock in the Dan Danger shorts has his entire body except for his limbs obscured the few times he physically appears.
  • Fake Ultimate Hero: The Dan Danger Show was a series of shorts almost an adventurer hero who had a reputation of beingness able to survive dangerous encounters with wild animals, simply in real life is a helpless coward who feared the most trivial of things.
  • Falling into Jail: The Super Santa short "Jingle Bell Justice" ends with Bedlam Bunny falling into a jail cell.
  • Imitation Teeth Tomfoolery: Quondam Man is revealed to be wearing imitation teeth in "Youngstar 3" when his dentures autumn out and get stuck on the eye of the giant fish monster he, Shero and Youngstar are fighting.
  • Burn down-Breathing Diner: In "Skippy Spankerton: Hot Tamale Monster Picture Madness", Skippy tries to get Zola to breathe fire by feeding him tamales with hot sauce.
  • First-Name Ground: The title grapheme of the brusque "Planet Kate" has the surname Moon, as shown on the back of the map she drew for schoolhouse that's taken past the conflicting dogs and in the end credits, but she is but ever chosen past her given name within the short.
  • Frankenstein's Monster: "Ollie and Frank" is about a boy who creates a Frankenstein monster domestic dog.
  • Friend to All Children: Dan Danger is shown to be on adept terms with children, to the indicate that Ruthie is able to motivate him to endure the situations that frighten him by reminding him that failing to face his fears would allow down the children who look up to him.
  • Fourth-Wall Observer: The title character of "Planet Kate" has a scene where she addresses the audience to explicate how she has gotten involved with a group of alien dogs and is the only character in the short to acknowledge the quaternary wall at all.
  • Fractured Fairy Tale: "Tales From The Goose Lady" consists of the Goose Lady forcing 2 children to listen to baroque versions of famous fairy tales.
  • G-Rated Sex: In Ask Edward: All Nearly Babies, Edward tells Emo that babies come from storks who respond to "Baby Request Forms" from the North Pole. This belief is a crucial chemical element of the plot.
  • Garrulous Growth: "Fuzzy Bunny Presents: A Kid'southward Life" has Suzy Cornhusk tormented by sentient blackheads appearing on her nose.
  • Gender-Blender Proper name:
    • The merman from the Hobart short "Deep Body of water Diva" is named Ethel.
    • The "Jelly's Day" brusque "Uncle Betty's Strange Rash" has Jelly'south uncle named Betty.
  • George Jetson Task Security: In the Super Santa short "Naughty", Elmer Scrooge fires his butler for giving him a cup of tea with ii sugars when he decided to have just one sugar instead at the terminal minute.
  • Gold Tooth: In "The Feelers", a walrus with a golden tooth shows up to give the titular rock band of anthropomorphic insects a ride during their performance of the song "Drib Me Off in Hollywood".
  • The Grinch: The Super Santa brusque "Naughty" had Elmer Scrooge, a descendant of Ebenezer Scrooge, endeavour to ruin Christmas for everyone by using gas to make all the children naughty solely because he grew to hate the holiday for Santa giving him coal all the time.
  • Happy Place: The titular character of the Dan Danger shorts sometimes tries to calm himself and suffer the hazardous situations that freak him out by putting on headgear themed afterwards a cute fauna (such as a rabbit or a puppy) and imagine he's in a world total of said cute animals.
  • Held Back in School: The Dan Danger short "Danger 101" shows that Dan's peachy Robert is still in the seventh grade while a grown man. Humorously, the school's current gym coach turns out to exist his son.
  • Hither We Go Once more!: After the title character finally succeeds in getting his brain back in his caput in "Max and his Special Trouble", Max then ends up coughing up his heart.
  • Honesty Aesop: "Lollygaggin" is about a young girl whose habit of lying results in her finding herself at the mercy of a giant monster who gets bigger as she continues lying and won't go away until she tells the truth to her parents.
  • Horror Host: "The Forgotten Toybox: Curse of the Werebaby" has its Framing Device consist of the story existence presented to the audience past a living ventriloquist dummy named Mr. Beasley later on rummaging through the titular toybox to fish out a toy related to the story he'south going to tell. Due to beingness 1 of the many shorts to non be picked upwardly for a full-fledged series, "Curse of the Werebaby" was the only tale from the Forgotten Toybox that Mr. Beasley ever got to tell.
  • Hypnotize the Captive: Simon Cerebellum does this to Stephanie with a Hypno Ray in at the beginning Kid from S.C.H.O.O.L. in social club to brand himself Homecoming King. Luckily for Stephanie, Jake Slade pulls him and his device away before he can fully brainwash her.
  • I'm Melting!: In the Super Santa brusk "Southward Pole Joe", Santa defeats a behemothic gingerbread human by splashing him with milk, which turns the giant gingerbread man into gingerbread pudding and has him scream "I'm melting!"
  • Inexplicably Tailless: With the exception of Rothgar, none of the alien dogs in the short "Planet Kate" accept tails.
  • Informed Species: The titular true cat in "Cat and Milkman" looks more similar a monkey than a feline.
  • Instant Skilful: The title character of "Magic Trixie" doesn't take much exposure to magic and exercise to go a sorcerer similar few have ever seen.
  • Intellectual Fauna: A highly intelligent dog is one of the master characters in the brusk "A Dog and His Male child".
  • Intercourse with You: In "The Feelers", Mitzi Moth at one point sings a vocal with somewhat suggestive lyrics chosen "100 Watts of Love".

    Mitzi: Whoa! I tin can handle whatsoever candle, I'yard a friction match for any match, and most flashlights I can laissez passer right past. But there is a light I see who is only fila-meant for me. You must agree I find him 1 brilliant guy!

    Mitzi, Mo, Max, and Stinger: 'Cause he'southward 100 watts of beloved! Yeah, he'southward 100 watts of love!

    Mitzi: Oh, his kisses really burn and nevertheless I e'er will return to get 100 watts!

  • Interspecies Romance: In the "Jelly'southward Twenty-four hour period" brusk "Uncle Betty's Foreign Rash", Jelly'south Uncle Betty falls in dear with a sentient blossom.
  • Merely Following Orders: In the Super Santa brusque "Vegetation", a tater minion of Dr. Carmine Miranda pleads to Santa that he was only following orders.
  • Kafka Komedy: The Goose Lady'due south rendition of Hansel and Gretel. Hansel and Gretel are 2 greedy fat kids who go along trying to eat the Witch'southward candy house. Every time the Witch tries to stop them, they cry for help and a nearby Woodsman, assuming the Witch is trying to eat the kids, attacks her with his ax. The design repeats itself until the Witch'due south home is near entirely gone. She then constructs a new business firm fabricated out of liver, which repulses Hansel and Gretel... simply it turns out the Woodsman loves liver and starts eating the house while the Witch breaks downward into tears.
  • Karma Houdini: The Goose Lady from the "Tales from the Goose Lady" shorts never gets punished for preventing Dot and Randy from attending school in guild to force them to listen to her stories. While the final brusque "Dot and Randy'south Deplorable Tale of Woe" has the kids turn the tables on the Goose Lady by tying her upwards and making her magic wand Juanito read a story that casts Dot and Randy as gifted children who are prevented from achieving their destiny due to being exhausted from decidedly unflattering representations of the Goose Lady and Juanito distracting them with stories, the Goose Lady doesn't acquire a thing from the feel and goes on her merry manner after Dot and Randy let her go.
  • Child Hero: There were several shorts where the main graphic symbol was a kid superhero.
    • The title graphic symbol of "Thatta Male child" spends his short chasing after supervillains, only for his sidekick to betray him and set free all the crooks he captured.
    • Youngstar from "Youngstar 3", who fights law-breaking with the aid of his grandpa Erstwhile Homo and a Fembot named Shero.
    • The title graphic symbol of "The Tantrum", who channels his frustrations at non getting what he wants through offense-fighting.
    • Jake Slade from Kid from South.C.H.O.O.L is more or less a child secret amanuensis.
  • Kid with the Leash: Mina and The Count is all about a little girl having a vampire under her pollex.
  • Laugh Runway: Used excessively in "Zoo Mates" and "That'due south My Pop!"
  • Left Hanging: The short "Planet Kate" ended on a Bewilderment and wasn't connected, leaving the alien dogs' quest to find the lost metropolis unresolved.
  • Living Toys:
    • A living plush rabbit named Fuzzy Bunny serves as the narrator for the "A Kid'southward Life" shorts.
    • "The Forgotten Toybox: Curse of the Werebaby" has a living ventriloquist dummy named Mr. Beasley serve as the short'south Horror Host.
    • The villain of the first Super Santa short, "Jingle Bong Justice", is a plush rabbit named Bedlam Bunny who seeks revenge confronting Santa Claus because he's aroused he wasn't something cooler like a toy robot and terrorizes the city with an army of toys he sends on a crime spree.
  • Male Band, Female Vocalizer: A fictional example can exist constitute in "The Feelers", with the members of the titular insect rock band consisting of the female Mitzi Moth as the pb singer and the male person Mo Skito, Stinger and Max every bit the corresponding guitarist, bassist and drummer.
  • Homo in a Kilt: Jelly'south Uncle Betty from "Jelly's Twenty-four hours: Uncle Betty'south Strange Rash" wears a kilt.
  • Mirror Routine: "Hubbykins vs. Sweetiepie" had Hubbykins attempt to escape his irate married woman Sweetiepie by pretending to be her shadow. He succeeds in deceiving her by mimicking her movements until Sweetiepie's existent shadow points out that information technology's really her hubby.
  • Mistreatment-Induced Betrayal: In the Super Santa short "Naughty", Elmer Scrooge's lackeys end up turning on their boss on the unproblematic basis that Santa Claus was nicer to them than he was.
  • Miss Conception: "Ask Edward: All Most Babies" has Edward and his younger brother Emo get completely inaccurate ideas about where babies come up from. Edward first tells his brother that parents get a baby by sending a request form to the stork at the North Pole during Christmas, Easter, or when the molar fairy comes to claim the lost tooth of one of the children they already take, afterwards the stork volition lay an egg that will hatch into a babe after beingness delivered. When their female parent tries to set up them directly by having their dad explicate the facts of life to them, they only stop upwardly thinking that eggs will only contain babies if bees have pollinated them.
  • Missing Mom:
    • The championship character of the Jamal the Funny Frog shorts has a father and a younger sister, but no mention any is made of his female parent.
    • "That's My Pop" but shows Naomi's father, with no indication fabricated on the whereabouts of her female parent.
  • Monster of the Week: Each of the Super Santa shorts had Santa Claus fight a dissimilar villain: A sentient toy bunny in "Jingle Bong Justice", a descendant of Ebenezer Scrooge in "Naughty", a Bad Santa in "South Pole Joe", and a Mad Scientist who tried to enhance an ground forces of mutated vegetables in "Vegetation".
  • Morph Weapon: "Enchanted Adventures" stars a knight named Galen who is armed with a sword he can command to modify into other weapons.
  • Mouse World: "The Feelers" was about a rock band of anthropomorphic insects trying to get humans to find them in spite of their small-scale size. They succeed when a spider named Legs helps them tape a song and has the recording play in forepart of the boss of the recording studio'southward owner.
  • Mr. Imagination: The championship character of "Earth to Obie", who pretends that he's at a prison for breakfast cereal mascots while at the supermarket.
  • Mrs. Claus: Is also an Action Girl in Super Santa.
  • Naked People Are Funny: Due to struggling to get ready for bed and finish her flick at the same time in "Skippy Spankerton: Hot Tamale Monster Pic Madness", Skippy Spankerton at ane point appears moisture and naked in front of the monsters she's filming when she rushes to continue working on her moving picture later on being told to take a bath.
  • Never Say "Die": Played straight in the short "Protecto 5000". The titular robot bodyguard'southward original owner is implied to be killed at one point, but when Protecto 5000 tells his story to the fiddling girl he befriends, he states that his owner "had an blow".
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: The dragon Kaltor in "Enchanted Adventures" is clearly channeling William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk.
  • No Fourth Wall: "What is Funny?" has Slap T. Pooch repeatedly asking the audience whether everything he does and everything that happens to him is funny.
  • Odd Proper noun Out: In "The Feelers", Stinger is the only member of the titular insect stone ring whose name doesn't being with One thousand (the other members are named Max, Mo Skito, and Mitzi Moth).
  • Old Superhero: Ane of the members of the titular hero team in "Youngstar three" is Old Man, who is Youngstar'southward granddaddy.
  • I Steve Limit: Averted. At that place are iv different shorts featuring a grapheme named Max: The drummer of the titular stone ring of anthropomorphic insects in "The Feelers", the keen in "Terry and Chris", the protagonist of the shorts "Max and his Special Trouble" and "Max and the Dove Incident", and the leader of the conflicting dogs in "Planet Kate".
  • Open-Fly Gag: In "Kid from S.C.H.O.O.L.", Jake Slade distracts Simon Cerebellum by telling him his wing is downward.
  • Our Werebeasts Are Different: The short "The Forgotten Toy Box: Curse of the Werebaby" had a selfish and young man cursed with turning into an adult-sized baby until he learns to human action his age after being bitten by an infant.
  • Parental Abandonment: Jelly from the Jelly's Day shorts is visited past 1 of her relatives in all of the shorts, but is e'er shown to alive by herself with no mention fabricated of where her parents are.
  • Parental Hypocrisy: Jamal'due south dad in the Jamal the Funny Frog shorts tends to not practice what he preaches. For instance, he is seen playing his son's video game later on telling him that playing video games will damage his mind in "His Musical Moment", while "Dentist" has him indulge in sweets and lose several of his teeth after lecturing his son on the importance of proper dental care.
  • Movie Day: "A Kid's Life: Picture Perfect" has the premise of Billy Butter wanting to make sure his school moving-picture show comes out meliorate than it did last year, and then he makes himself smile the unabridged mean solar day, even in situations where it would look weird or insensitive to exist smiling (e.g. being threatened by bullies, learning nearly the Great Depression, a sobbing girl in the hallway pleading that he provide donations for the victims of a recent tragedy and existence served meatloaf and broccoli in the schoolhouse cafeteria). Afterward the picture is finally taken, Billy is shocked to come across that he still had broccoli in his teeth.
  • Pietà Plagiarism: In "The Feelers", Mo Skito carries Mitzi Moth'southward body in his arms during her Disney Death.
  • Pink Girl, Bluish Boy: The twins Bene and Beckette from "Twins Blood-red and Those Amazing Robots". Bene is a male child with blue hair and a blue shirt, while his sister Beckette has pink hair and a pinkish dress. The trope is besides inverted in that Bene wears a pink scarf and Beckette wears a blue ribbon in her hair.
  • Public Domain Soundtrack: Some of the music used in "Jamal the Funny Frog" was from the classical era.
  • Punctuated! For! Emphasis!: OH! YEAH! CARTOONS!
  • The Quiet 1:
    • Very few of Max'due south utterances in the shorts "Max and his Special Problem" and "Max and the Pigeon Incident" are actual words, being slightly more talkative in the latter short.
    • The title character of "Magic Trixie" only has 1 line of dialogue ("I have natural talent"), ii if yous count the obligatory prune of the curt'southward primary character proverb "Oh Yeah! Cartoons".
  • Rewind Gag: "Hubbykins vs. Sweetie Pie" has a joke where Sweetie Pie glares at Hubbykins for carelessly tracking mud into the house and throwing his suitcase onto the floor, Hubbykins responding to his married woman's anger by walking backwards every bit the mud prints vanish from the floor and his suitcase flies dorsum into his hand.
  • Rise of Zitboy: The premise of the short "Fuzzy Bunny Presents: A Kid's Life", where a girl named Suzy freaks out over having sentient blackheads on her nose the mean solar day before the school trip the light fantastic toe.
  • Sassy Blackness Woman:
    • Jamal the Funny Frog's trivial sister Polly may just exist a tadpole, but she does tend to human action like a black woman with mental attitude.
    • Dotto from "Blotto" also has shades of this due to spending a lot of fourth dimension kvetching about how much she hates it in Inkworld and showing unrestrained ire at Blotto for beingness swept up by the director in the comic volume world's interest in making him a star.
  • Screw the Rules, I Have Money!: Elmer Scrooge from the Super Santa short "Naughty" clearly has this mindset, every bit he boasts that existence wealthy enables him to do whatever he wants.
  • Schoolyard Neat All Grown Up: The Dan Danger brusk "Danger 101" has Dan Danger having to go back to his old school to brand up for a twenty-four hour period of gym class he missed in his youth. While there, he runs into his neat Robert, who even so hasn't made it by the seventh grade and intends to clobber Dan over again later on school. After Dan makes the effort to stand up to Robert, Robert is so impressed by Dan's courage that he calls off the fight and instead asks Dan to sign his yearbook.
  • Senior Slumber Cycle: The brusk "Youngstar 3" begins with One-time Man having fallen comatose, leading to his grandson Youngstar and Shero to become and fight a monster without him. Once he wakes upwards, Erstwhile Man isn't happy that his two teammates went alee without him.

    Youngstar: But Grandpa, yous were napping!
    Erstwhile Man: (mocking tone) But Grandpa...

  • Shout-Out: The Super Santa brusque "South Pole Joe" has Santa encourage a kid asking if he's the real Santa Claus to tug at his bristles, which references the film Miracle on 34th Street.
  • The Smurfette Principle:
    • In "The Feelers", Mitzi Moth is the simply female fellow member of the titular rock band of anthropomorphic insects.
    • Shero is the only female among the titular superhero squad of "Youngstar 3".
  • Sneeze of Doom: In Microcops, Jones gets chased into the olfactory organ past the multiplied virus bugs and is left with a feather duster as his only remaining equipment. He resorts to bravado up the squeegee which scatters the feathers throughout the nasal passage, causing the host to sneeze out all the bugs.
  • Snowball Lie: "Lollygaggin" is about a young girl with a addiction of lying, who finds herself in trouble when she finds that her abiding fibbing has created a monster that eats her toys and grows larger every fourth dimension Lollygaggin continues to lie. In the cease, Lollygaggin defeats the creature by telling the truth to her parents.
  • Species Surname: Mitzi Moth from "The Feelers" is a moth, every bit her surname would indicate.
  • Stepford Smiler: The Goose Lady appears to be one, leading in to her guilt-tripping Dot and Randy into listening to her story in "The Egg Who Would Be King" past pointing out how ridiculous her entire existence is.

    The Goose Lady: Y'all think this is easy for me? Look at me Look AT ME! I'M A TALKING GOOSE WITH FAIRY WINGS! I'm an outcast! My stories are all I take! (sobs hysterically)

  • Stock Scream:
    • "The Feelers" features a use of the Howie Long Scream during the "Drop Me Off in Hollywood" musical number.
    • "Elise: Mere Mortal" also features utilise of the Howie Long Scream, where Elise sits in the waiting room and hears the scream accompanied by a dentist drill coming from Dr. Toothinstein's function.
  • Surfer Dude: The short "The Feelers" featured a spider with a surfer accent named Legs.
  • Successful Sibling Syndrome: Dan Danger'due south older brother Stan introduced in the Dan Danger short "A Lighter Shade of Danger" is shown to resent his younger brother for being a famous glory who overshadows him in spite of existence far more cowardly than he is.
  • Swiss Army Tears: In "The Feelers", Mitzi'due south Disney Decease is undone past Mo Skito's tears.
  • Take That!: The Dan Danger brusque "Danger 101" has a brief scene of Dan Danger telling Aquaman that his power to control body of water life is lame.

    Aquaman: Is talking to fish a skilful power?
    Dan Danger: No!
    Aquaman: Darn!

  • Take This Task and Shove It: Such a argument turns up in the Super Santa short "Naughty".

    Servant: Scrooge, you tin take this chore and— (fires a laser at Elmer Scrooge)

    Elmer Scrooge: Ingrates.

  • The Talk: The brusque "Enquire Edward: All About Babies" has Edward mislead his younger brother Emo that babies come from eggs that the stork lays after receiving a baby request form from the parents during Christmas, Easter, or when one of the children they already accept has lost a tooth. Later on Emo and Edward brand a scene over their mother cooking an egg they thought was their new little brother, she tries to set them straight with a talk from their father, only that only causes them to assume that eggs just have babies in them afterwards being pollinated by bees.
  • They Called Me Mad!: In the Super Santa short "Vegetation", Dr. Carmine Miranda rants that he used his horticultural cognition for evil because his peers laughed at him and called him a madman.
  • Thick-Line Blitheness
  • Three Shorts: Near every episode consists of three shorts that are around seven minutes in duration, the one exception existence the last episode of the first season (which consists of two eleven-minute shorts, Planet Kate and Fathead).
  • Title Drib: "Hey Await" has several segments of the brusk begin with the Big Guy or the Little Guy shouting the brusque's championship.
  • Title Theme Tune: Too the bear witness itself, at least one brusk (Zoey's Zoo) has a theme song of its own that mentions the championship.
  • Toilet Teleportation: The Hobart shorts both involved Hobart ending upwardly in a different globe later on being flushed down the toilet, with "The Weedkeeper" having Hobart and the dog he got for his girlfriend Okra wind up in a garden world where they have to avoid the titular Weedkeeper (a green gnome who desperately wants a dog of his ain) and "Deep Ocean Diva" having Hobart and Okra find themselves underwater and Hobart having to rescue Okra from the clutches of a singing merman named Ethel.
  • The Tooth Hurts: The Jamal the Funny Frog short "Dentist" had Jamal get a toothache from eating too much sweets. He initially dreads the trip to the dentist and is unwilling to part with his rotten tooth after it's been pulled out, but all is well for him when the dentist is able to fix upwardly his decayed molar and put it back in his oral cavity.
  • Trap-Door Fail: Zoo Mates has the zookeeper trying to get rid of Helen, who is pushing to shut downward the zoo, past opening a trap door, which unleashes a bear trap AND a roaring burn. Also bad Helen was standing few feet away from information technology.
  • Two Girls to a Team: The quintet of conflicting dogs acquainted with Kate Moon in the brusk "Planet Kate" consists of three males (Max, Bolivar, and Rothgar) and two females (Juno and Cleo).
  • Unskilled, but Stiff: Trix, of Magic Trixie has natural talent for magic and learns apace, but she is very much figuring it out as she goes forth and stumbles into the ways of successfully performing magic versus knowing what she's doing.
  • Villain Song:
    • The Criminally Insane Gingerbread Men in "What is Funny?" briefly sing "Tough Cookies" when Slap T. Pooch finds himself at their mercy.
    • The Balloon Goon in "Blotto" sings "Git the Girl into My Earth" while scheming to steal Blotto's beloved involvement Dotto.
    • In "Fuzzy Bunny Presents: A Child'due south Life", the sentient zits on Suzy'due south nose sing "Nosotros are the Stinkin' Blackheads", where they revel in how much torment and humiliation they crusade the children who get affected by them.
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: The short "Kameleon Kid" was about a boy who gained shape-changing abilities later a lab blow.
  • Wet Cement Gag: In the brusque "The Feelers", at that place is a gag where the titular rock ring of anthropomorphic insects try to leave their hand prints in wet cement during the song "Drib Me Off in Hollywood". Being bugs, they autumn correct in and accept to exist lifted out of the cement by the spider Legs.
  • Who Even Needs a Brain?: Blazon III is demonstrated in two shorts.
    • The short "Max and his Special Problem", where a homo literally sneezes his encephalon out and has to try and find a style to get his brain back in his head. Aside from twitching every time his brain is poked, he is shown to human activity perfectly fine without a encephalon.
    • In "Ollie and Frank", Ollie removes part of an ordinary dog's brain to give his Frankenstein monster domestic dog Frank a encephalon. The procedure isn't shown to have any ill furnishings on the normal dog, every bit information technology nevertheless acts the same after the operation is finished.
  • Wingding Eyes: In "The Feelers", low-cal bulbs appear in Mitzi Moth'due south optics during the titular insect rock band'due south performance of the song "100 Watts of Dearest".
  • Would Hurt a Kid: In "Magic Trixie", Migmar Magma grows so jealous of existence upstaged by Trixie that he puts the girl through acts that are overtly intended to impale her (fortunately, Trixie survives all of them).
  • X-Ray Sparks:
    • The gag of electrocution revealing one's skeleton is used in the brusque "Max and the Pigeon Incident" when Max tries to grab the pigeon bothering him while he's walking on a powerline.
    • Also used in "Elise: Mere Mortal", where Elise's skeleton flashes afterwards she recovers from beingness zapped during the tightening of her braces.
  • Y'all Could Have Used Your Powers for Good!: When confronting Dr. Reddish Miranda in the brusk "Super Santa: Vegetation", Santa points out to the villain that he could've used his horticultural knowledge for good.

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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WesternAnimation/OhYeahCartoons

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