Also ranks #1 on The Best Fat Cartoon Characters In TV History 2 Peter Griffin Family Guy 569 votes As the main protagonist of Family Guy, this bumbling father figure often finds himself in outrageous predicaments, all while attempting to navigate his family through life's...
If there's one thing we're known for in America, it's that we do things bigger than the rest of the world, and this includes our game characters! This list of ...
Okay, the show isn't horrible, but it's nothing compared to the movie.First off, changing the names of the main characters was a big mistake. Secondly, the characters themselves just aren't the same. The dad, Costa, is too animated and lively and takes things way too personally. Aunt...
Here are just about all of the songs I've used in all of the animations on this site, as either background music or songs that are sung by the characters. I have provided lyrics for the songs we either altered or wrote entirely.spoils...
Hey! This award-winning cartoon was based on Bill Cosby's boyhood adventures in Philadelphia, much like his stand-up comedy. The characters first appeared in a prime-time special on NBC in 1969, and the resulting series was a Saturday staple for many years, winning praise for its ...
Adds Thompson: "The whole movie is a message. I think the main message is to just try and be a nice guy, to try and help people. Plus, it's sugar-coated with fun." Fat Albert the movie is set partially in the cartoon—which is still stuck in an earlier generation—and partially ...
the detectives chase after leads as murders pile up. Dave falls for an anthropologist named Janet Lynd and Ed substitutes his parking laws for some throw-down improv. We meet lots of unrelated characters and witness some outrageous kill scenes, complete with Hershey’s Syrup gore. Could this be...
We've got yet another "Blurred Lines" remix for you, this time with fewer kid instruments and more Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids characters. Who doesn't think of the portly cartoon jokester's boisterous catchphrase whenever the "hey, hey, hey" hook in Robin Thicke's pop hit arrives?
to apologize and forgive.Lady Birdsuggests that all its characters could easily be the protagonist of their own movie. Although Julie fits the awkward fat friend trope, we also get glimpses of her inner life, suggestions that she has also had a coming of age over the course of the film. ...
The characters were off-putting, and the movie was poorly done compared to the Cary Grant version. Afterward, I read up on Sacco and Vanzetti, and I thought about Ben Hecht and the way he had portrayed his former colleagues. It made me hate leftism more than ever. I certainly understand...