Arthur: The Most Entertaining Aardvark
#1
Posted Jan 13, 2004 @ 8:17 PM
Today's rerun: the Piano Teacher one, and the Chocolate selling one (sorry I'm terrible with ep names, for any show)
One of my FAVORITE LINES EVER
Arthur: I'd like to play for you again, please.
Dr. Fugue: Highly irregular. Hmm...[checks watch] all right, I have a few minutes before Soul Train.
ahahahahahahaha
The Chocolate ep is weird...too much "Buster is stupid/irresponsible/a huge drama queen/etc" and...not enough logic. Like, why couldn't his mom pay off $60 and arrange some other repayment from Buster himself? Little too contrived to get the joke shop guy in there. Or maybe the joke guy paid more than the 60, but still...heh. Not a bad episode, but after the 5th viewing you start to find things. And making their own choc! I looove that part. You put tomatoes in chocolate?! :D
Late commentary on the NYC ep, from what I can remember.
I liked the live-action stuff, it was cute and pretty seamless with the animation. The chalk-drawing guy and the food places were awesome and the girls who took them to The Point were so cute! mmm, cupcake.
I seem to recall something about closing the Sugar Bowl, a Sue Ellen-centered ep, and that was ok. Oh yeah and that one about the hottest day of the year was so hilariously absurd; Arthur confronts chaos theory! heh that's what it got me thinking about, anyway.
I thought that whole week was supposed to be new eps? But they showed NYC twice...
#2
Posted Jan 14, 2004 @ 10:20 AM
This, alas, was the only new ep. I caught. I love how the word (whatever it is) makes people drop things in shock. I too would love to know what they were bleeping out.Did anybody see "Bleep" tho? I just saw it today.
#3
Posted Jan 16, 2004 @ 11:43 AM
#4
Posted Jan 16, 2004 @ 12:37 PM
#5
Posted Jan 19, 2004 @ 1:12 AM
Did anybody see "Bleep" tho? I just saw it today.
Yeah, I saw it twice last week, actually. It was one of the most surreal fifteen minutes of PBS television programming ever. The scene in the sandbox at the end was classic. "You bleephead!"
Me and my buddy Arthur go way back. When I was about seven (I'm twenty-two now), I got to meet Marc Brown and have him sign my book. I had to start aggressive treatment for a visual disorder when I was three, and my mom got me the book Arthur's Eyes about when Arthur first gets his glasses. When I met MB, my mom told him that story, so he drew a little pic of me in my glasses next to the one he drew of Arthur.
One of my favorite vintage Arthur eps is where he has to write a story for class, but gets intimidated when he hears what the other kids in his class are doing. It reminded me of my real life in grad school, when I sometimes become paralyzed and unable to do work when someone claims they've checked sixty-five primary texts out of the library or something. Anyway, Arthur's story is part alien fiction and part country song...it always cracks me up.
Sidenote: In the 70s, my mother was a teacher for a school disctrict in Meadville, PA. She says that the character of Mr. Ratburn is based on an actual teacher from that district, and that MB was from that area. I should do some research to see if I can back her theory up...she told me all of this much before Arthur was such a phenemenon!
#6
Posted Jan 24, 2004 @ 12:08 PM
One of my favorite vintage Arthur eps is where he has to write a story for class, but gets intimidated when he hears what the other kids in his class are doing. It reminded me of my real life in grad school, when I sometimes become paralyzed and unable to do work when someone claims they've checked sixty-five primary texts out of the library or something. Anyway, Arthur's story is part alien fiction and part country song...it always cracks me up.
"Down on Planet Shmelephant!!!! Paramp!"
Cannot. Stop. Laughing.
#7
Posted Jan 26, 2004 @ 9:04 AM
My favorite parts are when they used to do those comic strips. There haven't been any in a while. I loved the one where Francine was making fun of Fern, and vice versa. I liked the giant green blob, and it was so sad at the end. I also love Mrs. McCreery. The whole fair was good, with everyone chasing the secratary.
#8
Posted Feb 3, 2004 @ 9:31 AM
I liked it, but the song they kept doing (a-wee-a-wee-a-wee-a-wee-a) quickly got on my nerves.
#9
Posted Feb 3, 2004 @ 10:24 AM
The episode was OK. I loved Arthur's fantasy sequences with the limo. The episodes where Arthur screws up, while realistic (it is nice to have a hero who isn't always perfect), are never the ones I enjoy the most. I like the ones like the Binky episode better, where everyone means well but chaos ensues anyway. And then they all work it out in the end.
#10
Posted Feb 10, 2004 @ 12:37 AM
This is how I realized I'm truly turning into a 4-year-old: I saw an episode tonight about the Tibble twins imitating robotic superheroes on TV (forgetting the name of the episode). Aside from the clip of the superheroes the Tibbles saw on TV, there was a little bit of Mary Moo-Cow and a kiddie-style documentary about feet (hell, they could've been part of the same show and I just didn't realize it at the time!). I realized when I saw those clips that I wanted to keep watching them! Pathetic.
#11
Posted Feb 10, 2004 @ 9:55 AM
You mean with the classic tune, "Feet-feet-feet-feet-feet-FEET"? I think that was supposed to be more like a Sesame Street jingle.Aside from the clip of the superheroes the Tibbles saw on TV, there was a little bit of Mary Moo-Cow and a kiddie-style documentary about feet
#12
Posted Feb 12, 2004 @ 10:08 AM
Anyone else notice that David Read always forgets his catering appointments until first thing in the morning? He must not get a lot of jobs if he's a last minute caterer. And he does it all from his kitchen? Without any help? If he were a proper caterer he'd be shopping a day or two beforehand, preparing a bunch of the food to save time - so how does he still manage to forget?
There must not be any other caterers in Elwood and the citizens must have really low standards because I wouldn't want David Read catering my affairs.
#13
Posted Feb 12, 2004 @ 2:09 PM
If he were a proper caterer he'd be shopping a day or two beforehand, preparing a bunch of the food to save time - so how does he still manage to forget?
He forgets because he's so busy experimenting with things like liver pudding and ham-flavored ice cream.
#14
Posted Feb 14, 2004 @ 9:52 AM
Nice. Those foods sound like things that the Two Fat Ladies would be cooking as well.He forgets because he's so busy experimenting with things like liver pudding and ham-flavored ice cream.
#15
Posted Feb 14, 2004 @ 10:21 AM
#16
Posted Feb 16, 2004 @ 7:29 AM
I have a feeling that the big head thing comes from the fact that some real bunnies have this flap of neck skin that hangs down below their chin, but Buster and his mom don't have them so I'm not sure why they drew it onto Emily.
#17
Posted Feb 16, 2004 @ 9:05 AM
Why am I not surprised?One thing that I never really noticed, or gave too much thought about, was the fact that the Tibble twins were enjoying the fact that she was thisclose to falling off and seriously injuring herself.
#18
Posted Feb 17, 2004 @ 4:47 PM
#19
Posted Feb 25, 2004 @ 10:13 AM
#20
Posted Feb 27, 2004 @ 7:50 PM
#21
Posted Feb 27, 2004 @ 9:32 PM
#22
Posted Feb 27, 2004 @ 10:27 PM
#23
Posted Mar 1, 2004 @ 10:00 AM
#24
Posted Mar 2, 2004 @ 3:56 PM
taping it. nehehehehe.
I'm in NorCal which gets a Sac station and the SF station and it's on the SF station, which is channel 9 for me. Hope I'm helping someone by posting this. :)
neeheehee
#25
Posted Mar 2, 2004 @ 4:48 PM
Phishtar
I love that song. Really, I do. Every time I think I should look it up and buy it or something. It's a little embarrassing.
It's a snippet of a song called "Matalii ja Mustii" by the Finnish group Varttina, from their Seleniko disc. It was a left-field hit (well...by NPR standards) in the early 90's. I'm not sure if it's available anymore.
Of course, the fact that I both knew and owned this song did not impress my wife. In fact I think her exact words were "you're a bigger geek than I thought you were!" ...(Too late, HA!) Now we have geeky children.
#26
Posted Mar 14, 2004 @ 2:05 AM
neighborhood Borders (that's what we did). My mom and I were listening to it while making homemade Arthur and DW cakes and she was so excited to hear Art Garfunkel - she had seen Simon and Garfunkel in concert the night before.
We have Arthur's Christmas book and Pal was called Killer back then. Gee that's great, my Arthur obsessed 4 year old running around talking about "killer" out of context. Also, we're Jewish and every now and again, he'll shout "gas chamber" from the family vacation episode. :)
#27
Posted Mar 30, 2004 @ 2:49 PM
The hitting episode really bothers me too, not really because Arthur gets in trouble but because DW doesn't. I always end up thinking, "Arthur you fool, if you just didn't hit her she would be in big trouble and you wouldn't be in any." Maybe it just bothers me because I'm the oldest child because this episode doesn't bother MrNettey at all but he is the youngest in his family. I can remember a few times in my childhood when my little brother broke something of mine and I got mad at him and I ended up getting in trouble for yelling at him and not understanding that he "didn't know any better" while he got off scot free.
My favorite episode is the one with Henry Skreever (Prunella's Special Edition) and the second part is all from Kate and Pal's point of view and they have to find the bride and groom for the top of the wedding cake (The Secret Lives of Dogs and Babies).
I'm going to revive the trivia:
What is Kate's favorite TV show?
Edited by nettey78, Mar 30, 2004 @ 5:15 PM.
#28
Posted Mar 30, 2004 @ 2:59 PM
I don't recall what it is, but I'm pretty sure that it ain't The Love Ducks.I'm going to revive the trivea:
What is Kate's favorite TV show?
#29
Posted Mar 30, 2004 @ 4:23 PM
#30
Posted Mar 30, 2004 @ 4:45 PM







