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	<title>Comments on: Bloo Cheese Clips</title>
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	<description>Fiction has to be plausible. Reality is under no such constraint.</description>
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		<title>By: Gnorb.NET &#187; Blog Archive &#187; 80&#8217;s (and 90&#8217;s) Cartoons</title>
		<link>http://www.gnorb.net/483/bloo-cheese-clips#comment-17535</link>
		<dc:creator>Gnorb.NET &#187; Blog Archive &#187; 80&#8217;s (and 90&#8217;s) Cartoons</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Jan 2007 15:27:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] Most excited about that conversation were Joel, Gary, and Mari, who knew more about 80&#8217;s television than anyone else. While Joel kept complaining that the cartoons of today were weird, and that the 80&#8217;s was the golden decade of cartoons, Mari kept pulling up new greats her and daugther, my niece Belle like, such as Foster&#8217;s House for Imaginary Friends. I jumped in with stuff I liked in the 80&#8217;s as well as the 90&#8217;s, like Dexter&#8217;s Laboratory (the early episodes, which I watched while in high school), Dragonball Z (which I would race home to watch after the night shift ended at Barnes and Noble), and a show no one else seemed to remember, Stunt Dawgs. (Stunt Dawgs, by the way, had an disgustingly-named villain, &#8220;Dick P. Fungus&#8221;. You figure that one out.) Joel had me beat on cryptic cartoons, though, as he pulled up stuff like All-Stars (which featured Michael Jordan, Bo Jackson, and Wayne Gretzky as the main heroes). All I could counter is with Cartoon All-Stars which featured Bugs Bunny and the Ninja Turtles teaching kids about drugs. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] Most excited about that conversation were Joel, Gary, and Mari, who knew more about 80&#8217;s television than anyone else. While Joel kept complaining that the cartoons of today were weird, and that the 80&#8217;s was the golden decade of cartoons, Mari kept pulling up new greats her and daugther, my niece Belle like, such as Foster&#8217;s House for Imaginary Friends. I jumped in with stuff I liked in the 80&#8217;s as well as the 90&#8217;s, like Dexter&#8217;s Laboratory (the early episodes, which I watched while in high school), Dragonball Z (which I would race home to watch after the night shift ended at Barnes and Noble), and a show no one else seemed to remember, Stunt Dawgs. (Stunt Dawgs, by the way, had an disgustingly-named villain, &#8220;Dick P. Fungus&#8221;. You figure that one out.) Joel had me beat on cryptic cartoons, though, as he pulled up stuff like All-Stars (which featured Michael Jordan, Bo Jackson, and Wayne Gretzky as the main heroes). All I could counter is with Cartoon All-Stars which featured Bugs Bunny and the Ninja Turtles teaching kids about drugs. [...]</p>
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