LittleJerry92
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Because they make the final decisions in the end and don’t owe the fans any official streaming release.Why wasn't GBH in favor of streaming the show?
Because they make the final decisions in the end and don’t owe the fans any official streaming release.Why wasn't GBH in favor of streaming the show?
I did not say that the characters from Between the Lions should never make appearances again. I said that there is no point in having the show be brought back in a full length format, especially as too much time has passed from when it was originally in production. It would be challenging to replicate its quality and success from the past.Why do you not see the point of new Between the Lions material being made when the Theo and Cleo puppets have appeared in videos for the Ed Games Expos from 2021 and later?
Thank you, but my question still remains. Why didn't GBH want an official streaming release of the show?Because they make the final decisions in the end and don’t owe the fans any official streaming release.
I haven't watched Robot Chicken in years, but if they ever do anything with Between the Lions, I'll have to check out that episode lol.Since this thread is becoming less about a potential return and more about BTL in general, I felt this would be the place to share this… thing I made up.
About an hour ago, I was riding my bike around my neighborhood as I do, when I found myself oddly drawn toward a lake near someone’s lawn. I thought of it as a “lovely lakeside lawn”, and noticed the alliteration isn’t unsimilar to something from BTL, which gave me an idea to use it as the basis for this Robot Chicken-esque parody of the show’s “Fun With Chicken Jane” Segments featuring the Letter L. Without further ado, here’s it is:
Narrator: And now, Fun with Chicken Jane. Today, Chicken Jane and the Landslide.
Singer: Look Look, See See, coming down the lane. Here comes Scot, here comes Dot, here comes Chicken Jane.
Dot: Look, Scot, look. See the lovely lakeside lawn.
Scot: Yes, Dot, Yes. The lakeside lawn is lovely.
(The ground begins to crumble, and Chicken Jane begins bawking frantically.)
Scot: Look, Dot, look. The lovely lakeside lawn has come loose.
Dot: Yes, Scot, Yes. We are in a landslide.
(Chicken Jane panics)
Scot: Look, Dot, look. See Chicken Jane write the letters L-E-A-V-E. Leave.
Dot: Leave, Scot, Leave!
(The kids jump off the falling land, but Chicken Jane doesn’t and drowns. The kids then float by in an inflatable raft.)
Scot: Look, Dot, look. Chicken Jane has lost her life in the lake.
Dot: Yes, Scot, Yes. We didn’t lose our lives in the lake. We luckily landed in this lifeboat lying around.
Both: Thank you Chicken Jane!
Singer: Look look, see see, paddling around. There goes Scot, there goes Dot, Chicken Jane has drowned.
I actually like those jokes on Family Guy, they use them pretty rarely and generally have some sort of punchline to go with them. It's the ones where they take cheap shots at celebrities that get on my nerves. As much as I love the episode about Brian's son, Dylan, I always fast forward through the cutaway that's literally just 3 straight minutes of Stewie explaining to Matthew McConaughey why he sucks.Yeah, that was written when I was a bit more of an edgy teenager. I don’t care much for Robot Chicken either (it’s pretty much a show that consists solely of one of my least favorite kinds of Family Guy cutaway gags: the kind where the whole joke is just “beloved character gets killed in a brutal way”).
Yes, I remember Sam Spud. The skits often ended with a revelation that a girl was watching it on TV and weirded out, and her mother saying not to worry because of "how educational the material was and good for children and that it could somehow assist children in school." I guess that's why the starter of this thread felt Between the Lions was an important show.Back on topic, does anybody remember Sam Spud from Between the Lions? Those skits were extremely funny. They were basically just an excuse to make a bunch of food puns, but I personally love that type of humor.
They feel like the types of videos I used to make when I was younger. Turning a potato into a full-blown character and using it to make corny jokes is 100% something I would've done.