When I said cult following I just mean that it was really popular with a crowed older the the show was intended for, but it was wired enough to be interesting.
I didn't even know what the show was back then until I actually just ran into it won day and I still had no idea what it was, heh! it didn't take long but my mouth was wide open when I finally saw what to actually was.
Well, Tubbies had a cult following after the you know what comments. But that was after. It at least had a camp value to it. Doesn't mean the show sucked any less.
But to have prebuzz in a college aged (we know what they do, and why their clothes smell like a rock concert
) fan base was just a fluke. Didn't help the series at all.
It's good to know that PBS, the network that still keeps a certain Dino who should've been extinct after a box office disaster on their pay roll knows a flop when they see it.
Seeing Boohbah and Postcards from Buster falter and get cancelled is a good thing.
Funny thing about Buster... they didn't learn the Scooby Doo lesson yet. By which, you take the best characters in the show, remove them from the show that made them great, thinking kids will follow it, and winding up with something grotesquely inferior (I'm talking those Scooby, Scrappy and Shaggy episodes where they basically just run around avoiding large guys chasing them). Controversy aside (yet again), there really wasn't too much appeal about it.
Plus, I mean, how come, in the Arthur Universe, the kids they talked to were humans, when the rest of everyone is an animal?
Of course, I still love the fact Buster actually read Manga at the end of one episode.