Something You Never Did Get

In the Show Batman Beyound, episode April Moon, there was a line that Bruce says "Then maybe Bullwhip won't be coming back"...I really didn't understand that.
 
Okay, basically he's bought off that doctor's wife and has speant the last few weeks telling him that he's holding the woman hostage in order to get him to upgrade him with verious cybernetics. Bullwhip is unaware the doctor has discovered the truth. As Bruce accurately predicts, Bullwhip will go back to the doctor to get repaired. So, this guy is basically leaving himself at the mercy of someone who is very angry with him for stealing his wife and who has several tools he can use to rip Bullwhip apart.

And dude, remove the link. You're not supposed to link to copyrighted stuff.
 
That happens in far too many toons. You've got talking animals eating non-talking animals. Ick. In C.S Lewis' Narnia series, the same thing happens, but at least he offers up an explanation (which I'll paraphrase): the talking animals in Narnia are different from ordinary animals the same way humans are different from apes. They're related, but not the same, and thus predation is allowed. Maybe this same principle could be applied to Goofy vs. Pluto...? ;)
 
That actually would explain a lot. Just evolution at work in fiction.

They usually don't, I mean when's the last time Bikini Bottom was smaller than Plankton, or crushed by a worm. But yeah this seems more accidental than ignored because the series would end otherwise.
 
So if Goofy was hungry, would he eat Pluto for dinner? Would that be cannibalism?

Anyway, Huckleberry Hound is an anthropomorphic talking dog and in one cartoon, he's a mailman and tries to get by a viscious non-anthropomorphic non-talking dog to deliver a letter.
 
Huckleberry Hound was always talking about animals as though he weren't one himself. He was a veterinarian in one episode, and once, he even worked as a dog catcher!
 
I believe that was only in the episode where Ash caught a Primeape. Every other time those rice balls appeared in the series, 4Kids would call them either rice balls or sandwiches. Both feel like appropriate terms.



As Dekacloud mentioned, the first season of Yu-Gi-Oh! really didn't have much of any rules. Looking back at my first season DVDs and even at the legal subs on 4Kids' channel page, a lot of those duels don't make sense to me either. They follow the rules closer once the Battle City arc starts.



That's a good point. The way that Danny's parents were finally able to learn the truth was interesting, but it didn't have the same emotional impact as it did in "Reality Trip." Despite how he does erase his parents' memories at the end after accepting Danny's ghost powers, I still really like the movie itself.



That's true. Danny also did seem like he preferred keeping his secret with his friends and his sister Jasmine, which might be a reason as to why he erased his parents' memories in Reality Trip, but it's more likely that it was just poor handling of the ending on the writers' end. Giving away his identity to the whole world seemed a bit out of character, but I didn't mind it too much since he acted more content with his ghost powers and being able to show that part of himself to the world, rather than hiding it away. That and it probably helped that I knew it was the series finale. While I did miss some episodes in season three, I do remember some more hints at Danny and Sam coming together, as if it wasn't obvious enough by that point.
 
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