Anyone think Reptar should have gotten his own spin-off series?
Or both.
Or the gang babysits babies who like to "explore" like they did in Rugrats and find out about their babyhood.
Must have missed that one.
Anyone think Reptar should have gotten his own spin-off series?
Stu and Drew would be main characters, and the others would be guest right?
An anthology series is a radio, television, film, or video game series that presents a different story and a different set of characters in each different episode, season, segment, or short.[1] These usually have a different cast in each episode, but several series in the past, such as Four Star Playhouse, employed a permanent troupe of character actors who would appear in a different drama each week.[2] Some anthology series, such as Studio One, began on radio and then expanded to television.[3]
So maybe like an anthology series or something like that?
Nice idea, but did the parents know each other as kids or babies?
The final episode of All Grown Up was Golden Boy, but wouldn't the finale be were the gang visits a counselor for some reason and the parents begin to reveal their "active" babyhood.
We are familiar with the Holiday specials: Halloween, Christmas, Thanksgiving, Passover, Mother's Day, Chanukah, Valentines Day, I know I am. But was there one for Easter?
A prequel series?
P.S. I put some comments about Weaning Tommy and Dr. Homer, why don't you take a look and see.
I saw an ad that in the revival series Dil Tommy's baby brother introduced in the 1st film is making his appearance in the new series. What do you all think of that?
Here is a better idea for the final episode of All Grown Up: The gang are helping their parents babysit mischievous babies (who are a lot like them when they were babies), and the grown-ups reveal some of the misadventures they got in as babies and some of the morals they learned along the way. Then Phil asks if maybe they got in those situations on purpose, and the others blow it off. Then when no one is looking the babies begin talking saying "Grown Ups and Big Kids, what do they know?" and the series end.
Remember the episodes with morals? They taught kids to stay true to their true friends, standing up for yourself and friends, being yourself, how bad things you do will catch up to you, why it is wrong to steal, bully, avoid bad influences, how to be a true friend, facing your fears, how to deal with bullies, and how to rise a child.
After all, life lessons are pretty good, especially with little kids.
They should, I think the episodes that had a moral lesson is one reason why people liked the show. Especially when the lessons where when Angelica got her comeuppance.
Does the revival series continue the tradition of the former series of having a moral at the end of a majority of the episodes?