#Jackson publick
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TWENTY YEARS TO MIDNIGHT
The Venture Brothers starts out as a show that makes fun of the past, but lasted long enough to be one that truly understands it.
So I rewatched The Venture Brothers in one big splurge over the course of two weeks, from Turtle Bay to Baboon Heart.
One of the most charming things about the show is a product of its lengthy creation process and the fact that it was written almost entirely by just two people. The story nearly has a tight continuity, so if you take it at its word then all the events of the story take place over a period of two and a half years, while the actual show was made over a period of twenty years.
The outcome of this curious time dilation is that we follow the Venture Brothers, Hank and Dean, through those difficult years between 16 and 18, but we also follow the writers, Jackson Publick and Doc Hammer, through the difficult years between their twenties and their forties. The show begins irreverent, contrarian and cruel and changes, cell by cell, into something wiser and more profound.
The treatment of Rusty Venture, former boy adventurer and long-suffering heir to the poisonous Venture legacy, is a fascinating thread to follow. In the very first episode he steals his son's kidneys like a ghoul, and his various addictions and neuroses are firmly treated as quirky objects of pity. I don't know much about the personal lives of the writers, but I imagine a certain amount of tragedy would have found them over the course of twenty years. A certain empathy for Rusty's position kicks in around the second season and develops strongly throughout the years. By the time the writers have reached the age that Rusty is when he is introduced, there are delicate attempts to reach out to the poor man, to understand and maybe counteract some of his own personal tragedy, though careful not to smother the comedy that such a character brings to the table.
But the thread I enjoyed following the most was that trailing behind Action Johnny. If you have ever heard of The Venture Brothers, you already know that the show began as a parody and deconstruction of the 1960s Hanna Barbara cartoon Jonny Quest, which was itself an attempted relaunch of the Edisonade craze of the 1910s, riding on the coattails of the far more successful and popular Tintin and Uncle Scrooge comics.
Jonny Quest was the son of a world famous scientist and adventurer, Doctor Quest, who led an extraordinary jet setting life where he accompanied his father to exotic places to experience exciting, often racist, science-themed thrills instead of going to school. He was watched over by his lantern-jawed bodyguard, Race Bannon, and joined with his adopted brother, Hadji.
The Venture Brothers stole this set-up entirely, and Rusty's backstory is a carbon copy of Jonny's. We are first told that this is something more than a swipe early on in the first season of The Venture Brothers when Race Bannon appears, as himself, as a secret agent belonging to the same organisation as the Venture family bodyguard, Brock Samson. It's a clever shorthand for saying that boy adventurers are not singular in this world, they are a type, one which occupies a distinct social strata along with their bodyguards, enemies and other supporting cast members.
The way that we are told this fact, in the seventh episode of the first season, is peak 2004 adult swim: beloved cartoon character Rave Bannon drops out of the sky, lands in front of one of our characters, dies, then shits himself. This was vaguely subversive at the time, but twenty years of Robot Chicken and the like have rendered it a tired, hoary gag. Venture Brothers itself has proved that this moment is at least a wasted opportunity. There was undoubtedly more comedy and interest to be mined from having Race Bannon around as an older counterpart to Brock Samson. But there was fun to be had with squandering opportunities and biting the hand that feeds for writers in their twenties in 2004.
When Jonny Quest himself appears in 2006's season two episode, Twenty Years to Midnight, things aren't much different. Jonny is found haunting the bathyscaphe from the cartoon, injecting heroin, waving an antique pistol and ranting about his father. He has a teardrop tattoo and missing teeth. He is discovered by Rusty's brother, the overachieving but naïve Jonas Junior. It's a much better gag in execution than the Race Bannon one, despite being essentially the same beat, but there is some pathos thanks to Brendan Small's delivery. Jonny is left alive, unlike Race, but the capper to this scene is somehow more humilating and tragic than when Race's corpse shat himself: Jonny is brought on side by Jonas Junior who, pressed for time and not as accustomed to being threatened and menaced as Rusty is, is unable to apply superscience to this situation and simply offers Jonny a supply of heroin.
The entertainment industry's relationship to its back catalogue of intellectual property has changed a lot in the last two decades. Characters like Jonny and Race were embarrassing curios in Ted Turner's garage in 2006. Why not dust them off and kill them in a cartoon to make college kids giggle? Why not give them a crippling drug habit and have them collapse to their knees, bellowing, "I'm in real pain!" But within ten years the media behemoths realised they could spin their old straw into gold, and instead of selling sheink rays at a yard sale, so to speak, they were putting the Flintstones in ads for Halifax bank.
So the Venture Brothers show renamed their tragic, adult Jonny Quest to 'Action Johnny' and in doing so was forced to consider him as a character rather than a skit. And the colossal strength at the heart of the Venture Brothers is in taking ridiculous things like boy adventurers seriously. Jonny Quest was allowed to become a valuable (?) piece of IP, forever a child, forever innocent and marketable, while Action Johnny could live his life unfettered by the parent company's fears.
Action Johnny appears two years later in Season 3, sober but shaky, doing a favour to Rusty by running a seminar for his ill-fated summer camp. He undercuts the spirit of the event by warning the children of the long term effects of adventures on the psyche and unravels into rants about his father. It's a solid bit by itself, especially when contrasted with a neighbouring table from the Pirate Captain (who, despite being an important recurring character, the show refuses to give a name) about the joys of being part of the 'rubber mask set.' Though the world of the Venture Brothers is nominally organised through a bureaucracy of licenced 'protagonists' and 'antagonists,' the biggest tension on screen is between the characters who chose the life, like the Pirate Captain, and those who had the life forced upon them, like Action Johnny. It just so happens that the former tend to end up as tortured, resentful good guys and the latter wind up as joyful, carefree villains.
Bringing that point home in the same episode is the appearance of Doctor Z as the summer camp's headliner. Doctor Z is the final borrowed character Jonny Quest, and one who the writers clearly take the brightest shine to, probably because he has the funniest voice to imitate. Doctor Z also represents the goals of show's resplendent second half - having deconstructed the boy adventurer genre in the early seasons, the Venture Bros very carefully puts the pieces back together into something wholly new.
And so Doctor Zin, the generic yellow peril villain of Jonny Quest, becomes Doctor Z, the retired and contented former archfiend of the Venture Bros. Doctor Z is treated by the other characters as something like a national treasure, a beloved old star who made the game his own. The joke of Doctor Z is that he seems genuinely bemused that his lifetime of villainy seems to have had a lasting negative effect on people. When he appears at Rusty's summer camp, all theatre and terror, he is delighted to meet his old foe Action Johnny, while Johnny is thrown into a whirlwind of trauma at the sight of Z, one that will drag him down into further troubles.
Doctor Z will become more of a feature than Action Johnny over the following years as the show becomes more interested in its older cast members - the ones whose personalities shaped the world, and who have sunny memories of the days that were so painful to Rusty and Johnny. He is part of a larger rehabilitation arc on the meta level, where characters with reprehensible aspects to them are held up for the audience to inspect so that they may find some empathy with them. Sargent Hatred is the poster child of this era, who is a repentant paedophile who joins the main cast as the Venture Brothers' new bodyguard. He's a whole other topic, but Doctor Z has the same function as Hatred, but on a metatextual level. His ancestor, Doctor Zin, is a hideous racial stereotype of the sort that makes modern revivals of the adventure genre so unpalatable. In its first deconstructionist half, the Venture Brothers show would simply wave Doctor Z around as shock tactic - 'look how racist Jonny Quest was, and by extension the company that made it and, logically, its audience!' and then maybe give him a violent and undignified death to wash their hands of the whole matter. But the reconstructivist Venture Brothers show embraces Doctor Z, and takes him beyond his tawdry origins to become an integral part of its story.
In 2009, Action Johnny helps Rusty to articulate this in the episode 'Self-Medication' from Season 4. Johnny and Rusty are in the same therapy group for former boy adventurers, a premise that would later be stolen wholesale by the She-Hulk show. A trail of tenuous clues leads the group to Doctor Z's house in the middle of the night. Johnny forces a confrontation with Z, accusing him of murdering their therapist to perpetuate the spiral he has been in since he saw Z take the stage back at Rusty's day camp. Doctor Z immediately groks the situation and invites the former boy adventurers into his home for tea with his beloved wife, who proudly proclaims herself to be his beard. Doctor Z is proud of what he has done in life, and so has the ability to put the past behind him. Sat between Z and Johhny, who is unable to move on, Rusty realises that he has more in common with the antagonist in the room than the protagonist. Rusty has many such insights throughout the length of the show and they lead him to an interesting end point where he seizes the nettle and becomes a parental figure to the whole weird superscience community.
The final encounter between Action Johnny and Doctor Z takes place nine years (!) later in our timeline - 2018's 'The Terminus Mandate.' Doctor Z is retiring from active villany and, according to the ceremony-obsessed fraternity of organised supervillans, that means he must menace his archenemy one last time. Action Johnny's father is long gone, so Johnny inherits that dubious honour.
It's the first time that we see Doctor Z not being fully committed to the bit. Johnny is resident at a posh rehab clinic and Doctor Z is conflicted between genuinely wanting to see Johnny again but unsure of how to interact with him in a way that doesn't cause actual, lasting harm. Doctor Z even brings a prop from a Jonny Quest cartoon as a gift, in a sequence lovingly reanimated to translate Jonny Quest's vocabulary into the Venture Brothers' language. The sequence chosen is virulently racist, almost too racist to be believed: a mask of the god Anubis lands on top of Johnny's dog, and Doctor Z's Egyptian henchmen suddenly believe that the mask is a vengeful god come to punish them and so abandon the young Doctor, giving the advantage to Johnny's team. In the lobby of the rehab centre, in the late to evening, Doctor Z struggles to articulate why the Anubis mask means so much to him and Johnny cringes at the memory while enjoying the act of reminiscing. He offers to go and run and hide, so that Z can find him, and they both discover they are delighted by the idea.
It's a touching, uncomfortable and deeply weird scene that, to me, is the pinnacle of The Venture Brothers as a creative endeavour. Behind it is a group of people who have been mulling over the implications of Jonny Quest as a short-lived but impactful cultural phenomenon for most of their adult lives. They have been mining the absurdity, the legacy, the implications, the pathos and the bathos of those 26 half-hours of cartoon and found incredible treasures. It starts with finding a silly old thing in the attic that you want to ridicule and it ends, twenty years later, with you acknowledging the attachment one has formed to that silly old thing, and how it has informed your life, for better or worse, in ways you can't deny.
#venture bros#rusty venture#jonny quest#hank venture#dean venture#action johnny#hanna barbera#jackson publick#doc hammer#adult swim
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Eat the pennies Quizboy... paint on wood and vinyl lettering on the acrylic cover. Yes! It is a piggy bank!! 🐷 🪙
#venture brothers fanart#billy quizboy#st cloud#the venture bros#venture bros#pink pilgrim#william whalen#piggy bank#venture bros art#jackson publick#doc hammer#eat the pennies#so what you poop pennies
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Little orange kitten crying over the cancellation  is gone.
Little orange kitten begging you to fight for Doc and Jackson’s vision is here.
#rip little orange blushing kitten pfp when will I ever see you again#Why are there so many little orange kitten pictures to work with#venture bros#the venture brothers#vbros#the venture bros#doc hammer#jackson publick#save the venture bros
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Study of jackson & doc i did recently as a warm up
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20 years ago, Jackson Publick's The Venture Bros. became a hit animated series on [adult swim].
GO TEAM VENTURE! @jacksonpublick @stephendestefano @dannyhynes @ianjq @adultswim
Tweet version here
BTW this came from a promo on one of my VHS recordings of Case Closed if not Lupin the 3rd on [as] in August 2004
#the venture bros#venture brothers#the venture brothers#adult swim#[adult swim]#[as]#cartoon network#wb101#wb 101#jackson publick#chris mcculloch#the monarch#brock sampson#dr. venture#hanna-barbera#go team venture#GoTeamVenture#adult animation#20th anniversary#20 years#20 years of the venture bros.#the venture bros.#the venture bros. 20th anniversary#the venture bros 20th anniversary#venture bros#venture bros.#rusty venture
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The Venture Bros.: Radiant Is the Blood of the Baboon Heart (2023) Jackson Publick
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The Venture Bros. Season 6 Promo Art
Art by Patrick Leger
Source
#the venture bros#venture bros#fantasy#2010s#patrick leger#doc hammer#jackson publick#promotional art#adult swim#astrobase go!#brock samson#rusty venture
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Little redraw of old VB concept art I saw floating around
#the venture bros#the venture brothers#venture bros#doc hammer#jackson publick#adult swim#dr mrs the monarch#the monarch#dr girlfriend#my art#doodle
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half of the art book for vbros is just:
doc: hahah yeah i made this silly episode where people have fun! look at them go!
jackson: personally if it was me id make it fucked up and evil and the most emotional thing ever but thats just me
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#cartoons#cartoon network#cartoon#the venture bros#the venture brothers#venture bros#go team venture#venture brothers#vbros#poll#polls#tumblr polls#adult swim#doc hammer#jackson publick
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Loved seeing a picture of jackson publick for the first time and instantly recognizing billy quizboys hair like how does a man have cartoon hair in real life
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That time I painted a Venture Bros. Monarch themed dart board! Dart the Pirate for SAFETY!!
#venture bros#the mighty monarch#two ton 21#venture brothers fanart#dart board art#the venture bros#jackson publick#doc hammer
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i couldn’t find the commentary for season 7 of the venture bros online except for these very poorly optimized dvdrips (seriously. 1gb for every episode despite them being only 480p.) so i went ahead and re-encoded them and put them up on gdrive. the video quality is pretty poor and i stripped them of the other audio track but the main focus is the commentary so it doesnt matta. if you can find regularly priced copies you should still buy vb on bluray/dvd (they’re regionlocked for me) especially now that it’s seemingly getting taken off of streaming but for everyone else here’s this
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1pQEFZdTFNY7FjoF8Y4KMhMol4DS40BiJ
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They talk about season 8 and what could’ve been (and what could still be!) about 1.5 - 2 hours in. The rest is Doc Hammer talking about candy for hours
#he’s so funny for this#vbros#the venture brothers#venture bros#venture bros season 8#ken plume#the venture bros#doc hammer#jackson publick
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Jackson Publick posted an auction where you can buy autographed animation layout sheets from the VB movie. Let's see what the most and least sought after ones are with 5 days left:
Brock and Hank are neck and neck! I think people want the Hank one a little more because there's notes scribbled on there. Very stylish.
Aaand the one nobody wants is Sgt Hatred. Why would you even want that in your home? You have to frame these things. You gonna frame the wacky pedophile? You gonna explain that you got him for a bargain?
Special mention goes to Red Death. Someone's going to ruin that any minute now but I'm glad I saw it.
#a picturr . . . of a guy . . . with a big knife#venture bros#venture brothers#brock sampson#hank venture#red death#jackson publick
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Watched the Venture Bros finale movie and God, it’s so incredible to see this thing that’s been running since we were kids in elementary finally come to an end, and such a perfect end at that. Like, yeah, you can tell it’s very compressed from the plans for season eight and some of the ancillary plotlines have to be left hanging, but on the whole it’s just about the most fitting conclusion the show could reach.
Bizarrely and yet brilliantly wholesome that this whole show turns out, at its core, to just be a story about learning to appreciate what you have, realizing how the best things in life are often right in front of you and that chasing after nonexistent romanticized pasts or over-ambitious futures will just lead you to missing out on what really matters.
The fact that it ends with canon mpreg is also the stupidest yet most appropriate thing imaginable.
#venture bros#vbros#venture brothers#radiant is the blood of the baboon heart#the venture bros#rbbh#doc hammer#jackson publick#adult swim#cartoon network#animation
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