#neg that the humor is poking fun at paul
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
i love how much of tgwdlm's humor is just "haha hey guys *points to paul* he struggles with social cues and tone isnt this silly" like yes starkid we know hes autistic
#tgwdlm#the guy who didnt like musicals#paul matthews#starkid#hatchetblr#this is /pos btw#im not saying its like#neg that the humor is poking fun at paul#its just rlly funny to me#so many of the jokesbare just#“omg he cant tell tone waka waka”#and i love it#cuz the opening number makes paul sound#like such a bitch but than you learn hes just a guy#the meanest thing he did was say “fuck bill”#and pokey was like “oh FUCK You”#and had his musical body snatchers call paul a cold hearted grinch#like its so funny#spence rambles
63 notes
·
View notes
Text
I LOVE COLA LOSERS - HERES WHY
This is a long essay-ish thing that dives a bit into my thoughts about Cola Losers, analysing the two boys dynamic and it's potential for Eduardos characterization. This is in no way linked to the actual real life people involved, but only the cartoon characters.
1. EDUARDO - PRE/POST-LEGACY
Pre-legacy Eduardo (as seen mainly in Hammer & Fail) is the perfect flat mean girls parody character. He comes off though as much more catty than your TV show bully, especially when he is constantly looking for a new way to make fun of Edds crew with his friends Jon and Mark. At the same time, he's still intended to be Edds counterpart - often seen in green and drinking diet cola. This similarity yet also laced with major differences causes ire from Edd, who views him with comedic contempt.
Pre-legacy Eduardo is a good example of Eddsworld constantly using (and sometimes twisting) well-known tropes in fun ways to generate more laughs. The neighbors fills a fun and vital role in the Eddsworld ecosystem.
Legacy however takes him into a different direction. According to the legacy documentary, Paul Ter Voorde had noticed some liking for Eduardo and chose it as a chance to expand on his character. Legacy offers us a way to view Eduardo beyond the intended flatness of his pre-legacy self, opening up a chance for a bit more nuance and depth to be added to him.
2. POWEREDD AND EDUARDOS INSECURITY
PowerEdd is the legacy episode (and probably the episode in the whole series) that focuses on Eduardo the most, especially as he features as the villain. Poweredd in my eyes delves into 2 ways to interpret Eduardos characterization (and his insecurity) here. One i'd like to think of as the "pre-legacy inspired" and the other one as "legacy inspired".
| PRE-LEGACY INSPIRED; This interpretation relies on PowerEdd being a parodic exploration on superhero tropes - Eduardos disproportionate reaction to his "backstory" pokes fun of dramatic villain backstories by making Eduardos motive for his grudge seem like a silly and small thing. The episode itself is seen here as a humorous take on the superpowers trope and fits into that framework. This view relies upon the knowledge of Eduardos role in pre-legacy.
|LEGACY-INSPIRED; This takes Paul Ter Voordes statement of Eduardo into account. PowerEdd could be seen as a genuine attempt at lampshading Eduardos insecurity and his struggle with possible low self esteem. These aspects together create a superiority/inferiority complex of the highest caliber.
Eduardos behavior fits into that idea (seeing as he acts tougher than he is now in contrast to his meeker past self, goes extremely far to protect his pride as to try to destruct the source of his anxiety, makes his peers also act uncharacteristic which fails i.e Jon etc.)
It's a rather well-known phenomena in psychology that the individual who often feels a threat towards their sense of self (and thus security) uses a illusion of a tougher, more intimidating facade in order to feel comfortable with themselves.
The main argument here is that PowerEdd is not making fun of Eduardos superiority/inferiority complex, but rather tries to lampshade it and imply that this seemingly innocous event is not the /major/ cause of his insecurity, but rather the single drop that filled the glass over. Since i dont wanna base too much on assumptions, i wont expand on what these other possible events could be. But in the end, the result is quite obvious; it makes Eduardo go in a constant frenzy to prove himself superior to Edd at all times. He projected all his insecurities into this single event where his artwork came in second place, and the person who won over him.
3. HOW THIS ASPECT IS DEALT WITH
In their final confrontation in Poweredd, Edd questions Eduardos motivation for his actions. Edd (the audience proxy in this case) dont react though with mocking this reason or laughing at it. Edd actually takes it seriously and even apologizes for what he did, realising that the seemingly innocous action ended up being part of something bigger and more harmful.
This fully throws a confused Eduardo off, who had (most likely) been expecting a offensive reaction that'd validate his paranoia. But this doesn't happen. The narrative takes his frustration seriously, which is what i find so interesting and likeable about it. This so large seeming conflict diffuses so quickly because of Edds sincerity, a underexplored yet charming quality about him.
4. EDD IS NOT MUCH OF A THREAT
What made Eduardo waver and change his mind? He reaches the epiphany that Edds way too much of a dumbass to be a threat at all. Eduardo had been trying so hard the whole to prove himself to someone, to /something/ as being the better one. However, the real fool was Eduardo himself.
Edd is the furtherest from a threat that you can imagine. Honestly, he never really intentionally targets Eduardo with malicious intent (definitely prone to teasing though lol), and it's often the result of Eduardos own actions than anything else. Edd mostly minds his own businiess, and is upon a second look a rather sensible guy.
It makes Eduardo feels stupid for misjudging him, and you know he reaches that conclusion since he goes as far as to use up his last bunch of powers to defend Edd.
5. COLA LOSERS (ENCORE)
I felt like i wanted to establish all the points from earlier since they play a significant role to the way i view Edd and Eduardos dynamic. Edds relaxed and casual demeanor contrasts amusingly to Eduardos high-strung, much more neurotic tendencies. This difference makes for a surface-level funny competetive dynamic.
However, Edd is hardly a malicious person. He's not someone who actively tries to taunt Eduardo in a way intended to cause genuine harm. He's a bit silly and stupid, and his taunting of Eduardo is more based in neighbor shenegians rather than anything else. The whole point is that Edd could actually do more positive than negative for Eduardo - he can engage in a rivalry with him, but one that Eduardos actually comfortable with. Especially since by the end of PowerEdd, you can notice Eduardo clearly has nothing against Edd anymore (though still finds him annoying lol).
Something i rarely see mentioned when people talk about these two is that if they got to engage further in Eddsworld minus the grudge, Eduardo could actually make a change for the better and get something better from it. Not to mention, it hardly has to be a full on competition all the time - they could have moments where they're more friendly only to go back to being rivals again.
TDLR: I really love Cola Losers.
51 notes
·
View notes
Text
Shane Dawson, your fandom is problematic (YFIP)
My main issue with Shane Dawson is that I’ve been watching him since he made offensive skits back in the day, with yellow backgrounds to his thumbnails, Shane Dawson and Friends, etc. I grew to love him, his dark sense of humor and how real he could be on issues like eating disorders.
He went through a few rough patches. That’s fine, we all do. I’m not going to cover his food reviews or anything of the sort regarding what kind of content he uploads, rather, the subjects of the content and their effects on others. For example...
Bobby Burns
Look, maybe the kid makes content you dislike, you think he sold out to YouTube, and you miss his old content. However, no one can deny that the hate he’s recieved from Shane’s fan base is ongoing and unnecessary. Posts calling him a tweaker, poking fun at his ticks, saying he looks weird and creepy...and downvoting all of his newer content to shut, regardless of what the kid puts out.
Essentially, Shane used this kid to further his own career as a YouTube Saint, regardless of his initial intentions. He used the kid up, spit him out, and didn’t offer any public support when his fans continued to harass the kid, unless you count a few meager tweets.
Oh, but he bought Bobby a car, so he should just take the abuse.
Shane could have handled the entire issue a lot better.
Tanacon
Shane built the entire narrative around the fact that he was going to confront Tana, and fans were hyped. The one thing missing from this series was accountability, in regards to Tana. Michael, the CEO of Good Times, was not equally represented along with Tana.
He was represented as more of a side character, an antagonist to poor Tana, who had good intentions but didn’t think anything through :((( The last part of the series was just filled with her cutting him off, yelling like a child, and Shane didn’t reign her in. It was disgusting.
The comments section was fairly supportive of both parties, the negative ones saying that Tana was manipulating Shane, and Shane is simply a victim. This man is thirty years old, and knows what he’s doing.
Fans started to leave constructive criticism of what they’d want to see improved, or what could have been handled better, and Shane immediately shut down any forms of criticism. This is when things started to go downhill for me.
I don’t really care about the Jefree series
But what I really want to talk about is the fucking Jake Paul series.
First episode had my jaw to the floor. The demonization of sociopaths, or people who have ASPD was shocking to me. Shane cannot make a video like that without accepting the fact that he is providing false information on an already demonized disorder to 10 million fucking subscribers.
And instead of hiring someone who actually knew what they were doing, he brought in a friend of his, who referred to people with the disorder as icky, gross, and the like.
His twitter responses were lame, subpar, and apologized that people were offended, without recognizing or acknowledging that he fucked up. I stopped watching from there, but by the tweets I can only assume that he fell in love with Jake Paul and sees him as another Tana. Another problematic, unlikeable public figure that he’s ‘saved’
Alright, so my points have been pretty muddled and thrown around, but my main two issues are pretty simple. They lie with Shane, and the Fanbase.
Shane Dawson doesn’t take criticism well at all, he has a Savior Complex, and he doesn’t consider the collateral damage of his content. He’s preaching to millions of people. This man needs to take some damn accountability and be more aware of the fact that these videos are taken to heart by impressionable young fans. Accountability, somethig he and Tana both lack.
Shane’s fans will defend him for anything. He could kill someone and they’d still be writing nasty tweets to the judge who sentenced their ‘queen’. For instance, the girl who made a reddit post about Shane, after he left a negative reply to her well meaning tweet. She was forced to delete her account as changing her username and deleting the post didn’t deter the harassment. For more info on that, just search ‘My views on Shane reddit’- it’s just a nasty situation.
I’m tired of Shane, I’m done with his drama. He isn’t allowed to snap under the pressure that he put himself under.
Be more responsible with your fanbase. Be an example for other creators.
58 notes
·
View notes
Text
On the topic of PewDiePie
@tearahi
I’m going to both address the main topic and minor tidbits from each of your articles, but let’s start with your articles:
Popular YouTube Streamer Promotes Channel That Publishes Anti-Semitic Content
The article talks about Felix calling someone a “crybaby” because of the gender wage gap. In case you didn’t know, the gender wage gap is a perpetuated myth that only “exists” because of averaged differences in each gender’s work area.
What I mean is that men, because they’re typically stronger and more lenient towards hard labor, they’ll work said labor-intensive jobs that earn more, whereas women typically work in “easy” jobs, such as secretary, office, teaching, etc. There’s no wage gap.
YouTube’s most popular user amplified anti-Semitic rhetoric. Again.
One thing I must mention is bias. Vox is typically left-leaning, so I’m going to assume this article is chock full of left-leaning bias from the start...
Told you.
This article also mentions past grievances, the “nazi salute video” and the “Fiverr anti-semitic sign video” specifically.
Upon finding the infamous “Nazi Salute” video, it seems to me like it’s... a joke. It’s a mockery of his “fame” and “persona”. I’m not shocked that journalists would use this, tbqh.
The Fiverr incident was satirical. It was meant to convey a message that Fiverr has no moderation. In general, Fiverr is an untrustworthy site, that famous “Credit Card Digits” guy got into legal trouble because Fiverr didn’t bother giving him the earnings he got after a ban. Take a quick Google search to find that one out.
The article also mentions the video in question, noting that “the first 15 seconds of part two contain a reference to a 2017 incident in which PewDiePie himself dropped a racial slur...”, which isn’t at all relevant to the topic. Yet another strategically-placed bit of bias to make people dislike Felix because of a slip-up that he’s apologized and faced consequences for many times already.
Not only that, the article mentions his followers’ ages, not realizing that parents exist and that not teaching your child about the proper ways and tips on using the Internet is what brings about its dire effects. The article also attempts to speak about the “Sub to PewDiePie” meme as negative. Vox describes it as “aggressive” to say a simple phrase. The article makes the fans look aggressive.
It’s also interesting how Vox mentions WSJ’s “investigation” on PewDiePie, where they even say that WSJ “emailed Disney representatives for comment on the content of his videos”. Sounds to me like the WSJ is attempting a CNN and either blackmailing or pressuring executives.
PewDiePie Receives Backlash After Recommending Anti-Semitic, White Supremacist YouTube Channel
I’d like to use this article to mention something that I strongly dislike about YouTube and this controversy’s hypocrisy.
Remember when Logan Paul video-taped a man hanging from the Aokigahara Forest in Japan? Remember how this caused the infamous “Ad-pocalypse” on YouTube, where advertisers were bailing out due to the controversy, which caused the entire “Demonetization” feature to occur on YouTube, which subsequently ruined multiple channels due to petty shit like “offensive language”?
Yeah, after that, Logan got his little movie released on YouTube Premium, whereas Felix’s “anti-semitism” scrapped his whole Premium show. Here’s the website’s article on this issue. I hope you can understand why I mentioned this.
Your last article doesn’t mention much, so this is where I’ll begin the main topic:
The video itself seems fine. There’s minor edgy post-editing, and his opinions are very out-there in terms of broadcasting it to his fans. I don’t understand how this video that he enjoyed with edgy humor is somehow making Felix out to be a “white supremacist nazi”
To reference Vox’s terrible article, they mentioned that this video was one of many “dog-whistles” to instill “white supremacist propaganda”. They also specify that the video contained “racial slurs” and all I heard was “nigga”. Says a lot about their fucking credibility, huh?
Also, I fully watched Part 2, which was linked in one of your articles alongside referencing the Charlotesville Attack, and I didn’t see said reference. Do let me know if there’s a timestamp for it, cause the commentary’s got me bored.
and with that, this is where I begin my first point:
Stop taking everything online so seriously.
This is hypocritical coming from some kid online who hates the idea of radical feminists even touching him, but this is a serious point to make.
It’s understandable, morally, to give grievance when someone makes an “edgy” joke or uses 4chan memes. Yes, boo hoo, someone online, for example, called you a “faggot”. I know it affects people, I know it’ll hurt being called a slur or some shit. We need to start taking the idea of the internet into play when discussing this type of shit.
The internet is anonymous. The internet has countless amounts of opinions, personalities, and worldviews. You can’t apply your thinking and understanding of your personal opinions onto others. You can’t say “don’t say faggot” and expect people to listen.
The only tip I can give you from this is just... don’t take the internet so seriously... unless there’s some call to action that can threaten your life, or some shit obviously, but you’re better fucking off just sweeping shit like this as either “stupid” or “funny” instead of getting your panties in a twist over tiny, petty comments that you’re inevitably going to see online.
And now my second point:
Stop fully believing in the media, especially when you haven’t confirmed anything yourself.
While the articles mention E;R as a whole, they continuously use the same video Felix mentioned as some sort of “proof”, even though there was little-to-no “white supremacy propaganda” or “nazism” in the video linked. This is why you fact check before assuming things are correct.
To give you a better example, look at the recent Covington Students controversy, where CNN gave a false report that painted teenaged students as “racists” due to edited footage. Nobody attempted to research and a bandwagon of angry people began to harass, dox, and threaten death upon the teens until someone had released a full 2 hour video that showed the teens’ innocence.
On top of this, some of your articles mention Felix’s past transgressions, even though these events were either satirical examples or poking fun at idolization.
Instead of telling the truth, your sources began the infamous train of hate, purposefully used said past videos as “proof” that he’s “anti-semitic” and a “nazi”, and Vox had even detailed WSJ’s blackmail scheme to get PewDiePie fucked. You and the others took the bait and are still lost in the sauce.
Take that as you will, I’m done here.
If you need clarification on anything, feel free to @ me. I’m going to hope you at least skim through instead of pushing this aside.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Explained: “Put Your Head on My Shoulder” meme
This meme involves manipulating a video of someone playing the song “Put Your Head on My Shoulder” by Canadian-American singer-songwriter Paul Anka.
On 2 February 2017, Anthony Florey (also known as Floreyyyy) posted a video on Twitter (archived link). In the video, Florey covers the aforementioned song on an ultra-compact keyboard.
This video became quite popular, garnering more than 40,000 retweets and 75,000 likes.
Soon after (on or around 6 February 2017), the video was reposted to Tumblr. While the video originally appears to have had a positive reception, starting around December 2017, users started reblogging the post and adding negative feedback.
Subsequently, users started poking fun at the original video by editing the audio in a humorous manner.
One of the earliest examples of such videos is one made by @ryangoslingofficial, which was published on 2 December 2017. In the video, whenever Florey presses an MPC pad, the sound of flatulence plays.
The meme may also take an image-based format (such as this post).
A notable precursor is a video posted on 24 April 2017 by Tumblr user @crimewave420, who complains that the cover “don’t even got no 808s on it”. The video plays the song and uses clips of people dancing for the visuals.
Click here to see examples of the “Put Your Head on My Shoulder” meme.
256 notes
·
View notes
Text
Becoming a Bearheaded Girl
I recently met ( @jhnmyr ) @johnmayer (again) in St. Paul. This was my 3rd or 4th time meeting him in person, not including a few crazy nights where he (& his friends) crashed the video chats I was having with my friends. It was this strange combo of like seeing an old friend and meeting someone new for the first time. I’d forgotten how soft his hands are for a guitar player, remember him being thicker, wider and somehow shorter.
A friend of mine recently wrote a blog for her husband with a track list of John Mayer songs with lyric quotes and her reasons for loving them. It touched me. Made me want to write again. What better way to start than to start with the story of how Bearheadedgirl began?
It was 2003. I had just started working for a large printing company setting up their very first creative department. One of the girls I worked with asked me if I had ever heard of John Mayer. She passed me a CD she had just picked up called “Heavier Things” and I started to listen to it. Over and over, all day for days. I finally went out and bought my own copy and picked up his other album, “Room for Squares” while I was at it. Both albums quickly became staples in my collection. There were so many songs that spoke to my heart, it was like he’d reached into my brain and plucked out my feelings and set them to music. Songs like, “My Stupid Mouth” and “Love Song for No One” struck deep chords inside me.
On my birthday, September 12, 2006, my sister took me to the record store to let me pick out my birthday present. One of the big endcaps was dedicated to the release of “Continuum” and as I picked up the shiny, plastic-wrapped disc, I had no idea how much it was about to change my life. “Continuum” rocked my life. It was like someone had set my soul on fire. I’d liked John before, but there was something different about this album. One night, in front of the computer, I finally typed johnmayer.com into my browser and hit return. It’s one of those moments where your life pivots just a little, and you seem to just remember it forever. It was a Saturday night. September 16, 2006. I sat there reading his blog until the wee hours of the morning. I hadn’t laughed like that in so long, my throat was sore from disuse. That was the night I fell in love with John Mayer for the first time. Not because of the music, but because of what was in his brain. The way he thought, the way he wrote and most of all, the way he made me laugh. No one has ever (still) made me laugh the way he can. But also, because I could identify with him. I felt like I understood him, because I kept seeing pieces of myself. The pieces everyone always ridiculed me for, and they were right there on the page he’d written, for everyone to see.
Over the next several days, I dove deeper into his writing. Scouring the internet, and watching videos of interviews. Curiosity doesn’t kill the cat, it makes it stay up for hours past it’s bedtime doing research.
A couple weeks later, and mere days before the birth of my nephew, I had an epiphany. I’d wanted to lose weight for a while, and I had this crazy idea of writing a blog about it, and an even crazier idea of letting John be the muse behind it. It started out as a very tongue-in-cheek poke at John. “John Mayer won’t date no fatgirl” was the name of the blog. Double negative intentional. Over the years, I’ve gone back and re-read some of my posts. I can confidently (and wincingly) say I was probably (definitely) crazy at the time. But it was fun. I’d never had so much fun in my life.
I created a MySpace page and started meeting other fans. I truly can’t describe what it was like meeting other people like myself. People who got my jokes. People who got ME. I’d always felt like no one ever really “got” me until I started reading John’s blog, and yet, here they were. A whole group of them. I would have wept, but I was so freaking happy there was no time for tears. Finally, I’d found my tribe. And they were all ridiculous goofballs, just like me.
By 2007 I’d lost over 80lbs, chased John around the midwest, moved, had half my life stolen out of a rental car, and met a good bunch of the people (in person!) I’d met online. People who have molded and shaped my life over the past 10 years, people I now call family. My JM family.
By 2009 I was flying. I’d finally learned to be confident in myself. Don’t like my humor? Well, you can fuck right off then. I’d stopped being disappointed in others not getting the me that was deep inside because I’d already found the people who did. Life was good and I can honestly say, 2009 was one of the best years in my life from a happy/fun perspective.
2010 changed everything. I suffered a deep loss, and a deeper blow to my ego. I fell into a deep depression. John Mayer fell into a similar hole, for different reasons. I slowly started pulling away from everything. My friends, my job, the internet, everything. Minimal contact. Minimal conversation. I cried enough tears to fill the Hudson river. Or at least, so it felt. I went into a shell. And the man I’d looked up to, and depended on for cheering me up for the previous 4 years did the same. Logically, I know it wasn’t personal. He had shit, I had shit. We couldn’t play online anymore. Real life had crashed down on both of us.
It took a long time to crawl out of that hole. But it made me stronger. Wiser. Gone was the girl who wore her heart on her sleeve and bared all for everyone. So it was for the boy, also. In a way, I laugh at the synchronicity. But in the end, it was good for both of us. We had different stories, different problems, mostly different lessons to learn. But we made it through.
I was scared to see John this time. Not because it was HIM. Because what if it wasn’t the awesome I remembered? What if he didn’t remember me? What if it was awkward? What if he hated me now? What if...what if.
I saw him at a restaurant once in Fall of 2011. He was just recovering from his first surgery. He sat at a table at the end of mine. We kept looking at each other. I kept watching his face, waiting for some sign of invitation. But every time he looked at me, I got poker face. We spent actual minutes staring at each other. Neither of us moving or speaking. In the end, he walked out before I worked up the courage to say hi. A couple of days later, he tweeted something like, “All you have to do is say, ‘hello’ and it’s up to the other person to start the conversation from there.” I gave myself several swift kicks in the ass for that one.
So there I am last week, walking around this stupid curtain towards him. I stick out my hand, and he takes it. “Hi. I’m Mara.” (not even a blink) “You know, Bearheadedgirl? The original Bearhead?” He does a double take, “Bearheadedgirl. Whoa. How are you?” And just like that, everything started clicking back to normal.
The little empty spot that’s been in my heart is becoming full again.
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Boondocks: Season 2
Popular Adult Swim show on Cartoon Network! Based on Aaron McGruder’s comic strip which was distributed in 350 newspapers nationwide. Granddad sneaks the boys into the movies to be cheap. Sarah’s obsession with Usher after meeting him threatens her relationship with Tom. Riley and Granddad refuse to talk with cops about two local thieves, even after Granddad’s car is stolen. Stinkmeaner’s spirit possesses Tom and he tries to get revenge on Granddad. Riley joins the basketball team, and the boys fight over who will be boss while Granddad’s on vacation. Fans of Aaron MacGruder’s The Boondocks (based on his popular daily comic strip) should take note that all 15 episodes of the fearless animated series are included on this second-season boxed set. While complete seasons should be a given for the DVD presentation of most television series, most programs didn’t undergo the same level of scrutiny and negative press as The Boondocks, which saw two of its second season episodes pulled from its network run over allegedly offensive statements about the cable channel BET and its senior executives (including filmmaker Reginald Hudlin, who is also credited as executive producer on The Boondocks). Both episodes–“The Hunger Strike” (which sees Boondocks hero Huey Freeman protest BET’s negative programming) and “The Uncle Ruckus Show” (BET airs a reality series built around the self-loathing title character) – are presented here in their entirety, and include fairly straightforward commentary by MacGruder and producers Rodney Barnes and Carl Jones which, while never going so far as to point fingers at individuals who may have caused the episodes to be banned, does provide a succinct history of the troubles they incurred for the show. It should also be noted that while both episodes are solid and ruthless pieces of satire, they’re not the high points of the season–episodes that strike a stronger balance between humor and social commentary include “… Or Die Trying” (Granddad, Huey, Riley and Jazmine sneak into a screening of Soul Plane 2: The Blackjacking! and wrangle with Uncle Ruckus), “Invasion of the Katrinians” (Granddad learns to regret taking in his displaced New Orleans relative Jericho, voiced by Cedric the Entertainer), and “The Story of Catcher Freeman” (a Rashomon-like take on the history of the Freeman’s saintly ancestor). These and others come closest to achieving the level of quality of “The Return of the King,” the best episode of The Boondocks‘ first year, and do much to suggest that the show will continue to hit high-water marks in subsequent seasons.
In addition to the previously mentioned commentaries, MacGruder, Barnes and Jones are heard on two other episodes (“Stinkmeaner Strikes Back” and “The Story of Gangstalicious, Part 2”), and MacGruder is seen in video introductions for the banned episodes, as well as a making-of featurette which profiles the behind-the-scenes elements of the show in detail. “Trouble in Woodcrest” is a light-hearted look at a supposed feud between voice talent Cedric Yarbrough and Gary Anthony Williams, while “What N****s?” pokes fun at criticism of the show’s use of the epithet by compiling footage of the voice-over artists repeating it in recording sessions. Five-minute interviews with the main cast and minisodes of “Spider-Man” and “Married… With Children” bring the extras to a close. — Paul Gaita
from Products – www.Malls.biz https://malls.biz/product/the-boondocks-season-2/
0 notes