Goodbye Nurse!: The Final Wrap-Up
My initial criticism that Animaniacs was nothing but cutesy, educational garbage didn’t last long. By the second week of first-run shows I was watching it religiously, and episode 15 became the first one I actually videotaped. It wasn’t long before I had become infatuated with the series, and drawings of all the characters soon littered every blank piece of paper I could find, while a cassette copy of the original album was a mainstay in my tape deck. The winter ‘94 run of new episodes got me through the death of my grandfather, and I remember being obsessed with the “65th Anniversary Special” throughout that Summer. I followed the show over to the WB, kept up with it through the random airings and hour-long “H” episode nonsense, and stuck with it to the bitter end. It’s hard to believe that I was a freshman in high school when it started, and a junior in college by the time Wakko’s Wish was released. It’s even more amazing to think that my fondness for the show has never diminished despite it being gone for almost fifteen years. If anything, I love it even more now. Marathoning the series when the volume four DVD set arrived made me realize just how much I cared about it, and finally having every episode on home video was all the motivation I needed to start this blog. I never thought for a second when I began writing about Animaniacs last April that it would take me until late January to actually finish it, and I never imagined that I’d get as in depth as I eventually did. My review of the first episode looks downright embarrassing compared to the entries I was turning out even a week later and I’d be lying if I said there weren’t times I felt in over my head and considered throwing in the towel.
With the exception of Family Guy, I can’t think of many other animated shows that divide people the way Animaniacs does. For every person that loves every single thing about it and apologizes for even its worst elements, there’s someone else who thinks it’s unredeemable trash that represents everything wrong with '90s animation. In fact, the show had barely begun and John Kricfalusi was already tearing it to pieces, despite admitting that he had never even seen it. There were people who hated the series from the very beginning, and there’s even a 2000 episode of South Park that states there are two groups of people: those who like Animaniacs, and those that don’t. As I’ve made very clear over the past ten months, I don’t think the show is perfect. It’s unpredictable format and huge cast all but ensured that every segment wasn’t going to be a winner, and there were just as many clunkers as there were masterpieces. But when the series was firing on all cylinders it was nothing short of incredible, and that first production season was one of the wildest, 65-episode rides I’ve ever had with a syndicated weekday afternoon series. Animaniacs accomplished things no series had before and no series probably ever will again. It was very lucky to have come around at exactly the right time for the pieces to fall together as well as they did. Even the people who worked on the show consider it one of the high points of their careers. In August of 2010, Doug Walker (aka The Nostalgia Critic) put together an hour-long Animaniacs tribute, featuring interviews with Tom Ruegger, Sherri Stoner, Paul Rugg, John P, McCann and Nathan Ruegger and it’s clear that everyone involved loved being a part of the series. I can’t think of a better quote to end on than one by Rob Paulsen: “I tell people in interviews that Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles really changed my career, but Animaniacs really changed by life. I’m incredibly grateful.”
I’ve been asked many times over the past few months what cartoons I’d list as the best and worst of the series. For a show like Animaniacs that’s a very difficult task, so I think the best way to handle this is to break it down by character…
Best Warners Cartoons: “Hello Nice Warners”, “LA LA Law”, “Plane Pals”, “Hercule Yakko”, “Potty Emergency”, “Chairman of the Bored”, “Clown and Out”, “A Christmas Plotz”, “Ragamuffins”, “The Warners’ 65th Anniversary Special”, “Super Strong Warner Siblings”, “This Pun For Hire”
Worst Warners Cartoons: “Roll Over Beethoven” “Nothing But the Tooth”, “Moby or Not Moby”, “Broadcast Nuisance”, “Fake”, “Anchors A-Warners”, “Papers For Papa”, “Cute First…Ask Questions Later”
Best Pinky and the Brain Cartoons: “Win Big”, “Jockey For Position”, “Bubba Bo Bob Brain”, “Yes, Always”, “Brain Meets Brawn”
Worst Pinky and the Brain Cartoons: “Don’t Tread on Us”, “Hercules Unwound”
Best Slappy Squirrel Cartoons: “Bumbie’s Mom”, “Critical Condition”, “Frontier Slappy”, “Woodstock Slappy”
Worst Slappy Squirrel Cartoons: “My Mother the Squirrel”, “Soccer Coach Slappy”, “The Christmas Tree”
Best Goodfeather Cartoons: “West Side Pigeons”, “Hiccup”, “Raging Bird”
Worst Goodfeather Cartoons: “The Boids”, “Girlfeathers”, “Miami Mama Mia”, “We’re No Pigeons”
Best Mindy and Buttons Cartoons: “Les Boutons et le Ballon”, “Buttons in Ows”, “Night of the Living Buttons”
Worst Mindy and Buttons Cartoons: “Up the Crazy River”, “Mesozoic Mindy”, What a Dump", “Super Buttons”, “Mermaid Mindy”
Best Rita and Runt Cartoons: “When Rita Met Runt”, “Les Miseranimals”, “Phranken-Runt”
Worst Rita and Runt Cartoons: “The Cat and the Fiddle”, “Puttin’ on the Blitz”, “Smitten With Kittens”, “Kiki’s Kitten”, “Up a Tree”
Best Chicken Boo Cartoons: “General Boo-Regard”, “The Chicken Who Loved Me”, “Boo Happens”, “Boo Wonder”
Worst Chicken Boo Cartoons: “The Good, The Boo and the Ugly”, “Jingle Boo”
Best Hippo Cartoons: “The Pitter Patter of Little Feet”
Worst Hippo Cartoons: “La Behemoth”, “A Moving Experience”, “Can’t Buy a Thrill”
Best Song Segments: “The Monkey Song”, “Yakko’s World”, “Yakko’s Universe”, “Wakko’s America”, “The Senses Song”, “Schnitzlebank”, “A Quake, A Quake”, “The Tiger Prince”, “The Ballad of Magellan”, “Dot - the Macadamia Nut”, “The Animaniacs Suite”
Worst Song Segments: “The Return of the Great Wakkorotti”, “When You’re Traveling From Nantucket”, “Here Comes Attila”, “LA DOT”
Best of the Rest: “Yakko Warner’s World of Baldness”, “Cartoons in Wakko’s Body”, “Buttermilk, it Makes a Body Bitter”, “Branimaniacs”, “Previously on Animaniacs”, “It”
Worst of the Rest: “Wings Take Heart:, "Hollywoodchuck”, “Katie Ka-Boom: The Broken Date”, “Katie Ka-Boom: The Blemish”, “No Time For Love”
First, I want to thank the people who have worked on the show whom I’ve talked to through this blog’s Facebook group. They have given me useful information, corrected misinformation or enlightened me in general. These include Kirk Tingblad, Tom Minton and Tom Ruegger. I also want to thank Peter Paltridge of Platypus Comix, whose interview with Jon McClenahan proved to be an indispensable source of Startoons trivia. I also want to again thank Peter for coming to my rescue for title card screen shots for episodes 51 and 55. Special thanks go to the members of the Toon Zone forum for supporting me from the very beginning, and voting the talkback for the blog the best Toon Zone thread of 2013. More thanks go out to friends and family who have been patient with me through this long process.
But the biggest thank you is reserved for my very patient and loving wife Elizabeth, who has been there for me through all of this, even when I was trying to get this done alongside wedding planning last Summer and Fall. She watched every episode with me before I reviewed them, would proofread each entry before it was published and had to listen to way too much Animaniacs music during long car rides. There is no way I could have done this without her support. I love you, sweetheart.
And of course, a special thank you is required for all the people who made Animaniacs what it was in the first place - the hard working producers, writers, directors, voice artists, animators, musicians, teamsters, coffee people, therapists, assistants, assistants to the assistants, caterers and anyone else I might have missed. All your hard work is truly appreciated.
I guess that’s it. There’s only one thing left to say…