"Pflegeheim für imaginäre Freunde" House of Bloo's TV Episode 2004 Plot Summary
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McCracken and Mike Moon won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Animation in 2005 for their work in the episode. The show also received an Annie Award nomination for Best Character Design in an Animated Television Production. Terrence, meanwhile, has been watching from behind the bushes across the street and realizes that Mac has not gotten rid of Bloo. As Mac is on his way to Foster's the next day, Terrence keeps him from reaching Foster's, carries him back home, and locks him in the bedroom closet.
Soon after, Mac's older brother Terrence and an evil imaginary friend named Duchess make a plan to try to get rid of Bloo. Mac, with the help of friends named Wilt, Eduardo, and Coco, try to stop them. McCracken conceived the series after adopting two dogs from an animal shelter and applying the concept to imaginary friends. The series first premiered on Cartoon Network on August 13, 2004, as a 90-minute television film. The series finished its run on May 3, 2009, with a total of 6 seasons and 79 episodes.
Scene 8: Various Rooms / Foster’s Foyer
She has also become greatly infuriated with Bloo, particularly when Mr. Herriman makes her clean up his messes. Bloo seems to constantly find a way around her rules (and Mr. Herriman's) and feels that Frankie only wants him to be happy as shown in "Fools And Regulations". Mac created Bloo when he was 3 years old, meaning that, by the start of the series, they had been creator and creation for five years. According to a trading card in the Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends Leapster game, Mac created him when he had to give away his favorite blanket. The kids love Bloo so much, that they imagine their own variations on Bloo. Hundreds of Bloos are created, and Bloo dubs them his brothers and himself leader.

Mac and Bloo are the first two characters to speak in this movie, making them the first two characters to speak in the whole series. In one instance, Bloo says that Wilt should play basketball because of his height. Mojo Jojo appears as an "unimaginative friend;" the kid who created him just copied what he or she saw on TV. Bloo is one of the most well-received and popular characters in the series. Estimated delivery dates - opens in a new window or tab include seller's handling time, origin ZIP Code, destination ZIP Code and time of acceptance and will depend on shipping service selected and receipt of cleared payment.
Funko Pop! Animation: Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends, Bloo #942
Keith Ferguson voiced Bloo, Janice Kawaye voiced Jenny Wakeman, and Sean Marquette voiced Mac. – SpongeBob's best friend and a character from the popular cartoonSpongeBob SquarePants. – A sea sponge and the main protagonist of the Nickelodeon series of the same name. This episode was the first of five chapters for a special network event titled "Cartoon Network Invaded", a month long event that featured five different shows having alien invasions.
Despite appearing older than Mac, her exact age has never been stated. A player's friend, made from one of over 900,000 possible characters, could wind up in a future episode of Foster's. Over 13 million users were registered to play the game after its launch in May 2006. Because of its success and popularity, Cartoon Network announced in May 2007 that the game would continue for six more months, into November of that year.
Creator(s)
In his review, David Hinckley ofNew York Daily NewscalledBlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, "quirky and endearing", and offered praise for the character of Bloo. Matt Blum, writing forWired, favorably compared the show to Cartoon Network's animated programRegular Showand Fox's animated programFamily Guy, hailingBlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friendsas "clever, strange, and somewhat poignant". A talent unique to her is her ability to lay colorful, plastic eggs containing a plethora of objects. The series was pitched to The Bloo in 1997 as part of their then-recently created block The Bloo DeTour. The company had greenlit the series for production in 1998 after the pilot was completed for The Bloo DeTour.
The series was originally supposed to air in 1998 on MTV but the show was held back until 2 years later due to behind-the-scenes issues with The Bloo, as well as delays. Episodes are produced at Winking Pooh Entertainment, Bloo J's production company. 204bWhen Ivan, a seeing eye friend, loses his blind kid, the friends try to find the boy before harm comes to him. Even though season 2 aired from early-mid 2005, the first five episodes finished production in late 2004 . The series premiered on August 13, 2004, with the 90-minute pilot episode "House of Bloo's", and concluded on May 3, 2009, with the episode "Goodbye to Bloo". Terrence – Mac's older brother and the recurring villain of the series.
Scene 7: Foster's Front Yard / Sidewalk
Bardel Entertainment also provided ink-and-paint facilities during the second and third seasons. Various other animation studios were contracted beginning in season three. The 11-minute animation was animated at Wang Film Productions in Taiwan, Freelance Animators in New Zealand, and AKOM in South Korea. BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends has three main cast members.

The show has become a hit on Hulu; it is the second-highest viewed show afterSaturday Night Live. IGN calledBlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friendsa great show, and commented that it has gotten better since its revival. They stated that they cannot imagine another half-hour sitcom that provides as many laughs asBlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.Empirepraised the show and its writers for creating really hilarious moments with unlikely material. They commented that one of the reasons they love the show is because nothing is sacred—it makes jokes and gags of almost everything. BlooJ's Foster's Home for Imaginary Friendswas created by Bloo J for The Bloo.
The series continued to garner critical acclaim throughout its run, earning praise for its dialogue, humor, animation, as well as its appeal to both teenage and older viewers. Comedy Central accepted it and gave the greenlight to the show 2 months later. The series was originally supposed to air in 1998 on MTV but the show was held back until 2000 due to behind-the-scenes issues with Comedy Central, as well as delays.
Mac was going to take Bloo to see the Ice Charades, but with hundreds of Bloos, he can't figure out which is the original. 202bAll Wilt wants to do is watch a basketball game on TV, but the house's ridiculous requests and Wilt's inability to refuse them keep him from seeing the big game. Goo – A hyperactive, overly imaginative and talkative African-American girl who first appeared in "Go Goo Go".
At the 2007 Ottawa International Animation Festival, the series won Best Television Animation for Children. Animation for the show was done using a process involving Adobe software Illustrator, Flash and After Effects. Most of the episodes were produced at the Cartoon Network Studios in Burbank, California, while the rest were produced at Boulder Media Limited in Dublin, Ireland. The theme song was composed by James L. Venable, who had originally collaborated with McCracken on The Powerpuff Girls.
Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is an American animated television series created by Craig McCracken for Cartoon Network Studios. The series centers on a boy named Mac, who is pressured by his mother to abandon his imaginary friend Bloo, who moves into an orphanage for imaginary friends, and is kept from adoption so that Mac can visit him daily. The episodes center on the day-to-day adventures and predicaments in which Mac, Bloo and other characters get involved. The next day, Mac and Bloo stop in at the sprawling mansion and are met by Mr. Herriman, the strict business manager. After Bloo explains the situation in comically exaggerated detail, they are given a tour of the house. Frankie, the caregiver, is about to show Mac and Bloo around; however, she is soon called away by the ill-tempered, high-maintenance resident Duchess.
He has often demonstrated a hyper, albeit nonchalant personality and is sometimes incredibly naive and childish. In "Camp Keep a Good Mac Down," he endangered everyone by selfishly eating all their food and drinking all their water. Still, as demonstrated in the episode "Read 'em and Weep," he cares very deeply for his friends. When Eduardo is thought to have been "shot" by hunters, Bloo bursts into tears and confesses how much Eduardo meant to him as a friend. However, when Eduardo is later found to be alive and well, Bloo tries to cover for his previous outburst by acting flippant about the whole thing.
According to her driver's license in "Bus the Two of Us", she was born on July 25, 1984. Frankie is friends with most of the imaginary friends at Foster's and can be described as a protective big sister to them, but sometimes gets mad at Bloo, Cheese, Madame Foster and Mr. Herriman. Wilt – The kind, red, very tall and disabled no. 1 imaginary friend with only a right arm and crooked left eye-stalk. However, in "Good Wilt Hunting", it is discovered that he was not always this way; he was injured during a basketball game, leaving his left eye crushed and his left arm injured. Wilt exhibits consummate good sportsmanship, which he applies to every part of life he can.
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