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The Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy May not be reposted Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy and Mandy Grim Adventures Of Billy & Mandy |
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37A. Chocolate SailorBonus Ep
Written by Craig Lewis / Storyboard by Mike DiederichBilly falls under the spell of enchanted chocolate when he signs up to sell Chocolate Sailor candy in order to make himself some spending money.Most notable moment: Having turned to chocolate, Billy starts eating his own fingers while telling Mandy, "Ouch...ouch...ouch...It doesn't hurt really...you get used to it."
There's a quick reference to Lord of the Rings when Billy says, "Come to Billy, my precious," to the chocolates that he can't stop eating.37B. The Good, the Bad & the Toothless
Written by Brett Varon / Storyboard by Brett VaronAfter having his lights punched out by Sperg, Billy dreams that he, Mandy and Grim are living in the Wild West. Mandy does a great Clint Eastwood imitation.Most notable moment: After the Tooth Fairy challenges Mandy to a showdown, Billy smirks, "Mandy's gonna kick the snot out of your pixie butt."
There's a nod to Aqua Teen Hunger Force when the Tooth Fairy's scepter produces fries, a burger and a shake floating around in the air.During the closing credits, there's a whole scene that didn't make it into the episode. In the show, after Mandy says, "We've got a tooth to pick with you," there's a short scene showing Billy running to jump in the Tooth Fairy's lap. But during the credits we see the whole route: Billy running under a cow and getting a glass of milk; shooting down birds, the cow and a flying pig; getting himself shot out of a cannon and so on, all on his way to jumping into the Tooth Fairy's lap. I guess there wasn't room for the sequence in the show, so they made it part of the closing credits.
This is a single episode that has been tacked together with a single episode of Evil Con Carne ("Ultimate Evil") to make a sort of Grim and Evil show, like in the "old days." I put the synopsis for "Ultimate Evil" on the Evil Con Carne page.
Five-O-Clock ShadowsEpisode 38
Written and Storyboarded by Brett VaronGrim reluctantly agrees to take Billy and Mandy through the portal to the Shadow World, the nexus of a billion alternate realities. Merely setting one foot in it could endanger all of existence, and once there, Billy, Mandy and Grim must remain until the portal reopens, 12 hours later.Most notable moment: As soon as Mandy manages to convince her Shadow Self that her toy unicorns are actually make-believe, the formerly sweet Shadow produces a chain saw, Mandy grabs a flame thrower, and together they destroy all the toys in the whole house.
When Cartoon Network showed this episode again on November 4, 2004, they paired it with "Terror of the Black Knight" and used the infamous Mandy's Comment, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law"
38A. That's My MummyEpisode 39
Written by Maxwell Atoms and Alex Almaguer / Storyboard by Alex AlmaguerBilly comes to the conclusion that Irwin's mommy is a mummy and even though for once he's right, Mandy and Grim at first refuse to believe him because he has a tendency to confuse words that sound similar, like the time he mistook some DOGpoo for SHAMpoo.
The running joke in the episode is that Billy is constantly being stripped of his clothes by "the Curse of the Mummy" and is seen running all over town stark naked, with the pattering sound of his bare feet clearly audible.Most notable moment: Billy runs past Grim and Mandy, stark naked and shrieking his head off. Grim says, "Did you see..." and Mandy replies, "No."
38B. Toys Will Be Toys
Written and Storyboarded by Spencer LaudieroAfter Billy decides to throw out his complete Dinobonoid toy set, Grim brings the toys to life and shrinks Billy down to toy size to give him one last chance to play with them.
Most notable moment: In a scene reminiscent of the pilot episode, Mandy destroys a couple of Billy's plastic Dinobonoids using her magnifying glass and the power of the sun. After that, she goes after the toy-sized Billy. Sure, she knows who he is, but she figures she'll never get another chance like this any time soon.
During the closing credits, we see Billy in the shower. He is singing his usual hair-washing song, and throws in a line about how good the shampoo tastes. Then suddenly at the very end of the credits, he says: "Hey....this isn't SHAMpoo, it's DOG..." Note: except for the very tail end of the sequence, you won't see or hear this if you only watched the show on Friday night. They mess up the closing credits SO BAD on that show. Is there anywhere we can write and complain?? Not that it matters because I believe this is the last first-run episode for a while. (The weekday morning reruns at least don't push the credits to the side, although they do talk over them.)
Episode 4039. The Secret Snake Club
Written by Maxwell Atoms / Storyboard by C.H. GreenblattOn School Club Recruitment Day, Billy, Mandy and Irwin take three very diverse paths: Irwin joins the Macrame Club in order to macrame enough potholders to sell to raise money to buy a ray that will shoot everyone in the eyes and make them need glasses just like he does; Billy somehow ends up in the real CIA instead of the Junior CIA Club; and Mandy joins the Secret Snake Club...a club consisting of three nerdy geeks in need of help from the Underworld to resurrect Shnissugah, a snake creature from the past, to make him eat the cool kids.
Most notable moment: This entire episode was absolutely brilliant, I can't really pick one scene over another.
Notice that in the scene where Mandy is talking to the snake geeks while they are inside their curtained booth, the representative of the Glee Club, seen immediately to the left of the booth, is crying his eyes out. Glee Club, get it? The representative of the Cabbage Club is featured during the closing credits...eating his boogers.
Episode 4140A. He's Not Dead, He's My Mascot
Written by Nina Bargiel and Alex Almaguer / Storyboard by Alex Almaguer40B. Hog WildMindy asks Billy to hide the school mascot from the opposing team members, the Rump City Booty Heads, who are planning to steal "Fluffycat," an extremely destructive un-neutered male cat which then gets into Grim's trunk and turns into a giant, deranged monster bent on desctruction and chaos.
Most notable moment: Mandy, who has walked out of the cartoon after finding out it's "another stinkin' episode about pets," sits at home and watches Billy and Grim on television, commenting, "Uch, they'll put anything on TV." She's using Irwin as a footstool.
Written and Storyboarded by Brett VaronTo make it up to Billy about being so hard on him about "the rules," Billy's dad buys himself a new motorcycle, which Billy promptly ruins. Billy begs Grim to fix it before his dad finds out. The scythe wreaks its usual havoc and Billy's father, mother and every person they pass while they are riding on the motorbike turn into customized culture creatures. The situation will not be resolved until Billy can bring himself to admit to his father what he did.Most notable moment: Jerome the alligator eats Billy, but Mandy forces him to cough the boy back up. Afterwards, Jerome looks at Billy and says, "Eeeew, vomit."
Over the credits we see Billy destroy the new miniature ship which his father built after getting bored with the motorcycle.
Episode 4241A. Bad News Ghouls
Written by Richard Horvitz and Vincent Waller / Storyboard by Vincent WallerEven though Mandy is the only one of Billy's friends who can actually pitch, hit or catch, Billy refuses to let her on his losing Little League team because "girls can't play baseball." Mandy 'disguises' herself as a boy by putting on a baseball cap and Grim recruits some old friends from the Underworld to help out in the big play-off game against Mindy's team.
Most notable moment: Billy thinks Mandy is a boy named Manfred until she removes her baseball cap, then Billy recognizes her and kicks her off the team even though she's been pitching a no-hitter. As Mandy walks off the pitcher's mound, Billy asks aloud, "I wonder what happened to Mandfred?"
There is a small take-off on "Field of Dreams" as Grim's old Underworld friends emerge from a corn field to play baseball.
Richard Horvitz, co-credited with writing this story, is the voice of Billy (and Billy's dad).41B. House of Tomorrow
Written by Nina Bargiel and Alex Almaguer / Storyboard by Alex AlmaguerThe lines are way too long for the rides at Sassycat Land, so Grim, Billy and Mandy break into a closed exhibit called "The House of Tomorrow" because there aren't any lines at all for that one. Once inside, Billy, Mandy and Grim meet a park tour guide who has been trapped in the exhibit for 40 years, being abused by the futuristic robots, eating nothing but Sassycat Crud Cakes and using his costume as a litter box. As he tells his story, we find out that 40 years ago, Billy's dad's stupid questions angered the master control computer so much that it ordered the robots to attack the park visitors. Management ordered the exhibit to be shut down, but accidentally left the poor tour guide inside. Predictably, Billy angers the master control computer so much by his stupid questions that it once again orders the robots to attack and Mandy has to take over and lead the way out.
Most notable moment: After Mandy frees everyone simply by pulling the master plug and disconnecting the master control computer, Billy comes along and plugs it back in, because his grandmother always told him never to leave an unplugged plug unplugged. Grim, Mandy and Billy escape, but when the power comes back on and the door shuts, the park guide is once again locked inside -- and in a move worthy of Billy, he doesn't even seem to remember that all he'd have to do is pull the plug and he'd be free.
Episode 4342A. Happy Huggy Stuffy Bears
Written by Nina Bargiel and Spencer Laudiero / Storyboard by Spencer LaudieroEris turns out to be behind a plot to hand out free Happy Huggy Stuffy Bears, teddy bears which brainwash anyone who gets one, causing total chaos in Endsville.42B. The Secret Decoder RingMost notable moment: Mandy sees Grim and Billy staring at the blank TV screen and asks Grim what's wrong with the TV. Grim replies that there's no problem -- he just wants to see how long it will take Billy to realize that the TV is not on. Just about then Billy exclaims, "I LOVE this show!"
Written by Zena Wyss and Micheal Diederich / Storyboard by Micheal Diederich (I sure wish they'd decide how to spell this guy's name. I've seen both Michael and Micheal for him.)A secret decoder ring hidden in cereal boxes lures the children of Endsville into a mine shaft, where an ancient creature, an old friend of Grim's, hopes to be able to trick one of the kids into taking its place.Most notable moment: Billy puts on the ring and starts yelling that he's now invisible (he must have seen Lord of the Rings!). When he pulls off his clothes, he is wearing a strategic leaf for underwear. Grim points out to him that he's not invisible -- he's just naked. "Nuh uh," Billy replies. "I'm wearing a fig leaf...or maybe it's poison sumac; I'm kinda chafin'."
There are nods to other movies besides "Lord of the Rings" in this episode. In one scene, Billy uses the ring to decode the secret message and Grim asks derisively, "What's the message? Eat more Blasto Bits?" This is a situation from Jean Shepherd's "A Christmas Story," where Ralphie gets a Little Orphan Annie Secret Decoder and finds out that the secret message is "Drink More Ovaltine." The next place is where Billy's ring picks up a hologram of an imperious young woman in a white dress who is asking "Okie Wan Kedokie" for help. That's from Star Wars, episode IV. THE Star Wars, depending on how old you are.
Over the credits, we see a reprise of Grim scything the heads off the Happy Huggy Stuffy Bears; then he comes back to Mandy and says, "I haven't had this much fun since the French Revolution. We gotta do this more often." Billy also has some funny lines, I hope you all get to see the episode some time other than Friday nights.
Episode 4443A. Wild Parts
Written by Dr. Richard M. Burton and Bill Reiss / Storyboard by Bill ReissIn an episode unusually full of bad puns, everyone in Endsville except Mandy comes down with stuffy noses. Mandy suspects something sinister is going on and sets up a stake-out during which she, Billy and Grim follow Billy's nose to the mall, where a noseless Nasomancer (a.k.a. Nose Wizard) is luring all the noses of Endsville trying to find one he likes. Naturally, he likes Billy's.43B. The Trouble With BillyMost notable moment: Grim shows Billy and Mandy scenes of people picking their noses...in their cars, at the mall, in their cars, at school, in their cars, on the dance floor, in their cars...When Grim gets to the final "in their cars," the scene is of Billy, who is very proud and pleased to be representing a nose-picking scene.
Written and Storyboarded by Brett VaronAfter Billy gets his white tuxedo muddy for the 5th time that day, Grim tries to figure out what's wrong with the boy. It doesn't take him long to decide that Billy's dad, Harold, is what's wrong. This episode has a whole lot of fart jokes.Most notable moment: We hear Billy's dad's version of When Billy Met Mandy.
Over the credits, we see Billy as a baby, propelling himself around Townsville via his farts.
WishbonesEpisode 45
Story and Storyboard:
Intro: C. Scott Morse
Billy: Shawn Cashman
Billy's Dad: Alex Almaguer
Skarr: C. H. Greenblatt
Irwin: Micheal Diederich
Pud'n: Maxwell Atoms
Junior: Van Wasseluk
Sperg: Paul McEvoy and Thurup Van Orman
Mindy: Paul McEvoy
Mandy: C. Scott Morse
Introduction
Mandy comes upon Billy watching his favorite TV show, "Laundry Day." In other words, he is sitting on the floor in front of the front-loading dryer, watching the clothes swirling around to dry. Grim comes in and retrieves his soaking-wet robes which he insists must be drip-dried,and then realizes that he forgot to check the pockets before throwing the robes in the washer. Out of a pocket comes a magical skull with rubies for eyes, and the number 9 on its forehead. It turns out the skull, Thromnambular, has been imprisoned here on earth for centuries and can't get free until it grants 9 wishes. When Mandy asks Grim why he hasn't used the skull to get free from Billy and herself, Grim explains that he won't use it because he knows that wishes have a way of getting corrupted and twisted back upon the wisher. But Billy has already grabbed the skull and gone off to make a wish...Billy
Billy wishes that he could be an adventurer, traveling the world looking for lost civilizations and treasures with his scientist parents, his sidekick dog and his best friend from India. (Billy must be a Jonny Quest fan.) During their first big adventure, his dog and his best friend are killed by a pterodactyl and Billy decides he wants no more of this adventurous life. He puts the skull in the refrigerator, where his father discovers it while looking for a snack. Thromnambular now has an 8 on its forehead.Billy's Dad
Billy's dad wishes that he could re-live his high school years, which he has always thought of as the best years of his life...until his wish is granted and he realizes he wasn't quite as cool as he remembered. While making his wish, Harold accidentally hurls the skull out the window, and it lands in his neighbor's yard. The number on Thromnambular's forehead now reads 7.Skarr
Billy's next-door neighbor, ex-General Skarr, wishes to be the Lord High Master and Ruler of the Earth...but he gets raised up a bit higher than he expects. The skull falls back to earth and lands in Irwin's swimming pool. Thromnambular's forehead now says 6.Irwin
Irwin gets a two-part wish. He wishes he could make a hiphop video, and he wants Mandy to be in it with him. Oh, you can imagine how Mandy reacts to that. Eventually Irwin ends up in a trash can, and leaves the skull behind when he climbs out. The skull now has a 5 on its forehead.Pud'n
In this segment, written by series creator Maxwell Atoms, Thromnambular is found by Pud'n, who is sorting through the trash looking for candy (yuk!). His wish is for a pet bunny rabbit that will love him. Yes indeed, the bunny rabbit loves him all right...loves him to death. After lots of explosions, the skull lands in the school yard with the number 4 on its forehead. Junior picks it up and carries it into the school.Junior
Junior wishes that he knew what to wish for. Once that wish is granted, the skull disappears, leaving Junior knowing what he should have wished for, but out of wishes. Thromnambular reappears in the school hallway with a 3 on its forehead, where it bangs into Sperg.Sperg
Sperg wishes that he could get into the girls' bathroom in order to steal money from a female classmate who has been waving around a bag of cash. But after the skull turns him into a girl, Sperg finds out that girls can be more cruel than he ever imagined. Now with a 2 on its forehead, the skull migrates into an empty classroom where Mindy comes across it.Mindy
Mindy is worried that there are probably people in the world who don't even know who she is! She wishes she were a big star and gets her wish all too literally. The skull appears on the couch next to Mandy with one wish remaining.Mandy
Once Mandy finally gets her hands on the skull, she throws a yard sale to auction it off to the highest bidder. During the ensuing riot, Grim says, "I wish you two had never found that skull," and the show goes right back to the beginning, with Billy watching the clothes swirling around in the dryer.Most notable moment: To impress Mandy, Irwin tries to turn his backyard swimming pool into a hot tub by farting in it.
In case you're wondering what happened to the skull after Grim's wish, we see the answer during the closing credits. (Thank goodness when they re-run the episode Saturday morning, they don't push the credits to the side.) We see Grim holding Thromnambular, which has reverted to having a "9" on its forehead. Grim has worked out a way that he believes will allow him to get his dearest wish (to be rid of Billy and Mandy), and because he includes something Thromnambular wants as part of it (to be free of the curse), he thinks the wish won't backfire on him. Well, of course it does. The skull takes Grim's body and leaves Grim's skull on the floor...with a big 8 on his forehead.
45A. Dream Mutt
Written and Storyboarded by Brett Varon
45B. Scythe for SaleBilly wants four dogs that are all being given away, but Harold will only let him have one. Grim reluctantly uses his scythe to magically combine the four dogs into one, which is intended to be Billy's Dream Mutt. The dog looks and behaves as if it stepped out of an old Hanna-Barbera cartoon, complete with bad sound effects, bad jokes, bad laugh track and all. Billy won't let the dog sleep in his bed, so the magical animal retaliates by using Grim's trunk to construct a "handy-dandy doomsday-type device engineered for complete and total global domination of beds." With this device, the dog plans to steal every bed in the world so he can sleep on a different one each night. Billy goes screaming for help to Mandy, who knew from the start that the situation wouldn't work out and had Grim come up with a solution ahead of time. A running joke in the episode is that Billy keeps thanking his dad for things that Grim has actually done. Another is that Billy suddenly finds that he's on a television show called "Dream Mutt: The Reality Show That Bites." Mandy and Billy's dad are interviewed for the show, each giving their opinion as to whether Billy will or will not end up keeping the dog. (Mandy says no; Harold says yes.)
Most notable moment: While Billy is showing the dog around the house, they stop in front of the door to the basement. Because Grim's trunk is down there, the door is chained, nailed, boarded and padlocked shut -- but Billy opens it anyway, simply by turning the doorknob.
Episode 46Billy holds a yard sale. Irwin ends up with Grim's scythe and uses it to control Mandy's mind so she'll be his girlfriend. The running joke in the episode is that no matter how much power Irwin gets from the scythe, something always happens to remind him that he's still a dork. (By the way, my short synopsis does not do this story justice. IMHO this is an awfully good episode and I really hope that Harriet Kim is going to continue to write for the show!)
Most notable moment: In a take-off of Sesame Street, a character similar to Oscar the Grouch pops out of a dumpster to remind the youngsters in the audience that a scythe is not a toy, and to tell an adult immediately if they should ever see one just lying around.
Over the credits, we see Irwin doing very dorky things while trying to impress the mind-controlled Mandy.
Episode 4746A. Jeffy's Web
Written by Maxwell Atoms and Louie Del Carmen / Storyboard by Louie Del Carmen46B. Irwin Gets a ClueJeff, the magic giant spider who thinks Billy is his daddy, returns to Endsville to talk to Billy. Jeff has found out that he is a she after laying a few thousand eggs. With only 36 more hours to live, Jeffy wants to ask Billy to be godfather to the baby spiders after they hatch. Needless to say, Billy still screams like a girl at the very sight of Jeffy and wants nothing to do with her. In the end, Grim puts more sand in the spider's hourglass so that he can enjoy watching Billy's terror whenever Jeffy is around. The title of this episode is a take-off of the book "Charlotte's Web" by E.B. White (and there's a movie out as well). Check out the book and the movie HERE
Most notable moment: Billy does a great "Kilroy was here" imitation in the scene where he jumps into the giant teacup on the billboard across the street and then pokes out his head with his nose hanging over the rim of the teacup. For information about Kilroy, click here.
Death and the Maiden: When Irwin jumps in the bookmobile and orders the driver to follow 'Death and the Maiden,' he is referring to something much more than Grim and Mandy. Read a very well-written explanation of the classical reference here. (Thanks to Floyd for sending me this excellent URL!)
Written by Zena Wyss and Jim Schumann / Storyboard by Jim SchumannHoss Delgado comes to Endsville in order to fight the big, green, slimy monster that Billy accidentally created while playing around with Grim's scythe. After literally running into Irwin (and later hitting Booboo Bear, Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound as well), Delgado takes pity on the young nerd, who is miserable because his love for Mandy is most definitely not reciprocated. Delgado makes Irwin his sidekick so that Mandy can see him acting like a manly stud instead of a total nerd, which, Delgado figures, will cause Mandy to fall madly in love. Delgado figures wrong!
Most notable moment: Billy explains to Irwin the role of nerds in the world: "Nerds are like the moist towelettes of the universe. They make everyone else feel better about themselves."
Over the credits, we see Irwin doing a nerdy pom-pom routine. At the end he does the splits, rips his pants, and has to leave the screen with the pom-poms held over the front and the back of his pants.
47A. Duck!
Written by Maxwell Atoms and C.H. Greenblatt / Storyboard by C.H. Greenblatt47B. Aren't You Chupacabra To See Me?While having an uncharacteristically nice dream, Grim accidentally opens the Vortex and forms a bridge between this world and the dark realms, which releases a Nightmare Bugaboo on the unsuspecting population of Townsville. Although Grim considers this particular bugaboo to be a backwater, low-level nightmare, the invisible duck wearing a WWI-vintage German helmet makes life miserable for people by following them around and blowing raspberries. Only the person the duck is following can see it, and hysterical situations result from trying to convince anyone that it's the invisible duck making the farting sounds. Everyone it follows is mortified by its antics, but it meets its match in Mandy.
Most notable moment: The jail cell is crammed full of people falsely arrested for farting in public; one of them is Hector Con Carne, who complains that he's not even on this stupid show anymore.
Grim's last dream lines and Billy's "Same as it ever was" are lyrics from the Talking Heads song "Once in a Lifetime." To see the lyrics, click here (Thanks again, Floyd, for explaining to me what in the world was going on during Grim's dream!)
Written by Jeremy Bargiel and Ian Wasseluk / Storyboard by Ian WasselukMandy, Billy and Grim rent "The Legend of the Chupacabra" from Underworld Video. In a scene right out of "The Ring" the chupacabra emerges from the TV. For more information about El Chupacabra, see http://paranormal.about.com/cs/chupacabra/?once=true&
Most notable moment: After watching the same movie 60 times, Billy still can't remember how it ends. He is incredibly shocked that Mandy and Grim know what comes next and suspects them of being "pa-sychic."
During the closing credits we see Grim and the invisible duck at the movies. In the row behind them, a man is talking noisily on his cell phone. After the duck blows a raspberry, the man gets very indignant and tells whomever he's talking to that "someone is being really rude in here."
Episode 48
Original broadcast date: June 27, 2005
Mandy's Comment: "Truth is always strange...stranger than fiction." Then a narrator comes on and says: "The following episode is based on a true story." Well, at least it's based on a cool old movie, The Fly -- by which I mean the 1958 version starring Al Hedison (a.k.a David Hedison, of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea fame). That's probably why Mandy's comment is in black and white instead of color, the whole intro being a throwback to the Fifties.
48A. Zip Your Fly
Written by Maxwell Atoms and Louie Del Carmen / Storyboard by Louie Del Carmen48B. Puddle JumpingIn what Grim refers to as "a common wardrobe malfunction," Mandy accidentally zips her head onto the body of a fly, and the fly's head onto her body. While Grim watches Mandy eat her way through 20 metric tons of garbage trying to find the magic zipper that caused the problem in the first place, Mandy's body with the fly's head causes an inadvertent revolution in the classroom, enthusiastically aided and abetted by Billy.
Most notable moment: Harold attempts to swat Mandy and flush her down the toilet.
Written and Storyboarded by Mike Diederich (I think he must have gotten tired of them mis-spelling Michael/Micheal so he's going for Mike from now on!)
Billy takes a swan dive into his little backyard wading pool and comes out in another universe, thanks to an errant ray of sunlight bouncing off the scythe and opening a cosmic sinkhole in the bottom of the pool. The sinkhole, Grim explains to Mandy, can suck you up and spit you out anywhere in the world...or anywhere in the universe. Since Billy is Mandy's science project, she insists that they must go find him no matter where he has ended up. A running joke in the episode is that Sperg keeps seeing Mandy, Billy and Grim disappearing into the pool but whenever he jumps in, the bottom is solid. Another running joke is that an alligator in the alternate universe keeps popping out of water and eating someone...and in the end, it eats Sperg, who had just come to the conclusion that the whole cosmic sinkhole thing was a fake.
Most notable moment: Using a piece of pie as bait, evil witch Granny Applecheeks snags Billy out of the water just like a fish.
During the closing credits we see two men in a Japanese bath. They are discussing American cartoons. "I just don't get American cartoons," complains the first man, "they are so weird." Suddenly Grim pops up in the tub. Without missing a beat, the second man inquires of Grim, "Do you have an appointment?" The first man faints dead away at the sight of the Grim Reaper, but Grim assures the other man that his friend is good for another six weeks.
OPH's HELPFUL HINT OF THE DAY: If you have closed captioning, you can read what the people are saying during the credits even if you can't hear the words.
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