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The best kids show for adults
The Show Though most will think of the animated segments on "SNL" when they hear the name "TV Funhouse," this show is a bit different. First off, there are animated bits, but they are far from the focus. The spotlight is instead on our host, the somewhat simple Doug, and the Anipals, an aggressive gaggle of anti-social animal puppets similar to Triumph the Insult Comic Dog. Each episode has a special theme, like "Christmas Day" or "Caveman Day," but only Doug cares anything about it. Like old kids shows, the hosted segments are paced out by short filmed bits or cartoons, which creates variety that makes each episode fly by. But despite the twisted fun of the main show, most everyone either remembers or will want to check out this series because of the shorts included, which are so brilliant you probably mistakenly think you saw them on "SNL." Just a short list shows how great the animation was on this show: "Stedman," which casts Oprah's boyfriend as a fake secret agent who concocts missions to avoid being intimate with her, "Mischievous Mitchell," an anti-Semitic take-off of Dennis the Menace, the '70s-inspired adventure "The Black Sabbath Show," and the excellent "The Baby, The Immigrant and the Guy on Mushrooms," which is genius in its simplicity. Even the live-action shorts are great, like "Mnemonics - Your Dear, Dear Friend," the very dark "Policeman" and the fantastic "The Safety Gang," which may be the best use of child actors I've ever seen. Though there's no real weak episodes, there are certainly bits that stand out above the rest. As far as individual bits go, the Michael Kupperman animations, which capture his style and sense of humor well, are great, along with "Kidder, Downey & Heche: Private Trespassing Investigators" an awesome, though dated piece making fun of the three celebrities who had trouble staying out of other people's homes. Episode highlights include the two-part trip to Atlantic City by the Anipals, where they meet up with a self-parodying Robert Goulet and the great Triumph, and "Mexicans Day," which is great for two particular reasons. Number one is "Fetal Scooby Doo" which is so bizarrely silly it takes a one-note joke and makes it work terrifically. The second is "Jokamel," which starts out as a joke about marketing cigarettes to kids, and morphs into a puerile pile of sex jokes that amazes in terms of its obviousness. It's the willingness of the show to go to any length for a joke that makes these eight episodes so memorable, and makes it likely that eight episodes was probably just enough.
The Quality The audio is presented as straightforward Dolby Digital 2.0 tracks, and they sound the way you'd expect a basic-cable series from 2000 to sound, which is pretty much right-down-the-middle, with clear, distortion-free dialogue and music. The mix is simple, but it does the job, letting you hear every filthy joke, in all its uncensored glory.
The Extras Another commentary, of sorts, is included, with four of the Anipals, Chickie, Jason, Xabu and Dave. This one isn't quite a commentary, as you watch the puppets watch the show on an editing bay. It's not a complete episode, with just under seven minutes of footage, and it mainly consists of them screwing around. More interesting is the making-of footage from the Anipals segments, including a lengthy attempt to get a penis joke to work, that's really quite ridiculous. There's almost eight minutes of unused footage that's called "outtakes" on the menu, but is really just production clips. There's more complete examples of this in the two behind-the-scenes clips, which show how two scenes were shot, and an un-aired segment of "What Do We Know," the Bob Odenkirk-hosted clueless documentary sketch. A couple of less-connected clips are on Disc Two, as you get two Triumph appearances, from the Rob Reiner roast and "The Daily Show." They're funny if you like Triumph, but they feel a bit like filler on these DVDs. The set also includes some DVD previews and Comedy Central Quickies.
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