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NamelessDrake
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My mom was one of those leave-the-TV-on-after-the-news types, and she watched the local NBC station (KUSA) for news a lot, so I got exposed to a lot of NBC primetime. Including the Apprentice. Even when I was a kid I had no idea what Trump's appeal was.

As someone who is an outsider, what kinds of practices have earned Adult Swim their poor reputation?

I do, but that was my very early childhood.

If the illustrations look as nice as the cover, that by itself is a selling point to me.

The Hair Bear Bunch?

DHX Media. A Canadian firm with delusions of grandeur about becoming the next family entertainment empire. Don't give them ideas!

Where's Mildew Wolf?

Time Warner and Time Warner Cable haven't been the same company since 2009.

Don't count out Bravestarr. DreamWorks Animation is desperate to milk all those old IPs they bought a few years ago, and that's one of them!

That would make sense.

I'm honestly kind of baffled at how popular CatDog seems to be.

It's long been common practice to run older shows late at night, which are "non-peak" viewing hours. Take for example when Nick at Nite was actually focused on old shows, or the Disney Channel's old "Vault Disney" block.

He had a lot of voice roles. He was also Milo in Pepper Ann and Jack Spicer in Xiaolin Showdown.

Disney owns Doug and is sitting on it unless by some freak event, Viacom manages to grab it away from them.

How ironic it is that they spent the entire 1990s saying they were the first/only network for kids and now that those kids are adults they have to come crawling back to them!

They actually sell that again, though I haven't seen it anywhere but Target.

The Jetsons seems like it's remarkable mostly for its design sense. I watched an episode not long ago, for the first time in years, and it felt like it was pumped with too much saccharine sweetness. Though maybe because it was an Elroy episode.

That was just two shows though.

I still think it's awesome, and it's way better than Recess.

I think Nickelodeon had an arrangement that if a Nicktoon got canceled before it reached its 65th episode, the IP reverted to the creator. So Nick canceled Doug at 52 episodes and the IP reverted to Jim Jinkins and his company Jumbo Pictures.