These are lists of animated television series. Animated television series are television programs produced by means of animation. Animated series produced for theaters are not included in this lists; for those, see List of animated short film series. These lists include compilation series of theatrical shorts such as The Bugs Bunny Show since they often feature some new wrap-around animation.

Duncan got a pretty big facelift for the cartoon, and despite my love of the vintage line, that figure always seemed kind of weird to me, because I was so used to seeing Filmation Man-At-Arms. This figure features the same body as Skeletor, including the boots, with an all green body suit, orange grieves, brown boots, a blue belt and brown diaper. On the other hand, he gets brand new chest armor, as well as armor pieces for his shoulders and forearms, all cast in orange to match the grieves. Like Skeletor, the colors on this figure are wonderfully vibrant and really evoke the colorful nature of the cartoon. I also dig the full armor on both arms more than the vintage style figure.


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The vintage Man-At-Arms was an ugly cuss. Past figures slapping a mustache on him helped a little, but here we get the full on cartoon Duncan portrait and he looks great. The simpler sculpt makes it feel more like the cartoon than the Classics version and I love that the head and helmet are separately sculpted. You also get a nice pearlescent finish to his helmet and bright orange panels on the sides. This portrait is really well done.

Compliance Week praised Brooks Pierce partner David Smyth for his creative cartoon series that helps explain securities enforcement issues. His "Insider Trading Cartoon Series" currently offers 10 interesting lessons about the intricacies of insider trading law.

The WWII generation was faced with a set of challenges that we can hardly wrap our minds around today. Building a military large enough to fight a two ocean war was one big hurdle to overcome. Men were conscripted into military service beginning in 1940, however, 50 percent of men reporting for induction were rejected for military service due to physical or mental deficiencies. After the nation was at war, standards for induction into the military were relaxed and rejection rates dropped to 29 percent for the duration.

For high school-aged Americans at the time, military service was a foregone conclusion. In most cases, the American fighting man was just a teenager who had likely never ventured more than 100 miles from their birthplace before the service.

To educate young soldiers with minimal formal education on military subjects and to improve morale, a series of cartoons were created by the US War Department. Director Frank Capra, chairman of the US Army Air Forces First Motion Picture Unit, came up with the title character, Private Snafu, a bumbling recruit who did everything wrong. To the GI audience, SNAFU was also a military slang acronym for: Situation Normal All Fouled Up.

Transformice: The Cartoon Series is a series produced by Cross River Productions, Atelier 801 and Believe Digital. This series is not paid for by Atelier 801, but is instead funded by Cross River Productions, with the series having no negative impact on development of the game.

Banzai's character is seen as a stereotype of a Japanese samurai, from the attire to the personality. Many consider this cultural appropriation. Lots of other stereotypes are visible in the characters.

In episode 7, Fatale is shown as an alluring character who distracts mice with its tail in order to obtain the cheese. This trope is very common among classical television shows. In episode 9, Fatale is also seen as a cheerleader, giving viewers the sense that this is what a typical 'girly' character would find as a hobby. However, as of Episode 25, it was discovered that part of Fatale's charm comes from their cosmetics. This is most noticeable in the scene where Fatale throws down their exotic flower earpiece and necklace out of frustration.

In episodes 10, 11, 20, and 35, Red is seen performing what seems to be a satanic ritual, utilizing the pentagram (inverted pentagon). Cross River was not familiar with how shamans work in the game and resorted to common shaman rituals from pre-modern history.

Episode 12 proved to be the most controversial among players and viewers. This episode features Brutus committing suicide many times in order to go to a mouse heaven abundant with cheese. Their attempts ultimately fail and Brutus is revived by Blue. The episode featured no trigger warnings or 'viewer discretion is advised' in the beginning of the video.

In episode 13, a white mouse is not permitted to enter the microwave club. Because the rest of the mice are brown, some viewers saw this as a form of racism. Melibellule, an administrator, mentioned that this was not intentional but rather the white mouse was a modeling shortcut (the mouse was used in episode 9) and easily distinguishable among other mice. Since the series is void of dialogue, the message had to be conveyed in a very clear fashion.

The same episode also holds a very morbid attribute. The series as a whole does feature various deaths, but many are seen as simply comical. The ones featured in episode 13 stood out quite distinctly. Presumably by accident or possibly on purpose, Brutus burns every mouse inside the microwave club. This circumstance echoes the operations performed during World War 2.


The Gormiti Cartoon Series (also known as Gormiti: The Lords of Nature Return!) is the ninth series of the Gormiti toyline. It is the fourth series to be released in English-speaking territories. The Cartoon Series toys were released to coincide with the release of the animated TV show of the same name and featured characters which appeared in the show. The Gormiti from the Cartoon Series were divided into tribes of Earth, Forest, Water, Air and Volcano. The characters in the Cartoon Series are actually resculpts of characters cherry-picked both Series 1 (or Energheia) and Series 2, with brand new leaders for each of the Tribes. In the show, the Gormiti Tribe leaders were given first names (like Toby and Jessica), but in Italy and the UK these characters were simply called The Lord of the Sea or The Lady of the Air.

The series featured a lower number of sculpts than previous series, with only 24 blind bagged figures. However Cartoon Series introduced a lot of exclusive minifigures released with larger-sized 12cm articulated action figures as well as those included with playsets.

Cartoon Series Gormitis came packages in individual blind bags, carded blister two-packs, carded blister four-packs and boxed ten-packs. There were also larger, 12cm articulated figures (mentioned above).

Don't ask us, for if there's one thing that the IGN editors can claim to be, it's kids trapped in the bodies of adults. And so it goes without saying that we sure do love us some cartoons. And in particular, television has proven to be a hugely important part of our toon-development, starting from our earliest days with the Saturday morning and after-school shows and continuing right on to today with the more mature Adult Swim offerings and the like.

In fact, as we prepped for this story and looked back at our many favorite animated series from over the years, we were amazed by the diversity of the shows that we came up with. From classic tales of cats chasing mice to the legend of a Dark Knight avenger patrolling the streets of a place called Gotham, from incompetent alien invaders to incompetent nuclear families, from stories of the future to sagas of the past, IGN's Top 100 Animated Series has it all.

The success of the animated Archie Show was big, as it extended into music with The Archies hit song "Sugar, Sugar." This led to another Archie Comic coming to television with Josie and the Pussycats, which took pre-existing Archie Comics universe character Josie and put her into a new scenario as she formed a band -- the comic book character also reflected the change, in a bit of synergy. Hanna-Barbera produced Josieand it's an amusing show for how it so specifically combined elements from the success of The Archie Show and Hanna-Barbera's own Scooby-Doo, as Josie and her friends not only played music together, but inadvertently stumbled into mysteries they would ultimately help solve.

Despite only running for 16 episodes (not counting the amusing spin-off/continuation Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space), frequent repeats, the spunky characters and a great theme song kept Josie in the public consciousness for years to come, ultimately leading to an underrated film version in 2001.

One of the more popular cartoon/toy marketing machines of the Eighties was M.A.S.K., the Mobile Armored Strike Kommand (yes, command with a 'K', that's what happens when you have to make an acronym fit into your story concept). The show was a weird kind of G.I. Joe-Transformers hybrid, but it managed to combine the best elements of those franchises while adopting few of their flaws. But what really set it apart was the namesake of the show -- the super-powered masks the characters wore. The masks provided the ethnically-diverse-yet-stereotypical cast with abilities like anti-gravity, flight, and energy beams.

Matt Trakker was the ruggedly handsome, rich, charismatic lead of the show. His pimp ride was a red Chevrolet Camaro G3 that transformed into a gull-winged fighter plane. His son Scott and his friend/pet robot T-Bob provided some comic relief. And since Scott was always upgrading his expensive buddy, he provided plenty of validation for the little boys who would grow up to be today's tech geeks and robot nerds. But one of the more notable aspects of the show was the fact that it showed a single dad taking care of his only son while fighting the forces of evil.

In some ways this is the Firefly of animated series -- aired out of order and then quickly discarded by a network that didn't feel it fit with their programming. Only six episodes were produced, and only two of them aired, but there was a lot of very funny material in Kevin Smith's adaptation of his own film. A rather brilliant second episode parodied that old television staple, with the characters trapped together, reminiscing on past events -- only here, with only one episode having been produced, all of their memories are of that previous week's events... before things get really hysterical and surreal. Starring the entire main cast of the Clerks films, not to mention Alec Baldwin as the Lex Luthorish Leonardo Leonardo, Clerks was able to do a lot more broad comedy and parodies than the films, with episodes evoking everything from Fast Times at Ridgemont High to the unfortunate results of a Transformer transforming with a person inside him. 152ee80cbc

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