
Episode 97 - George Shrinks
Explicit content warning
03/09/24 • 61 min
On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie do what they do best and ponder the grotesque biological and terrifying existential implications of a show for literal preschoolers with William Joyce's George Shrinks. How does a three-inch child with the ingenious mind of an inventor make his way through a world not built for his size? Can his tiny worldview help save his dismal local hockey team? And what in god's name did the parents go through when they went through the body horror nightmare of giving birth to a child the size of a cockroach?! All this and more on our needlessly deep discussion on a delightful and inoffensive show for toddlers.
Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 33 "Coach Shrinks." Directed by Brian Lee and written by Jennifer Pertsch. Original airdate January 14, 2003.
If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.
Follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/CartoonNightPod?s=20
Chris' Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cinemacreep
Sylvie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sylvieskeletons
Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn
Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/
On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie do what they do best and ponder the grotesque biological and terrifying existential implications of a show for literal preschoolers with William Joyce's George Shrinks. How does a three-inch child with the ingenious mind of an inventor make his way through a world not built for his size? Can his tiny worldview help save his dismal local hockey team? And what in god's name did the parents go through when they went through the body horror nightmare of giving birth to a child the size of a cockroach?! All this and more on our needlessly deep discussion on a delightful and inoffensive show for toddlers.
Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 33 "Coach Shrinks." Directed by Brian Lee and written by Jennifer Pertsch. Original airdate January 14, 2003.
If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.
Follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/CartoonNightPod?s=20
Chris' Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cinemacreep
Sylvie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sylvieskeletons
Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn
Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/
Previous Episode

Episode 96 - NFB Showcase #9: Martine Chartrand
In honour of Black History Month, we are using our side series highlighting the innovative and significant animation produced through the National Film Board to spotlight the work of one trailblazing black artist. The paint-on-glass animation of Haitian-Canadian animator Martine Chartrand has been used in her visually stunning work to explore the enduring flow of Black history and culture throughout the makeup of Canada's identity. Whether it be a a montage of centuries of significant events in Black Soul (2000) or one unlikely friendship that irrevocably changed two lives in Macpherson (2012), her intricate and gorgeous work is worth spotlighting any time of the year.
Films covered are Black Soul (2000) and Macpherson (2012). Links: https://www.nfb.ca/directors/martine-chartrand/
Chartrand's official website: https://martinechartrand.net/index.html
If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a review on your podcatcher of choice.
Follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/CartoonNightPod?s=20
Chris' Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cinemacreep
Sylvie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sylvieskeletons
Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn
Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/
Next Episode

Episode 98 - RoboCop: The Animated Series
On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie finally put to bed the hot-button media debate of our age - Is RoboCop PoLiTiCaL?? While the Paul Verhoeven 1987 masterpiece is unassailable on this front, what about the oft forgotten attempt to soften the hard edges of the NSFW sci-fi satire for Saturday morning television that premiered a year later? What gets lost in translation when you take one of the hardest R-rated movies ever released that poignantly and painfully tackles reagonomics, capitalism, dehumanization, and the militarization of the police force and make it for kids? And the most pressing question, does this make RoboCop technically Canadian?
Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 4 "The Brotherhood." Written by John Shirley and directed by Bill Hutton & Tony Love. Original airdate October 22, 1988.
If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.
Follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/CartoonNightPod?s=20
Chris' Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cinemacreep
Sylvie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sylvieskeletons
Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn
Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/
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