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- <text id=92TT0816>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Loonier Toon Tales
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 79
- Loonier Toon Tales
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A new dog-and-cat cartoon show gleefully violates every rule of
- good taste and subtlety
- </p>
- <p>By Stefan Kanfer
- </p>
- <p> Producer-director John Kricfalusi examines the storyboard
- for a future episode of The Ren & Stimpy Show. Beaming with
- satisfaction, he congratulates the staff. "This is it," he
- announces. "Not a glimmer of good taste anywhere."
- </p>
- <p> When the animated series debuted on Nickelodeon last
- August, there were only half a dozen episodes. Vice presidents
- at rival networks snickered. The adventures of a rabid Chihuahua
- and a bulbous cat? Drawn in retro '50s style, with garish
- backgrounds and gags based on bodily functions? Who knew that
- Ren and Stimpy were on the cusp of celebrity?
- </p>
- <p> Kricfalusi knew. "I figured there had to be millions of
- kids out there as sick of Ducktales and The Flintstones and My
- Little Pony as we were," he recalls. "We" were his partners, Jim
- Smith and Bob Camp, and his girlfriend Lynne Naylor. All were
- in their early 30s and had served time on Saturday-morning
- cartoon shows. What the world needed now, reasoned Kricfalusi
- & Co., was the anarchic vulgarity of the Three Stooges and the
- comic timing of old Warner Bros. cartoons, plus a dash of Monty
- Python lavatory humor. In 1989 they formed a shoestring company
- called Spumco.
- </p>
- <p> Just before the money ran out, they concocted some new
- gags for Kricfalusi's repellent cat and dog, and he pitched the
- show to anyone who would listen. "Watching John present an idea
- is like watching Robin Williams playing the part of Kirk
- Douglas," says an admiring Disney director. "He doesn't talk,
- he explodes, acting all the parts, doing the sound effects,
- falling down, jumping up, waggling his beard, drawing, singing,
- laughing, crying. He's animation's irresistible force of
- nature."
- </p>
- <p> Irresistible to Nickelodeon, anyway. After all three
- broadcast networks and Fox gave aggressive thumbs-down, Vanessa
- Coffey, the cable network's V.P. of animation, saw something
- "uniquely bizarre" in Ren and Stimpy and helped develop scripts
- and concepts. "At all costs, we wanted to change the face of
- animation," she recalls. Actually, the price tag was about
- $300,000 a show. Kricfalusi voiced Ren as a deranged Peter
- Lorre; ex-standup comedian Billy West enacted Stimpy in a tone
- vaguely reminiscent of Larry, a founding Stooge.
- </p>
- <p> Initial responses were mixed. A reviewer for the Austin
- American-Statesman griped, "I don't remember ever seeing
- animated retching before, and hope to never see it again."
- Campus critics took a different view. Ren's constant bleat--"You bloated sack of protoplasm!"--began to replace Bart
- Simpson's "Eat my shorts!" as their put-down of choice. Frank
- Zappa joined the fan club. So did Robert De Niro and pop singer
- Matthew Sweet. Dormitories at Yale, the University of Michigan
- and U.S.C. staged viewing parties, where undergraduates
- displayed their new Ren & Stimpy T shirts.
- </p>
- <p> For several months MTV, Nick's older sibling, added the
- show to its Saturday-night lineup. Boosted by the attention,
- R&S went through the roof. It has now doubled Nickelodeon's
- ratings for its 11 a.m. Sunday slot. Result: a viewing audience
- of 2.2 million households--even though the same six episodes
- have been recycling all season long. Nickelodeon has just
- agreed to underwrite 20 new episodes of its hottest show.
- </p>
- <p> But anyone who expects a refinement of style or substance
- should rent 101 Dalmatians. One of the new adventures visits the
- men's room of the White House, where the President has a painful
- encounter with his fly zipper; in the same episode, the Pope
- (voiced by Zappa) gets lost in Antarctica. In another show, Ren
- and Stimpy play their favorite board game, Don't Pee on the
- Electric Fence.
- </p>
- <p> "These episodes are designed to be refreshingly outrageous
- for at least 15 years," says Coffey. Which means the bloated
- sack of protoplasm will be eliciting laughter well into the
- 21st century. The thought fills Kricfalusi with equanimity. "I
- think we are destroying the minds of America," he concludes.
- "And that's been one of my lifelong ambitions."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-