What's the best way to teach Christian values to children? Through semi-anthropomorphizedGod-loving vegetables. Obviously. A cast the size of a produce department, silly songs, and plots taken from The Bible make for much better entertainment than you might expect. Why vegetables? Well, they're good for you, and what child wouldn't want to munch on versions of their favorite characters. But mostly because they didn't originally have the budget for CGI that could handle complex characters, but if you make a green sphere and call it a grape, who's to argue?Early videos used the format: Introduction by Bob the Tomato and Larry the Cucumber talking about some issue (e.g. anger at siblings, materialism, not learning to share, not telling the truth, wouldn't help others, won't be patient or confident, etc.), sometimes prompted by a viewer letter; short story which illustrates the issue; silly Intermission, usually in the form of "Silly Songs With Larry"; another short story; discussion of the moral and relevant verse, the latter provided by QWERTY the computer. Later installments began using one long story with "Silly Songs" at the intermission. Currently, a given video could be either of these formats or simply be a single long story with no introduction, intermission, or theme song. Usually longer now than the Theme Song's claim of "half an hour" (which a recent updating of the opening removed).References and parodies plots from The Bible, The Grapes of Wrath (literally), Gilligan's Island, Star Trek, Batman (Larry Boy), Madame Bovary (Madame Blueberry), Gilbert and Sullivan, Indiana Jones, Hamlet, The Lord of the Rings, The Wizard of Oz, Sherlock Holmes, and all kinds of others.Two movies, a TV series, a few video games, and a traditionally animated series for Larry-Boy have been produced.
All-Cheering All the Time: "Tomato Sawyer And Huckleberry Larry's Big River Rescue" had a trio of female pea cheerleaders who showed up at random times during the story.
Intentionally averted for most of the other characters. Series creator Phil Vischer explained:
"If it were a typical Christian show, I figured, they'd be named Tommy Tomato and Kooky Cucumber. But the last thing in the world I wanted was to make a typical Christian show."
Always Chaotic Evil: Supposedly, the Rhubarbarians from "Duke and the Great Pie War."
Pa Grape: I'm a viking, and I've come to take your land — oh, yes — I've come to take your land; and I've come to burn your crops and steal your horses! And I've come to step on your chickens, and soil your quilts!... oy.
Junior Asparagus:(skeptical) Did [the Israelites] really build a rocket in the middle of the desert and get Slushees dropped on their heads?
And Knowing Is Half the Battle: Dave and the Giant Pickle, Gideon: Tuba Warrior, Minnesota Cuke and the Search for Sampson's Hairbrush and Sumo of the Opera.
Anthropomorphic Food: The Great Pie War, a food fight appearing in the episodes (royalty themed) - King George and the Ducky and Duke and the Great Pie War (or "Princess and the Pie War").
Archibald: Does the hippo see them? Is the poor mute cebu successful in communicating the imminent danger to the other passengers? Is the boy injured? Why is the sad cebu sad? Is the canoe wood or aluminum?
Art Evolution: The early episodes looked very crude; as technology increases for later episodes, the episodes get better lighting, softer textures, and smoother animation.
Which of course makes sense, given that Larry-Boy is a fairly obvious Captain Ersatz for Batman.
Big Eaters: Jimmy and Jerry Gourd. In fact, when they made their debut in the Affectionate Parody of Star Trek, they managed to save the starship from crashing into a meteor made of popcorn by eating the entire meteor.
Big "NO!": By Larry during "Is this the End of Silliness?", when Archibald Asparagus explains why Larry lost his silly songs.
Big Ol' Eyebrows: Larryboy and the Angry Eyebrows has living, flying Big Ol' Eyebrows that are attracted to anger and make whoever they land on angrier.
BLAM Episode: "The Wonderful World of Auto-Tainment" has been called one of the weirdest VeggieTales videos yet. Bob and Larry travel to the future, where they learn entertainment will rely entirely on making characters perform songs and jokes related to subjects picked at random. Some might also find the Aesop randomly tacked on ("Even if your day doesn't go as planned, at least God still loves you!").
The episode started out as a compilation of music videos for songs from VeggieTales-themed soundtracks.
Many of the stories taken from The Bible are toned down; for example, in the original story of Daniel and the Lion's Den, the king puts the evil advisors and their families to death by tossing them in said den. With lions that went to bed without supper. The VeggieTales version of it instead ends in a more cartoonish way, with the advisors running off while the king chases after them.
However, they never try to hide the fact that they are trying to kill Daniel. The lyrics to the song in that episode 'What We Gonna Do?' are all different ways they want to kill or seriously injure Daniel, and they finally decide on 'Tie him up, and beat him up, and throw him out of Babylon!'
On the other hand, the Jonah movie intentionally includes the ending where the title character is bitterly angry with God and curses his own life. After the scene, Pa Grape (who is telling the story via Flashback) abruptly ends the story and turns his attention elsewhere, much like the Bible story.
They also Bowdlerized one of their own cartoons, Rack, Shack, and Benny, for its second release: "The Bunny Song", a song that the protagonists refuse to sing, originally had some genuinely troubling lyrics. It was then completely rewritten for the sing-along video, which was reasonable enough (because, you know, you're not supposed to sing along with the original). But then when they started rereleasing all their videos, Rack, Shack, and Benny got its version's lyrics replaced with refusals to eat healthy food. Even weirder when you realize the song is now essentially condoning cannibalism.
They did not, however, bowderlerize the very child unfriendly fate of being thrown into a firey furnace.
The issue with the Bunny Song is that despite the fact the song was condemned by the protagonists on screen, the song was still quite catchy, which led to Big Idea getting letters from parents complaining about kids singing about not loving their parents.
Possibly one of the strangest examples was their version of Esther. In The Bible account, Haman intended to hang the Jews on gallows he was setting up. The Veggie version: banishment to the Island of Perpetual Tickling. "They never stop! Not even if you say "pretty please!!"
"King George and the Duckie" is an adaptation of the story of David and Bathsheba; while the Biblical story centers around adultery, the VeggieTales version substitutes rubber duckie theft. It's particularly clever since both versions are incited by the king seeing someone bathing on the roof.
Also because the king gets a chance at reconciliation (the guy survived and won the war single-handedly in this version).
And in the Jonah story of the Bible, Nineveh was a city of adulterers and thieves. It was changed in their version to people who slap others with dead fish. Um, what?
Actually they were generally bad, but that was what got most mentioned
"Moe and the Big Exit" is an adaption of The Exodus From Egypt. Although they tone down most of the plagues for children, people receive a plague of gophers instead of frogs, and acne instead of skin disease, they don't ignore that all the firstborn sons of the Egyptians were killed on Passover. And the burning tumbleweed instead of the burning bush!
Brick Joke: One of the first Silly Songs With Larry, The Hairbrush Song ended with Bob confessing to Larry that he gave his hairbrush to The Peach, and Larry decides to let him keep it. After the song, The Peach made only a handful of other appearances, and never even got a name. Fast forward to the Indiana Jones parody, one of the most recent productions. When Larry/Minnesota Cuke consult an illustrated Bible manuscript in search of Samson's Hairbrush, the character standing in for Samson is The Peach!
Bubble Pipe: In its Sherlock Holmes parody, the Sherlock character has a bubble pipe, and at one point he inhales by accident and chokes on the soap.
Butt Monkey: Mr. Lunt, who is frequently the worthless sidekick, appears insufferably lazy, cross-dresses at least twice, and laments that his life has only included one half hour of happiness. That one day. Between two and two-thirty.
"And remember, kids, God made you special, and he loves you very much."
"Perhaps I can be of assistance!"
"I'm Bob, I'm a tomato, and I'm here to help you!" "I'm Larry, I'm a cucumber, and I'm here to make you giggle!"
Christmas Episode: Five so far: "The Toy That Saved Christmas", "The Star of Christmas", "Saint Nicholas: A Story of Joyful Giving", "The Little Drummer Boy", and "Christmas Sing-Along Songs!".
Composite Character: Mr. Nezzer is sort of one. "The Toy That Saved Christmas" introduced Nebby K. Nezzer's brother Wally, who had the exact same character model and voice. Eventually they started casting "Mr. Nezzer" in other roles. Although we've never seen this [[Animated Actor|s]] out of character in the "real world", it can probably be assumed that he is a single character.
Scallions: We could give him jelly donuts, take 'em all away, we could fill his ears with cheese balls and his nostrils with sorbet. We could use him as a footstool or a table to play Scrabble on, then tie him up and beat him up and throw him out of Babylon! (from the song "What We Gonna Do?")
From "Jonah: A Veggie Tales Movie":
Guard: ...The slap of no return! Everyone: [laughs]
But then you see it's a giant metal fish that swings down on you, turning you into a paste.
From "Gideon — Tuba Warrior":
Gideon:We will defeat the Midianites with our horns and flashlights!
Then there's the Hebrews marching around Jericho getting slushies dropped on their heads.
Did Not Do the Research: An In-Universe example, in Tomato Sawyer and Huckleberry Larry Bob wants to open a Tax Firm on the land that they're trying to own, little to his knowledge that income tax hasn't started yet.
Disproportionate Retribution: In Rack, Shack and Benny. What else do you call burning people alive because they won't sing a song about chocolate bunnies?
Early Installment Weirdness: Where's God When I'm S-Scared? is the only episode to use opening titles in each segment.
Elvish Presley: Literally, in Lord of the Bean. Larry wears a sequined jumpsuit and fake elf ears for his Silly Song. Jimmy the squash even invokes the trope by calling him "an Elvish impersonator."
Embarrassing Slide: A version of this occurs in one of the silly songs (The Song of the Cebu): the song is sung along with a slideshow... which eventually stops showing relevant pictures and starts showing vacation pictures instead. The song quickly ends, to the consternation of Archibald, who wonders just what the ending of the song was supposed to be.
Exactly What It Says on the Tin: "Silly Songs with Larry," the part of the show where Larry comes out and sings a silly song.
Excited Show Title!: God Wants Me to Forgive Them!?!, Very Silly Songs!, Larry-Boy! And the Fib From Outer Space!, Josh and the Big Wall!, Jonah Sing-Along Songs and More!, The Wonderful World of Auto-Tainment!, Bob and Larry's How to Draw!, Heroes of the Bible! Lions, Shepherds and Queens, Oh My!, Heroes of the Bible! Stand Up, Stand Tall, Stand Strong!, Heroes of the Bible! A Baby, A Quest and the Wild, Wild West!, and The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything Sing-Along Songs and More!
Executive Meddling: The politically-correct kind — NBC made them take the explicit Christian references out of the present-day segments of the TV show. Which, unfortunately, somewhat defeats the purpose of the whole thing.
Expository Theme Tune: Whether this is played straight or averted is rather iffy. The theme song says the show's name an awful lot, addresses the show's demographics (It's for the kids who like to talk to tomatoes), and even states how long an episode is. (Cauliflower, sweet and sour, half an hour, Veggie Tales) However, it speaks very little of the show's premise, aside from the mention of the lack of the characters' dexterity, a common point the show makes, and doesn't even speak of the religious aspect, confusing a lot of first-time viewers.
Food Fight: This food fight thingy happens again in "Duke and the Great Pie War".
Foreshadowing: After Larry, Mr. Lunt and Pa Grape successfully host an entire episode (Gideon: Tuba Warrior) as The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything, Pa makes a mock poster with a suggestion to star in their own pirate movie." A year later and guess what happens?
At the end of the episode (Sheerluck Holmes), Larryboy (Larry the Cucumber) states his dress rehearsal for the next show (Larry Boy and The Bad Apple) starts in two minutes.
Four-Fingered Hands: The ONE character with hands - the angel of Hope - has these.
And Buzzsaw Louie from the Christmas movie has fingerless hands.
Herbivore Confusion: A world populated by talking vegetables and fruits, there are pies and popcorn balls as food, and apparently "apple choppers". It was confirmed in the commentary for Duke and the Great Pie War (and demonstrated in Jonah) that there are non-sentient fruits and vegetables in their world as well.
In their version of Daniel and the Lion's Den, a cucumber is tossed to lions.
I Am X, Son of Y: In "Lord of the Bean": Randalf, son of Mandalf; the leader of the Razzberry Forest, Lord Falaminion Tereglith, son of Therebil-Elithimon.
Identical Ancestor: Nebby K. Nezzer's Victorian-era ancestor Ebeneezer is presumably one.
Invisible Anatomy: Averted with feet (the characters move around by hopping), but the characters' lack of hands is constantly Lampshaded.
Right from the start, before the theme song:
Bob: I know! You play the guitar! Larry: Bob, I don't have any hands.
Josh and the Big Wall had Tom Grape and Pa Grape lampshade how they and other characters were applauding a giant rocket.
Tom: How are we clapping? Pa: I have no idea.
"Lyle the Kindly Viking" has a reference.
Bjorn (Lunt): I would clap if I could.
Dr. Jiggle and Mr. Sly repeatedly shows close-ups of a character's hands and feet, who is then shocked when he doesn't have limbs in the long shots. It's kind of weird, really.
Invisible hair as well - in Minnesota Cuke and the Search for Samson's Hairbrush, Martin notices Minnesota's haircut even though he never had any hair to begin with. Though a few scenes later, Minnesota can't use the power of the hairbrush since he has no hair (a reference to The Hairbrush Song). Go figure.
From the personalized show:
Larry: I think we should give our good friend a hand! Bob: But, Larry, we can't. We don't have hands. Larry: I was speaking metaphorically, Bob.
Kids Shouldn't Watch Horror Films: "Where's God When I'm S-scared" starts with Junior Asparagus watching "Frankencelery," and becoming frightened by everything in the house after that. However, the point of the episode is that Junior doesn't need to be scared because God is taking care of him, not that he shouldn't have watched the movie.
Large Ham: Archibald, Larry as Larry-Boy, occasionally Bob
Lotus-Eater Machine: How Bad Apple plans to conquer Bumblyburg just like her great-uncle almost did, starting with the mayor, the reporter, and Larry-Boy.
Medium Awareness: In The Wonderful Wizard of Ha's Larry tells Bob that they can't let the show be too short, they have a whole DVD to fill.
Also in The Wonderful Wizard of Ha's when asking why Pa Grape/The Lion didn't eat the rabbits and animals in the forest if he was so hungry he responeds with "It's a kid show, they won't let me do that."
In Jonah, Dad Asparagus isn't satisfied until there's a big musical number to close the film.
Archibald: You can't just start a song and leave it hanging like that!
No Flow in CGI: The whole reason why the series stars vegetables was to deliberately avert this. While other CG cartoons at the time tended to look stiff and choppy, the simple designs of the VeggieTales characters left the creators free to put a lot more work into making sure they animated fluidly.
No Fourth Wall: The intro and outro segments, some of the Silly Songs, and less frequently the stories themselves.
A rather memorable example was during a segment modeled after a Shakespeare play. As the gourd, Mr. Lunt was pushed onto the "stage" in full drag:
"Ooooo. We gonna get a lot of letters about this."
Jimmy Gourd's reaction is endlessly hilarious to this "fair Ophelia".
No Indoor Voice: As the creators have pointed out in commentary, it wasn't really until Lyle the Kindly Viking that Junior's voice actress stopped screaming all of her lines.
Once per Episode: Bob hates the song that precedes the final Aesop; Larry loves it. Turned on its head in Lord of the Beans, when the evil sporks stole the record — and Bob admits he misses the song.
And Monty Python references, the most explicit being the French Peas as the people of Jericho taunting the Israelites from atop their wall. Oddly enough, they started out playing Philistines in a less explicit reference to the same scene.
In Lyle, the Kindly Viking, the episode starts off with Larry mentioning various viewer questions about sharing, such as "When do I have to share?", "Why do I have to share?", "Whatever happened to Sonny & Cher?".
Perverse Sexual Lust: An in-universe example; in "Barbara Manatee," one of the Silly Songs With Larry segments, Larry appears to be crushing on a manatee from a TV show. He even has a plush of her, which he sings to and dances with.
Playing Against Type: In-universe example: the episode Pistachio has Junior, the kind, lovable asparagus, playing a rebellious, talkative puppet.
Perhaps nowhere more obviously than in Lord of the Bean, where two of the adventurers' names are food puns on those of actual Fellowship members — Ear-a-Corn and Leg-o-Lamb.
Shout Out: In addition to almost every non-Bible story a being straight-up parody or pastiche of some book or movie, we have the following:
At the end of A Snoodle's Tale (which is told in the style of Dr. Seuss), Larry comments that "there was something about that story that made me want to eat green ham."
In Pistachio, Khalil, who is playing the Cricket, says "I'm no fool, no-sirree!" a line from the educational films Disney produced in the '60s and '70s starring Jiminy Cricket.
From The Ballad Of Little Joe, made into a very out-of-place Shout Out simply because of the accent Larry says it in:
And of course the title character is a reference to Bonanza.
In their most recent video, It's A Meaningful Life, Larry and Petunia's characters are named Stewart and Donna, after the actors who played the characters they're parodying in It's a Wonderful Life.
Another It's a Wonderful Life reference in "The Star Of Christmas": Bob as Cavis states "I will teach all of London how to love!"
"Sumo of the Opera" has numerous ones to Rocky, such as the main character being named "the Italian Scallion" and his attempt to at least tie with the current heavy-weight champion.
Larry-Boy and the Bad Apple has a scene parodying the first Charlie and the Chocolate Factory movie: when Bad Apple introduces Larry-Boy to his Lotus-Eater Machine (a museum of chocolate), she wears a purple hat like Wonka's, and does a crazy rant like Wonka does during the boat's Disney Acid Sequence.
Small Town Rivalry: In "The Story of Flibber-O-Loo" (a re-telling of the Good Samaritan story), the towns of Flibber-O-Loo and Jibberty-Lot have a heated rivalry, where they launch shoes and pots at each other with catapults and other devices.
Spell My Name with an S: Larry-Boy/Larryboy/LarryBoy. The first was used in Fib from Outer Space & Rumor Weed, the second was used in the Flash-animated spinoff series, and the third was used in Bad Apple.
Spit Take: When Dave announces his plan to fight Goliath, King Saul spits out his drink.
Stealth Pun: The antagonist in Larry-Boy and the Bad Apple is an apple who dabbles in dealing with temptation. In other words, she's the Forbidden Fruit.
Story Arc: In Josh and the Big Wall, technical difficulties prevented Larry from properly ending The Song of the Cebu, that video's "Silly Songs With Larry" segment. Archibald became so disappointed with Larry's lack of preparation, he announced the cancellation of "Silly Songs" in the next video (Madame Blueberry)'s segment. The Framing Device of the video after that (The End of Silliness?) showed Larry desperately trying to recover from the loss, until Archibald announces that a fan petition prompted him to uncancel "Silly Songs."
Take That: In the Oh, Santa! Silly Song, Larry gives cookies to both a bank robber and a Viking "because it's Christmas." And then the next person comes to the door.
"I'm from the IRS! And I've come to tax your—" (SLAM)
Surveillance Station Slacker: Jimmy and Jerry Gourd, as seen in the episode "Larry-Boy and the Fib from Outer Space!"
The Ultimate Silly Song Countdown was the result of a viewer poll to determine the silliest of the first ten Silly Songs with Larry (not counting Oh, Santa!). The winner was The Hairbrush Song.
Uriah Gambit King George and the Ducky (which bears more than a passing similarity to the original one)
Valley Girl: Only Big Idea would go so far as to turn the Princess of Egypt in their retelling of the story of Moses in the Bulrushes into this - hilariously.
Villain Song: Mr. Nezzer's reprise of "The Bunny Song."
Played for Laughs with "Oh No!" from "Daniel and the Lions' Den" of "Where's God When I'm S-Scared?".
Bad Apple's "The Temptation Song" from Larry-Boy and the Bad Apple.
Visual Pun: One of the books Archibald pulls out in the "Modern Major General" song from The Wonderful World of Auto-tainment! has a picture of Larry in a robe and crown. Larry King!
Scallion #1 (the tall one), Archibald, and the narrator for "Silly Songs with Larry" used to sound different. Archibald's delivery was more hammy, and Scallion's lacked the faux British accent the others had. This gradually blended together until it's pretty much all the same voice. Larry eventually hung a lampshade on this at the end of The Biscuit of Zazzamarandabo by acting surprised that Archibald and the narrator were not the same character. Archibald was surprised, too. In fact, now the creators attempt to place Scallion #1 and Archibald in the same scenes at times, just to prove that they're not the same character.
Just as noticeable is Jerry Gourd, who started out sounding like an impression of Jimmy Gourd's voice (enough to mark them as a matched pair of characters but with a subtle enough difference to be clearly a different actor — Phil and Mike use this approach extensively) but now sounds almost exactly like Larry.
Water Hose Rodeo: In Larry Boy and the Bad Apple, one character attempts to hose off a statue that's been covered in cobwebs. It turns out that the firehose is too strong for him, and he gets flung all over.
Wax On, Wax Off: Mikey, in "Sumo of the Opera," teaches sumo to the Italian Scallion by mopping the floor and climbing the down escalator.
Youthful Freckles: Both Tom and Rosie Grape have them, as do many of the pea characters, no matter their age. However, the French Peas' trickster nature is highlighted through these.
Twippo:(to Khalil the tow truck driver) Ah... have we met?
Animation Bump: Due to the animators having a movie-sized budget, the animation in Jonah is probably the best in the series. Notably, Big Idea was able to get lighting animators who had just finished work on films like Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and Ice Age. The end result is gorgeous.
The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything sort of doesn't count, because it wasn't animated by Big Idea. The animation was provided by Starz Animation.
The caterpillar/worm that eats the shade plant near the end of the Jonah story becomes Jonah's traveling buddy and a recurring character. His mother was a caterpillar; his father was a worm. But he's okay with that now.
The reason for Ninevah's fish obsession was because in real life, they did indeed worship a fish god.
Deus ex Machina / The Cavalry: The King is the one that rescues the heroes from the villain's lair in Pirates. According to the commentary, this is justified since the film is a Christian parable.
Fish out of Water: In the second movie, a trio of layabout waiters freshly fired from a Pirate-themed dinner theatre are thrown back in time to the past.
Foreshadowing: In Jonah, the last pair that Khalil has during the game of Go Fish is a whale.
Freeze Frame Bonus: In Jonah, the menu items in the seafood restaraunt Bob and the gang stop at goes as follows:
GASP!: Jonah, Khalil, and the Pirates all take turns at dramatic gasping when they see just what "The Slap of No Return" is, before all doing a simultaneous gasp.
Germans Love David Hasselhoff: Parodied: In-universe, as the commentary for Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie (from Larry and Mr. Lunt, self-proclaimed actual producers of the film) points out, the first VeggieTales movie (not Jonah), "Socks with Stripes," according to Mr. Lunt, proved a flop in the US, but highly regarded in France.
The Mean Brit: Willory, the Princess's aide, is subtly disapproving of the Pirates when she's around, and openly hostile to them when she's not. Part of the joke being that he's right on with his criticisms.
Khalil: Would you look at yourself?!? You care more about that weed than about all the people in Nineveh!! Jonah: Well... I... Khalil: Why are you here now? Instead of back in the belly of that whale? Because God is compassionate! He wanted to help you! And because he is merciful! He gave you a second chance! Jonah: Oh, yes — and I'm very grateful— Khalil: Has it ever occurred to you that maybe God loves everybody, not just you?! That maybe he wants to give everyone a second chance! He saw that those people needed help - that they didn't know right from wrong - and he wanted to help them! And that is why he sent you! And when you told them what they were doing wrong they said they were sorry - they put down their mackerels and their halibuts - and they asked God for a second chance. And by golly, he gave them one! Don't you see? God wants to give everyone a second chance! And so should we! Jonah: Well, if they get a second chance — those fish-slappers — well, then... it would be better if I were dead! Oh, I wish I were back in that whale! Khalil:(stonily) You are pathetic.
When Jonah protests Khalil's decision to leave, Khalil then retorts:
Khalil: I wanted to be big and important... just like you! But the world doesn't need more people who are "big and important," the world needs more people who are nice. And compassionate. And merciful. That's what I want to be. You can find yourself a new traveling buddy. Goodbye. Jonah: You can't just leave! Khalil: Can and am!
Schizo Tech: In an era of sailing ships and exploration, the King and Big Bad are apparently master tinkers that have built, respectively, a Time Machine and a sort of Powered Armour.
Up to Eleven in Jonah, where the Pirates play ping pong, baby wipes, plush toys with sound chips, tape recorders with motivational tapes and have their own outboard power motor.
Shamu Fu: The Ninevites in the first film are notorious for this.
Shaped Like Itself: One of the extras in Jonah is a tour of Big Idea Studios, where at one point the viewer sees a staff member working at his computer on the unreleased DVD... which you watch on your DVD. Phil Vischer directly Lampshades this.
The Dinner Theatre that the protagonists work at has a Pirate-themed show.
Cavis and Millward's "Princess and the Plumber" in Star of Christmas.
Marlee's "Up with Bunnies" in 'Twas the Night Before Easter.
Shown Their Work: In Jonah, the producers tell the entire story, going beyond what most retellings of Jonah do.
Left the Background Music On: Inside the whale, Jonah and the angels are holding a massive celebration. Cut to the surface as two fisherman hear the music and wonder what on earth is going on.
The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: The Trope Namers themselves star, and the trope itself is deconstructed, as the opening of Jonah has their slacking result in them being completely broke, only to later actually "do something" and get in fantastic adventures.
Jonah: I'm afraid the only thing left is to be thrown into the sea.
Larry: Oh, you don't have to do that! We've got a plank! You can just walk off!
What Do You Mean, It\'s Not Heinous?: Fish slapping. Justified in that it's all a story being told by the modern day Pirates, and saying what the real Assyrians did would be inappropriate for their young audience.