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* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Most fans today gain access to the show through websites including kisscartoon, and watchcartoononline, or through illegal downloading from torrents. Time Squad has never been officially released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it available for streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). If copyright strikes haven't taken them down yet, one might be lucky to find the entire series on Website/YouTube or dailymotion every so often. The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active).

to:

* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Most fans today gain access to the show through websites including kisscartoon, and watchcartoononline, or through illegal downloading from torrents. Time Squad has never been officially released on only received one official DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it release in the United Kingdom (containing the first three episodes). It also isn’t available for streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). If copyright strikes haven't taken them down yet, one might be lucky to find the entire series on Website/YouTube or dailymotion every so often. The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active).
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** According to show writer, Carlos Ramos, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/181960714855/time-squads-adam-eve-ep an episode centered on the Time Squad going back to the Garden of Eden to get Adam and Eve to partake of the forbidden fruit from The Tree of Knowledge was written, but never made]] (the main reason isn't known, but it can be speculated that the content would have pushed things a bit too far). Also: Tommy Chong (from the stoner comedy duo, Cheech and Chong) was going to be the voice of Adam, but Dave Wasson rejected the choice for being too obvious.

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** According to show writer, Carlos Ramos, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/181960714855/time-squads-adam-eve-ep an episode centered on the Time Squad going back to the Garden of Eden to get Adam and Eve to partake of the forbidden fruit from The Tree of Knowledge was written, but never made]] (the main reason isn't known, but it can be speculated that the content would have pushed things a bit too far).far such as showing two naked people and the religious reference). Also: Tommy Chong (from the stoner comedy duo, Cheech and Chong) was going to be the voice of Adam, but Dave Wasson rejected the choice for being too obvious.
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** Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing some voice work, including random civilians and animals including Mrs. O'Leary's Cow, Billy[[note]]the kid who got crushed by the piano in "The Clownfather"[[/note]], and a pterodactyl.

to:

** Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing some voice work, including random civilians and animals including like Mrs. O'Leary's Cow, Billy[[note]]the kid who got crushed by the piano in "The Clownfather"[[/note]], and a pterodactyl.
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** According to Dave Wasson, had the show got a 3rd season, he would've wanted a crossover with WesternAnimation/MrPeabodyAndSherman.
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** The series was originally ordered as a [[https://web.archive.org/web/20010309054643/http://pressroom.turner.com/pr/cda/newsrelease/1,2467,3346%7c29,00.html single season of 26 episodes]], before being split into two separate 13 episode seasons.
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* WordOfGay: On the ''[[Podcast/TalkinToonsWithRobPaulsen Talkin' Toons]]'' [[http://techjives.net/2012/05/04/039-mark-hamill-on-talkin-toons-with-rob-paulsen-weekly-voice-acting-and-voice-over-tips/ podcast]], Mark Hamill and Rob Paulsen crack jokes about how "there was no ambiguity with regard to [Larry's] sexual preference." In fact, Rob Paulsen has made references to Larry's behavior in other episodes of his podcast.

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* WordOfGay: On the ''[[Podcast/TalkinToonsWithRobPaulsen Talkin' Toons]]'' [[http://techjives.net/2012/05/04/039-mark-hamill-on-talkin-toons-with-rob-paulsen-weekly-voice-acting-and-voice-over-tips/ podcast]], Mark Hamill and Rob Paulsen crack jokes about how "there was no ambiguity with regard to [Larry's] sexual preference." In fact, Rob Paulsen has made references to Larry's behavior in other episodes of his podcast.podcast.
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* The series is the very first Creator/CartoonNetwork original series entirely produced by Cartoon Network Studios, no longer a division of Creator/HannaBarbera following the death of William Hanna in 2001.[[note]]''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'', ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyBravo'', ''WesternAnimation/CowAndChicken'', ''WesternAnimation/IAmWeasel'', and ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'' were produced in part by Hanna-Barbera; ''WesternAnimation/EdEddNEddy'' was produced by a.k.a. Cartoon; ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' was produced by Stretch Films; and ''WesternAnimation/MikeLuAndOg'' was produced by Kinofilm in LA and Studio Pilot in Russia[[/note]]
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* CrossDressingVoices: Otto is voiced by Creator/PamelaAdlon, who often voices little boys (i.e. [[WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill Bobby Hill]], [[WesternAnimation/TheOblongs Milo Oblong]] -- in fact, Otto's voice is closer to Milo Oblong's than Bobby Hill's) or, in the case of ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' and ''WesternAnimation/PepperAnn'', girls who look or act like boys (Spinelli and Margaret Rose "Moose" Pearson).

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* CrossDressingVoices: Otto is voiced by Creator/PamelaAdlon, who often voices little boys (i.e. [[WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill Bobby Hill]], [[WesternAnimation/TheOblongs Milo Oblong]] -- in fact, Otto's voice is closer to Milo Oblong's than Bobby Hill's) or, in the case of ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' and ''WesternAnimation/PepperAnn'', girls who look or act [[{{Tomboy}} act]] like boys (Spinelli and Margaret Rose "Moose" Pearson).

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Actor Allusion is not Trivia (at least not anymore). Removing second trope from the same trope entry and merging it into the example. Removing mass natter and irrelevant info.


* ActorAllusion: Yes, that's [[Creator/MarkHamill Luke Skywalker/The Joker]] voicing [[StarWars an effeminate robot]] not unlike an exaggerated take on C-3PO.



* DescendedCreator: Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing some voice work, including random civilians and animals including Mrs. O'Leary's Cow, Billy[[note]]the kid who got crushed by the piano in "The Clownfather"[[/note]], and a pterodactyl.

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* DescendedCreator: DescendedCreator:
**
Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing some voice work, including random civilians and animals including Mrs. O'Leary's Cow, Billy[[note]]the kid who got crushed by the piano in "The Clownfather"[[/note]], and a pterodactyl.



* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness"[[note]]the whole episode parody of ''Scooby Doo, Where Are You?'' where the Time Squad trio go back to 1912 to investigate rumors that the White House is haunted[[/note]] was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender"[[note]]the sequel episode of "Blackbeard, Warm Heart", where Blackbeard the pirate is back to being an environmentalist[[/note]] but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma"[[note]]the episode where Tuddrussel forces himself to be nice to Larry, while the Time Squad go back to the Aztec empire to get Montezuma to stop doing stand-up comedy[[/note]] It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the U.S. government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste.
** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]] This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns with no censorship done to it.

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: MissingEpisode:
**
For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness"[[note]]the whole episode parody of ''Scooby Doo, Where Are You?'' where the Time Squad trio go back to 1912 to investigate rumors that the White House is haunted[[/note]] Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender"[[note]]the sequel episode of "Blackbeard, Warm Heart", where Blackbeard the pirate is back to being an environmentalist[[/note]] Offender" but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma"[[note]]the episode where Tuddrussel forces himself to be nice to Larry, while the Time Squad go back to the Aztec empire to get Montezuma to stop doing stand-up comedy[[/note]] Zuma". It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the U.S. government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste.
** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also [[ScheduleSlip held back back]] because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]] This ended up being all for nothing, as Bush. However, Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns with no censorship done to it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
entry clean up


* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Most fans today gain access to the show through websites including kisscartoon, and watchcartoononline, or through illegal downloading from torrents. Time Squad has never been officially released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it available for streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). If copyright strikes haven't taken then down yet, one might be lucky to find the entire series on Website/YouTube or dailymotion every so often. The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active).

to:

* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Most fans today gain access to the show through websites including kisscartoon, and watchcartoononline, or through illegal downloading from torrents. Time Squad has never been officially released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it available for streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). If copyright strikes haven't taken then them down yet, one might be lucky to find the entire series on Website/YouTube or dailymotion every so often. The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active).



* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness"[[note]]the whole episode parody of ''Scooby Doo, Where Are You?'' where the Time Squad trio go back to 1912 to investigate rumors that the White House is haunted[[/note]] was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender"[[note]]the sequel episode of "Blackbeard, Warm Heart", where Blackbeard the pirate is back to being an environmentalist[[/note]] but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma"[[note]]the episode where Tuddrussel forces himself to be nice to Larry, while the Time Squad go back to the Aztec empire to get Montezuma to stop doing stand-up comedy[[/note]] It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the U.S. government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. Another theory as to why "White House Weirdness" got pulled was possible legal issues over using the actual ''Scooby Doo'' music track for this episode.
** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype, complete with effeminate voice and a love for Judy Garland[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns with no censorship done to it.

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness"[[note]]the whole episode parody of ''Scooby Doo, Where Are You?'' where the Time Squad trio go back to 1912 to investigate rumors that the White House is haunted[[/note]] was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender"[[note]]the sequel episode of "Blackbeard, Warm Heart", where Blackbeard the pirate is back to being an environmentalist[[/note]] but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma"[[note]]the episode where Tuddrussel forces himself to be nice to Larry, while the Time Squad go back to the Aztec empire to get Montezuma to stop doing stand-up comedy[[/note]] It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the U.S. government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. Another theory as to why "White House Weirdness" got pulled was possible legal issues over using the actual ''Scooby Doo'' music track for this episode.\n
** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype, complete with effeminate voice and a love for Judy Garland[[/note]]). reasons[[note]] This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns with no censorship done to it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
entry clean up


* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Has never been released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it on Netflix or Hulu streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active). The entire series is available to watch on Website/YouTube[[note]]or was, since multiple copyright strikes have taken it down. The only ''Time Squad''-based clip found on Website/YouTube is the second season opening. If you're lucky, you might find some of the ''Cartoon Cartoon Friday'' wraparounds that had the ''Time Squad'' trio as hosts, particularly the one with Tuddrussel vs. Johnny Bravo in a pex flex-off or the sing-along promo, both the long version and the short version, but those usually get taken down too[[/note]], Dailymotion, Kisscartoon, Watchcartoononline, and illegal downloading from torrents (all of which, save Website/YouTube, have every episode). It's also one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}} in America [[note]]It did enjoy a good run on the German and Swedish feeds of Boomerang[[/note]]

to:

* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Has Most fans today gain access to the show through websites including kisscartoon, and watchcartoononline, or through illegal downloading from torrents. Time Squad has never been officially released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it on Netflix or Hulu available for streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). If copyright strikes haven't taken then down yet, one might be lucky to find the entire series on Website/YouTube or dailymotion every so often. The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active). The entire series is available to watch on Website/YouTube[[note]]or was, since multiple copyright strikes have taken it down. The only ''Time Squad''-based clip found on Website/YouTube is the second season opening. If you're lucky, you might find some of the ''Cartoon Cartoon Friday'' wraparounds that had the ''Time Squad'' trio as hosts, particularly the one with Tuddrussel vs. Johnny Bravo in a pex flex-off or the sing-along promo, both the long version and the short version, but those usually get taken down too[[/note]], Dailymotion, Kisscartoon, Watchcartoononline, and illegal downloading from torrents (all of which, save Website/YouTube, have every episode). It's also one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}} in America [[note]]It did enjoy a good run on the German and Swedish feeds of Boomerang[[/note]]

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Removed: 239

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Has never been released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it on Netflix or Hulu streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active). The entire series is available to watch on Website/YouTube[[note]]or was, since multiple copyright strikes have taken it down. The only ''Time Squad''-based clip found on Website/YouTube is the second season opening[[/note]], Dailymotion, Kisscartoon, Watchcartoononline, and illegal downloading from torrents (all of which, save Website/YouTube, have every episode).
** Not to mention, it's one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}}.[[note]]At-least in the US as it does (or at-least did) air on Boomerang in places like Germany and Sweden.[[/note]]

to:

* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Has never been released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it on Netflix or Hulu streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present). The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active). The entire series is available to watch on Website/YouTube[[note]]or was, since multiple copyright strikes have taken it down. The only ''Time Squad''-based clip found on Website/YouTube is the second season opening[[/note]], opening. If you're lucky, you might find some of the ''Cartoon Cartoon Friday'' wraparounds that had the ''Time Squad'' trio as hosts, particularly the one with Tuddrussel vs. Johnny Bravo in a pex flex-off or the sing-along promo, both the long version and the short version, but those usually get taken down too[[/note]], Dailymotion, Kisscartoon, Watchcartoononline, and illegal downloading from torrents (all of which, save Website/YouTube, have every episode).
** Not to mention, it's
episode). It's also one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}}.[[note]]At-least Creator/{{Boomerang}} in America [[note]]It did enjoy a good run on the US as it does (or at-least did) air on Boomerang in places like Germany German and Sweden.[[/note]]Swedish feeds of Boomerang[[/note]]



** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns with no censorship done to it.

to:

** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype[[/note]]).stereotype, complete with effeminate voice and a love for Judy Garland[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns with no censorship done to it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Not to mention, it's one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}}[[note]]At-least in the US as it does (or at-least did) air on Boomerang in places like Germany and Sweden.[[/note]]

to:

** Not to mention, it's one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}}[[note]]At-least Creator/{{Boomerang}}.[[note]]At-least in the US as it does (or at-least did) air on Boomerang in places like Germany and Sweden.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

**Not to mention, it's one of the few 2000s Creator/CartoonNetwork originals to have never aired on Creator/{{Boomerang}}[[note]]At-least in the US as it does (or at-least did) air on Boomerang in places like Germany and Sweden.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. Another theory as to why "White House Weirdness" got pulled was possible legal issues over using the actual ''Scooby Doo'' music track for this episode.
** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" Weirdness"[[note]]the whole episode parody of ''Scooby Doo, Where Are You?'' where the Time Squad trio go back to 1912 to investigate rumors that the White House is haunted[[/note]] was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," Offender"[[note]]the sequel episode of "Blackbeard, Warm Heart", where Blackbeard the pirate is back to being an environmentalist[[/note]] but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." Zuma"[[note]]the episode where Tuddrussel forces himself to be nice to Larry, while the Time Squad go back to the Aztec empire to get Montezuma to stop doing stand-up comedy[[/note]] It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the U.S. government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. Another theory as to why "White House Weirdness" got pulled was possible legal issues over using the actual ''Scooby Doo'' music track for this episode.
** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.reruns with no censorship done to it.



** Dave Wasson himself was originally going to be the voice of Tuddrussel.

to:

** Dave Wasson himself was originally going to be the voice of Officer Buck Tuddrussel.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.

to:

** "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]).Police". Or, more famously, how the ''Dexter's Laboratory'' episode "Dial M For Monkey: Barbequor" was replaced with the episode "Dexter's Lab: A Story" due to possible legal issues with Marvel over their spoof of The Silver Surfer character and some inappropriate humor, such as The Infragible Krunk being drunk at the barbecue and The Silver Surfer spoof being a CampGay stereotype[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** In April of 2020 Cartoon Network briefly added the first episode to their app for viewing, and soon after the same episode was released on a wide range of other streaming sites, including Apple TV, Hulu, and SlingTV. But this was only temporary, and fans are waiting for more information as to wether or not Warner Media will have Time Squad on HBO Max in the near future.
* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste.

to:

** In April of 2020 2020, Cartoon Network briefly added the first episode ("Eli Whitney's Flesh-Eating Mistake" and "Never Look a Trojan in the Gift Horse") to their app for viewing, and soon viewing. Soon after the same episode was released on a wide range of other streaming sites, including Apple TV, Hulu, and SlingTV. But this Sling TV. This, however, was only temporary, and fans are waiting for more information as to wether or not see if Warner Media will have Time Squad include the entire series on HBO Max in the near future.
Max.
* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. Another theory as to why "White House Weirdness" got pulled was possible legal issues over using the actual ''Scooby Doo'' music track for this episode.

Changed: 1281

Removed: 966

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste[[note]]Other theories as to why "White House Weirdness" was bumped from its original slot include the fact that, since "White House Weirdness" was a full episode parody of ''Scooby Doo'' -- complete with use of the original 1969 series' music -- Cartoon Network's legal department may have told Wasson and company that they needed permission to use the music before it can air, and, the simple fact that Cartoon Network was dealing with the fallout of firing the crew and was trying to decide whether to shelve the remaining episodes or burn them off[[/note]].

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste[[note]]Other theories as to why "White House Weirdness" was bumped from its original slot include the fact that, since "White House Weirdness" was a full episode parody of ''Scooby Doo'' -- complete with use of the original 1969 series' music -- Cartoon Network's legal department may have told Wasson and company that they needed permission to use the music before it can air, and, the simple fact that Cartoon Network was dealing with the fallout of firing the crew and was trying to decide whether to shelve the remaining episodes or burn them off[[/note]].taste.



** Judging by some clips in both [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ig_Txr3jLQ the aired]] and [[https://lydiduh.tumblr.com/post/31019789207/boogiepoeta-punmonster-001-season-2-opening animatic]] version of the season two opening, ''Time Squad'''s second (or third) season was supposed to have episodes featuring William Tell, Stonehenge, the Easter Island heads, a sequel episode with Albert Einstein, and one where Henry VIII does ballet and Larry is disgusted over it.
* WordOfGay: On the ''[[Podcast/TalkinToonsWithRobPaulsen Talkin' Toons]]'' [[http://techjives.net/2012/05/04/039-mark-hamill-on-talkin-toons-with-rob-paulsen-weekly-voice-acting-and-voice-over-tips/ podcast]], Mark Hamill and Rob Paulsen crack jokes about how "there was no ambiguity with regard to [Larry's] sexual preference." In fact, Rob Paulsen has made references to Larry's behavior in other episodes of his podcast. No word on the HoYay between Larry and Tuddrussel though, but it's clear that the show creator and, by proxy, the voice actors knew from the start what Larry was supposed to be[[note]]in fact, according to Rob Paulsen, Dave Wasson did plan for Larry to be gay, mostly for character development reasons and mostly because Mark Hamill's audition for the character was so funny that they'd be stupid not to choose him[[/note]], reassuring fans that they weren't just imagining/misinterpreting things nor was it wishful thinking by YaoiFangirls.

to:

** Judging by some clips in both [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ig_Txr3jLQ the aired]] and [[https://lydiduh.tumblr.com/post/31019789207/boogiepoeta-punmonster-001-season-2-opening animatic]] version of the season two opening, ''Time Squad'''s second (or third) season was supposed to have episodes featuring William Tell, Stonehenge, the Easter Island heads, a sequel episode with Albert Einstein, and one where Henry VIII does ballet and Larry is disgusted over it.
* WordOfGay: On the ''[[Podcast/TalkinToonsWithRobPaulsen Talkin' Toons]]'' [[http://techjives.net/2012/05/04/039-mark-hamill-on-talkin-toons-with-rob-paulsen-weekly-voice-acting-and-voice-over-tips/ podcast]], Mark Hamill and Rob Paulsen crack jokes about how "there was no ambiguity with regard to [Larry's] sexual preference." In fact, Rob Paulsen has made references to Larry's behavior in other episodes of his podcast. No word on the HoYay between Larry and Tuddrussel though, but it's clear that the show creator and, by proxy, the voice actors knew from the start what Larry was supposed to be[[note]]in fact, according to Rob Paulsen, Dave Wasson did plan for Larry to be gay, mostly for character development reasons and mostly because Mark Hamill's audition for the character was so funny that they'd be stupid not to choose him[[/note]], reassuring fans that they weren't just imagining/misinterpreting things nor was it wishful thinking by YaoiFangirls.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
updated info


** As of 2020, however, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/614673444689379328/they-started-to-put-time-squad-on-cns-streaming Apple TV's Cartoon Network streaming app has all the episodes]].

to:

** As In April of 2020, however, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/614673444689379328/they-started-to-put-time-squad-on-cns-streaming Apple TV's 2020 Cartoon Network briefly added the first episode to their app for viewing, and soon after the same episode was released on a wide range of other streaming app has all sites, including Apple TV, Hulu, and SlingTV. But this was only temporary, and fans are waiting for more information as to wether or not Warner Media will have Time Squad on HBO Max in the episodes]].near future.

Added: 1189

Changed: 1463

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* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. "Floral taste[[note]]Other theories as to why "White House Weirdness" was bumped from its original slot include the fact that, since "White House Weirdness" was a full episode parody of ''Scooby Doo'' -- complete with use of the original 1969 series' music -- Cartoon Network's legal department may have told Wasson and company that they needed permission to use the music before it can air, and, the simple fact that Cartoon Network was dealing with the fallout of firing the crew and was trying to decide whether to shelve the remaining episodes or burn them off[[/note]].
**"Floral
Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003.

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003.2003 and some overseas Cartoon Network channels do air "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" in reruns.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003.

to:

* MissingEpisode and ScheduleSlip: For reasons unknown, "White House Weirdness" was supposed to air after "Repeat Offender," but was replaced with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Monty Zuma." It has been speculated that because of the stringent censorship about mocking the government that was prevalent after the September 11th attacks, depicting The White House as a haunted house would have been in bad taste. "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" (the final two episodes) were also held back because Cartoon Network was concerned over complaints about "Orphan Substitute"'s depiction of George W. Bush ("Floral Patton" being banned was a case of guilt by association, as this cartoon was made back before a show creator could do a 10-minute episode of his or her show and just mix and match episodes if one got pulled for content reasons).reasons[[note]]though there were cases of this happening in the "Cartoon Cartoons" era of Cartoon Network, as seen with the syndicated run of ''Cow and Chicken'', which mixed and matched episodes to cover up the fact that ''I Am Weasel'' was spun-off into its own show and such episodes as "Buffalo Gals", "Chicken in the Bathroom", and "Grizzly Beaver Safari" were removed due to content -- "Buffalo Gals", especially, since all reruns have that episode replaced with season one's "Orthodontic Police"[[/note]]). This ended up being all for nothing, as Cartoon Network aired "Floral Patton" and "Orphan Substitute" as part of a Thanksgiving weekend block in 2003.



** Dave Wasson was originally going to be the voice of Tuddrussel.
** According to show writer, Carlos Ramos, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/181960714855/time-squads-adam-eve-ep an episode centered on the Time Squad going back to the Garden of Eden to get Adam and Eve to partake of the forbidden fruit from The Tree of Knowledge was written, but never made]] (most likely because it would have pushed things too far). Also: Tommy Chong (from the stoner comedy duo, Cheech and Chong) was going to be the voice of Adam, but Dave Wasson rejected the choice for being too obvious.
** Judging by some of the clips in both [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ig_Txr3jLQ the aired]] and [[https://lydiduh.tumblr.com/post/31019789207/boogiepoeta-punmonster-001-season-2-opening animatic]] version of the season two opening, ''Time Squad'''s second (or third) season was supposed to have episodes featuring William Tell, Stonehenge, the Easter Island heads, a sequel episode with Albert Einstein, and one where Henry VIII does ballet and Larry is disgusted over it.

to:

** Dave Wasson himself was originally going to be the voice of Tuddrussel.
** According to show writer, Carlos Ramos, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/181960714855/time-squads-adam-eve-ep an episode centered on the Time Squad going back to the Garden of Eden to get Adam and Eve to partake of the forbidden fruit from The Tree of Knowledge was written, but never made]] (most likely because (the main reason isn't known, but it can be speculated that the content would have pushed things a bit too far). Also: Tommy Chong (from the stoner comedy duo, Cheech and Chong) was going to be the voice of Adam, but Dave Wasson rejected the choice for being too obvious.
** Judging by some of the clips in both [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ig_Txr3jLQ the aired]] and [[https://lydiduh.tumblr.com/post/31019789207/boogiepoeta-punmonster-001-season-2-opening animatic]] version of the season two opening, ''Time Squad'''s second (or third) season was supposed to have episodes featuring William Tell, Stonehenge, the Easter Island heads, a sequel episode with Albert Einstein, and one where Henry VIII does ballet and Larry is disgusted over it.

Added: 195

Changed: 344

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Has never been released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it on Netflix or Hulu streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present)[[note]]though with the upcoming streaming service, HBO Max, there might be a chance this will be shown, since that service is following in the footsteps of Disney+ and showing cartoons from the Warner Bros. archives and acquired shows from the Ted Turner-owned networks, such as TBS, TNT, and, of course, Cartoon Network and Boomerang[[/note]]. The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active). The entire series is available to watch on Website/YouTube[[note]]or was, since multiple copyright strikes have taken it down. The only ''Time Squad''-based clip found on Website/YouTube is the second season opening[[/note]], Dailymotion, Kisscartoon, Watchcartoononline, and illegal downloading from torrents (all of which, save Website/YouTube, have every episode).

to:

* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Has never been released on DVD or Blu-Ray, nor is it on Netflix or Hulu streaming like most of the other Cartoon Network shows (past and present)[[note]]though with the upcoming streaming service, HBO Max, there might be a chance this will be shown, since that service is following in the footsteps of Disney+ and showing cartoons from the Warner Bros. archives and acquired shows from the Ted Turner-owned networks, such as TBS, TNT, and, of course, Cartoon Network and Boomerang[[/note]].present). The show did appear on Cartoon Network's website as part of its 20th anniversary in 2012, but only in clips, not full episodes. Dave Wasson's website had a ''Time Squad'' episode up ("Billy the Baby" -- possibly because Wasson considers that episode his magnum opus), but no other full episodes (as of 2020, that website is no longer active). The entire series is available to watch on Website/YouTube[[note]]or was, since multiple copyright strikes have taken it down. The only ''Time Squad''-based clip found on Website/YouTube is the second season opening[[/note]], Dailymotion, Kisscartoon, Watchcartoononline, and illegal downloading from torrents (all of which, save Website/YouTube, have every episode).


Added DiffLines:

**As of 2020, however, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/614673444689379328/they-started-to-put-time-squad-on-cns-streaming Apple TV's Cartoon Network streaming app has all the episodes]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* DescendedCreator: Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing some voice work, including random civilians and animals including Mrs. O'Leary's Cow and a pterodactyl.

to:

* DescendedCreator: Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing some voice work, including random civilians and animals including Mrs. O'Leary's Cow Cow, Billy[[note]]the kid who got crushed by the piano in "The Clownfather"[[/note]], and a pterodactyl.

Changed: 276

Removed: 536

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* DescendedCreator: Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing vocal effects.
** "Napoleon the Conquered" has one of its writers Carlos Ramos[[note]]the same one who created ''WesternAnimation/TheXs'' for Nickelodeon[[/note]], as the voice of Napoleon.

to:

* DescendedCreator: Some episodes have the show's creator Dave Wasson doing vocal effects.
some voice work, including random civilians and animals including Mrs. O'Leary's Cow and a pterodactyl.
** "Napoleon the Conquered" has Carlos Ramos, one of its writers Carlos Ramos[[note]]the the main writers, [[note]]the same one who created ''WesternAnimation/TheXs'' for Nickelodeon[[/note]], as voiced Napoleon in the voice of Napoleon.episode "Napoleon the Conquered" and the Spelling Bee Champ in "Orphan Substitute".



** ''Time Squad'' was originally going to be a Nickelodeon Nicktoon (since Dave Wasson was doing animated shorts for ''Oh Yeah! Cartoons'', it seemed logical that Nick would want David to do a full series for them). While it's not explicitly stated why Dave Wasson chose Cartoon Network over Nickelodeon, it can be assumed that, much like Danny Antonnucci with ''Ed, Edd, and Eddy'', Wasson was afraid Nickelodeon would bombard the show with ExecutiveMeddling and most (if not all) of the show's most risque moments would be toned down.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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** According to show writer, Carlos Ramos, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/181960714855/time-squads-adam-eve-ep an episode centered on the Time Squad going back to the Garden of Eden to get Adam and Eve to partake of the forbidden fruit from The Tree of Knowledge was written, but never made]].

to:

** According to show writer, Carlos Ramos, [[https://thecarlosramos.tumblr.com/post/181960714855/time-squads-adam-eve-ep an episode centered on the Time Squad going back to the Garden of Eden to get Adam and Eve to partake of the forbidden fruit from The Tree of Knowledge was written, but never made]].made]] (most likely because it would have pushed things too far). Also: Tommy Chong (from the stoner comedy duo, Cheech and Chong) was going to be the voice of Adam, but Dave Wasson rejected the choice for being too obvious.

Top