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Smiling Friends's Final Season: Why Adult Swim's Best-Selling Series Has Come to an End
Fans of the quirky Adult Swim animated comedy Smiling Friends were stunned this week when creators Zach Hadel and Michael Cusack announced that the series will conclude with its third season, effectively cancelling further seasons despite prior renewal plans. One of the decade's most talked-about adult animated films abruptly comes to an abrupt end with the surprise announcement made by the showrunners themselves.
By Raviha Imran15 days ago in Geeks
Power Rangers Review: "The Wedding (Part III)"
This three-part arc began with a trip to Australia for the Rangers turning into the group being teleported to a theater and battling various monsters, while learning at the end of Part I that their powers are kaput inside that place. Part II would see the Rangers learn the true reason for their appearance: Lord Zedd and Rita Repulsa are getting married. The Rangers would escape, but their Zord fight would see them defeated due to their power supply being reduced, and they were sent back to the theater.
By Clyde E. Dawkins16 days ago in Geeks
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood Power Rankings. AI-Generated.
The world of Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood isn’t just about alchemy — it’s about sacrifice, ambition, and the terrifying cost of power taken too far. Some fighters rely on skill and discipline but fall apart against overwhelming force. Others appear limited at first glance, only to reveal terrifying versatility once the battlefield shifts in their favor. And then there are the monsters — beings whose regeneration, Philosopher’s Stone reserves, or mastery of alchemy push them so far beyond human limits that ordinary rules simply stop applying.
By Top Ranked16 days ago in Geeks
Wonder Pets In The City Will Premiere on March 20th For Season 2
There was a first look at ‘Wonder Pets: In The City’ Season 2. The new season will premiere on Apple TV+ on March 20th. The series follows three new animal protagonists: Izzy the Guinea Pig, Tate the Snake and Zuri the Bunny, who live in New York City and travel all around the globe in their jetcar. They are all different characters from the original three. This reboot has actually been around since 2024. The original three were Linnie, Ming Ming and Tucks.
By Levi Omeke16 days ago in Geeks
5 Underappreciated Cartoons IV
Well, well, I finally found more. It's been three years since my last Underappreciated Cartoons list. That's three years of searching for stuff to put into a fourth entry. It took a while, but I think I finally found a couple of good ones.
By Greg Seebregts16 days ago in Geeks
Invincible Power Rankings. AI-Generated.
The world of Invincible isn’t built on clean heroics or simple good-versus-evil lines. It’s a universe where cities fall in minutes, loyalties shatter without warning, and strength isn’t just about who can throw the hardest punch — it’s about who survives when entire civilizations go to war. Some fighters look unstoppable until they face someone faster. Others seem secondary until the body count starts rising. And then there are the beings so overwhelmingly powerful that every battle feels less like a fight and more like a reckoning.
By Top Ranked17 days ago in Geeks
"Beyond the Gates" Turns One!
It seems like yesterday. It really, truly does. As those who read my stories know, I have had a love-hate relationship with soaps for nearly my entire life; I hate soaps but love their villainesses. I guess I was basically waiting for that perfect soap to finally hit the small screen. One with good angles, one that isn't so over the top, and one with good representation.
By Clyde E. Dawkins17 days ago in Geeks
SpongeBob Review
The episode "F.U.N." unfolds as a masterclass in character-driven comedy and narrative irony, centering on Plankton’s most hilariously transparent scheme to date. From the opening moments, the Chum Bucket’s oppressive gloom is a stark, almost visceral contrast to the sun-drenched, vibrant chaos of the Krusty Krab, a visual metaphor for the fundamental conflict between cynical ambition and joyful innocence. Plankton, tiny and vibrating with a fury that seems to distort the very air around him, constructs his "Friendship, U & Me, and Anywhere and Anytime" acronym not as a genuine olive branch but as a convoluted trap, his every syllable dripping with insincerity. The scene is a tightly wound spring of tension, as we, the audience, are complicit in the joke, watching SpongeBob—radiating pure, unadulterated optimism—plunge headfirst into the obvious snare with a trusting eagerness that is both exasperating and profoundly endearing.
By Forest Green17 days ago in Geeks
SpongeBob Review
The neon-drenched stage of the Krusty Krab talent show becomes an arena of brutal, unvarnished Bikini Bottom culture in “Culture Shock,” a masterclass in satirical storytelling that uses SpongeBob’s boundless optimism as a sacrificial lamb. From the moment the curtain rises, the episode meticulously constructs a world where genuine artistic expression is irrelevant, replaced by a cynical ratings machine run by a smarmy, suit-clad producer and an audience whose applause is a fickle currency. SpongeBob’s earnest, if bizarre, jellyfishing routine—complete with a literal net and interpretive dance—is not merely bad; it is an ontological crime against the very concept of entertainment as understood by this crowd, who are immediately shown to be more interested in nachos than narrative. The scene is painted with excruciating detail: the sweat gleams on his porous forehead under the spotlight, his smile never wavering as the boos begin like a low tide and rise into a roaring wave of contempt, a visual symphony of his heart breaking in real-time as the camera zooms in on his crushed, wide-eyed innocence.
By Forest Green17 days ago in Geeks
THE MAN YOU THOUGHT YOU KNEW FROM YOUR CHILDHOOD
For many people, childhood memories are stitched together by television shows that felt safe, familiar, and quietly meaningful. You may not remember every episode, but you remember faces. You remember voices. And sometimes, you remember a character so clearly that they begin to feel like someone who existed in your own home. For millions of viewers, that character was Sam McGuire, the dad from Lizzie McGuire. And the man behind that role was Robert Carradine.
By S.A Charles17 days ago in Geeks
Power Rangers Review: "The Wedding (Part II)"
When we last left our heroes, they were vacationing in Australia, with no worries. Seriously, there were no worries. Lord Zedd was about to recharge his evil energies, leaving the Rangers with no emergencies to deal with. However, when one rat sleeps, another creeps in, as Rita Repulsa crash-landed on moon and set her sights on the ultimate takeover. The plan was to dose Zedd with a love potion, marry him, and then overrule him.
By Clyde E. Dawkins18 days ago in Geeks











