

|
| Beavis and Butt-head | |
![]() Beavis (right) and Butt-head (left). |
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| Format | Sitcom |
| Run time | 18-20 minutes (per episode) |
| Creator(s) | Mike Judge |
| Starring | Mike Judge Tracy Grandstaff Adam Welsh |
| Country | USA |
| Network | MTV/VH1 |
| Original run | March 4, 1993 – November 28, 1997 |
| No. of episodes | 199 |
Beavis and Butt-head is an animated series that aired on the cable television channel MTV from 1993 to 1997. Each show contains short cartoons centering around a pair of post-pubescent teenagers by the names of Beavis and Butt-head who live and go to school in the fictional town of Highland. These cartoons were broken up by short breaks in which Beavis and Butt-head watch music videos and poke fun at them.
Contents |
Beavis and Butt-head's lifestyles revolve around TV, nachos, Fruity Whips, shopping malls, and trying to "score with chicks". Both Beavis and Butt-head are revealed in one episode to be highschool freshmen (this means that they are probably 14 or 15 years old assuming they haven't been held back). Beavis wears a blue Metallica T-shirt, while Butt-head wears a gray AC/DC T-shirt. (On some merchandising items these were changed to shirts saying "Skull" and "Death Rock" due to trademark and licensing legalities.)
Beavis has blonde hair, an underbite and a fixated stare on his face which almost never looks straight but to the side. Beavis grunts when he laughs and his voice is reminiscent of horror film characters played by actor Peter Lorre. According to available information, Beavis' birthdate is October 28, 1979.
Butt-head has brown hair, dental braces and his eyes are squinted. Butt-head speaks nasally with deep voice and a slight lisp, repeatedly punctuating his speech with "uhh..." Both Beavis and Butt-head constantly snicker.
Their full names were never mentioned on the show. However it was suggested, in the film Beavis and Butt-head Do America, that Butt-head's name is actually "Butt Head". An old lady asks him his last name. He tells her it's "Head", adding "My first name's Butt". In an episode of the TV show, he mentions having a cousin named Richard Head, a play off of Dick Head.
Butt-head seems calmer and marginally more intelligent than Beavis. Butt-head is usually oblivious of subtleties, while Beavis is somewhat oblivious of the obvious.
The series has featured many recurring characters, most of whom appeared in minor roles in the early days and whom were not initially given names. Also listed are a number of popular and memorable one-shot characters. It should be noted that some of these characters will be listed as only descriptions, as many characters are never given names.
Mike Judge created the Beavis and Butt-head characters for an animated short for the Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation. This short, named "Frog Baseball", was aired on MTV's independent animation showcase Liquid Television, and featured the two playing baseball with a living frog as the ball.
The duo introduced a plethora of slang insults and terms into the lexicon including "buttmunch", "fartknocker", "bunghole", chode, "ass munch", "TP", "spank the monkey" and others. Early episodes gave them a juvenile obsession with fire and dangerous behavior. The show was blamed for numerous child deaths as the result of fire and dangerous stunts. The references were excised from further broadcastings, being replaced to some extent with simply silly stunts, bad pick-up lines, etc. References to fire were often cut from earlier episodes in reruns. Other episodes were uneditable and MTV opted to not rerun them.
Jabs at the controversy were made in subsequent episodes.
Early episodes with the controversial content intact are rare and traded on home-made tapes made from the original broadcasts. In an interview included with the recent Mike Judge Collection DVD set, Judge says he is unsure if some of the earlier episodes still exist in their uncensored form.
MTV also responded by broadcasting the program after 11:00 P.M., and adding a disclaimer reminding viewers that:
Beavis and Butt-head, along with Ren and Stimpy and The Simpsons, pushed the boundaries of cartoons away from clean material for small children. They were famously lambasted by Democratic senator Fritz Hollings as "Buffcoat and Beaver" which would subsequently become a running gag on the show of adults mispronouncing their names. Critics, though split upon the cultural merits of the cartoon, often compared the dialogue to that of Samuel Beckett.
The show often offered succinct social commentary.
Beavis and Butt-head have been compared to idiot savants, because of their creative and subversively intelligent observations of music videos. This part of the show was mostly improvised by Mike Judge (who performed both characters simultaneously) and are considered by many to be the show's highlight. With regard to criticisms of Beavis and Butt-head as "idiots", Judge has responded that a show about straight-A students and do-gooders just wouldn't be funny.
The series has a number of recurring elements as far as stories go.
One element is the constant torment Beavis and Butt-head visit upon their neighbor, Tom Anderson. This typically takes the form of the two being hired to do odd jobs which usually result in the theft and destruction of his property. Despite how often they interact, Anderson rarely ever seeks retribution, as his bad eyesight and absent-mindedness often make it easy for them to claim that a past catastrophe must have been caused by, for instance, "some other guys." A typical Anderson encounter begins with his familiar line, "Say, you boys look kinda familiar....aren't you the ones... ?", an accusation which the boys rarely have trouble deflecting.
They cause havoc at their place of employment, Burger World. Beavis and Butt-head spend little time working, and when they try to work, they are often too incompetent to even take a customer's order. They often enjoy frying things other than food, including, and especially, the various electronics and appliances at Burger World. Other jobs the boys have had include being secretaries and telemarketers.
They cause trouble at school. They are usually pitted against their teachers and other school officials. Principal McVicker, whom they occasionally refer to as "McDicker", is visibly agitated by the duo's antics. At the end of the final episode, Beavis and Butt-head's antics exasperate McVicker to the point where he suffers a heart attack.
One of their most prominent goals in life is to "score" with chicks. Throughout the series neither of them meets with any success. They occasionally spend Friday nights at the local Maxi-Mart, attempting to pick up on any female they encounter. This continues until the manager runs them off.
Beavis often transforms into his alter ego, the Great Cornholio. Beavis's transformation into Cornholio is indicated by pulling the back of his t-shirt over the top of his head, holding both arms up, pacing back and forth unpredictably, and proclaiming largely nonsensical utterances in a foreign-sounding accent, such as "I am the great cornholio! I need TP for my bunghole! Are you threatening me?" This transformation is usually prompted when Beavis very rapidly consumes an improbably large amount of stimulants. Beavis first discovered this proclivity when he stole Stewart's mother's candy stash. In another episode, the duo wanders into a Bohemian basement coffeehouse, where an open-mic poetry slam is in session. Beavis takes a turn at the mic after ingesting a large amount of cappuccino, and the audience immediately hails his antics as revelatory performance art. In one episode, he transforms into Cornholio while at Burger World. At the same time, an INS official visits for a surprise inspection, searching for illegal aliens working without a visa. Beavis' nonsensical, pseudo-Hispanic ramblings prompt the INS officer into thinking he is from Mexico, and Beavis is subsequently deported. Beavis assumed the Great Cornholio persona for the climactic scenes of Beavis and Butt-head Do America.
Mr. Van Driessen gets the two involved in an odd job or activity, usually to teach them some sort of life lesson. These have included running for class office, cleaning his home to learn the value of work and capitalism, and participating in a number of activities designed to be therapeutic on some level, in hopes of reaching out to them.
Peter Small, Rod Munch, Mrs. Dicky, Harry Sachz, Betsy Weiner and other similar sexualized names are running jokes.
There are several prime locations featured in the series.
At least three holiday specials were produced -- one for Halloween and two for Christmas.
The Halloween special involved them attempting to trick-or-treat, in ridiculous costumes. Butt-head pours melted cheese on his head and becomes "nachos", while Beavis wears a pair of underwear on his head and is a "nad". Beavis and Butt-head eventually become separated. After stealing some kids' candy, Beavis turns into the Great Cornholio. Butt-head is taken to the country and deserted by Todd and his gang, where he is confronted by the crazy farmer. Eventually Beavis wakes up after his suger high to find himself hanging in the farmers barn. At the end of the episode it is implied (but not shown) that he is killed by a now blue skinned Butt-head and the farmer who are both wielding chainsaws.
The first Christmas special featured the pair sitting in front of the television providing crude commentary on various aspects of Christmas.
The second Christmas special consists of two segments that parodied popular Christmas stories. The first was a parody of A Christmas Carol, featuring Beavis as Ebeneezer Scrooge. The second was a send up of It's A Wonderful Life, with an angel named Charlie trying to convince Butt-head to kill himself for the good of all mankind. The special also contained short segments where Butt-head dressed as Santa and read letters from viewers, while Beavis was dressed as a reindeer whom Butt-head occasionally struck with a bullwhip.
The running joke during these segments was that in every letter written by a girl, she wants Beavis, which pisses off Butt-head and leads him to hit Beavis even more with the bullwhip.
All of the letters read by Santa Butt-head were actually sent in by MTV viewers, as several months before the special aired, MTV had a commercial encouraging viewers to write letters to Santa Butt-head, and provided an address to which they could be sent.
For a full list of musical artists on Beavis and Butt-head, see List of musicians appearing on Beavis and Butt-head.
One of the most well-known aspects of the series was the inclusion of music videos, which occurred between animated segments. The duo would watch and make humorous observations, or simply engage in nonsensical dialogue.
Bands they liked were also mocked. They were disappointed by AC/DC, despite the fact that they were as fans of the group. Upon seeing a video by Def Leppard, Butt-head remarks that "Spinal Tap really sucks". At times, the criticism reflects their young age and ignorance of music history. Upon seeing a video by Black Sabbath, they decide that the band's vocalist can't be Ozzy Osbourne, because "Ozzy's an old fart!"
Beavis and Butt-head expressed enjoyment rarely. Nirvana's Kurt Cobain is said to have been ecstatic at having the video for "Smells Like Teen Spirit" praised by Beavis and Butt-head and deemed it a great compliment. Beavis became hyper with joy saying "Yeah!, Megadeth !" while watching the video "Sweating Bullets" and Butt-head told Beavis that Dave Mustaine's singing voice was similar to Beavis's speaking voice. White Zombie, Type O Negative, Onyx, the Violent Femmes, the Beastie Boys and Pantera were also among the few groups for whom Beavis and Butt-head expressed appreciation, and the one group that earned their fondest reviews was Gwar. Beavis voiced his estimation that every video should be like a Gwar video. Ironically, a large number of fans of the group Army of Lovers attest to having discovered the group from the appearance of a video of theirs on Beavis and Butt-head, in which both of the boys expressed frustration with the frequent shifts between scenes they deeply enjoyed and scenes they found disturbing. Beavis and Butt-Head treat Lemmy Kilmister of Motorhead fame, like a V.I.P. whenever he appears. One occasion of this was when Lemmy walked into a Ramones video and Beavis says to Butt-Head, " Whoa! Butt-Head, look! It's Lemmy! It's Lemmy! What's he doing there?!" Butt-Head responded by saying, " He's Lemmy, dumbass. He can walk into any video he wants."
Beavis and Butt-head had especially severe reactions when confronted with videos they found particularly awful. As soon Butt-head realized he was watching a Michael Bolton video, he announced that he had soiled his pants. The ultimate put-down was to simply look at each other, each with a look of horror and then switch the channel without saying a word. Only Vanilla Ice and Milli Vanilli were considered so egregious as to deserve this fate. (Although in a later episode, they did watch another Vanilla Ice video, giving it the full round of criticism.)
The duo would occasionally engage in physical humor during the videos. These antics ranged from simple comic violence, such as slapping, punching, and kicking one another, to the duo's memorable dances, which ranged from a few simple arm motions, to one dance where Butt-head jumps back and forth across the room.
Beavis and Butt-head Do America, was released in 1996. The movie features the voices of Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, David Letterman, Cloris Leachman, Robert Stack and Eric Bogosian. The film's plot follows Beavis and Butt-head on a journey to retrieve their stolen television set. They travel across the United States and become involved in a biological weapon smuggling scheme that they remain unaware of throughout the film. The journey takes them to Washington, D.C. where they meet President Clinton (voiced by Dale Reeves). Tom Anderson, David Van Driessen, and Principal McVicker have cameos.
Beavis and Butt-head's fathers (voiced by an uncredited David Letterman) are seen in a small part during the movie, where Beavis and Butt-head run into two older look-alikes who then tell of how they "scored" with "sluts" in Beavis and Butt-head's hometown, Highland. They are later identified as their biological fathers by the FBI using 'specimens' left in Anderson's camper and matching them with prison sperm donors.
A CD appeared, named The Beavis & Butt-head Experience featuring many hard rock and heavy metal bands, such as Megadeth and Nirvana. Moreover, Beavis and Butt-head do a duet with Cher on "I Got You Babe" and a track by themselves named "Come To Butt-head".
A spinoff show based on their classmate Daria Morgendorffer, Daria, was also created. Mike Judge was not credited as a producer of this series and said he was not involved with it at all except to give permission for the use of the character. The Daria character had been created for Beavis and Butt-head by Glenn Eichler, who became a producer for Daria. In the first episode of Daria, Daria and her family move from Beavis and Butt-head's hometown of Highland to Lawndale. None of the other characters from Beavis and Butt-head ever appear on Daria other than Daria herself.
King of the Hill was created by Mike Judge and at least owes its start to the success of Beavis and Butt-Head. Lending credence to its status as a spinoff the main character, Hank Hill, sounds just like Mr. Anderson. Indeed, the show was preceded by rumors, before Beavis and Butt-head stopped airing, that Judge was going to do a spin-off show about Mr. Anderson.
All VHS collections of episodes are out of print. They were compiled into two sets of three multi-episode Time-Life DVD releases called "The Best of Beavis and Butthead", which are also no longer available. A set of three DVDs from Time-Life containing the same content as the first 3 VHS editions was released in December 2002. The remaining 3 VHS programs were also released on DVD soon afterwards but were not equally advertised (if at all) and are subsequently rarer.
A two-disc DVD set titled The History of Beavis and Butt-head was scheduled for release in September 2002, but was cancelled at the last moment. Many copies were mistakenly put on store shelves on the scheduled release date, only to be immediately recalled. The set started selling on eBay at very high prices, sometimes over $300 USD. According to creator Mike Judge, the History set was made up of episodes that Judge had previously rejected for home video release and was prepared without his knowledge or consent. Judge said in an interview, "it was basically all the worst episodes, with some exceptions." Judge owns approval rights for video releases of the series, and the History DVD set was recalled at his demand.
On November 8th, 2005, MTV and Paramount Home Video released the three-disc The Best of Beavis and Butt-Head Volume One: The Mike Judge Collection. The DVD set includes approximately eleven music video segments from the original shows. All prior VHS and DVD releases have lacked these segments except for the last disc of the second and last Time-Life set, presumably due to the difficulty involved in acquiring music rights for the videos. This last disc, entitled "Hard Cash", appeared to have made room for four music videos since it contained half the episodes (one VHS worth) of most of the other volumes (typically the combination of content formerly occupying two VHS tapes). A second Mike Judge Collection is planned for 2006, although an exact date has yet to be announced.
Mike Judge has said that he imagined Beavis and Butt-head as slacker students at the real-life Highland High School on Coal Avenue in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he lived. Specifically, he first drew Butt-head as his idea of the archetypal slacker high school student, then decided to draw a companion for him, and came up with Beavis.
It is a popular myth at the University of California, San Diego that the appearances of Beavis and Butt-head were modelled on faculty at its Department of Physics. Their real-life models are said to be David Kleinfeld and James Branson respectively.
The show became the focus of criticism from social conservatives, such as Michael Medved, who depicted it as the epitome of mindless and amoral entertainment, while others, such as David Letterman, and the conservative magazine National Review, defended it as a cleverly subversive vehicle for social criticism and a particularly creative and intelligent comedy. Letterman eventually voiced a character ("Mötley Crüe Roadie #1") in the Beavis and Butthead movie and used his regular pseudonym Earl Hofert in the credits.
| Beavis and Butt-head | |
![]() Beavis (right) and Butt-head (left). |
|
| Format | Sitcom |
| Run time | 18-20 minutes (per episode) |
| Creator(s) | Mike Judge |
| Starring | Mike Judge Tracy Grandstaff Adam Welsh |
| Country | USA |
| Network | MTV/VH1 |
| Original run | March 4, 1993 – November 28, 1997 |
| No. of episodes | 199 |
Beavis and Butt-head is an animated series that aired on the cable television channel MTV from 1993 to 1997. Each show contains short cartoons centering around a pair of post-pubescent teenagers by the names of Beavis and Butt-head who live and go to school in the fictional town of Highland. These cartoons were broken up by short breaks in which Beavis and Butt-head watch music videos and poke fun at them.
Contents |
Beavis and Butt-head's lifestyles revolve around TV, nachos, Fruity Whips, shopping malls, and trying to "score with chicks". Both Beavis and Butt-head are revealed in one episode to be highschool freshmen (this means that they are probably 14 or 15 years old assuming they haven't been held back). Beavis wears a blue Metallica T-shirt, while Butt-head wears a gray AC/DC T-shirt. (On some merchandising items these were changed to shirts saying "Skull" and "Death Rock" due to trademark and licensing legalities.)
Beavis has blonde hair, an underbite and a fixated stare on his face which almost never looks straight but to the side. Beavis grunts when he laughs and his voice is reminiscent of horror film characters played by actor Peter Lorre. According to available information, Beavis' birthdate is October 28, 1979.
Butt-head has brown hair, dental braces and his eyes are squinted. Butt-head speaks nasally with deep voice and a slight lisp, repeatedly punctuating his speech with "uhh..." Both Beavis and Butt-head constantly snicker.
Their full names were never mentioned on the show. However it was suggested, in the film Beavis and Butt-head Do America, that Butt-head's name is actually "Butt Head". An old lady asks him his last name. He tells her it's "Head", adding "My first name's Butt". In an episode of the TV show, he mentions having a cousin named Richard Head, a play off of Dick Head.
Butt-head seems calmer and marginally more intelligent than Beavis. Butt-head is usually oblivious of subtleties, while Beavis is somewhat oblivious of the obvious.
The series has featured many recurring characters, most of whom appeared in minor roles in the early days and whom were not initially given names. Also listed are a number of popular and memorable one-shot characters. It should be noted that some of these characters will be listed as only descriptions, as many characters are never given names.
Mike Judge created the Beavis and Butt-head characters for an animated short for the Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation. This short, named "Frog Baseball", was aired on MTV's independent animation showcase Liquid Television, and featured the two playing baseball with a living frog as the ball.
The duo introduced a plethora of slang insults and terms into the lexicon including "buttmunch", "fartknocker", "bunghole", chode, "ass munch", "TP", "spank the monkey" and others. Early episodes gave them a juvenile obsession with fire and dangerous behavior. The show was blamed for numerous child deaths as the result of fire and dangerous stunts. The references were excised from further broadcastings, being replaced to some extent with simply silly stunts, bad pick-up lines, etc. References to fire were often cut from earlier episodes in reruns. Other episodes were uneditable and MTV opted to not rerun them.
Jabs at the controversy were made in subsequent episodes.
Early episodes with the controversial content intact are rare and traded on home-made tapes made from the original broadcasts. In an interview included with the recent Mike Judge Collection DVD set, Judge says he is unsure if some of the earlier episodes still exist in their uncensored form.
MTV also responded by broadcasting the program after 11:00 P.M., and adding a disclaimer reminding viewers that:
Beavis and Butt-head, along with Ren and Stimpy and The Simpsons, pushed the boundaries of cartoons away from clean material for small children. They were famously lambasted by Democratic senator Fritz Hollings as "Buffcoat and Beaver" which would subsequently become a running gag on the show of adults mispronouncing their names. Critics, though split upon the cultural merits of the cartoon, often compared the dialogue to that of Samuel Beckett.
The show often offered succinct social commentary.
Beavis and Butt-head have been compared to idiot savants, because of their creative and subversively intelligent observations of music videos. This part of the show was mostly improvised by Mike Judge (who performed both characters simultaneously) and are considered by many to be the show's highlight. With regard to criticisms of Beavis and Butt-head as "idiots", Judge has responded that a show about straight-A students and do-gooders just wouldn't be funny.
The series has a number of recurring elements as far as stories go.
One element is the constant torment Beavis and Butt-head visit upon their neighbor, Tom Anderson. This typically takes the form of the two being hired to do odd jobs which usually result in the theft and destruction of his property. Despite how often they interact, Anderson rarely ever seeks retribution, as his bad eyesight and absent-mindedness often make it easy for them to claim that a past catastrophe must have been caused by, for instance, "some other guys." A typical Anderson encounter begins with his familiar line, "Say, you boys look kinda familiar....aren't you the ones... ?", an accusation which the boys rarely have trouble deflecting.
They cause havoc at their place of employment, Burger World. Beavis and Butt-head spend little time working, and when they try to work, they are often too incompetent to even take a customer's order. They often enjoy frying things other than food, including, and especially, the various electronics and appliances at Burger World. Other jobs the boys have had include being secretaries and telemarketers.
They cause trouble at school. They are usually pitted against their teachers and other school officials. Principal McVicker, whom they occasionally refer to as "McDicker", is visibly agitated by the duo's antics. At the end of the final episode, Beavis and Butt-head's antics exasperate McVicker to the point where he suffers a heart attack.
One of their most prominent goals in life is to "score" with chicks. Throughout the series neither of them meets with any success. They occasionally spend Friday nights at the local Maxi-Mart, attempting to pick up on any female they encounter. This continues until the manager runs them off.
Beavis often transforms into his alter ego, the Great Cornholio. Beavis's transformation into Cornholio is indicated by pulling the back of his t-shirt over the top of his head, holding both arms up, pacing back and forth unpredictably, and proclaiming largely nonsensical utterances in a foreign-sounding accent, such as "I am the great cornholio! I need TP for my bunghole! Are you threatening me?" This transformation is usually prompted when Beavis very rapidly consumes an improbably large amount of stimulants. Beavis first discovered this proclivity when he stole Stewart's mother's candy stash. In another episode, the duo wanders into a Bohemian basement coffeehouse, where an open-mic poetry slam is in session. Beavis takes a turn at the mic after ingesting a large amount of cappuccino, and the audience immediately hails his antics as revelatory performance art. In one episode, he transforms into Cornholio while at Burger World. At the same time, an INS official visits for a surprise inspection, searching for illegal aliens working without a visa. Beavis' nonsensical, pseudo-Hispanic ramblings prompt the INS officer into thinking he is from Mexico, and Beavis is subsequently deported. Beavis assumed the Great Cornholio persona for the climactic scenes of Beavis and Butt-head Do America.
Mr. Van Driessen gets the two involved in an odd job or activity, usually to teach them some sort of life lesson. These have included running for class office, cleaning his home to learn the value of work and capitalism, and participating in a number of activities designed to be therapeutic on some level, in hopes of reaching out to them.
Peter Small, Rod Munch, Mrs. Dicky, Harry Sachz, Betsy Weiner and other similar sexualized names are running jokes.
There are several prime locations featured in the series.
At least three holiday specials were produced -- one for Halloween and two for Christmas.
The Halloween special involved them attempting to trick-or-treat, in ridiculous costumes. Butt-head pours melted cheese on his head and becomes "nachos", while Beavis wears a pair of underwear on his head and is a "nad". Beavis and Butt-head eventually become separated. After stealing some kids' candy, Beavis turns into the Great Cornholio. Butt-head is taken to the country and deserted by Todd and his gang, where he is confronted by the crazy farmer. Eventually