The late 90s was a strange purgatory for kids’ animation. You had the sophisticated, moody storytelling of Batman: The Animated Series on one end, and the surreal, gross-out chaos of Ren & Stimpy on the other. Histeria! , created by Tom Ruegger (the brains behind Animaniacs and Tiny Toons ), landed squarely in the middle. It was edutainment on a triple espresso. It premiered on Kids' WB in September 1998—right as the Clinton impeachment hearings were dominating the news, a coincidence the show would have gleefully exploited. Histeria- -1998-2000-
It ran for two seasons and 52 episodes. It was never cancelled with a bang, but a whimper. The WB moved it to death slots—Saturday mornings opposite Pokémon . The network didn't know how to market a show that was simultaneously a Looney Tunes pastiche and a legitimate survey of Western civilization. By 2000, it was gone. No DVD release for years. A ghost in the memory banks. The Big Fat Noise of Nothing The late
Today, Histeria! feels less like a cartoon and more like a prophecy. It predicted the internet’s core tone: irony, speed, historical detachment, and the screaming baby of absurdity that resets the conversation every 48 hours. You can find clips on YouTube now, pixelated and glitchy. Watching them, you realize: the 90s were trying to warn us. History doesn’t repeat. It histerias . , created by Tom Ruegger (the brains behind
Before the algorithm fragmented every attention span, Histeria! was the proto-meme machine—a sugar-rush cartoon that taught you the Magna Carta while a character named “Loud Kiddington” got an anvil dropped on his head.
No nos cansemos, pues, de hacer bien; porque a su tiempo segaremos, si no desmayamos.
Gálatas 6:9
What A Friend We Have In Jesus
No Hay Argumento
God Be With You
Jesús, Haz Mi Carácter
You Raise Me Up
In The Garden
Jesus, Lover Of My Soul
Portador De Tu Gloria
I Give You My Heart
Eres Tú
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The Big Fat Noise of Nothing
The late 90s was a strange purgatory for kids’ animation. You had the sophisticated, moody storytelling of Batman: The Animated Series on one end, and the surreal, gross-out chaos of Ren & Stimpy on the other. Histeria! , created by Tom Ruegger (the brains behind Animaniacs and Tiny Toons ), landed squarely in the middle. It was edutainment on a triple espresso. It premiered on Kids' WB in September 1998—right as the Clinton impeachment hearings were dominating the news, a coincidence the show would have gleefully exploited.
It ran for two seasons and 52 episodes. It was never cancelled with a bang, but a whimper. The WB moved it to death slots—Saturday mornings opposite Pokémon . The network didn't know how to market a show that was simultaneously a Looney Tunes pastiche and a legitimate survey of Western civilization. By 2000, it was gone. No DVD release for years. A ghost in the memory banks.
Today, Histeria! feels less like a cartoon and more like a prophecy. It predicted the internet’s core tone: irony, speed, historical detachment, and the screaming baby of absurdity that resets the conversation every 48 hours. You can find clips on YouTube now, pixelated and glitchy. Watching them, you realize: the 90s were trying to warn us. History doesn’t repeat. It histerias .
Before the algorithm fragmented every attention span, Histeria! was the proto-meme machine—a sugar-rush cartoon that taught you the Magna Carta while a character named “Loud Kiddington” got an anvil dropped on his head.
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