HRWiki:Featured article for 2005, week 41

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{{featuredimage|parsnips.PNG|134px|Old-Timey Fun}}
{{featuredimage|parsnips.PNG|134px|Old-Timey Fun}}
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The '''[[Old-Timey]]''' (also called '''1936''') Era is the collective name for the Homestar [[Toons|toons]] said to have been made in the 1930s; and they are in essence a pastiche/tribute to the cartoons of the time. The toons are in black and white and have intentionally sloppy edits, a grainy and scratched appearance, and a soundtrack filled with static and pops. The characters look and sound different from their modern-day counterparts, and often have different personae, much in the way that the characters in the earliest Disney and Warner Brothers cartoons are noticeably different to later incarnations.
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The '''Old-Timey''' era (also referred to as the '''1936''' era) is the collective name for the [[Homestar Runner (Flash cartoon)|Homestar]] [[Toons|toons]] said to have been made in the [[Wikipedia:1930s|1930s]]; and are in essence a pastiche/tribute to [[Wikipedia:The Golden Age of Hollywood animation|the cartoons of the time]]. The toons are in black and white and have intentionally sloppy edits, a grainy and scratched appearance, and a soundtrack filled with static and pops. The characters look and sound different from their modern-day counterparts, and often have different personae, much in the way that the characters in the earliest [[Wikipedia:Mickey_Mouse|Mickey Mouse]] and [[Wikipedia:Looney_Tunes|Looney Tunes]] cartoons are noticeably different than later incarnations.

Revision as of 18:05, 13 October 2005

Old-Timey Fun

The Old-Timey era (also referred to as the 1936 era) is the collective name for the Homestar toons said to have been made in the 1930s; and are in essence a pastiche/tribute to the cartoons of the time. The toons are in black and white and have intentionally sloppy edits, a grainy and scratched appearance, and a soundtrack filled with static and pops. The characters look and sound different from their modern-day counterparts, and often have different personae, much in the way that the characters in the earliest Mickey Mouse and Looney Tunes cartoons are noticeably different than later incarnations.

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