List of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends episodes
This is a list of episodes for the American animated television series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
First season
Episode Number | Production Number | Original Airdate | |
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"House of Bloo's" | |||
01 - 03 | 101 - 103 | August 13, 2004 | |
We are introduced to eight-year-old Mac and his imaginary friend, Blooregard Q. Kazoo ("Bloo" for short), as Bloo is about to be ejected from Mac's apartment by his mom, who says that they and Mac's older brother, Terrence, age thirteen, have had enough causing trouble and Mac's too old to have an imaginary friend. Mac, however, does not want to give him up until Bloo sees an ad on TV for Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends. At first, they're hesitant, but after visiting and meeting some new friends — the basketball-obsessed Wilt, the single-word speaking Coco and the monsterous coward Eduardo — Bloo decides to stay. Mac says that he'll be back at the home, until Frances "Frankie" Foster, the keeper of the home says it's not a boarding home, but an adoption place. The next day, a filthy rich family wants to adopt a friend, namely Her Royal Duchess Diamond Persnickity the First, Last and Only (Thank goodness!) As Mr. Herriman draws up the papers, their bratty daughter decides she likes Bloo better and wants to call him Tiffany. The others chase them through the house and she shows Bloo to her parents, and Duchess is upset. Mac comes back to save Bloo from adoption, but Duchess and Terrence conspire to rid everyone of Bloo with the help of a ball-and-chain extremeasaurus. After a chase through a junkyard and one parody of Pac-Man, Mac and the friends save the day, and Mr. Herriman punishes Duchess by staying at the home, and is about to say that Bloo is up for adoption, until Madame Foster, Frankie's grandmother, arrives and says Bloo can stay as long as Mac visits him everyday. Episode Notes:
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"Store Wars" | |||
04 | 104 | August 20, 2004 | |
The gang heads to the local shopping mall to purchase a birthday present — and on Mr. H's insistence, some streamers — for Madame Foster's birthday, but everyone runs amuck in the shopping center, as Bloo calls all of the store clerks a "ripoff artist" and kicks them in the shin after hearing the price of some items, and Coco gets three jobs — as a fast-food server, an information desk worker and as a security guard — all in the same day just to pay for a massage chair for the matriarch of the house. Episode Notes:
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"The Trouble With Scribbles" | |||
05 | 105 | August 27, 2004 | |
There is a forbidden door in Foster's that is never to be opened... until Bloo opens it and unleashes a mass of troublesome imaginary friends called Scribbles. Episode Notes:
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"Busted" | |||
06 | 106 | September 3, 2004 | |
While trying to follow the rules established in the home by Mr. Herriman, Bloo breaks a bust of Madame Foster (by accident) and the gang rushes to fix it — resorting to toothpaste, soap and even asking Madame Foster herself to be covered in flour — before Mr. Herriman finds out. Meanwhile, a frustrated and overworked Frankie gets upset over the "Funny Bunny" and those same rules. Episode Notes:
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"Dinner is Swerved" | |||
07 | 107 | September 10, 2004 | |
It's dinnertime, but a very starving Bloo and Mac are lost in the labyrinthine house, seemingly winding up on the roof every time they try to get to the table. Mr. Herriman feels that everyone shouldn't eat until Bloo arrives, but Madame Foster and Frankie feel otherwise. Can an imaginary food friend named Charlie the Chicken Leg get them downstairs in time to chow down? Episode Notes:
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"World Wide Wabbit" | |||
08 | 108 | September 17, 2004 | |
Working on a video with Frankie's digital video camera for the Foster's Home web site, Mac and Bloo accidentally tape a video of Mr. Herriman singing a silly song to his owner. Much to Mac's chagrin, Bloo and Frankie show it to all the friends, then Bloo uploads it onto the world wide web where it becomes an Internet phenomenon. Episode Notes:
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"Berry Scary" | |||
09 | 109 | September 24, 2004 | |
A cute new friend named Berry shows up at the house and falls in love with Bloo. When Bloo ignores her, she becomes jealous of the friendship of Mac and Bloo, proceeding to "accidentally" break all their attempts for a world record. Episode Notes:
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"Seeing Red" / "Phone Home" | |||
10 | 110 | October 1, 2004 | |
In "Seeing Red", Terrence has been the constant victim of Bloo saving his owner's body from harm, citing that "this'll only hurt for a second", so he creates his own imaginary friend — a giant red cube named "Red" — to torment the blue blob. However, it does the opposite of what Terrence wants it to do, namely "kill, destroy, crush, maim (and) smash" while being abused by imaginary bees, a sea monster and unicorns as Bloo gives him a tour of the residence. Only then does Terrence realize that it will ony hurt…for a week! In "Phone Home", Blooregard mistakes a man in a cell phone costume with the zipper stuck as one of his own, and brings him to Foster's trying to out-do Wilt winning the "Friend of the Month" award. Look for plenty of jokes about "mobile phones" and "cell phones" as well as Eduardo being told by Blooregard that "I'm on the phone" in the script. And when Mac finds a perfect example of an imaginary friend, what does he get for his reward? Episode Notes:
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"Who Let The Dogs In?" | |||
11 | 111 | October 8, 2004 | |
After a couple mistakenly brings a dog to Foster's, Eduardo brings a puppy (an imaginary one) into the house and tries to hide him from the deathly afraid of dogs Mr. Herriman Meanwhile, Bloo's trying to make a time machine, but Mac finds more (imaginary) puppies. What will Herriman do? Episode Notes:
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"Adoptcalypse Now" | |||
12 | 112 | October 15, 2004 | |
When the house holds a special event called "Adopt-A-Thought Saturday," Mac and Bloo conspire to keep their good friends from being adopted by little kids. Unfortunately, their plans fail and the two have to deal with being tied to a chair in a closet during the next "Adopt-A-Thought Saturday". Episode Notes:
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"Bloooooo!" | |||
13 | 113 | October 22, 2004 | |
"It was a dark and stormy night." Frightened by a scary movie, Coco, Wilt and Eduardo mistake a cold-ridden Bloo (who has turned white) for a ghost. Included is a sub-plot where a scared Frankie tries to enter the locked house while being followed by a mystery person with a hook for a hand (revealed as an imaginary friend looking for the house). Episode Notes:
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Second season
Episode Number | Production Number | Original Airdate | |
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"Partying Is Such Sweet Soireé" | |||
14 | 201 | January 21, 2005 | |
Madame Foster and Frankie have gone away for the day, and leave Mr. Herriman in charge of the house, and needless to say, he's not good at it. Bloo feels that this is a great time to throw a party, and Coco disguises her voice to call the rabbit and ask him that old prank call if his refrigarator is running, which Herriman takes literally and starts out of the house (when in fact, there was an imaginary friend icebox doing just that!) When Duchess and Mac try to bring the party to a halt, Bloo tempts Mac with his one weakness: sugar. Apparently, Mac has a strange condition where if he has a single molecule of sugar, he goes on a sugar rush. Mac continues to consume sugar, and eventually ends up rampaging around town in his birhday suit. Episode Notes:
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"The Big Lablooski" | |||
15 | 202 | January 28, 2005 | |
When Madame Foster loses half her bowling team to her rival, Mrs. Jerhkins, because she bribed them with lace doilies, she turns to Mac and the friends to help win their upcoming match against Jerhkins' team. Bloo would rather play with his Chinese finger trap and try to win a paddleball in a crane game at the arcade inside the bowling center. When Mac gets thrown off the team because Blooregard's a better bowler, he turns to an imaginary guru named Bowling Paul for advice…with disastrous, albeit happy, results. Episode Notes:
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"When There's a Wilt, There's a Way" / "Everyone Knows It's Bendy" | |||
16 | 203 | February 4, 2005 | |
In "When There's a Wilt, There's a Way", while getting a bowl of potato chips for Bloo, a series of ridiculous demands keeps Wilt from watching the big game on the television, first in the house, like changing a lightbulb or doing laundry, and then outside the home, such as helping an old lady across the street, being framed for a robbery that he didn't commit, going into outer space as an astronaut, delivering anchovies to a pizza shop, and making the pizza, and delivering that pizza to the police station where he was locked up again. All he has to say is "no", but he just can't do so. In "Everyone Knows It's Bendy", the parents of a young child whose imaginary friend named Bendy (voiced by Jeff Bennett) has caused trouble around their house, and for his own good, leaves him at Foster's. The gang has all sorts of problems, and Bendy frames them to Mr. Herriman and Frankie as he claims to say they have done the dirty deeds. Now it's up to Bloo to catch him in the act. Episode Notes:
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"Sight for Sore Eyes" / "Bloo's Brothers" | |||
17 | 204 | March 4, 2005 | |
In "Sight for Sore Eyes", an imaginary seeing-eye friend named Ivan (voiced by Kevin McDonald) who has twenty eyes has been separated from his blind owner, Stevie (a reference to musician Stevie Wonder), and it's up to Mac and Bloo to find the child. Meanwhile, Wilt, Coco and Eduardo have played a game of hide-and-seek and believe Bloo ditched them, then they find him in a trash dumpster and think Mac abandoned him. Can they all get together and have their act straightened out in time to find Ivan's owner? In "Bloo's Brothers", Mac makes Blooregard the subject of his weekly show-and-tell at his school. The classmates are so amazed, they want to make up their own versions of Bloo, and as a reward for publicizing the home, Frankie and the others give them tickets to the Ice Charades (a spoof of the old Ice Capades skating show). But all Mac's classmates are not thrilled about their Bloo clones, and bring them to Foster's. How will these lookalikes save the Ice Charades when a star skater is out with an injury? Episode Notes:
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"Cookie Dough" | |||
18 | 205 | March 11, 2005 | |
On a very rainy day in the middle of winter, the house's roof leaks beyond all control because Madame Foster used the emergency money to buy a gold safe, which prompts Bloo to sell lemonade, which is a major flop because lemonade is usually sold in the summer. When the home's matriarch brings out some of her cookies, people start buying them, but there's one problem: she only bakes them once a year. So Blooregard buys the rights to the recipe, and the power of ownership goes straight to his head, and he becomes a successful businessman at his friends expense. Bloo acts as a cross between Donald Trump (by telling everyone that they're fired) and the wicked stepmother and her stepdaughters in Walt Disney's "Cinderella" by telling everyone to "go a little faster" and "pick up the pace", and in the process, almost loses his friends by acting like — in Mac's words — "a royal jerkface". Episode Notes:
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"Frankie My Dear" | |||
19 | 206 | March 18, 2005 | |
Both Mac and Bloo develop a crush on Frankie after Mac gets her get out of doing some paperwork of Mr. H's, and they compete with one another for her love, but she falls for a secret boyfriend. The two become jealous, and thwart Chris (misconstrued as either Chad or Quinn), a pizza-delivery boy and an imaginary Prince Charming who uses lame pick-up lines from singles bars that Frankie gets in contact with, but when the see the real suitor, a Gen-Xer named Dylan Lee, they decide to proceed and spoil their date, dressing up as "Orlando Bloo", a pun on the name of actor Orlando Bloom and Prince Charming comes along in drag. Only when Dylan proves to be just plain stuck-up, Frankie realizes who her true friends are. The episode ends with Frankie punching her ex in the face. Episode Notes:
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"Mac Daddy" | |||
20 | 207 | May 6, 2005 | |
One morning, Mac wakes up to find an imaginary friend named Cheese sleeping in his bed, similar to a scene in the 1972 movie The Godfather. Alas and alack, Mac thinks he created a new friend, when in fact, his neighbor, Lousie, created him. Madame Foster allows him to stay under the same rules as Bloo at the house, and Bloo doesn't like it one bit, trying to get rid of him. After failing a few times, Cheese goes out on his own in the house, and Blooregard realizes that the house could be too dangerous for someone as amazingly dumb as Cheese. Will Bloo find him before Mac notices he's gone? Episode Notes:
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"Squeakerboxxx" | |||
21 | 208 | May 13, 2005 | |
The gang pays a visit to a Chuck E. Cheese-type arcade and pool all their tickets to buy a pink squeaky elephant, but all argue over who should own it…that is, until Frankie decides that everyone should share it. Coco displays it on her turn, Eduardo nurses it like a child, Wilt (who wanted to name it "Harry Elefante") plays basketball with it and Mac (who suggested the name "Donald Trunk") teases Bloo with the "baby waby pachyderm". When Bloo gets his chance, he squeaks away and it drives everyone crazy sqeaking it repeatedly until Frankie tells him his turn is over. That night, Bloo sneaks into Frankie's room, and takes the elephant from the music box she keeps it in, but while playing with it, it breaks. The next morning, Mac overhears Bloo telling himself he broke it, so it's time for another trip to the arcade to get a new elephant. What are the chances that will happen? Episode Notes:
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"Beat With A Schtick" | |||
22 | 209 | May 20, 2005 | |
A big, scary new friend seemingly takes Bloo's comedy the wrong way in the eyes of the others, and Blooregard is scared that he's be finally be getting what he deserves, and it's not a race car bed or bubble gum flavored medicine, either. Madame Foster seizes the chance to lay down bets against Bloo lasting thirty seconds against him, and tries everything from breaking all the clocks in the house or hiding in houseplants (until he gets ratted out by Jackie Khones) and trying to get expelled from the premises and even resorting to Terrence to beat him up, but it turns out to be different than he thought, but Blooregard still gets it in the end when he critiques his comedy act. Episode Notes:
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"Sweet Stench of Success" | |||
23 | 210 | May 27, 2005 | |
When Bloo is jealous of the others for appearing on a segment of the local TV station's newscast, he feigns illness, appears on TV and a Hollywood producer named Kip Snip notices. Suddenly, he's the star of deodorant ads for a product we later find out that actually doesn't work, and Kip makes Blooregard (who is now known as "DEO", the product's package mascot) sleep in a cage as he tries to get out of the contract — which Mr. Snip claims are adoption papers — and Bloo uses an old-fashioned variety special on TV to rat him out. How will Bloo and Mac be reunited? Episode Notes:
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"Bye Bye Nerdy" | |||
24 | 211 | July 1, 2005 | |
When Bloo beats the high score of Mac in a Space Invaders-type video game, he proceeds to go to Mac's school and tell him by rubbing it in his face. However, Mac has been sent to detention for throwing a spit wad at another student, so Bloo thinks Mac has become - gasp! - a nerd! When Mac makes his daily visit, Blooregard's attempts to make Mac the coolest kid in school are failures, even to the point where one kid asks if the clothes he's wearing were "bought at the 1987 store." Mac says he doesn't care, which is news to Jamez Witazee, the coolest kid in town, and invites him down to "The Rock" after school the next day. With Mac's absence, Mr. Herriman decides Bloo's eligiable for adoption, so how will he survive this double whammy? By using a line from the 1980 Blues Brothers movie and trying to avoid getting caught similar to what happened in the opening credits of Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery. Episode Notes:
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"Bloo Done It" | |||
25 | 212 | July 8, 2005 | |
When Bloo becomes popular for publishing a newsletter for the Foster's residence, he suddenly gets upsurged when the first, best and original friend of the house, Uncle Pockets (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) pays a visit, and he charms the others. Bloo is jealous of the attention Uncle Pockets is getting, and is suuus-piii-cioouus (a sing-song running joke) of him, so he plans to write up in the newsletter that Uncle Pockets is a fraud…until he overhears what he thinks is a plan to eliminate Madame Foster, even as going as to tell Mr. Herriman and Frankie about "rubbing her out" when in fact, the house matriarch is getting a trip to a day spa…complete with a massage. Will Bloo stop this in time? Episode Notes:
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"My So-Called Wife" | |||
26 | 213 | July 15, 2005 | |
When Benjamin Edward Factor III, Esquire, D.D.S., a rich philantrophist, mistakes Coco for being Mr. H's wife, he decides right then and there to promptly enter them into a contest to be held at a challenging gala for lots of cash ($10 million US to be exact), and amongst the compitition are none other than Bloo and Mac, who want jet cars. As it turns out, Bloo and Mac win, but when they realize he doesn't have the money, he trips out in the middle of the night, then the real rich guy appears and everyone there — including Mr. Herriman, Coco, Blooregard and Mac — spend the night in jail. Episode Notes:
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Third season
Episode Number | Production Number | Original Airdate | |
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"Eddie Monster" | |||
27 | 301 | July 22, 2005 | |
Eduardo runs away from the home to prove he's not a total coward after trying to retrieve a "whizbee" (a spoof of Wham-O's "Frisbee" flying disc) from the Extremeasaurus cage. Terrence finds him in the slums of town in a dumpster, and recruits him to be a fighter in the Extremeasaur fighting circuit. Terrence keeps it a secret…that is, until he lets the preverbial cat out of the "tater" bag to Mac at home. Can Bloo and the others get to Eduardo before harm is done? Episode Notes:
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"Hiccy Burp" | |||
28 | 302 | September 5, 2005 | |
Mac finds a rival in his school named Richie Wildebrat talking about his imaginary friend, Blake Superior, being the best in the world. Bloo gets an earful from Mac about it and decides to drink mass quantities of soda and eat a few bags of potato chips, and gets the "invincible" hiccups. Everyone tries to rid Bloo of his hiccups before the county imaginary friends talent show pageant, which serves as the home's annual fund raising event. On registration day, Richie brags to Mac about it so much, that Mac decides to enter Bloo in the contest, using the hiccups to Bloo's advantage in the talent segment, which Richie and Blake are secretly viewing…and proceed to steal the act, which makes Bloo lose those hiccups. Can those hiccups come back and be a blessing or a curse for him in the contest? And will Wilt do a better job hosting than the previous year? Episode Notes:
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"Camp Keep a Good Mac Down" | |||
29 | 303 | September 9, 2005 | |
Survival of the fittest in the wilderness is the story here when Bloo hogs up all the food when the friends go camping. So, they try to rough it: Bloo tries to grow a beard with honey and pine needles, much to Mac's disbelief; Mr. Herriman goes after some food, gets befriended by rabbits, and goes feral; Madame Foster befriends a bear; Coco takes over for Bloo while fishing and refuses a request to have a can opener laid from one of her eggs; Eduardo is scared about all of this, and Wilt gets stuck in, er, quicksand. And all of this a half-mile from home? Episode Notes:
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"Imposter's Home For Um…Make 'Em Up Pals" | |||
30 | 304 | September 16, 2005 | |
"Goofball" John McGee comes to Foster's and drives Frankie nuts on a night when she plans to go to a concert, and is out to prove him as a fraud as McGee wreaks havoc by eating all the food in the kitchen with Bloo and Frankie has to go shopping for some more food and orders out for pizza when three human friends come over. Even Mr. Herriman, Coco, Blooregard, Wilt and Eduardo fall for this, and Goofball makes a call to Canada for his owners, but when Frankie decides to fight fire with fire — becoming an imaginary friend named Goof-Goof, with a tutu, deely bobbers and Groucho Marx funny nose glasses and impression — Goofball unmasks her and Frankie has to miss the concert with the Fake Outz because she is told by Mr. Herriman that she has to clean the house from top to bottom. When they return from the concert with new T-shirts, and Goofball's family arrives, much to Frankie's surprise, it turns out that Goofball is an imaginary friend with an elephant trunk-type nose from hiding inside his red clown nose. Episode Notes:
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"Duchess of Wails" | |||
31 | 305 | September 23, 2005 | |
Her Royal Almighty Highness Duchess Diamond Persnickity the First, Last and Only (Thank goodness!) is adopted by Mac's new next-door neighbors, the Applebees, Mac didn't even know about that, and because of this, Mac's mother (making her first appearance since "House of Bloo's") and Terrence are thinking about moving somewhere else, far away from the home like Singapore…in Malaysia before 1965, and not Wisconsin. So Mac and Bloo decide to sabotage the Applebee apartment and show Duchess what she really is, but those darned Applebees think otherwise of their vandalism, praising Duchess instead, and the two resort to kidnapping her. What will happen? Episode Notes:
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"Fosters Goes To Europe" | |||
32 | 306 | November 4, 2005 | |
Mac and the friends win a contest where the prize is a European vacation. Things go awry on the day of the trip departure: Madame Foster needs her older-than-her babysitter, Wilt has to pack the essentials (nothing), Eduardo can only take one Beanie Buddie, Coco is afraid to fly, even though she is part bird and part plane, Mr. Herriman has to reschedule everything over and over and Mac is harried while a new friend, Eurotrish dreams of going, but Bloo takes the ticket given to her while singing every time he changes his mind, and to make things even worse, someone has sabotaged the bus by taking all the sparkplugs. It all has a happy ending... that is until they arrive at the airport and Mac finds out the tickets are gone. Madame Foster snitched them and went to europe with her friends and Eurotrish. Episode Notes:
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"Go Goo Go" | |||
33 | 307 | November 11, 2005 | |
After meeting Mac when his backpack breaks trying to recover an eight-person toboggan in the middle of June in a tree (don't ask), Goo Goo Gaga introduces herself to Mac, who is introduced to Bloo. Goo then goes insane upon meeting the best friends and creates many new friends. One small problem, though: Frankie and Mr. Herriman have banned this "total nut job" for her hyperactive imagination because her parents can't repress her creativity. So when Goo returns, she goes over the top as far as making new friends and overfills the house with imaginary friends, and Frankie and Mr. Herriman think Goo and Mac are... boyfriend and girlfriend? Mac is banned until Goo is no longer creating friends of the imaginary variety... so will there be a solution, and will Mac's backpack ever be repaired? Episode Notes:
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"Crime After Crime" | |||
34 | 308 | November 18, 2005 | |
Mr. Herriman is addicted to carrots and can't stop, so when Frankie discovers that all the carrots are gone, Coco gets framed by the chief rabbit in charge and is sent to her room... without supper, along with everyone else except Blooregard. Madame Foster offers to give cooking lessons to Frankie of a mish-mash she calls "it"…a recipe so seemingly hideous, Madame Foster doesn't even know that pieces of plaster from the ceiling where Bloo, Mr. Herriman, Eduardo and Mac bouncing on the bed in her bedroom places plaster into what Bloo believes is "vomit" (which Frankie catches Mac bouncing her grandma's bed, and thus getting kicked out the house), so he decides he wants to be punished without supper, but every time he tries to stop Mr. Herriman, such as using "Gelatin-O" (Cartoon Network wouldn't use the brand name Jell-O) to fill his office with the product, put banana peels on the stairwell, causing the Funny Bunny to take a deep fall down a few flights of stairs or even trying to use a wrecking ball to destroy the house, only to have Herriman find Eduardo, who had been "stalking" him, he gets nothing but praise from Mr. Herriman Meanwhile, Wilt has a problem about punishment, so he winds up in jail — with Mr. Herriman, who was caught "stealing" Madame Foster's diamonds Bloo had planted in Mac's backpack, and what's on the menu in jail? Carrots! Episode Notes:
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"Land of the Flea" | |||
35 | 309 | November 25, 2005 | |
Chewy (from "Who Let The Dogs In?") has returned to the home, and joins his owner, Eduardo, at the beauty salon one morning. After Eduardo is primped for the day, he feels Chewy needs to be cleaned up, so he decides to give her a bath, and lo and behold, fleas (the imaginary variety) jump into Eduardo, leading to Blooregard (and some others) to label him as a "weirdo". When Mr. Herriman and Frankie overhear that Eduardo has the fleas, they take drastic measures to rid them from his fur, such as trying to give him a bath, or giving him a flea collar, or resorting to sending him down to the salon with a flea comb imaginary friend waiting for him. Meanwhile, Bloo wants fleas for some reason, and Mac won't let him. What will Blooregard do to get fleas, and what would be the ultimate solution? Episode Notes:
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"One False Movie" | |||
37 | 310 | February 10, 2006 | |
Mac decides to make a home movie about Foster's for his school project, but then Blooregard adds some "pooting" noises, and turns it into a funny movie that the school principal loves. Mac is then entered into a statewide student film competition, and Bloo turns the film into a blockbuster hit. The film costs money, so Mac starts selling collectible stuff, including some of Madame Foster's possessions, on SchmeBay to raise more money. Meanwhile, Eduardo, worried about the armpit skills of Bloo, not believing he has a "pooting" problem, writes to the executive producer of Lauren is Exploring to tell them about it, and makes a special episode. The night before the premiere, Eduardo sees the tape and records the special Lauren is Exploring episode. At the theatre, the film cuts out in the middle, showing the Lauren is Exploring that Eduardo had recorded, and everyone ends up hating the film. The episode ends when Bloo says that shows don't need ending, appropriately cutting him off half-way through the statement. Episode Notes:
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"Setting A President" | |||
38 | 311 | February 17, 2006 | |
Frankie decides she's had enough of Mr. Herriman's oppression, so one night at dinner, she throws an open challenge for President of Foster's: her, Herriman and Bloo. At first, the tides are clearly in favor of Frankie and her honest, "woman of the people" campaign - with everybody cheering her during the official debate - so a worried Mr. Herriman convinces Bloo to drop out of the race and become his campaign manager. Together, they bombard the house with unsavory attack ads against Frankie; complete with a paid-advertisement song (which even she admits is catchy). The redhead, instead of attacking her competition, does a heartfelt speech over the intercom to win the friends back. The next day, the election is held, and when the results are tabulated…Frankie wins by a landslide, getting 1,287 votes while Mr. Herriman gets only 52 (and Coco gets one write-in vote). From the get-go, Frankie proves to be a very successful and well-liked president; however, as a result, Mr. Herriman decides to leave the house for good, and becomes a grocery bagger at a supermarket. This, along with the discovery that her new payday consists of a few pennies and carrots, causes Frankie to reconsider and put the rabbit back in charge. Episode Notes:
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"Room With A Feud" | |||
39 | 312 | March 17, 2006 | |
After a calculator friend called Poindexter Dorkface III moves away, a new room is available. Bloo, Coco, Eduardo, and Wilt all end up seeing the room and wanting it. Mr. Herriman decides to let them sort it out amonst themselves. Not willing to let anyone else have it, the four perform various contests and tasks to see who gets it. During these contests, a imaginary friend named Peanut Butter also tries to get the room. Frankie takes advantage of their eagerness to get them to do her chores. Tired of all the fighting, Mr. Herriman gets Mac to decide when he shows up. Mac isn't sure what's going on, believing someone to be in trouble, so he picks Peanut Butter. No one is happy about the decision, they try to drive Peanut Butter out. First, they form an oompah band, which Peanut Butter turns out to be a fan of. They then wreck the place, but Peanut Butter says that reminds him of home because his creator was a slob. Mac then gets a human classmate named Jerry to be a friend with him. Madame Foster eventually shows up to resovle the dispute, making each friend draw straws. Eduardo wins. At night, Eduardo sees a spider, which scares him, so Wilt comes in and sleeps in his room. Soon, Coco goes in the room leaving the old room to Bloo. Bloo is happy at first, but then he feels lonely so he goes in the room too. After they all settle in the new room, Jackie gets their old one to himself. Episode Notes:
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"Cuckoo for Coco Cards" | |||
40 | 313 | March 24, 2006 | |
Mac brings his school class to Foster's on a class field trip. Bloo tries to entertain them by telling a joke, but gets the punchline wrong. After Coco tells it correctly and makes everyone laugh with her knock-knock jokes and various antics, Mac appoints her as tour guide for his classmates while Bloo continues to try to outdo Coco for attention. As the tour ends, Coco creates a new line of Foster's trading cards for Mac and his classmates, but Bloo scares them off by throwing eggs at them to demonstrate that he "can get eggs too." Coco's trading cards quickly become popular among the residents of Foster's, and everyone wants them, especially Bloo. Once he tries to make his card seem important, he finds to his dismay that it's the most common card (and thus the least valuable) and is being used as everything from dental floss to a coaster. In a fit of desperation and jealousy, Bloo trades his Eduardo card for a Bloo card, only to find out moments later that the Eduardo card is the rarest and most valuable. Bloo then confronts Coco, accusing her of favortism, making her angry. As a result, she refuses to lay more eggs/cards for Bloo, who is now left to do whatever he can to acquire cards, with the goal of being the first person to have an entire collection. He does this through a combination of manipulation and annoying whining, but by the time he announces his possession, Coco has created newer cards with holograms. Bloo then tries to collect that entire set, but is thwarted after Coco created a third edition. This continues up until the fifth edition of cards, by which time Bloo is a ranting, paranoid mess. Finally he announces to Coco that he has achieved a full set of cards for every collection - without her help - only to be informed by Coco that he still has one card missing. Unable to figure out which card he doesn't have, Bloo is reminded by Mac that it's his card which is missing, and by this point the Bloo cards have all been discarded or lost as a result of misuse or disinterest. Bloo finally locates a card - it's stuck in the spokes of a tricycle being ridden by Eduardo, who has been trying to increase his card statistics all this time (going from "big fat baby" to "chicken" to "scaredycat") and is about to perform a dangerous stunt by riding his tricycle down a ramp through a ring of fire. Bloo interrupts Eduardo, who accidentally starts the ride early, but manages to escape via parachute, earning his new status as "a crazy idiot." Bloo rides the tricycle through the ring of fire, turning the Bloo card into ash. Finally, Coco relents and lays an entire set for Bloo, who discovers that the statistics on his card say that he's a jerk. Bloo reluctantly apologizes to Coco, who lays him an egg with a "Bobble Body" Bloo inside. Bloo goes into an adjoining room to gloat about his Bobble Body, only to find out that everyone already has one and the rarest Bobble Body is a Wilt Bobble Body. Episode Notes:
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Fourth season
Episode Number | Production Number | Original Airdate | |
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"The Big Picture" | |||
41 | 401 | To Be Announced | |
Episode Notes
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"I Only Have Surprise For You" | |||
42 | 402 | To Be Announced | |
Bloo plans a surprise ninth birthday party for Mac, but he wants no part of them. Episode Notes
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Other episodes
Other episodes that have been announced and planned for Season Four include "Challenge of the Superfriends", "Squeeze The Day", "Neighbor Pains", "Infernal Slumber", "Bus The Two of Us", "Bloo's The Boss", "Emancipation Complication", "Make Believe-It-or-Not", featuring the return of Goo, and "The Big Cheese", which will feature the return of Cheese.
Fifth Season
A one-hour episode, entitled "Good Wilt Hunting" (a pun of the Ben Affleck-Matt Damon movie Good Will Hunting), will be the season premiere. Wilt goes in search of his creator after he fails to show up at a reunion picnic. We also will discover Eduardo's creator and the scientists who watched Coco before she came to the home.
Holiday Specials
Episode Number | Production Number | Original Airdate | |
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"A Lost Claus" | |||
36 | Special | December 1, 2005 | |
After seeing a gaggle of imaginary Santas, which Frankie says are as real as her Aunt Fanny, Mac believes that there's no such person as Santa Claus, so he and Blooregard — along with the rest of the imaginary friends — must regain their faith in Jolly Old Saint Nick to prevent a horrible Christmas with scientific experements: Wilt goes off with unicorns around the world in a day, Eduardo gets stuck in the house's chimney and Coco takes a short-lived job at the mall from "Store Wars" as a Mall Santa, only taking the job to pay off her vacation home. On Christmas Eve, Madame Foster tells Mac that he's at a stage in his life where it comes together. That night, as Mac asks Santa for underpants — the worst possible gift to get for Christmas, Mr. Herriman gets scared by Bloo in a spoof of A Christmas Carol — with Bloo playing all the ghosts (except for the Ghost of Christmas Past) as Bob Marley instead of Jacob Marley, the Ghost of a Christmas Present and a robot representing Christmas Yet To Come who reprograms the rabbit in charge into cancelling the holiday like The Grinch Who Stole Christmas. Will there be a Christmas miracle unlike "Adoptalypse Now"? The Foster's home has the best Christmas Day ever, and Mac gets what he wished for to know if Santa exists — underwear. Bloo, however gets the worst Christmas because he got piles of coal. Episode Notes:
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Foreign episode titles
- "House Of Bloo's" — "La Maison de Bloo" (French), "Nowy Dom Bloo' (Polish), "新しき我が家 (My New Home)" (Japanese)
- "Store Wars" — "Panique Au Centre Commercial" (Panic at the Shopping Center) (French), "Wojna o fotel" (Polish), "ショッピング・モール大騒動" (Shopping Mall Riot) (Japanese)
- "The Trouble With Scribbles" — "Liberté por Les Gribouillis" (Freedom for the Scribbles) (French), "Bazgroły na wolności" (Polish), "秘密のドア" (Secret Door) (Japanese)
- "Busted" — "Le Jour du Réglement Premier" (The Day of the First Rule) (French), "Wpadka" (Polish)
- "Dinner Is Swerved" — "Faim de Bloo" (The Hunger of Bloo) (French), "Podano do stołu" (Polish), "腹ペコの夜" (Japanese)
- "World Wide Wabbit" — "Lapinou.com" (Rabbit.com) (French), "Sławny na cały świat" (Polish), "おもしろウサギは大スター" (Funny Bunny Superstar) (Japanese)
- "Berry Scary" — "Myrtille" (Bitter Berry) (French), "Bajdzo straszna historia" (Polish),"いとしのブルー" (Darling Bloo) (Japanese)
- "Seeing Red" / "Phone Home" — "Terrence voit Rouge" (Terrence Sees Red) / "Téléphone Maison" (French), "Rudy przyjaciel/Telefon do domu" (Polish), "レッドとの対決" / "最優秀フレンドになりたい" (Showdown with Red / Want to Become the Best Friend?) (Japanese)
- "Who Let The Dogs In?" — "Qui Laissé Entrer Les Chiens?" (French), "Kto tu wpuścił psy?" (Polish), "子犬はどこ?" (Where are the puppies?) (Japanese)
- "Adoptalypse Now" — "Journeé d'Adoption" (Day of Adoption) (French), "Czas adoptokalipsy" (Polish), "仲間を救え!" (Save a Friend!) (Japanese)
- "Blooooo" — "Bououou!!" (French)
- "Partying is Such Sweet Soireé" — "Une fête improvisée" (An improvised party) (French), "Żadnych szalonych prywatek" (Polish)
- "The Big Leblooski" — "La folie du Bowling" (Bowling Madness) (French), "Mistrz kręgielni" (Polish)
- "Where There's A Wilt, There's A Way" / "Everyone Knows It's Bendy" — "Wilt, l'ami qui dit toujours oui" / "Bendy, le bandit" (Wilt, the friend who always says Yes / Bendy the thief) (French), "Pomocna dłoń Chudego"/ "Wszyscy wiedzą, że to Bendy" (Polish)
- "Sight for Sore Eyes" / "Bloo's Brothers" — "Rien ne vaut les yeux d'un ami" (Nothing is worth the eyes of a friend) / "Les Bloo's Brothers" (French) , "Nic nie widzę" / "Wielka Jagódka" (Polish)
- "Cookie Dough" — "Opération Cookie" (French), "Słodki interes" (Polish)
- "Frankie, My Dear" — "Frankie chérie" (French), "Moja droga Franko" (Polish)
- "Mac Daddy" — "Mac Papa" (French), "Tatuś Maks" (Polish)
- "Squeakerboxxxx" — "Un éléphant ça couine énormément" (The elephant with an enormous squeak) (French), "Teraz moja kolej" (Polish)
- "Beat With A Schtick" — "Le nouveau" (The New One) (French), "Kto mieczem wojuje" (Polish)
- "The Sweet Stench of Success" — "Le parfum de la gloire" (The Smell of Glory) (French), "Słodki zapach sukcesu" (Polish)
- "Bye Bye Nerdy" — "Cool ou pas cool" (Cool or not cool) (French), "Papa kujonku!" (Polish)
- "Bloo Done It" — "Bloo Reporter" (French), "Dziennikarz Bloo" (Polish)
- "My So-Called Wife" — "Drôle de couple" (Funny couple) (French), "Moja tak zwana żona" (Polish)
- "A Lost Claus" — "Pas de doute, c'est le Père Noël!" (Not any doubt, this is the real Santa Claus!) (French), "Zagubiony Mikołaj" (Polish)