Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 2, Summer 2007 | Page 43

Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends 39 culture, it must be perfect already. Furthermore, Bloo does not understand that the elements of a blockbuster movie, for example, often depend upon their original context to make any sense at all. In the episode “Challenge of the Superfriends,” which will be analyzed in detail, Bloo emulates the behavior of superheroes he sees in comic books and movies, but ends up letting the villain escape. Bloo does not understand why this creates as a problem, as he did it in “a very super way.” Another storyline finds Bloo attempting to make Mac “cool” by employing every surface transformation he can think of He encourages Mac to use the mannerisms of boy band members and spout catchphrases from commercials. Bloo’s advice proves disastrous, as he removes these behaviors from their contexts without altering them. While Bloo wholeheartedly endorses anything slickly packaged and marketed, the show uses him to point out the ridiculousness of being too caught up in glossy exteriors. Children today face an all-out assault from a “glutted market for adolescent obsessions” (Wright 284), and Bloo falls victim to the latest trends nearly every time. Bloo’s tendency to mimic popular culture as a means of attempting to either connect with others, or prove just how “cool” he is, allows Foster's Home to delve into the relationship between Americans and their popular culture. The episode “One False Movie” finds Bloo hijacking Mac’s film project for his elementary class. Mac films various residents of Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends, giving each one the chance to say a few words to the camera. Bloo declares the project “boring,” and convinces Mac to let him “fix” it. When Mac plays the movie for his class, he finds to his horror that Bloo superimposes fart sounds over the initial soundtrack, thus depicting everyone as suffering from extreme flatulence. Much to Mac’s surprise, his teacher and classmates find the film delightfully funny, and his principal enters Mac in a regional filmmaking contest as a result. Bloo once again commandeers the creation of Mac’s movie, this time reaching far beyond the oft-used attempt at humor derived from someone passing gas. Bloo names his creation T-Rexatron Alien Wolfhound III, A Prequel in Time: The Unrelenting. The quality of Bloo’s movie becomes obvious just from its title. Indeed, a robotic tyrannosaurus rex, a werewolf, and time travel all make appearances at various points in the movie, but the result is completely incomprehensible, a mishmash of images stolen from various blockbuster films and cobbled together without rhyme or reason. Bloo’s movie also incorporates elements of the Lethal Weapon movies, the spaghetti western, pirates, and the iconic scene of Elliot flying against the silhouette of the moon from E.T., again with no reason other than that Bloo believes that if one popular culture reference is good, dozens certainly will result in a superior movie. Bloo even provides the voice-over for the movie, which sounds like a collection of the quick catchphrases used to capture the audience’s attention in movie previews. In fact, such lines as “In a world where chaos reigns like cats and dogs” and “A retired cop must settle one last score” could almost have come from the previews for any large-budget feature of recent years.