Why Arent You Talkin Jon Arcuckle Did You Flounge a Big One Again
Some other animated serial based on the comic strips of Jim Davis. Dissimilar Garfield and Friends, however, this series was CGI-blithe, and without U.S. Acres, Davis' less-known comic strip which was also featured in Garfield and Friends. The serial was launched in 2009. It had numerous 11-minute episodes and half-hour specials during its run, but Cartoon Network eventually stopped airing the show.
The titular lazy, orange-furred feline, Garfield, makes his return to the Tv set screen, with wacky hijinks galore. His owner, Jon Arbuckle, and the long-tongued yellow domestic dog, Odie, are also main characters.
Total episodes can exist found on the official YouTube channel.
There is a All-time Episode Crowner page here.
This series provides examples of:
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- thirty Minutes, or Information technology's Free!: Garfield exploits this to Vito'due south Pizza in the episode "Great Pizza Race" to keep feeding himself for free. And he would accept gotten abroad with it... if it weren't for the fact that John was taking Liz to Vito's on a dinner appointment. The episode ends with Garfield and Odie, after being busted, having to launder dishes — which were a lot due to Garfield's scheme — at Vito's Pizza every bit reparation, while Vito monitors in person.
- Absurd Phobia: "Fraidy Cat" mentions a lot of ridiculous fears in Dr. Whipple'south commercial for curing people of their phobias, including a fear of people named Sid, a fright of sitting on a grilled cheese sandwich and a fear of moving with your family to Peru and subsequently getting a task as a toboggan salseman. At the end of the episode, Garfield uses Dr. Whipple'due south invention to make Nermal afraid of beingness too cute and Dr. Whipple afraid of being in a cartoon.
- Adaptational Jerkass:
- Unlike earlier incarnations, this Nermal has a far more insufferable ego and annoys Garfield intentionally.
- Jon recently seems to have suffered from this. Mostly justified, considering he had to deal with Garfield's antics.
- Adaptational Nice Guy:
- Garfield in comparison is slightly more benevolent than in the comics, while still a gluttoness snarker, he goes out of his way to help people more and bullies Jon and Odie a lot less. Most of the individuals Garfield does victimize are far more provocative than in the comics (see in a higher place).
- Liz is also far less grouchy and sarcastic, more on par with her character in movies. Justified because she admitted her love for Jon in the 2006 strips.
- A Fool and His New Money Are Soon Parted: When Jon encounters a massive amount of money, don't expect him to continue information technology at the end of the episode. Both times has him lose it over being stolen past a fraudulent investor or not even exist due to a sauce stain on a nearly-winning lottery ticket.
- A.I. Is a Crapshoot:
- "Night of the Apparatuses" has Jon buy a computer program to run his house, who ends upwards falling in love with Jon and turning the appliances against Jon when she gets jealous of Liz.
- The T3000 is a robotic dogcatcher that eventually proves to be overzealous, to the point that he goes after stray animals for the most minor of offences.
- All-CGI Cartoon: The get-go Garfield animated series to be completely CGI.
- Alternate Continuity: In spite of too being in CGI and having the central characters played by the exact same vocalism actors, this evidence isn't in the aforementioned continuity as the Garfield Animated Pic Trilogy, as the animated films established that the Garfield cast live in a globe of comic strip characters, while this series takes identify in its ain world.
- Aluminium Christmas Trees: At that place is a real-life cheese theme park
in Republic of korea similar to Eddie Gourmand'south endeavour at 1, merely it isn't literally made out of cheese.
- And I'grand the Queen of Sheba: "Freaky Monday", where Garfield and Odie have their minds switched by an alien, at i signal has Garfield in Odie'southward body try to explicate his plight to Arlene. Arlene doesn't believe that Odie is Garfield, remarking that if this is the case, and so she's the Queen of England.
- And Knowing Is Half the Boxing: At that place are curt segments based on the show, having Garfield instruct child viewers to stay prophylactic in the sun, don't ingest poisonous substance, be careful on the Internet, etc. Absolutely, it is strange to hear Garfield tell kids to eat fruits & veggies or get plenty of exercise.
- At to the lowest degree with Heathcliff, they had him acknowledge his hypocrisy:
- "Now, if only I could just follow my own advice."
- The PSAs tin exist considered out-of-continuity equally in show Garfield often makes no hush-hush that his lifestyle is unhealthy but he makes no attempt to alter it.
Harry: You can't beat me, you're out of shape!
Garfield: Twenty pounds of pasta a day will practice that to y'all... - Also, in "Gravity of the Situation", Garfield stops the testify mid plot to evangelize an educational message about gravity, and and so he assures the viewers not to worry every bit they won't do some other one "until next flavor or maybe the one later that"... only to follow it with a completely inaccurate portrayal of naught gravity.
- And Your Little Dog, Too!: Quoted past Al the Domestic dog Catcher when promising to catch Garfield.
- Brute Sweet on Object: In "Odie in Dear", Odie, not being very smart, falls in beloved with a dog castor. Garfield gets tired of this, so he steals the brush and throws information technology in the garbage bin, which deeply saddens Odie.
- Animal Talk: As in the comics, most of the animals can communicate with each other (exceptions can occur), but most of them can't talk to humans. Though as in the comics the trope is averted from time to time due to Rule of Funny.
Garfield: I can explain! Well if I could talk I could explain...
- Also when Liz gets turned into a mouse in "Every Witch Way", she gains the ability to communicate with Garfield and company.
- There are ofttimes times when Garfield and some other animal characters tin communicate with humans, mostly when they're backside the scenes or doing an educational episode.
- Also when Liz gets turned into a mouse in "Every Witch Way", she gains the ability to communicate with Garfield and company.
- Animated Actors: Several episodes portray Garfield and the others as in-universe actors, examples including "Express joy in a Can" (where a express joy track is added to the show confronting Garfield's wishes), "The Golden Lasagna Awards" (which has Garfield run an awards anniversary and Nermal ticked that Garfield appears to be winning every laurels) and the "Glitter Gulch" special (where the bandage acts in a Western flick directed by Nermal).
- Anthropomorphic Zig-Zag:
- Odie tin can spend whole episodes walking and acting like a normal dog, and in others exist most every bit apt equally Garfield, walking and gesturing similar a human with opposable thumbs all suddenly.
- Garfield himself does the opposite, continuing on his hind legs for the most part but occasionally he stands on all fours - making his artillery and legs equal size and his paws look less similar human hands and more like an actual cat.
- Nermal also gains a like digitigrade torso construction during a vocal where he quite fittingly sings "You gotta get in touch with your wild side."
- Antidisestablishmentarianism: One of the items the rats steal in the "Rodent Rebellion" special is a trophy a woman earned for spelling the discussion antidisestablishmentarianism correctly.
- Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: In "Nice to Nermal," Garfield decides the cruelest matter he should do to Nermal is not sending him into outer space or even feeding him to the sharks, only instead making him watch televised golf games.
- Attractive Bent-Gender: "Glenda and Odessa" has Nermal becoming smitten by Garfield afterward the latter got dressed upwardly by Jon's Bratty Half-Pint nieces. Luckily for Nermal he never finds out the truth.
- Aw, Look! They Actually Practice Love Each Other: Despite Garfield bullying Odie for the nearly part, he does intendance for him deep downwardly and is even willing to put himself in harm'south way to rescue him.
- Most definitely highlighted in "A Gripping Tale" where Odie causes Garfield to lose all of his precious donuts and Garfield still ventures into the sewer to save him from the giant squid.
Garfield: [peering into the sewer] Don't worry Odie! I'll get you out of there! I won't carelessness you! [runs off and then comes back] And while you're down there, go on an eye out for my donuts!
- Also Garfield towards Jon. Despite Garfield's mischievous antics he does look out for Jon whenever he can.
- To a lesser extent Nermal. While Garfield makes information technology clear he hates Nermal, from time to time he volition actually help Nermal out.
Garfield: Nermal, you know how I'k always telling y'all to leave? Well this fourth dimension information technology's for your own skilful!
- Most definitely highlighted in "A Gripping Tale" where Odie causes Garfield to lose all of his precious donuts and Garfield still ventures into the sewer to save him from the giant squid.
- Allurement-and-Switch: A crooked shopping network's method, using Verbal Words to exist marginally legal. An example is a portable cooling device that Jon buys turns out to be a giant ice cube.
- Banana Pare: The episode "The Write Stuff" has Garfield vexed by his show making ham-fisted attempts at beingness more serious due to the show's new author Samuel W. Underburger being a humorless stoic (a flashback Underburger narrates shows that he hasn't laughed since he saw a man sideslip on a banana peel when he was eight years old). The episode's plot is driven by Garfield attempting to become Underburger to laugh and so he tin gain a humor and incorporate gags into the show instead of derailing it with his misguided efforts to brand the show more grounded in reality. None of Garfield's attempts at getting the writer to laugh work, but Underburger ends up laughing for the first time in years anyway when he slips on a assistant peel himself.
- Belly Dancer: In the episode "Barking Mad", Scheherazade is seen dancing on Tv.
- Berserk Button:
- Don't call Nermal mangy.
- Don't try to brand Garfield exercise either. You lot wouldn't similar him when he's angry.
- Don't call Neferkitty "Fuzzbutton".
- Don't refer to Jon Arbuckle's brother equally "Doc Boy".
- "Better if Not Born" Plot: The episode "Globe Without Me", where Paddy the Leprechaun tries to testify a depressed Garfield that his existence makes all the difference in the world, initially makes information technology expect like anybody is better off without Garfield, as Jon and Odie are shown to alive in a mansion and Arlene is shown to be Bruno's girlfriend, but the episode afterward subverts the trope and becomes closer to a straight example of It's a Wonderful Plot. Garfield later finds that his absenteeism would've made it possible for the Infinite Lasagna race to invade Globe (only preventing this timeline's version of the pasta aliens from succeeding by asking Paddy to temporarily make him be in the alternate reality), Jon and Odie feel lonely without a true cat around, Arlene doesn't really honey Bruno and would rather have someone else equally her boyfriend and Vito'southward pizzeria has gone out of business without a regular customer with an appetite as big equally Garfield's. In spite of how the other characters are shown to be worse off without Garfield, their plights aren't the reason Garfield's existence matters; the end of the episode has Paddy reveal that if Garfield didn't exist, neither would this bear witness.
- Better Than a Bare Bulb: Starting with the 2nd flavour, most of the show'southward sense of humour consists of Lampshade Hanging and the lack of a quaternary wall.
- Big Eater: Garfield (as usual).
- Bratty One-half-Pint: Three of them: Jon's twin nieces Druscilla and Minerva, and Mrs. Ferret in "Ferret Food".
- Breadstuff, Eggs, Breaded Eggs: In the episode, "Filthy Fugitives", while chasing down Garfield and Odie so they can take a bath, the butcher Mr. Gizzard accidentally dumps a bucket of water all over Aunt Ivy. The furious aunt chases him downward, as she shouts:
"You idiot! You moron! You idiotic moron!"
- Bright, only Lazy: Followed to a tee with Garfield.
- Breaking the Fourth Wall:
- In the 2nd season, Garfield completely tosses out the 4th wall, completely aware that the testify is in its 2nd flavour and that everyone is part of a TV show.
- In fact, in that location's an episode where Squeak can effectively predict the future considering he's watching the episode (information technology'due south a rerun, merely no i realizes it). Information technology involves him catching up to himself and helping Garfield pretend to be psychic. Unfortunately, he accidentally deletes the episode when Garfield is near to testify his powers to the public.
- The Bus Came Back: Lyman (from the comic strips, he was originally Odie'southward owner earlier vanishing in the 80s) finally returns in the 4-function episode "Long Lost Lyman", where his long absence is fully explained.
- Butt-Monkey:
- The mailman, Herman Post.
- Naturally Jon and Garfield as usual, albeit not quite as much as in the comics.
- Past the Lights of Their Eyes: Garfield and Odie when they go stuck within the "TI-D 7000"
- Canon Foreigner: Eddie Gourmand, Dr. Whipple, Aunt Ivy, Drusilla and Minerva, and Vito Cappelletti, the Italian restaurant/pizzeria owner were all created for this drawing and did not be in the original comic strip.
- Captain Colorbeard: The "Against All Tides" special mentions a pirate named Purplebeard, whose fate is eventually revealed when the cast get eaten alive past a whale and discover Purplebeard's skeleton during their efforts to discover a way out.
- Captain Obvious: Jon gets chosen out equally this in the following:
Jon: (notices Garfield and Odie stuck in a tree) Garfield! Odie! You lot're stuck in a tree!
Garfield: And the grass is green, Captain Obvious. - Cargo Ship: In-Universe, in "Odie in Love" Odie falls in love with a castor. Something that bothers Garfield.
- Carnivore Confusion: Though it'south never actually shown onscreen (i.due east. an intelligible creature ending upward every bit another's lunch), predation is just treated as a fact of life for the almost part. Though mostly the animals that are considered prey tin't actually talk like Garfield and co.
- I example would be in "Turkey Trouble" where Jon wins a turkey for Thanksgiving and Hilarity Ensues when it turns out he won a LIVE turkey.
Jon: If yous want roast turkey, it'south easy Garfield. Y'all go put it in the oven.
Garfield: At least it'due south fresh. [noticing the turkey eating his food] Hmm, my dinner seems to be having luncheon...
Jon: I'one thousand sorry Garfield, I don't have the heart to end that little turkey's life and neither do you.
Garfield: I detest it when Jon's right. Fortunately it doesn't happen very often. - And another example would be in "Mother Garfield" where Garfield claims he stopped eating birds because "they were as well much work, too many feathers and not enough drumsticks." He then gets the urge to takes upwards bird chasing once more but then reconsiders and instead tries to prevent a family of Bluebirds from being eaten by the stray true cat Harry.
- Also mice are one of the few things that Garfield won't eat (forth with "most good for you foods, anchovies on pizza, Jon'southward meatloaf, craven salad sandwiches and raisins"). Co-ordinate to Lucky, it'due south "because they're his friends and they don't taste similar lasagna". While other cats have no problem with eating mice, in a Wile East. Coyote fashion we never run into them catch any.
- I example would be in "Turkey Trouble" where Jon wins a turkey for Thanksgiving and Hilarity Ensues when it turns out he won a LIVE turkey.
- Cassandra Truth: Usually Garfield falls victim to this.
- "Information technology'due south true! If I didn't know whatsoever meliorate I wouldn't believe me either!"
- In "Expletive of the Weredog", Jon refuses to believe Garfield when Odie goes all Hulk and wrecks the business firm, and takes away Garfield'southward lasagna. Only when Jon hears Professor Bonkers' diagnosis on the news (and when he takes a closer await at the damage Odie did on the furniture) does he apologize to Garfield and they get to the Professor for a solution.
- Cats Are Snarkers: Garfield, of course.
- Catchphrase: Garfield has a few:
- "Big fat hairy bargain."
- "Go me an attorney named Murray!"
- "I'll worry nigh information technology later on..."
- (usually he gets called fat) "Yous're not exactly supermodel textile yourself."
- Christmas Episode:
- "Caroling Capers" has Garfield endeavor to get caroling on Christmas Eve in exchange for food, just to neglect miserably and see Nermal and Odie having ameliorate luck at it.
- "Home for the Holidays" is a one-half-hour episode that concerns Garfield having to help several homeless animals find new homes to prove he cares well-nigh the Christmas spirit.
- Con Man:
- Dr. Whipple, a recurring villain who tries to convince people to buy his products. Which normally involve serious creature abuse.
- Also Bernard Scamberry from "Virtual mailman".
- Gimmicky Caveman: "Iceman" has a frozen caveman thawed out and falling in love with an unattractive woman who drives an water ice cream truck.
- Coattail-Riding Relative: When Garfield manages to win thirty gazillion dollars and buys a mansion, he receives a visit from a bunch of like looking orange cats who merits to exist his cousins, and were glad to detect out they had a rich cousin. But Garfield affirms he isn't related to and doesn't know whatever of them.
- "Could Accept Avoided This!" Plot: "Master Chef" has Garfield go on a quest to find Vito Cappelletti's mentor Giuseppe Essquissito and go him to melt a batch of his lasagna due to existence dissatisfied with Joe's Frozen Lasagna and hearing that the lasagna Giuseppe made is regarded every bit the all-time lasagna ever fabricated. Later on getting Giuseppe to reunite with Vito and larn that his apprentice has perfected his craft of cooking in spite of being ane of his worst students, Giuseppe reveals that he sold his recipe to the makers of Joe'south Frozen Lasagna and Jon learns that he had forgotten to remove the plastic from the lasagna when he cooked it for Garfield and Odie. Had Jon known that he was supposed to remove the plastic when cooking Joe's Frozen Lasagna, they would never have gone to Vito'south and heard well-nigh Giuseppe's lasagna.
- Counting Sheep: The episode "Silence of the Sheep" involves three sheep attempting to become Garfield to sleep by counting them. This fails to work because Garfield had earlier drunk 92 cups of coffee. Because of their failure to get Garfield to sleep, the sheep are fired by Mr. Sandman and so decide to make everyone else in boondocks fall asleep in hopes that this will convince Mr. Sandman to rehire them. Mr. Sandman enlists Garfield'due south help to become the sheep back and the episode ends with Garfield finally sleeping past counting lasagnas.
- Cute Kitten:
- Nermal. And he never lets you forget information technology.
- "The Art of Being Uncute" features Garfield in a situation where he's surrounded by cute cats identical to Nermal; all having won Cutest Cat Shows in their corresponding countries.
- Spumoni'southward cat form certainly counts.
- As well "Piddling Angel" is perceived equally one, though it turns out he'due south MUCH older then he looks.
Harry: He's not an incredibly beautiful kitten. He's older than you even. Only cat I know who'southward onetime plenty to shave. Merely he's bad news.
- Cut a Piece, Take the Residuum: In "The Pet Testify", after Garfield helps Odie win the lasagna prize in a competition, Jon tells Garfield to give Odie his fair share. Approximate what Garfield does side by side?
- Deadpan Snarker: Garfield, as expected.
- Demoted to Extra: Arlene, despite being present in the intro sequence, shows upwardly but in a handful of start-flavour episodes and is thus far absent in the 2nd flavour. She has made some more appearances since so, having larger roles in some of the specials but it all the same doesn't help that other recurring characters have made more appearances than her.
- Depending on the Writer:
- Dr. Whipple, Harry, Bruno, Nermal and many others range from being a supporting character to an antagonist depending on the episode.
- Vito is ofttimes a very ambiguous character, either highly appreciating Garfield for saving his business on a regular basis or determined to prevent Garfield from stealing his lasagna or pizza.
- Jon often falls into this as well, being a Prissy Guy in well-nigh episodes, but in others, tin can be very ambitious.
- Diamonds in the Vitrify: Neferkitty just wears jewelry, though cats don't unremarkably clothing apparel to begin with.
- Didn't Remember This Through: In the episode "Land of Later", a race of sloth people living underground come up with a plan to take over the surface earth by using a device to enslave humanity after turning them into procrastinators. One of the sloth people points out to the rex the virtually blatant flaw in this plan (i.east., that humans who have no involvement in getting anything done would make rather useless slaves). The rex concedes the point, but simply decides that he'll undo the effects of the device after the sloth people have taken over.
- Distaff Analogue: Nermal is seen dancing with an identical cat to himself (but pink) in "Stealing Habitation".
- The Ditz: The "Mean Car" special features a scene with two guys who are so impaired that they can't even figure out what iii + viii is without consulting an electronic device.
- A Dog Named "Dog": 1 recurring graphic symbol is a Rottweiler who is actually named Rottweiler.
- Dogs Are Dumb: Played with more compared to the comics. Odie, while still with his brain-dead moments, is toned down compared to his comics counterpart, leaning more as a Cloud Cuckoo Lander who is sometimes more observant of things than even Garfield.
Garfield: I tin get away with this because as you may have noticed, dogs aren't specially bright.
- Dogs Detest Squirrels:
- In the episode, "Up a Tree", we meet that Garfield'southward favorite past time is watching Odie exist thwarted nonstop as he chases the squirrels in their backyard. Somewhen though he actually catches one of the squirrels who runs into a tree. This makes him actually take compassion on the piffling guy and he eventually makes friends with him and the other squirrels. When Garfield later comes and scolds them for making peace and ruining his pastime, the squirrels give him a Humiliation Conga.
- In a later episode, "Where'south Odie", Odie ends up running off while chasing a squirrel. By the fourth dimension Garfield finds him, he'south in a cabin with an old man who thinks he's his lost dog Spot.
- Don't Explain the Joke: Garfield is specially guilty of this. Just one case would be the Diegetic Soundtrack Usage in "Unfair Weather condition".
- Downer Ending:
- "King Nermal", which ends with Garfield and Odie injured, and Nermal getting to stay even longer.
- Also "Everything'southward Relative" where all the attempts to go rid of Aunt Ivy fail to the point her twin sis shows upwardly to double the hurting.
- "Non So Sweet Sound of Music". It starts out with Jon getting his sometime accordion, the sounds from which annoys Garfield (co-ordinate to Garfield, squeeze box ranks #2 in the world's most terrible instrument — #ane goes to bagpipe). Garfield spends the whole episode trying to go rid of it, which he succeeds in doing but also ends with him getting accidentally injured (not to mention Odie soon finds the squeeze box anyway). When Jon goes to the local music shop upon finding out the accordion is damaged at the terminate of the episode, he ends upward having to throw it away — simply there's a sale in said music shop. Gauge what he ends upwards ownership...
Garfield: No! No! I'd rather have the accordion back! Wait! Cease! HEEEEELLLLPPPP!!
- "True cat Nap" ends with the revelation that Silent Jack had robbed the house and got away make clean while Garfield, Odie and Squeak had mistaken Jon for Silent Jack.
- Dr. Jerk: Dr. Whipple.
- Does This Remind You of Anything?: In "Caroling Capers", Garfield tells Nermal and Odie he'll give them singing lessons for 10 percent of the food. In the acting business, ten percent of the player's earnings go to their agent.
- Dream Within a Dream: In "The Amazing Flying Dog", Odie has a dream, of where he has flying abilities much like Superman. He is waken twice past Garfield. Afterwards Garfield and Odie talk the second fourth dimension around, nosotros see Garfield walk downtown, walking unintentionally into cement, a girl poodle tries to assist him, but they both get stuck. Odie comes to the rescue with his flight abilities. Subsequently a while, we run across Garfield wake upward frantically. He talks to Odie who is trying to sleep, and equally he goes back to sleep, Odie does too again dreaming of existence a super canis familiaris.
- Earn Your Happy Catastrophe: In "Stealing Home" Garfield and Odie accept their home forcefully stolen by an envious stray true cat chosen Bruno while Jon's out. They trick Bruno into taking his old trashcan home back past convincing him that it's much Bigger on the Inside, which gets him whisked abroad by trash collectors. Unfortunately Jon comes dorsum early and blames the mess Bruno fabricated, on Garfield and Odie which means they accept to get live in another trashcan once more. Which turns out leads to a secret luxury lounge where all their friends are throwing a political party.
Garfield: Perhaps nosotros might go lucky and Jon won't take us back!
- Easy Amnesia: This happens to Garfield in "Garfield Astray" when a bowling ball drops to his head. A taste of lasagna gets his memories back.
- Elephant in the Living Room:
- The Kiss Me Girl from Virtualodean.
- Played with later with a literal elephant in the living room that it takes Jon a few moments to actually notice is out of place.
- Embarrassing Nickname: Almost everyone refers to Neferkitty past her owner given nickname "Fuzzbutton" after her Villain Decay. She will have none of information technology.
Heather: I'll name yous..."Fuzzbutton"!
Neferkitty: Ewwww! Fuzzbutton!? - Engineered Public Confession:
- Dr. Whipple'due south first downfall occurs when Garfield tricks him into admitting that his pet training business is a huge con and how he thinks the public is stupid...while the live idiot box audience and viewers are listening to his every word.
Dr. Whipple: But it won't work. The public is too stupid to catch on. Garfield hovers the mic at him And so what if my training programme doesn't piece of work? They still transport me tons of money, those idiots. I got a sweet racket going here and y'all won't terminate me.
Pulver: Dr. Whipple, they're hearing yous on national telly!
Dr. Whipple: They tin can't hear me! I left my microphone on stage!
Pulver: They can...
Garfield: smiles Do you have whatever further words for our listening audition, Doctor?
- Done again in "Depths of a Salseman" when Garfield uses a functional model of a hyped-upward tape recorder to record a chat between the owner of the "All Buying Channel" and his salesman that everything they sell is just junk that's cleverly hyped. As such when the salesman of the recorder attempts to testify the production works, it plays dorsum the conversation neither knew had been recorded.
Actor: This Crawly Audio Appliance plays the most beautiful music! Listen! presses play
Mama Meany In The Boombox: Merely basically, it's another piece of junk. Everything we sell on this station is a piece of junk. The idiots out there never catch on!
Garfield: I have a feeling they'll catch on now.
Mama Meany: I'll get you a refund, true cat! Just get out of hither!
- The "Lasagna Tree" special ends with Garfield exposing Mama Meany as a con human being duping his customers with cheaply-manufactured and horrible-tasting substitutes for real food when the cat uses Eddie Gourmand's robotic cameraman to record and circulate to the globe Mama Meany gloating about how lucrative his restaurants are while calling his customers idiots for continuing to fall for his scam.
- The Eponymous Bear witness: This series is called The Garfield Bear witness.
- "Everybody Laughs" Ending: "Turkey Trouble"
- Evil Lawyer Joke: "The Keen Trade-Off" has a Mad Scientist named Dr. Puzzle demonstrate an invention of his to other evil geniuses that tin can swap personalities. One of the villains expresses interest in using information technology to swap the personalities of his lawyer and a snake. Dr. Puzzle responds by asking how he could tell the departure.
- Fantasy Kitchen Sink: Witches, mole people, cat people from another dimension, aliens, robots, a mad scientist neighbor...
- Fat Bastard: Eddie Gourmand, sometimes.
- Four Legs Adept, 2 Legs Better:
- The cats commonly presume an upright opinion but the dogs ordinarily don't.
- Utilized with Odie, who ordinarily stands and walks upright when in a more than intelligent role.
- Inverted with Garfield, who switches to four legs whenever he is struck by his Feline instincts.
- "Freaky Friday" Flip: Between Garfield and Odie in "Freaky Mon."
- Frisky Ferret: Mrs. Ferret is a hyperactive ferret with an equally hyperactive metabolism. As a issue, many people who adopted her from the veterinary Liz returned her immediately and she's a nuisance for Garfield due to always eating his food in the blink of a 2nd.
- The Ghost:
- The plot of "Cat Nap" involves Garfield hearing a news written report virtually a thief named Silent Jack and mistaking Jon (who had simply returned from a rather painful trip to the dentist) for the criminal. The real Silent Jack is never actually seen, non even when Garfield, Jon, Odie and Squeak realize that they've been robbed past the real Silent Jack during their squabble.
- Nermal is said to have an owner who looks after him when he'southward not visiting Garfield in "King Nermal", but said owner never makes a concrete advent nor are they identified.
- Go-Karting with Bowser: Expect to encounter the same characters that might act every bit antagonists towards Garfield in one episode suddenly become much more friendly/helpful in another. As you tin can see the line between best friends and worst enemies is very blurred. Even Lamp Shaded past Garfield when talking about his office-time cat pal Harry.
Garfield: (discussing an earlier episode) Now Harry, he was kinda rotten in that episode. Come to think of it he'southward kinda rotten in this episode too.
- One thousand Finale: The "Rodent Rebellion" special, a four-part episode comprising the entirety of Flavor 5 which has Garfield, Odie and Nermal trying to defend the city from an uprising of rats who have likewise framed Jon for committing robberies, serves as the conclusion to this series.
- Halloween Episode: The episode "Orange and Black" has Garfield decide to get trick-or-treating and getting himself in trouble considering he decided to go equally Catzilla, a jungle true cat that had recently escaped from the metropolis zoo.
- Hate Sink: The abrasive Aunt Ivy, who treats everyone (except for the twin nieces) around her similar servants.
- Heroic Domestic dog: Odie has his moments.
- How We Got Here:
- The episode "Jon's Night Out" begins with Garfield trying to wake Jon up as he sleepwalks through a building, and then proceeds to tell the viewer the story.
- The episode "Piffling Yellow Riding Hood" begins with Garfield and Jon escaping from a wolf, and Garfield asks the viewer to pause the show, and then tells the viewer the story.
- The "Rodent Rebellion" special starts with Garfield and Odie beingness hounded by the constabulary and so starts to explain how the two wound up in that situation.
- Hypno Fool:
- Ane episode has Jon suffering from indisposition, so he goes to a hypnotist so he can get some remainder. While Jon was supposed to hear a bell in order to get some close-eye, an accident causes the trigger to be Odie'southward barking instead. This may non seem bad at starting time, but then Jon starts sleepwalking...
- A later episode had Garfield getting hypnotized by Dr. Whipple, to go a difficult-working farm cat whenever he hears a horn. Later in the episode he turns the tables with the aforementioned device.
- Hypocritical Humor: In the "Mean Machine" special, Eddie Gourmand encounters his own robot double and derides him by saying that he needs to lose some weight and has a terrible fashion sense. This is rich considering that he's talking to a robot double of himself and is therefore wearing the same wearing apparel equally well as being hugely obese.
- Thought Bulb: Garfield gets i in "Land of Hold" but is represented by a fluorescent light seedling every bit it is an "energy saving idea".
- Incredible Shrinking Man: Nathan, the Mad Scientist child from an earlier episode, does this to Garfield in a later episode.
- Instant Humiliation: Just Add together YouTube!: "Online Arbuckle" has Garfield create embarrassing videos of his possessor Jon, which results in Jon condign the town laughingstock. After seeing how unhappy the experience is making Jon, Garfield so switches to making embarrassing videos of Nermal, who is initially irate about it, but changes his listen after seeing how popular the videos brand him.
- Jerkass: Several minor antagonists, such as Jon's aunt Ivy and Dr Whipple. As well Nermal.
- Wiggle with a Heart of Gold: Garfield equally with previous animated incarnations. Nermal has his moments too, particularly in "Into the Wild".
- Karma Houdini:
- Played straight by Nermal in "King Nermal" (if only one), where he gets abroad with faking an injury and even gets to go along causing misery for Garfield and Odie afterwards they have been injured for real, though in this case it could exist a justified example of Who's Laughing Now? for all the crap he'due south taken from Garfield in the past.
- Garfield isn't equally lucky in this series, all the same, partly due to Jon being quick to doubtable him — and he's often right.
- In "Cyber Mailman", Bernard Scamberry steals Jon's millions, and gets away to Brazil.
- ...leading to a truly wonderfully awful pun when Garfield notes, "Looks like Bernie 'fabricated off' with the money."
- The criminal Silent Jack in "True cat Nap" doesn't face up whatsoever comeuppance for robbing the Arbuckle household.
- Kick the Son of a Bitch: Thank you to Nermal's more outright Jerkass behavior in this series, he seems to deserve the crap Garfield puts him through a lot more than he does in other Garfield media.
- King of Beasts: "The King of beasts Queen".
- Light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation-Guided Amnesia: The episodes involving witches. The master characters (except Lucky) end up getting their memories erased by the witches later on learning they're real.
- Lighter and Softer: Somewhat less cynical than the comics or even the previous animated installments. Garfield is more than genuinely sympathetic, Jon is slightly less of a loser and there are more frequent heartwarming moments.
- Longer-Than-Life Sentence: Implied in the "Rodent Rebellion" special, where Jon tries to explicate that he was framed for the robberies by rats and his lawyer quips that if Jon tells this to the gauge, Jon will exist lucky if he gets released from jail this century.
- Look Backside You: In the episode "Mother Owl", Garfield distracts Bruno by telling him "Look, the green-eyed distraction bird!"
- Mad Scientist: Dr. Thaddeus Bonkers.
- Magical Flutist: In the "Rodent Rebellion" special, Nermal saves the twenty-four hours by using his flute to herd all the rats in town and lure them to the police.
- Mage Species: The Witches, specially Cauldrons, were not mortals who learned to do magic, but rather a separate supernatural race with inherent magic powers.
- Meat-O-Vision: When Garfield begins to go crazy over trying to complete his bet with Nermal that he can go an hour without eating anything in "The Final Word", he begins to hallucinate Odie as existence a hot dog and Nermal as being a cupcake.
- Merit Badges for Everything: After Drusilla and Minerva apparel Garfield, Odie and Nermal in scout uniforms in the "Into the Wild" special, the twins remark that the pets should get a merit badge only for being adorable. Nermal retorts that he already has six.
- Metronomic Man Mashing: In "Little Miss Mouse", Squeak'due south niece appears to be in danger of existence eaten by Bruno, but as soon as Bruno confirms that he is a cat, she promptly grabs him past the arm and repeatedly swings him above her to striking him against the ground.
- Mirror-Bully Ugly: Nermal mocks Bruno for not being as cute as he is in "The Neat Trade-Off" and proves information technology by showing his compact mirror to him, Bruno'due south reflection causing the glass to crack.
- Moral Myopia: The villains of the "Mean Machine" special are a bunch of robots who attempt to enslave humanity and the inhabitants of planet Sprocket to build more of them. In the end, the robots are beaten and then reprogrammed into beingness servants, which is essentially also enslavement.
- Multi-Part Episode: This series has a few.
- My Dearest Smother: Petey the Canary feels this way about his owner Betty Wilson who thinks of him as a son.
- Mythology Gag:
- In the second season, Jon asks Garfield if he'd like to lookout man Binky the Clown on Boob tube. Garfield responds past saying that Binky is contractually obligated to never show up in this serial.
- At 1 betoken Garfield asks if anyone is old enough to remember Binky? Then he says never heed equally he didn't expect information technology.
- When Garfield takes command of the pet talent testify, and is making Nermal do insanely impossible tasks within the infinite of a few seconds, one of the tasks is finding the Klopman Diamond.
- Various pictures of Garfield from throughout the years announced throughout the firm. Of noteworthy mention is a picture show of Garfield'south original pattern in the living room.
- The episode "Fame Fatale" involves Garfield switching places with a British lookalike named Sir Leo, which is similar to the plot of the second live-action Garfield motion picture Garfield: A Tale of Two Kitties having Garfield switch places with his lookalike Prince.
- "Where's Odie?" has a near-sighted former man error Odie for his dog Spot, an allusion to how Odie used to be named Spot in Jon, the prototype version of the original Garfield comic strip.
Due north-Z
- Never Smile at a Crocodile: Subverted with Monique the alligator from "Into the Wild".
- Never Say "Dice": Different Garfield and Friends, this testify is a lot tamer in comparison - therefore this trope is ever played directly.
- One episode even features a ghost cat nevertheless he'south never referred to as existence dead.
- "Nighttime of the Apparatuses" subverts this by having Mildred yell "You will all di-!" but getting cut off past her plug being pulled before she finishes.
- On occasion Garfield averted this.
- Negative Continuity: Other than a few major staples of the series that are nowadays in every episode, each episode seems to be set in its own universe since they disregard annihilation that came before them eastward.k. "the Hollow Tree" in Jon's yard only exists in episodes that require its presence, or Jon's neighbors vary depending on the episode. This leads to a lot of Series Continuity Errors when episodes contradict continuity by referencing by events from other episodes.
- 1 rather jarring one, is that Jon has twin nieces despite his but sibling existence his bachelor brother Doc Boy.
- In "Which Witch" Mrs. Cauldron is a normal onetime woman who just happens to be witch-like, but in after appearances she is a witch.
- Prissy Guy: Odie and Jon (commonly).
- New Piece of work, Recycled Graphics: does this very frequently and information technology'southward quite noticeable. Oft the aforementioned five character models will be reused for unlike roles each episode with petty change to their models but very unlike personalities. The Indian scientist and the balding character that was the "Dr Whipple" that sold a fake animal show posing as an animate being whisperer in one episode, are the most reused. Is related to the show'due south Negative Continuity
- The balding character went on to be a Tv advertised therapist, an abusive elephant owner in a circus human activity, and many more.
- The Nicknamer: Garfield is sometimes this, usually calling Odie past various nicknames like "Odster", "The Pup", "Bloodhound" etc
- No Celebrities Were Harmed:
- Frank Welker deliberately channels the late, great Lorenzo Music as Garfield.
- Dr. Whipple equally an evil version of Dr. Phil McGraw.
- No Ending: "It's Near Time" ends earlier we run into how Garfield and Nermal restore things to the original timeline.
- No Quaternary Wall: By the second season, it becomes rare for the characters to not bring upwardly that this testify is a drawing.
- Not Now Were Besides Busy Cryingover Yous: At the end of the episode "Underwater World", John is stranded on an island lamenting while they believe that Garfield and Odie had died after falling to the lesser of the bounding main, while the two are right behind him, Garfield speaks to him and John asks them don't comfort them, Garfield counts to three and right later that John realizes they are still alive
- Non-So-Harmless Villain: The starting time fourth dimension we see Nathan, a kid in the same neighborhood as Jon, he appears quite friendly. Then he turns out to be a nasty Mad Scientist-in-the-making, trying to turn Odie into a cockroach in the very same episode.
- Opening Shout-Out: In the first half of "Unfair Atmospheric condition" Jon's ringtone is the show'due south main theme. Garfield even says information technology sounds familiar.
- Our Werebeasts Are Different: In "Curse of the Weredog", a rare star alignment in the sky causes Odie to turn into a Weredog whenever the full moon is visible. Past the end of the episode Odie no longer suffers from this due to the stars rearranging themselves, but then another rare star alignment occurs which affects Garfield...
- Overly Long Tongue: Odie
- Panda-ing to the Audience: Garfield, Odie, and Nermal befriend a pair of pandas (with Australian accents) in the four-part episode "Picayune Trouble in Big Prc". They not only assistance out in transportation merely also rescue them from 2 antagonistic Siamese cats (but not by doing kung fu considering that would exist ridiculous for pandas).
- Paper-thin Disguise: In "Extreme Housebreaking" Harry assumes the fake identity of "Kittykins" and all it takes for Garfield to not recognize him (at to the lowest degree non right abroad) is an orange wig.
- The Eeyore:
- A parrot Jon'south editor entrusts to Jon in "Parrot Dejection" does goose egg but gripe about everything negative well-nigh life.
- Pet the Dog:
- Garfield has his occasional kind moments, usually with Odie such as rescuing Odie in "Underwater World"
Garfield: Ladies and Gentlemen, I'm about to do my one skilful act for the twenty-four hours.
- "Mother Garfield" has Garfield take care of a bunch of baby birds later on noticing that their mother hasn't come back to her nest in a very long time (mainly because she was trapped in a garage), and had to protect the birds from Harry, who wants to swallow them. The baby birds appear in a later episode and then Garfield goes to smashing lengths to protect them from Harry.
- Pounds Are Fauna Prisons: Bumbling Animal Control officers: Al and Pete are regular antagonists.
- Predators Are Mean: Chomper the shark from "Underwater Globe" and the Giant Squid from "A Gripping Tale". Subverted with the wolf from "Big Bad Wolf", who was only trying to protect its young. Averted with Garfield and Odie, played direct with Harry, Bruno, Hercules and other cats/dogs.
- Previously on…: The Garfield story arc episodes practice this by showing clips from the previous parts at the first.
- The Professor: Professor Bonkers
- Protagonist-Centered Morality: In "Online Arbuckle" Garfield records and uploads a video of Jon having an accident, making him a laughing stock. Garfield later feels bad and decides to set up everything... past humiliating Nermal instead.
- Rascally Raccoon: In "Into the Wild", a trio of raccoons play tricks Garfield, Odie, and Nermal into switching places with them.
- Real Subsequently All:
- The Zabadu turns out to be a real creature at the end of the "Long Lost Lyman" special.
- In "The Very, Very Long Night", Garfield, Odie, Drusilla and Minerva get scared from watching a horror film about a creature with tentacles. Later on Garfield, Odie, Drusilla, Minerva and Jon have all gone to bed, the episode ends with the Fauna with the Tentacles turning out to be existent.
- Really Expressionless Montage: "Long Lost Lyman" features a variation that doesn't involve death where information technology looks like Odie will have to get dorsum to Lyman and Garfield sadly imagines a montage consisting of scenes featuring Odie from previous episodes. It's ultimately subverted considering Odie misses Garfield and Lyman allows Odie to continue living with Jon.
- Ring Ring CRUNCH: The theme song opens on an alarm clock ringing next to Garfield, who then punches it off of the dresser.
- Robot Me: The "Mean Machine" special has a race of extraterrestrial automatons attempt to take over Globe by enslaving humanity. Garfield poses a threat to their schemes, and so they attempt to eliminate him by creating robot doubles of anybody Garfield knows.
- Running Gag: A scream in the background is heard nearly every fourth dimension the "Bulldog of Doom" is mentioned.
- Rube Goldberg Device: Played direct when Garfield employs one early in an episode to catapult Nermal from a reclining chair into a trash can outside. Subverted toward the terminate of the same episode when Garfield catapults Nermal from the same chair into a cardboard box exterior without using complex contraption.
- Scooby-Dooby Doors: In "Heir Apparent"
- Screwball Squirrel: Odie ends upwardly facing ane amid a group of four squirrels in "Up A Tree". They settle their differences and get friends by the end of the episode though.
- Seldom-Seen Species: Paxton from "Parrot Blues" is a green-winged macaw (albeit a small i), rather than the generic parrot usually seen in cartoons. Likewise the clownfish family unit from "Underwater World".
- Cocky-Deprecation: The "Rodent Rebellion" special has a scene devoted to explaining that rodents and mammals are not the aforementioned matter, with a human being showing upwards to inform the audience that the episode's writer needs to get back to school.
- Set Correct What Once Went Incorrect:
- Several episodes, more often than not involving Garfield having to rectify his mistakes earlier (especially if nutrient is at stake).
- The story arc of the Professor from "Unfair Weather".
- "Shaggy Dog" Story: "Master Chef" had Jon buy Garfield a new type of microwaveable lasagna which he doesn't like. Then hears a story nearly a cook who tin can brand "the best lasagna in the world". Garfield goes through the whole episode trying to become said melt to reconcile with his apprentice (the pizza melt, Vito) to take it made. When he finally succeeds, the melt reveals he had sold his recipe to be distributed every bit a microwaveable food...the aforementioned one Garfield had dismissed earlier. The reason it tasted bad? He forgot to take the plastic wrapping off the nutrient.
- Shout-Out:
- Dr. Whipple gets traumatized past the wacky events in an episode plenty to fear dogs briefly, during which he sees a dog and runs away shrieking "Who let the dog out?" while the dog he sees barks.
- To Bernie Madeoff of all people. In "Cyber Mailman", Jon invests all the lottery money he won through future newspapers into an investor called Bernie Scamberry, who outright scammed them and stole all their money under the promise he'd triple their money. Garfield remarks "Bernie fabricated off with all our money!"
- In "Every Witch Way" and "Bride and Broom", features a witch with a European accent named Winona who'due south fall in love with Jon Arbuckle and Doc Boy and trying to marry them in Belfry of Witchery, a queen of all witches Caput Witch turned Garfield and Odie into frogs considered turning them into a "moose and squirrel", and and a raven who keeps saying "never more!".
- Speaking of witches, the v-part "Bewitched" features a young witch named Abigail and a bat named Bruce.
- Shown Their Work:
- The mounted dinosaur skeletons from "Bone Diggers" are surprisingly accurate and realistic, for a cartoony prove.
- The Giant Squid from "A Gripping Tale" has its mouth in the correct location (the center of the arms). Said mouth is even a beak.
- "Farmer Garfield" breaks the "goats eat can cans" myth and states they actually lick the glue off of cans.
- In "Little Trouble in Big China", Dingbang explains his name means "Protector of the Country".
- Speaks Fluent Animal: Witches are able to communicate with animals via a translation spell.
- Sphere Eyes: xc% characters play this directly though exceptions do occur such as Bob Wilson and every mouse grapheme.
Garfield: Expect over here with those oversized optics of yours.
- Stock Sound Prune:
- And how! The prove LOVES this trope to the point where you could make a drinking game for each time you hear a recurring express joy or cry.
- You can guarantee that yous'll hear Garfield'south "Hoo-hoo-hoo-ha-ha-ha" express joy used somewhere in EVERY episode.
- Skyward Scream: Garfield does this in "The Last Word", afterwards seeing Nermal with a chocolate Popsicle. Garfield did that because he got indigestion and was unable to eat any solid food.
Garfield: CHOCOLAAAAAAAATE!!!!
- Stupid Evil:
- Afterwards reclaiming his elephant (which Garfield had been hiding due to the corruption it suffers), Dr Whipple immediately begins tearing into it, threatening to starve it and otherwise brand its life hell, right in front of a group of police force (who naturally arrest him on the spot).
Dr Whipple: Y'all can't lock me upwards like some...dumb animal!!!
- In the Engineered Public Confession example above, he patently didn't find Garfield was belongings a microphone right in front of his face.
- Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: Eddie Gourmand finds out the hard fashion that building a cheese theme park 100% out of cheese is a horrible idea due to the smell, attraction of flies and the buildings melting.
- In "Globe Without Me" Garfield goes through a Information technology's a Wonderful Plot and reveals that Jon's technically Secretly Wealthy, or would be if non for all his money existence used to feed Garfield.
- Tempting Fate: When Odie gets by the first circular of a pet pageant (with Garfield'due south "assist"), Garfield expresses confidence that "nosotros tin can't lose." Then cue the announcer stating that the second round would be a talent contest. Garfield's reaction: "Male child, tin can we lose."
- Threatening Shark: Chomper from "Underwater World".
- Toilet-Drinking Dog Gag: In an episode where an alien switches Garfield and Odie'south bodies, Arlene tries comforting Garfield past telling him to think about how many things he tin do as a dog. The first things that come up to his mind are chasing his tail and drinking from the toilet, which doesn't make him feel whatsoever better.
- Too Impaired to Live: In one episode a mouse refuses to believe that Garfield is dainty to mice and doesn't eat them, so he repeatedly tries to get Garfield to consume him merely to prove he'south right. He'south lucky Garfield isn't the kind of cat to eat mice.
- Translation Convention: The animals all speak English (or the episode's language) to each other, but to the humans, they sound like normal animals.
- Tough Spikes and Studs: Hercules is a tough Chihuahua dog who scares people off and tin can be a trouble-maker (although he feels lonely deep downwards). In the first season, he wears a spiky neckband.
- Ungrateful Bastard:
- In "Rodent Rebellion" Nermal helps save the day and Garfield thanks him past mailing him to Abu Dhabi once more.
- Likewise in "Truthful Colors", later on Garfield takes a beating from some dogs to save Nermal, the latter responds by proverb he'southward an idiot who should get his caput examined, and his hair turning grey.
- Vegetarian Carnivore: Averted with Garfield as he has been known to eat plenty of other intelligible species. Though mice are off the tabular array.
- Villain Song:
- In "The King of beasts Queen" special, Egomaniac Hunter Dirk Dinkum sings "Become Abroad", where he boasts about what a repugnant and horrid scumbag he is. The title refers to the phrase frequently said to him by the people he has tormented.
- The "Bewitched" special has two Villain Songs.
- "Be My Ghost", where the ghosts inhabiting the underworld sing about how much they similar scaring the living.
- Varicella sings "Varicella Song" when her plan to turn all humanity into frogs almost succeeds.
- In the "Mean Machine" special, the antepenultimate function "Robot Rampage" has Principal Control sing "That Fat Cat", where he expresses how he must eliminate Garfield to foreclose him from thwarting his plan, while the concluding function "The Robot Rebellion" has him sing "Warning Song", where he orders his minions to terminate Garfield and Odie.
- Walk Through The Photographic camera: Used quite oftentimes. These are only some of the examples.
- "The Big Sleep" after Garfield eats something from the fridge, his belly fills the screen and the scenes cuts to him in bed.
- "Penny Henny" later on Garfield hears about the twins coming, he walks into the camera conveying suitcases.
- "Pup in the Pound" when Garfield finally tries to look for Odie afterwards being threatened past Jon.
- "Night of the Bunny Slippers", where Jon invites Aunt Ivy inside.
- "Odie in Love", where Garfield mocks Odie of his beat. "If you lot break upward with the brush I've got some prissy nail clippers for you"
- "Stealing Home", with Bruno raiding through Garfield's fridge
- "Land of Hold", with Garfield running abroad from a bunch of floating phones
- "The Robot", with the cleaning robot about to grab and suck abroad Garfield
- "The Big Sleep", with the owner of the "All You Can Eat" restaurant inviting the bearded Jon inside
- "Lucky Charm", where a leprechaun realizes someone stole his gold.
- We Want Our Wiggle Back!: The episode "Any Happened to Aunt Ivy?" has Jon's aunt Ivy endeavour to be nicer to Garfield in gratitude for the cat saving her from falling downwardly the stairs. Garfield eventually finds Aunt Ivy's efforts in being a nicer person to be more annoying than her sometime crabby cocky (mainly due to cooking healthier food than he prefers and interrupting his Idiot box time to read to him), so he searches for a fashion to make Aunt Ivy hateful again.
- We Will Meet Once more: The T3000 promised to return for revenge at the end of his debut episode, simply his only other appearances in the series are a pair of cameos.
- The World Was Not Prepare: After his invention which opens a gateway between the fictional world of Idiot box and the real world causing hilarity to ensue, Professor Bonkers feels this way most his own genius.
Professor Bonkers: Oh honey...It seems the world is non yet set up for my genius.
- You Dingy Rat!: The "Rodent Rebellion" special has the disharmonize revolve around a agglomeration of rats overrunning the town and framing Jon for their robberies.
- You Need to Become Laid: In "See The Parents"
Mrs Wilson: (to Jon) This identify could utilise a woman's bear on.
Garfield: So could Jon.
- Yous Won't Like How I Gustation: In "Garfield Gets Canned", Mrs. Ferret attempts to talk Garfield and Odie out of eating her by claiming that ferrets gustatory modality like asparagus. When that doesn't work, she and then claims to sense of taste like tofu, which is too ineffective as a deterrent.
- Your Goggle box Hates You lot: In the episode "The Last Word", Garfield makes a bet with Nermal that he tin can spend the adjacent hr without eating anything and does his best to laurels the deal due to Nermal promising to go out him alone for an entire month if he proves he can do it. At one point, Garfield tries to distract himself from his hunger by watching television receiver, but only worsens his hunger due to seeing an episode of Eddie Gourmand's cooking show, a parody of Casablanca that involves Rick and Ilsa sharing a cheeseburger and a commercial for Vito'due south pizzeria.
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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WesternAnimation/TheGarfieldShow
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