Garfield, the over-fed, pampered cat is actually a starving stray. His life of comfort and over-indulgence is the product of his simple, and aversive animal night. His body is able to survive the harsh winter nights in the open alleys because his mind denies this fact and instead tells him he's in a warm cat-bed. He survives the crippling hunger-pains of not eating for several days because his brain tells him that they're pains form eating too much lasagna. Garfield in reality may even be regularly abused by humans and chased by dogs, thusly why in his delusions he's mentally superior to both the human and the canine he knows. He's already coping in the survival part of the brain, why not cope in the sociological one? Anyways, theory goes that Garfield is in a family with Jon and Odie, and has interactions with all the other characters. However, this is all within his mind, as he suddenly wakes up from the nightmare one day, to find the real world a cold, desolate, and abandoned place. Where he once found food, he now finds nothing, and his warmth and shelter are completely devoid, as if the world has suddenly died. Garfield cannot comprehend this, and begins hallucinating. Since then, all of the strips of Garfield have been created by his twisted imagination as he slowly starves to death in his abandoned house. These theories are based on a Halloween short run in 1989.
It'd make more sense for Jimmy with the yellow skin to have died from a hepatic disorder... But anyways read these online ages ago pffft
What a coincidence, I didn't even heard a credit for the original author who wrote these theories. Basically copied with Copy and Paste.
Ok... I have a request for theories on Powerpuff Girls, Phineas and Ferb, Beavus and Butthead, Teenage Mutant Nunja Turtles, Regular Show, and Teen Titans
©Copyright and Credits to Smoofie. POWER PUFF GIRLS THEORY A really long psychoanalysis of the Powerpuff Girls The Powerpuff Girls, from the popular 1990’s cartoon show The Powerpuff Girls, suffer from five mental disorders; Multiple-Personality Disorder, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Paranoia Schizophrenia, Paranoid Personality Disorder and Depersonality. The three Girls—Blossom, Bubbles and Buttercup—are actually all fractions of one host personality, whose name is unknown to the audience, but for conveniences sake we will call her Brenda. The cause for the development of Multiple-Personality Disorder in Brenda originates from bullying in early childhood by her older brother, whose actual character is unknown to the audience, but is manifested in Brenda’s hallucinations as Mojo Jojo, the Girls’ greatest nemesis. The three personalities are: · Bubbles: She is the “cute” little girl. She has large blue eyes and blond hair tied into small pigtails. She symbolizes the innocence and playfulness of Brenda as a child. She is naïve and submissive, and also tends to cry a lot. However, at rare times, she will become uncontrollably aggressive; symbolizing Brenda’s pent up frustrations of wanting to retaliate back at her brother. However, the majority of those frustrations are manifested in Buttercup. · Blossom: She is the “smart and stable” girl. She has brown eyes and long orange hair. She symbolizes the girl that Brenda wanted to be; mature, level-headed, and witty. She acts as an “ego” by trying to find compromises in situations by mediating between the desires of Brenda’s id and superego, which are not manifested in Brenda’s world. · Buttercup: She is the “tough” girl. She has green eyes and short black hair. She symbolizes Brenda’s thoughts of retaliation against her brother. Buttercup is violent, reckless and stubborn. She is also very sharp with her tongue. However, there is another side of her that is deeply caring for those she loves (the other two personalities), but the majority of those feelings are manifested in Bubbles. The three personalities of the Girls and Brenda are all parts of the same person; the Girls are Brenda, and Brenda is the girls. They all experience the same hallucinations, but the Girls do much of the actual action, and Brenda is more of a watcher (an effect of Depersonalization, which I will talk about later). Mojo Jojo takes the form of a black monkey with a hat over the dome of his skull, in which the brain is visible. Mojo Jojo was created first by Professor Utonium, the father figure in the hallucinations. The Powerpuff Girls were created afterwards. Mojo Jojo and the Powerpuff Girls are related; they share one “creator”. In reality, their “creator”, “Professor Utonium”, is their father. The relationship between the Girls and Mojo Jojo is, in fact, siblinghood. In The Powerpuff Girls, the Girls are constantly battling Mojo Jojo. Brenda experiences hallucinations of battling “Mojo Jojo” as a result of the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder that developed from being bullied by her older brother. The trauma of always having to fight or defend herself from her brother manifests itself in this way. Mojo Jojo later reveals that he is jealous of the love that Professor Utonium gives the Powerpuff Girls, implying that Brenda was abused by her older brother because of his jealousy. All the other villains shown in the show are manifestations of the abuse Brenda suffered, becoming her “inner demons”. Paranoia Schizophrenia is characterized by auditory, tactile, olfactory and visual hallucinations. In this case, all three personalities of Brenda suffer severely from these hallucinations; they have completely detached from reality. (All of the hallucinations also point to a clue that Brenda was very young when the bullying happened. The Powerpuff Girls are all stuck in the body of young girls, and all the villains they come across look like animated dolls or toys). In addition to this, there does not seem to be a day in the life of the Powerpuff Girls that there is not somebody attacking or plotting to destroy the city. The Mayor constantly calls the Girls to save the “city” (a manifestation of Brenda’s mind). The Mayor is actually the manifestation of Brenda’s feelings of danger whenever her older brother is nearby, which calls out the three Girls’ personalities to defend Brenda’s fragile self. The Girls are not necessarily always consciously worried about someone or something attacking their “city”, but the fact that the “Mayor” calls nearly every single day shows the underlying anxiety that Brenda feels. Most of the hallucinations that Brenda/the Girls experience take their essence from flashbacks of the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, which are incredibly and horrifically mutated to form the entirely new world inside her head. Sufferers of Paranoia Schizophrenia also experience delusions; in this case, Brenda/the Girls are all superheroes in their city. This allows Brenda to feel as if she is worth something in her world, because the constant emotional/physical abuse her brother dealt her must have severely cracked her self-esteem so that she was no able to function in real life (and possibly suffer from some sort of social phobia). Another disorder that Brenda/the Girls suffer from is Paranoid Personality Disorder. As stated before, the feelings of anxiety that Brenda feels about being attacked by her older brother are not always conscious. The paranoia that the Girls feel is also not immediately obvious to the audience, but is in a deeper issue. Brenda/the Girls are always, constantly, stuck in their world. Brenda is too afraid of the real world to come out of her fantasy world, where she and her other personalities are heroes in her town, where she has special powers to effectively beat down and wipe out all enemies who try to oppose her. Not only is she afraid of reality but she is afraid of what adults will do to her. She does not and can not take the idea of being locked into a hospital for the rest of her life, so she created the imaginary world to shield her from reality. This is an extreme form of Paranoid Personality Disorder, and is so severe because of her other mental disorders. The last disorder that Brenda suffers from is Depersonalization. During the entire duration of the show, you do not see Brenda. You only see the three personalities. This is because the entire Powerpuff Girls series is from Brenda’s point of view. She is showing the audience what she sees; she sees “herself”, manifested in the three personalities of the Powerpuff Girls. It is herself that feels all the bliss, joy, rage and sadness that the Girls experience, but she cannot actually feel it for herself. Depersonalization is the feeling that one is watching themselves on a movie screen. Brenda feels as if she is watching herself on a movie screen, and that is how the story of the three girls is shown to us. The true story of the Powerpuff Girls is a much more cruel reality than what children can take. The story of Brenda tells the audience of her childhood trauma and her insane delusions/hallucinations. It shows the world what it is like to be inside the head of one suffering from severe schizophrenia, split-personality disorder, as well as other mental disorders. It is truly a great series and should be seen by other age groups for analyzing, not just the young children of America. --- O_O
©Copyrights and Credits to Yugico PHINEAS AND FERB THEORY Here it is, the Phineas and Ferb Theory: The events taking place in the show are all the delusions of a group of kids in a children's psychiatric facility. That's why the parents never see anything and why everything is so easy to do in that world. In reality, Phineas and Ferb's inventions are made of toys. The reason nobody ever gets hurt on anything is because (since they're locked up) the toys their inventions are made from are childproof to prevent their use as a weapon. The reason they "disappear" at the end of every day around the same time is because they have scheduled time to play with them. The reason the parents go away so often during the episodes is because, while they visit as often as possible, they aren't allowed to be with their children all day. The kid's minds make the grocery excuse to explain why the adults are so often absent. In reality... Phineas is Schitzophrenic and detached from reality. He's so happy all the time because of the mood stabilizer's he has to take to keep him from becoming depressed and suicidal. The 3 subplots that run in the series are all his mind's interperetation of the everyday occurances that go on around him. Ferb is a nonverbal Autistic whose social withdrawal got so bad that he couldn't go to normal schools, because he would have a meltdown if he did. He inexplicably became attached to Phineas. In their world, Ferb chooses not to speak but can still mantain healthy relationships as he was unable to in real life. His kinship with Phineas is the reason why they're "brothers" without being related. Isabella has an unnamed psychotic break from reality, caused by abuse from her father (which is why he's never seen) and the reason her mother is so friendly and motherly is to compensate for her real mom's inability to protect her. Her obsession with Phineas is caused by Reactive Attachment Disorder. Candace has multiple personalities, including Perry, which is why she and Perry are so deeply connected and why Perry experienced Candace's dream. This is why her moods cycle so much. Jeremy, Stacey and Jenny are all her personalities, which is why Stacey was her "eyes, ears and mouth" in "Put That Putter Away!", and it's also why she acts so differently when they're around. The other children recognize Candace's personalities as different people as well and treat them as such. Candace's mom's frustration with her busting the kids isn't even about the busting, but instead about her giving into Phineas's delusions and being so aggressive to her counselors. Buford has bipolar disorder, which is why he goes from deep and sensitive to aggressive and spiteful so often. Baljeet is Obsessive Compulsive. Dr. Doofenshmirtz is a Doctor at the facility who, while not a bad person, is unliked severely by Candace. When she's in her Perry personality she's more prone to break rules, which is why Doof "traps" her so often and why he only fights her if she attacks first. Carl is an orphan who had nowhere else to go. He got involved in the kid's games once (in Undercover Carl) and was still in reality, which is why he was so reluctant to play along. He grew attached to Monogram, since he was the only adult who was ever really kind to him. Major Monogram is Carl's social worker who interacts with the kids from time to time. Candace has an unexplained fondness for him and when in her "Perry" personality sees him as a part of their separate reality as his boss, since he always tries to encourage "him" to fight the illness. What Phineas and the other kids involved see as him bossing Carl around is simply his tough-but-fair way of trying to help the boy have a future. Django was depressed, but after connecting with the boys, he was checked out by his dad, although he's relapsed once. The Fireside Girls are Isabella's friends from her old life who come to visit often and play along with her delusions. The recurring background characters are random Doctors, visitors, social workers and other patients. The "did you think it was just going to fall out of the sky?" couple are the parents of a patient who are always fighting about their kid's illness and the father is usually right. The extras from the first episode were kids who were almost done with treatment and were checked out soon after. This also explains why it's perpetually summer, why the kids always wear the same clothes, why nobody goes to school and why none of the adults ever see what the children do.
Doug Funny Theory Doug was the original Emo kid. He sat in the corner of the park and wailed on his banjo, singing love songs about Patti Mayonaise. What do little kids do? Idolize cartoon characters. Emo, and the subsequent emo kids, are all Doug’s fault. Doug was emo; keeping a journal, getting his ass kicked by bullies, and wearing a sweater vest. I understand sweater vests aren’t emo, but, come on…he was Doug. It’s emo on Doug. Trust me. I’m the connoisseur of Doug. (Guys, drop that one at parties as a pick up line for a girl…give her 5 seconds, and you’ll be wondering why you are all alone in the corner with your friends laughing at you and the host asking you to leave because you are too fucking stupid to stay at the party. Go home and listen to the Beets. It’s what I do.) Doug wore underwear over his shorts to make them look tighter, probably because he didn’t have the balls to steal his sister’s pants (I know, “having the balls to steal your sister’s pants” is a very contradictory phrase, but work with me here). His pants are tight. His mighty banjo is in his hand. His heart is broken. It reeks of emo more than Christina Agulera reeks of “worthless whore.” Doug is responsible for the lameness of America’s youth. Before Doug, we worshiped kick ass super heroes. Superman could fly and kick ass. Batman had a sick car and beat the shit out of people. Hell, Wonder Woman used S