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Garbage Pail Kids: Difference between revisions
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The series was devised by Topps consultant / Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist [[:File:Maus cover.jpg|Art Spiegelman]]{{Jew}} and Mark Newgarden who worked together as the [[editor]]s & art directors of the project, [[Mars Attacks|Len Brown]] acted as manager, and the first run of the cards was drawn exclusively by artist John Pound. Following the initial success of the cards, several additional artists and writers were brought in to contribute, including [[MAD Magazine|Jay Lynch]], [[MAD Magazine|Tom Bunk]], and [[MAD Magazine|James Warhola]], among others. | The series was devised by Topps consultant / Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist [[:File:Maus cover.jpg|Art Spiegelman]]{{Jew}} and Mark Newgarden who worked together as the [[editor]]s & art directors of the project, [[Mars Attacks|Len Brown]] acted as manager, and the first run of the cards was drawn exclusively by artist John Pound. Following the initial success of the cards, several additional artists and writers were brought in to contribute, including [[MAD Magazine|Jay Lynch]], [[MAD Magazine|Tom Bunk]], and [[MAD Magazine|James Warhola]], among others. | ||
==GPK IRL B&?== | ==GPK IRL B&?== |
Revision as of 17:19, 12 August 2018
This article needs moar examples of retarded fandom & lulzy drama. You can help by adding moar examples of retarded fandom & lulzy drama. |
Garbage Pail Kids is a series of sticker trading cards produced by the Topps Company, originally released in 1985 and designed to parody the Cabbage Patch Kid dolls which were popular at the time. Each sticker card features a child exhibiting some form of abnormality, deformity, and/or suffering a lulzy fate. To maximize profit two versions of each card were produced, with variations featuring the same artwork but a different character name denoted by an 'A' or 'B' lettered number. Many of the card backs feature puzzle pieces that form giant murals while other flip-side subjects vary greatly among the series, from licenses and awards to comic strips and, in more recent releases, Facebook profiles.
The series was devised by Topps consultant / Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Art Spiegelman✡ and Mark Newgarden who worked together as the editors & art directors of the project, Len Brown acted as manager, and the first run of the cards was drawn exclusively by artist John Pound. Following the initial success of the cards, several additional artists and writers were brought in to contribute, including Jay Lynch, Tom Bunk, and James Warhola, among others.
GPK IRL B&?
During the height of the card series' popularity, Garbage Pail Kids were b& in many schools. One of the main reasons for this prohibition was that teachers cited them [citation needed] as distractions during class...
— Principal Dr. Charles Gersna |
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Stupid Student Award | ||
Licensed to Ill?
A selection of the offending licenses & awards.
TIL • Trademark Infringement Lolsuit
Topps were jewed by the makers of Cabbage Patch Kids for trademark infringement. As part of the out-of-court settlement Topps modified the appearance of the Garbage Pail Kids to remove the resemblance between brands & tweaked their logo. Production of the cards themselves continued, but by 1988 sales had bottomed out and a planned 16th series was never produced.
GPK • The Movie
In 1987, a live-action film based on the card characters was released. Its shitty production made it both a critical and commercial flop, opening poorly in 374 theaters with initial receipts of $661,512 and total gross receipts of $1,576,615, barely making back its 1 million dollar budget. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 0% critic rating and 35% 27% audience rating. It is widely considered to be one of the worst films ever made.
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GPK IRL B& 2: Electric Boogaloo
The American television-network CBS commissioned an entire season of GPK cartoons, and heavily promoted it in the run-up to the 1987-88 season. However, it was abruptly pulled a few days before its debut, and was replaced with an extra half hour of Muppet Babies, which was expanded to 90 minutes in order to fill the slot after Garbage Pail Kids was pulled from the schedule.
CBS removed the series from their schedule, following protests from Action for Children's Television, the National Coalition on Television Violence, and the Christian Leaders for Responsible Television (a part of the American Family Association). The reasons given were that the series ridiculed the handicapped and glorified violence, along with the common issue eventually rectified by the Children's Television Act that the program was effectively program-length ads for the toys and cards of the Garbage Pail Kids franchise.
Some advertisers, such as Nabisco, McDonald's and Crayola also pulled out, either due to pressure from interest groups, or because they were unable to pre-screen the series from advanced tapes.
Despite never airing in the United States, it did air in several other countries, including Spain, Brazil, Portugal, Trinidad and Tobago, the United Kingdom, Iceland, Israel, Italy and the Philippines.
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30 Years Of Garbage: The Garbage Pail Kids Story
30 Years Of Garbage is a documentary deatailing the rise and fall of the GPK line in the 1980s but more amusingly it's two hours of the creators whining about the legal butthurt they and TOPPs were handed because their product resembled, a little too closely, current products such as the Crappage Patch Kids.
Some fans of the product also preach a little too left handedly that GPK were embraced by children because they were the first product that showed them the true idiocy of major corporations and attempted to take them down a peg. Those more au fait with juvenile cognitive processes explain that they were popular with kids because they were funny and gross.
The documentary serves as a warning that if children like something and parents hate it, parents will utilise any and all means at their disposal to have it banned.
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GPK R34?
Of course, it goes without saying that only a sick fuck like John K or Tom Wysom would want to see actual Garbage Pail Kids getting diddled; happily for any onanistically inclined fans of the product not looking to open themselves up to a period of extended penal servitude, Powersville Inc. have released a series of GPK themed spank tapes that are 100% street-legal.
Garbage Pail Girls • Selections from the Trashy Trilogy
⚤ Garbage Pail Girls 1 - Scene 2 • Dirty Harry, Patricia Petite - Pornhub
⚤ Garbage Pail Girls 2 - Scene 1 • Rick Masters, Tory Lane - Pornhub
⚤ Garbage Pail Girls 3 - Scene 4 • Jay Ashley, Naudia Nyce - Pornhub
Meet the Kids
See also
External links
The Garbage Pail Kids Movie
Garbage Pail Kids (TV Series)
- Barren AARON's GPK World • US & International card reference site.
- GEEPEEKAY • Comprehensive US card reference site.
- GPK Movie Reviews • Rotten Tomatoes
- Rarest & Most Expensive GPK Cards Ever Made • io9
- Interview With Mark Newgarden Co-Creator of GPK • Vice
Garbage Pail Kids is part of a series on Visit the Media Portal for complete coverage. |
Featured article August 18 & 19, 2018 | ||
Preceded by Marcellus Williams |
Garbage Pail Kids | Succeeded by TBA |