The Ren & Stimpy Show

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Not quite the Fab Four.

The Ren & Stimpy Show (often known as simply Ren & Stimpy) is a famous piece of 1990s anarchist propaganda, airing on the Nickelodeon children's network. Created by German cartoonist Leni Gufeschtahl ("GOO fin stall") and Canadian egomaniac John Kricfalusi ("PHALLUS sigh"), the show was known for its highly troubled production process.

Premise[edit | edit source]

Ren & Stimpy revolves around Ren Hoëk (voiced by Billy West) – a screaming chihuahua who is fond of leather and whips – and his submissive partner Stimpson J. "Stimpy" Cat (voiced by John Kricfalusi) – a dimwit cat who is addicted to cinnamon sugar. Some have theorized that the entire show takes place within Stimpy's mind, due to a psychotic break involving egg sucking.

Additional characters include Muddy Mudskipper, George Liquor, Powdered Toast Man, The Announcer, and that weird-looking dude with the chicken leg on his head – not to mention a whole gaggle of ugly animals traced from Milt Gross comics at the eleventh hour.

Production[edit | edit source]

Development[edit | edit source]

German cartoonist Leni Gufeschtahl was a fan of Bob Clampett's hate-filled anti-ethnic screeds from the WWII era and sought to duplicate their manic, fast-paced intensity and powerhouse animation, but felt morally obliged not to preserve Clampett's obvious disdain for the sight of dirty Japs walking upright instead of lying bleeding slowly to death on the pavement. Thus, in the summer of 1989, she packed her bags and headed for America, where she delivered her pitch for a series to the local cable network Nickelodeon, a network already renowned for its gross humor and alleged cannibalism driven by an unquenchable thirst for blood.

To produce the cartoon, Gufenschtahl founded an animation studio, which soon enslaved employed a Canadian artist by the name of John "Kriccy" Kricfalusi, who was assigned "scapegoat status" upon his arrival. Production of the first season was "hellish", according to Kricfalusi:


Conflicts with Nickelodeon[edit | edit source]

Nick and Kricfalusi were already at loggerheads over the direction of the show by the time the first three episodes were finished. Nick wanted the anarchist element to be brought more to the surface at the expense of "all those stupid bits where you waste a whole three minutes holding on the beats between lines so you can put in those weird faces that don't tell us anything important". Gufenschtahl was, by all accounts, completely taken aback by this suggestion, saying years later in an interview with the online magazine 90skids.net:


By the fall of 1992 Nick was fed up with Kricfalusi's disobedience, especially his insistence on submitting scripts instead of incoherent doodles on napkins, the latter of which Nick felt "made for better cartoons". Nick also expressed reservation at Gufenschtahl's conservative attitudes; "not violent enough" and "more broken glass" were oft-heard complaints from executives.

Cancellation[edit | edit source]

The final straw came when an episode featuring the ultra-liberal George Liquor ended with Ren refusing to beat Liquor senseless to prove his loyalty, instead encouraging George, Stimpy, and the audience to rebel against their violent, repressive, backward society by spreading free love and ignoring decency laws, after which all three characters danced around chanting "make love, not war" to the tune of Raymond Scott's "In An 18th Century Drawing Room".

Nick promptly fired Kricfalusi and crudely reanimated the episode as an ultra-violent spectacle, taking great pains to make George look more Catholic before he gets the shit beaten out of him. After this incident, they cancelled the show and lynched Gufenschtal; none of her remains were ever found.

Spinoffs and reboots[edit | edit source]

"Adult Party Cartoon"[edit | edit source]

In 2003 Spike TV (now Paramount Network) decided to give John Kricfalusi another chance to work on Ren & Stimpy. Yeah, give a second chance to a guy who was a total asshole to his co-workers. This show outright ruined Ren & Stimpy, and you can pin the blame on John Kricfalusi.

Comedy Central reboot[edit | edit source]

Paramount Global has expressed interest in rebooting Ren & Stimpy for Comedy Central, with Billy West as the voice of the two main characters. Unfortunately, with the exceptions of John Kricfalusi (good riddance) and Chris Reccardi (miss ya buddy), everyone who worked on the original show has expressed interest in returning, but the new writers claim "they're too old".

See also[edit | edit source]