![]() Plucky Girl: She’s a very daring and adventurous girl, seeking adventure all across Strawberryland.Pink Means Feminine: As part of her Girliness Upgrade, Strawberry wears a lot more pink, with her hair color even changing to dark pink from her more reddish-orange hair of 2003. ![]() ![]() Only Sane Woman: In many episodes she always has to act as the voice of reason and mediator between her friends whenever they get into arguments with one another (mostly from Angel Cake and Peppermint Fizz).Nice Girl: She is a sweet girl with a 'berry' big heart.Meaningful Appearance: Her hat has strawberry patterns all across it.Everywhere she goes she always manages to make a new friend. Magnetic Hero: It's Strawberry's world, and we're all just living in it.Kindhearted Cat Lover: Strawberry's pet is Custard the cat.Girliness Upgrade: After the Plot-Relevant Age-Up Time Skip, Strawberry became more of a Girly Girl, though it’s still very downplayed.Cool Horse: Honey Pie Pony is usually her steed in the series.Cheerful Child: She generally has an upbeat attitude and positive outlook on things.Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: She’s the Redhead to Angel Cake's Blonde and Blueberry Muffin's Brunette.Always Someone Better: She’s considered a superior baker to the Purple Pieman, both in baking talent, and for her kind nature compared to Pieman’s scheming ways.Alliterative Name: Strawberry Shortcake.Adaptational Dye-Job: Her original incarnation had yarny red hair, wile this Strawberry has messy orange hair, and later straight dark pink hair in Season 4.Optimistic, adventurous, and berry sweet, she’s always looking to meet new friends. I am kind of a nut about these things so pardon my stepping on any toes, I mean not to offend, simply readjust the perception.Her Season 4 designThe main heroine of the series, Strawberry Shortcake is the unofficial princess of Strawberryland, where she and her friends go on fun adventures together. Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light-First Run Syndication.ĭinoRiders-Not even technically it’s own show, this was part of the “Marvel Action Hour” along with reruns of Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, Robocop and that fantastic “Pryde Of The X-men” pilot Sunbow did. Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors-First Run Syndication. 11 minute episodes which were usually 2-3 parters. TigerSharks-Not even technically it’s own show, this was merely a segment of “The Comic Strip” which also featured Camp Mini-Mon, The Street Frogs and Karate Kat. It’s a blanket statement that I feel does not do justice to the quality of the final product. I just get annoyed when the FRS toons get lumped into the same category as the SMC do. This created a major issue when it came to not just quality but to consistency, the network SMC were higher budgeted and had to produce fewer episodes and the FRS toons had to make much more product with smaller budgets yet these not being made for a network would also allow them much greater leeway when it came to slipping in more adult content (my interview with Buzz Dixon touches on this ). A SMC would average 13 to 20 episodes and a FRS toon would have to be 65 episodes. Most SMC were made by their respective networks for the express purpose of selling advertising (the dolls and cereal ads) whereas a First Run Syndicated toon would be “stripped” 5 days a week usually with the backing of a toy company. You keep using the term “Saturday Morning Cartoons” when in fact %75 of your list are actually First Run Syndication toons and there is a major difference between them.
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