

"Ren Seeks Help" - After Ren does something so horrible to Stimpy that it leaves Stimpy in hysterical grief and Ren in guilt, he finally realizes how cruel he can be to his best friend and tries to apologize to him, but Stimpy refuses to forgive him, so Ren goes to see a psychiatrist.They later get chased out of the spittoon and head back in the homeless man's mouth. In the spittoon, the duo eats bottly fluids and play baseball under the sheets. "Onward and Upward" - Tired of living inside a homeless man's mouth, Ren and Stimpy move to the inside of a spittoon after Stimpy pools his secret stash of money into it.Episodes Official Episodes Main article: List of Ren & Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon episodes In 2005, he announced that all of the Adult Party Cartoon episodes that were fully produced were coming to DVD, which was released on July 18, 2006. Kricfalusi shut down Spümcø shortly thereafter following a lawsuit filed by Carbunkle for failing to pay the animation studio for their services.
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The remaining episodes were set to resume in August 2004 along with the premiere of Spike's new animated series Immigrants but both shows were pulled and never aired again. The show stopped airing after three episodes when TNN's animation block was "put on hold". Advertisers objected to some of the new show's content, particularly that of the risqué episode "Naked Beach Frenzy" which did not air in the show's original run, causing trouble with scheduling.

The episode portrayed the characters as bisexual. Kricfalusi wrote the first episode, "Onward and Upward", based on requests from fans from the Nickelodeon era. The new series began airing in June 2003 as part of an animation block also featuring Gary the Rat, Stripperella, and digitally remastered episodes of the original Ren & Stimpy series, subtitled "Digitally Remastered Classics". Kricfalusi had previously relied upon Carbunkle during the Nickelodeon years, and he subcontracted animation of many original series episodes (including "Space Madness", "Black Hole" and "The Royal Canadian Kilted Yaksmen") to that studio. Cast members Harris Peet and Cheryl Chase also returned, and Kricfalusi's father Mike Kricfalusi and long-time childhood friend Tom Hay provided some voices.Īll of the episodes were animated at Carbunkle Cartoons, in association with Big Star Productions. Eric Bauza was hired to replace West as Stimpy, while Kricfalusi reprised his roles as Ren and Mr. Horse, who turned down the role, as he did not consider it funny and felt that participating in it would damage his career. Some of the original voice cast members returned, with the exception of Billy West, original voice of Stimpy and second voice of Ren and Mr. In a similar vein to the original series, Kricfalusi ran into problems with meeting production deadlines, with only three out of the nine episodes ordered by the network being completed on time. Some of the head storyboard artists, screenwriters, and animators returned from the original Ren & Stimpy series, such as Vincent Waller, Eddie Fitzgerald, and Jim Smith, but most of the animation and writing team were a new team of artists, specifically instructed and headed by Kricfalusi. TNN gave Kricfalusi greater control of the writing and contents of the episodes, and he produced six new cartoons aimed at adult audiences. Kricfalusi said that TNN wanted an "extreme" version of The Ren & Stimpy Show. In 2002, about a decade after Kricfalusi's termination, Viacom (which owns Nickelodeon) contacted him to produce a new version of his series for an updated version of TNN, Spike TV, which was devoted to programming for male audiences. The show's creator, John Kricfalusi, had many altercations with the network, eventually culminating in his termination.

The original Ren & Stimpy Show premiered alongside Rugrats and Doug as one of the original Nicktoons on children's network Nickelodeon in 1991.
