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{{Short description|American comedy Flash-animated series}} | |||
:''This article is about the Internet cartoon series. For the character and series' namesake, see ]''. | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2020}} | |||
{{Mergefrom-multiple|Teen Girl Squad|Cheat Commandos|date=December 2006}} | |||
{{Primary sources|date=December 2024|article|reason=Multiple primary source references to homestarrunner.com well beyond the realm of uncontroversial self-descriptions}} | |||
{{Unreferenced|date=December 2006}} | |||
{{Use American English|date=March 2024}} | |||
{{Internet cartoon| | |||
{{Infobox television | |||
image= ] <br /> <small>The Homestar Runner logo| | |||
| image = Homestar Runner logo.svg | |||
| caption = ''Homestar Runner'' logo | |||
devise=]<br>Craig Zobel| | |||
| genre = {{unbulleted list|]|]|]|]}} | |||
writer=]| | |||
| creator = {{unbulleted list|]|]}} | |||
| writer = {{unbulleted list|Matt Chapman|Mike Chapman}} | |||
voice-actor=The Brothers Chaps<br>]| | |||
| voices = {{unbulleted list|Matt Chapman|Missy Palmer|Mike Chapman}} | |||
launchdate=] ]| | |||
| country = United States | |||
website= | |||
| language = English | |||
| animator = {{unbulleted list|Mike Chapman|Matt Chapman}} | |||
| first_aired = {{Start date|2000}} | |||
| last_aired = present | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Homestar Runner''''' is an American comedy animated ] and website created by Mike and Matt Chapman, known collectively as ]. The series centers on the adventures of a large and diverse cast of characters, headed by the titular character, Homestar Runner. It uses a blend of ], self-parody, satire, and references to ], in particular ]s, classic ], and ]. | |||
Homestar Runner originated in 1996 as a book written by Mike Chapman and ], intended as a parody of ]. While learning ], Mike and his brother Matt expanded the concept into a website, which was launched on ] ]. While the site originally centered on the title character, the ''Strong Bad Email'' cartoon skits quickly became the site's most popular and prominent feature, with ], initially the series' main antagonist, becoming a breakout character. Since 2000, the site has grown to encompass a variety of cartoons and web games featuring Homestar, Strong Bad, and numerous other characters. | |||
'''''Homestar Runner''''' is a ] ] ]. It mixes ] with references to 1980s and 1990s pop culture, notably ], classic television and ]. Although originally conceived as a book written for children, the site is perhaps most popular with young adults, although it does have its share of youth, preteen, and adult fans.{{Fact|date=January 2007}} | |||
At the peak of its popularity, the site was one of the most-visited sites with collections of Flash cartoons on the ], spreading via ].<ref name="Wired">{{Cite news |last=Dean, Kari Lynn |date=June 2003 |title=HomestarRunner Hits a Homer |work=Wired News |url=https://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,59261,00.html |url-status=dead |access-date=June 12, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060613134340/http://wired.com/news/culture/0%2C1284%2C59261%2C00.html |archive-date=June 13, 2006}}</ref> The site sustains itself through ] sales and has never featured ].<ref name="FAQ">{{Cite web |title=FAQ |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/faq.html |last1=Chapman, Matt |last2=Chapman, Mike |year=2005 |website=homestarrunner.com |format=SWF |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061217051211/http://www.homestarrunner.com/faq.html |archive-date=December 17, 2006 |access-date=December 18, 2006}}</ref> The Brothers Chaps have turned down offers to make a television series.<ref>{{Cite news |last=John Scott Lewinsk |date=June 18, 2007 |title=Homestar Runner Rejects TV to Stay True to Web |work=wired.com |url=https://www.wired.com/entertainment/theweb/news/2007/06/homestarrunner |access-date=August 26, 2008 |archive-date=August 10, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080810071133/http://www.wired.com/entertainment/theweb/news/2007/06/homestarrunner |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Cartoons are nominally centered on ], a terrific yet unintelligent athlete. The series of cartoons in which the antagonist ] answers email from viewers, called ''Strong Bad Email'', is the most prominent feature of the site. The site has also grown to encompass dozens of other characters. | |||
After a four-year hiatus beginning in 2010, Homestar Runner returned with a new Holiday ] on April 1, 2014, for ]. Afterwards, co-creator Matt Chapman announced plans to give the site semi-regular updates. Since global support for Flash ended on December 31, 2020, homestarrunner.com has maintained a fully functional website through the Flash emulator ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bonifacic |first1=Igor |title=Flash content like Homestar Runner lives on in the Internet Archive |date=November 19, 2020 |url=https://www.engadget.com/internet-archive-flash-emulator-233338419.html |publisher=Engadget |access-date=5 September 2023}}</ref> More cartoons have since been released on the website and its ] on an occasional basis, usually to celebrate holidays. | |||
The site is one of the most popular Flash cartoons on the Internet and is notable for its refusal to sell advertising space (the creators pay for everything through merchandise sales, which includes a line of T-shirts).<ref name="FAQ">{{cite web| |author=] |coauthors=] | year=2005| title=FAQ | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/faq.html | accessdate=2006-12-18}}</ref> It grew in popularity largely through ]. | |||
== |
==History== | ||
] | |||
''Homestar Runner'' was brought to life in Atlanta in 1996 by two ]<ref name="bostonglobe">{{cite news | last = Aucoin | first = Dan | coauthors = | title = Lookin' At A Thing In A Bag | work = The Boston Globe | pages = C1 | language = English | publisher = The Boston Globe | date = 09 August 2003 | url = | accessdate = 2006-12-25}}</ref><ref name="penguinbros">{{cite web | last = Strick | first = Jacob | authorlink = | coauthors = Samuel Strick | title = Homestar Runner Interview | work = | publisher = Penguin Brothers | date = 26 May 2003 | url = http://www.penguinbros.com/interviews/homestarrunner.html | format = | doi = | accessdate = 2006-12-25 }}</ref><ref name="tlchicken">{{cite web | last = Chinsang | first = Wayne | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Homestar Runner's The Brothers Chaps | work = Tastes Like Chicken | publisher = Tastes Like Chicken | date = June 2003 | url = http://www.tlchicken.com/view_story.php?ARTid=1374 | format = | doi =|accessdate = 2006-12-25 }}</ref> students, ] and Craig Zobel, who were working during the summer in jobs related to the ].<ref name="Wired">{{cite web | author=Dean, Kari Lynn| year=June, 2003| title=HomestarRunner Hits a Homer | format= | work=Wired News| url=http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,59261,00.html | accessdate=2006-06-12}}</ref> | |||
===1996–2000: Development=== | |||
On a day off, they visited a bookstore where they found that the state of children's books was dismal. Intending to parody this, they wrote the original story ''The Homestar Runner Enters the Strongest Man in the World Contest''.<ref name="original book">{{cite web |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/book1.html |title=The Homestar Runner Enters the Strongest Man in the World Contest |accessdate=2006-12-19 |author=Chapman, Mike |authorlink=The Brothers Chaps |coauthors=Zobel, Craig |work=homestarrunner.com |year=1996}}</ref> This story featured Homestar Runner, ], ], ], and a few characters that are rarely seen in recent cartoons: The Robot, Mr. Bland, Señor, and the Grape Fairie<!--sic-->. This hand-drawn book was the only incarnation of the characters for several years. | |||
''Homestar Runner'' was created in ] in 1996 by ]<ref name="bostonglobe">{{Cite news |last=Aucoin |first=Dan |date=August 9, 2003 |title=Lookin' At A Thing In A Bag |pages=C1 |work=The Boston Globe }}</ref><ref name="penguinbros">{{Cite web |title=Homestar Runner Interview |url=http://www.penguinbros.com/interviews/homestarrunner.html |last1=Strick |first1=Jacob |last2=Samuel Strick |date=May 26, 2003 |publisher=Penguin Brothers |access-date=December 25, 2006 |archive-date=June 27, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060627090923/http://www.penguinbros.com/interviews/homestarrunner.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="tlchicken">{{Cite web |title=Homestar Runner's The Brothers Chaps |url=http://www.tlchicken.com/view_story.php?ARTid=1374 |last=Chinsang |first=Wayne |date=June 2003 |website=Tastes Like Chicken |access-date=December 25, 2006 |archive-date=November 16, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061116055258/http://tlchicken.com/view_story.php?ARTid=1374 |url-status=live }}</ref> students Mike Chapman and friend ], who wrote the original picture book, ''The Homestar Runner Enters the Strongest Man in the World Contest'', while working summer jobs surrounding the ].<ref name="Wired" /><ref name="original book">{{Cite web |title=The Homestar Runner Enters the Strongest Man in the World Contest |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/book1.html |last1=Chapman, Mike |author-link=The Brothers Chaps |last2=Zobel, Craig |year=1996 |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010628163835/http://www.homestarrunner.com/book1.html |archive-date=June 28, 2001 |access-date=December 19, 2006}}</ref> | |||
Matt described the origin of the name "Homestar Runner" as an in-joke between themselves and ], a childhood friend of the Chapman brothers while growing up in ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Strong Bad's the Brothers Chaps – Interview |url=http://www.adventuregamers.com/articles/view/18236 |last=Allin |first=Jack |website=Adventure Gamers |date=December 12, 2008 |access-date=January 15, 2015 |archive-date=March 25, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150325161349/http://www.adventuregamers.com/articles/view/18236 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="io9 oral" /> | |||
They later used '']'', a ] video game, to create the first cartoon of the series.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/supernes.swf |title=Super NES |accessdate=2007-01-03 |work=homestarrunner.com |format=SWF |year=1996}}</ref> By 1999, Mike and his younger brother ] (who typically call themselves ]) were learning ] and looking for something to practice on.<ref name="kevinscott">{{cite web | author=Scott, Kevin| year=May 20, 2003| title=The Homestar Runner Interview | format= | work=Kevin's Spot| url=http://members.shaw.ca/kevinscott/Homestar/index.html|accessdate=2006-05-28}}</ref> Digging out the old children's book provided a solution. The homestarrunner.com domain was registered on ], ] and by ] ], homestarrunner.com was live.{{Fact|date=January 2007}} Matt provided the voices of the male characters, while ] provided ]'s voice.<ref name="FAQ">{{cite web|author=] |coauthors=] | year=2005| title=FAQ | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/faq.html | accessdate=2006-12-18}}</ref><ref name="Wired" /> | |||
{{blockquote|It actually comes from a friend of ours . There was an old local grocery store commercial, and we live in Atlanta, and it advertised the ]. It was like, "the Atlanta Braves hit home runs, and you can hit a home run with savings here!" And so there was this player named ], and they said something like "All star second baseman for the Braves". And our friend knows nothing about sports, and so he would always do his old-timey radio impression of this guy, and not knowing any positions in baseball or whatever, he would just be like, "homestar runner for the Braves". And we were just like, "Homestar Runner? That's the best thing we've ever heard!"<ref name="kevinscott" />}} | |||
Regarding the origin of the name "Homestar Runner", Matt had this to say, from an interview with Kevin Scott:<ref name="kevinscott" /> | |||
When Mike and Craig were in a bookstore and made a remark about how "awful" the children's books were, the idea to write their own children's book occurred to them.<ref name="io9 oral">{{Cite web |title=An Oral History of Homestar Runner, the Internet's Favorite Cartoon |url=http://io9.gizmodo.com/an-oral-history-of-homestar-runner-the-internets-favor-1791519879 |last=Winkle |first=Luke |date=January 24, 2017 |website=] |access-date=January 24, 2017 |archive-date=January 25, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170125100338/http://io9.gizmodo.com/an-oral-history-of-homestar-runner-the-internets-favor-1791519879 |url-status=live }}</ref> They spent around two hours designing the look of Homestar Runner, Pom Pom, Strong Bad, and The Cheat, and completed the book within a day. They only printed about five to ten copies to share with friends, and had no intention to publish it. However, they had no idea that their father had sent out the book as a manuscript for submission to about 80 different publishers, but they only got rejection letters back, if anything. The pair began to work on a sequel, ''Homestar Runner Goes for the Gold'', which would have introduced Strong Bad's brothers, Strong Mad and Strong Sad, but was eventually abandoned.<ref name="io9 oral" /> They later used the ] video game '']'' to create the first cartoon featuring the characters.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Super NES |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/supernes.swf |year=1996 |website=homestarrunner.com |format=SWF |access-date=January 3, 2007 |archive-date=September 10, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120910143859/http://www.homestarrunner.com/supernes.swf |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
{{cquote|It actually comes from a friend of ours. There was an old local grocery store commercial, and we live in Atlanta, and it advertised the ]. It was like, "the Atlanta Braves hit home runs, and you can hit a home run with savings here!" And so there was this player named ], and they said something like "All star second baseman for the Braves." And our friend knows nothing about sports, and so he would always do his old-timey radio impression of this guy, and not knowing any positions in baseball or whatever, he would just be like, "homestar runner for the Braves." And we were just like, "Homestar Runner? That’s the best thing we’ve ever heard!"}} | |||
===2000–2009: Launch and initial popularity=== | |||
Homestar was once called ''The'' Homestar Runner,<ref name="original book" /> but the title has since changed to ''Homestar Runner'', while The Homestar Runner is now mostly reserved for the name of the ] counterpart.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/parsnips.html |title=Parsnips A-Plenty |accessdate=2006-12-19 |year=2002 |author=] |coauthors=] |work=homestarrunner.com}}</ref> | |||
Around 1999, Mike recognized how popular ] animation was taking off, and he and his younger brother Matt Chapman started to learn Flash on their own.<ref name="io9 oral" /> Looking for something on which to practice, they found inspiration in the old "children's" book.<ref name="kevinscott">{{Cite web |title=The Homestar Runner Interview |url=http://members.shaw.ca/kevinscott/Homestar/index.html |last=Scott, Kevin |date=May 20, 2003 |website=Kevin's Spot |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20051222112111/http://members.shaw.ca/kevinscott/Homestar/index.html |archive-date=December 22, 2005 |access-date=May 28, 2006}}</ref> Their initial cartoons were launched on their dedicated website, homestarrunner.com, by 2000. Mike animated the cartoons, Matt provided the voices of the male characters, and Mike's girlfriend (now wife) Missy Palmer provided the voice of Marzipan.<ref name="Wired" /><ref name="FAQ" /> | |||
They initially started off with shorts that featured competitions between Homestar Runner as a heroic character and Strong Bad as the villain, but these did not really capture viewers. Mike and Matt came up with the idea of animating the scenes between competitions; Matt stated "that was the stuff that was funnier, the stuff happening between the plot points, which is hilarious because we hadn't even established a routine of making cartoons about competitions, we'd made like one".<ref name="io9 oral" /> From May 2000 to February 2001,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Homestar Runner Evolution Photo |url=http://www.fanpop.com/clubs/homestar-runner/images/37785/title/homestar-runner-evolution-photo |last=Temptasia |year=2002 |publisher=Fanpop |access-date=May 26, 2013 |archive-date=May 26, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130526141235/http://www.fanpop.com/clubs/homestar-runner/images/37785/title/homestar-runner-evolution-photo |url-status=live }}</ref> the website and cartoons started out with different art styles.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Original Website! |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/oldflash.html |last=The Brothers Chaps |publisher=Homestar Runner |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20011227035300/http://www.homestarrunner.com/oldflash.html |archive-date=December 27, 2001 |access-date=May 26, 2013}}</ref> In February 2001, it gained a new look, which has largely remained consistent to the present with minor changes. | |||
The site grew slowly at first, but by mid-2001 it began to take off with the first Strong Bad Email. The number of visitors to the site grew, and by March 2003 the site had outgrown its original web host, ].{{Fact|date=January 2007}} | |||
Merchandise sales |
The site grew slowly at first and primarily through word-of-mouth. They were able to sell a "few dozen" T-shirts by 2001.<ref name="io9 oral" /> Mike moved back to New York in mid-2001 and he and Matt started crafting the first Strong Bad Email ''some kinda robot'', intending this to be a weekly feature.<ref name="io9 oral" /> The Strong Bad Email series proved very popular, generating significant interest in the site; when the brothers were late in publishing a new Strong Bad Email, they received angry emails asking where the new short was, which Matt said was "a cool feeling to know you're as important as a cup of coffee or morning crossword to some folks".<ref name="io9 oral" /> Their father suggested Matt quit his full-time job to devote time to creating more Homestar Runner shorts.<ref name="io9 oral" /> With the number of visitors to the site growing, by January 2003 the site had outgrown its original web host, ]. Merchandise sales paid for all of the costs of running the website as well as living costs of the creators, whose retired parents managed many of the business aspects.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Holy crap |url=http://www.dennews.com/media/paper309/news/2004/04/23/TheVerge/holy-Crap-669677.shtml |last=Meinheit, Matt |date=April 23, 2004 |website=The Daily Eastern News |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927230404/http://www.dennews.com/media/paper309/news/2004/04/23/TheVerge/holy-Crap-669677.shtml |archive-date=September 27, 2007 |access-date=August 18, 2006}}</ref> | ||
The brothers considered the period between 2002–2005 to be their most creative and successful, exploring various different media for the shorts and having a large quantity of merchandise. Matt considered a day in February 2004 to be the highlight of the series, having received a demo tape from ] for a song to use in a Strong Bad Email short and a life-sized replica of ] from '']'' producer ] on the same day.<ref name="io9 oral" /> They also reflected on how Homestar Runner had been a common point of reference over which newly formed couples bonded and how ] incorporated references to Homestar Runner into his television shows '']'' and '']'' as further signs of success.<ref name="io9 oral" /> | |||
] | |||
The Brothers Chaps have a creative freedom that they would not have doing a regular TV show, because they run their own website and refuse to put their characters onto the small screen. Even 10 years after the first ''Homestar Runner'' book was put together at ], they continue to produce ''Homestar Runner'' as a labor of love, enjoying what they do.{{Fact|date=January 2007}} | |||
===2009−2014: Hiatus=== | |||
Though the internet was initially the only venue for viewing ''Homestar Runner'', the first 100 Strong Bad Emails were released on DVD on ], ]. The ''strongbad_email.exe'' box set retained the various hidden features of the ] originals. Also included were three unreleased emails, two music videos, commentary tracks by the characters and their creators, and other features. A fourth collection of e-mails on DVD was released separately on ], ], and a toons DVD called "Everything Else, Volume 1" was released on ], ]. Volume 2 of this collection was released on ], ]. | |||
Through 2010, Homestar Runner remained financially viable for the brothers through sales of related merchandise. Both brothers were married by 2010 and had their children to care for, and they recognized that they would need to find other jobs to support their respective families.<ref name="io9 oral" /> When Matt had a second daughter, the two agreed to put the series on hiatus, knowing they would want to come back to it but could not guarantee a time frame. Mike also noted that they had spent nearly ten years delivering a weekly cartoon, and believed that, creatively, they needed a break.<ref name="io9 oral" /> The success of Homestar Runner led to Matt and Mike getting writing jobs for television animated series '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']''.<ref name="io9 oral" /> | |||
During this hiatus, the brothers released a small number of Homestar Runner cartoons, including ones for 2010's ] and Decemberween holidays. They also made a special video featuring Homestar and Strong Bad for the 2013 ] to introduce a panel regarding the history of ]. | |||
On ], ], Podstar Runner was launched, allowing people to download select Strong Bad Emails and other toon episodes to a video-enabled ]. Once made available through iTunes' podcast directory, it very quickly took the #1 slot on Apple's "Most Popular" podcast list.{{Fact|date=January 2007}} | |||
===2014–present: Return=== | |||
On ], ], the 10th anniversary of ''Homestar Runner'' was celebrated with the release of a Flash cartoon remake of the plotline of the original ''Homestar Runner'' book, titled ''Strongest Man in the World''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/10years.html |title=Strongest Man in the World |accessdate=2006-12-19 |year=August 21, 2006 |author=] |coauthors=] |work=homestarrunner.com|format=SWF}}</ref> | |||
Matt, after completing work on ''Gravity Falls'', moved back to Atlanta in 2014 where Mike was living, and the two agreed that they now had the opportunity to return to ''Homestar Runner'' on a semi-regular basis. Their first short in nearly four years, posted on April 1, 2014, poked fun at how they had not updated the site in years.<ref name="io9 oral" /> Matt confirmed their commitment to continue the series in July 2014.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Homestar Runner's Matt Chapman |url=http://jeffrubinjeffrubinshow.com/episode/123-homestar-runners-matt-chapman/ |publisher=The Jeff Rubin Jeff Rubin Show |access-date=July 7, 2014 |archive-date=July 12, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140712140609/http://jeffrubinjeffrubinshow.com/episode/123-homestar-runners-matt-chapman/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Since then, the site has featured occasional updates, usually for holidays. Until 2017, this was mostly due to the brothers' involvement in developing the ] animated show '']''.<ref name="io9 oral" /> | |||
With the impending discontinuation of ] in December 2020, most new ''Homestar Runner'' animations were released directly as videos to ]; the brothers also worked to transfer the older Flash content into video format for archival purposes. Prior to Flash's discontinuation, the ] included Homestar Runner content in its collection of Flash animations and games. The content is directly viewable in modern browsers through the ] Flash emulator.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bonifacic |first1=Igor |title=Flash content like Homestar Runner lives on in the Internet Archive |url=https://www.engadget.com/internet-archive-flash-emulator-233338419.html |website=Engadget |access-date=2 October 2024 |date=19 November 2020}}</ref> The ''Homestar Runner'' website itself was also updated to use Ruffle, restoring much of its original functionality.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pot |first1=Justin |title=How to Play All of Those Old Flash Games You Remember |url=https://www.wired.com/story/how-to-play-old-flash-games-ruffle/ |website=Wired |access-date=2 October 2024}}</ref> | |||
== Strong Bad Email == | |||
{{see also|strongbad_email.exe}} | |||
Traditionally, one of the most popular features on ''Homestar Runner'' are the fairly regular . The format has remained essentially unchanged: it is a series of cartoons in which Strong Bad receives an email from a fan or viewer, and starts typing his response. Strong Bad may mock the viewer, criticizing names, hometowns, spelling, and grammar. Most of the time a cut-away sequence is used that gets away from typing the e-mail. Once the events of the email finish unfolding, Strong Bad wraps up the email.<ref>{{cite web | author=] |coauthors=]| year=2003| title=Strong Bad Email 79 "the process" | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail79.html | accessdate=2006-12-19}}</ref> | |||
==Characters== | |||
Emails are checked with no predictable schedule, but there tend to be around two or three per month, and are always released on or around ]. Strong Bad Emails are the most frequently updated cartoons on the site, with the total in excess of 168 emails as of March 2007, though this count includes neither the extra emails found in the DVDs nor any partial emails found in some cartoon-episodes that are not officially classified as Strong Bad Emails. | |||
{{See also|Strong Bad}} | |||
Homestar Runner cartoons typically center on Homestar Runner, ], and the other ten main characters: The Cheat, Marzipan, Coach Z, Bubs, Strong Sad, Strong Mad, Pom Pom, the King of Town, the Poopsmith, and Homsar. The Brothers Chaps have described them as “dumb animal characters”. These characters all live in the fictional town of Free Country, USA. Each character has multiple alternate versions of themselves, such as "Old-Timey" and "20X6" versions. | |||
==Cartoons== | |||
] | |||
{{cleanup section|reason=excessive amounts of ].|date=September 2017}} | |||
Some features of the site, such as ] and the very popular ], originated in Strong Bad Emails.<ref name="comic">{{cite web | author=] |coauthors=]| year=2002| title=Strong Bad Email 53 "comic" | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail53.html | accessdate=2006-12-19}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | author=] |coauthors=]| year=2003| title=Strong Bad Email 58 "dragon" | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail58.html | accessdate=2006-12-19}}</ref> Some concepts in the emails parody real-world problems, such as the Flagrant System Error<ref>{{cite web| author=] |coauthors=]|url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail50.html|title=Strong Bad Email 50 "50 emails"|format=SWF|accessdate=2006-10-03}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| author=] |coauthors=]|url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail118.html|title=Strong Bad Email 118 "virus"|format=SWF|accessdate=2006-12-14}}</ref> and the Teal Screen of Near Death,<ref>{{cite web | author=] |coauthors=]| year=2006| title=Strong Bad Email 159 "retirement" | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail159.html|accessdate=2006-12-19}}</ref> which in ''Homestar Runner'' cartoons are equivalent to or variations of the ]. | |||
''Homestar Runner'' features several spin-off series from the main "shorts" and "big toons", including the most well-known, Strong Bad Email. | |||
=== Strong Bad Email === | |||
== Other "sub-cartoons" == | |||
Strong Bad Emails (also known as "sbemails") is a series featuring Strong Bad answering emails from fans. Since starting in August 2001, the initially brief episodes have grown in length and scope, introducing numerous spin-offs, characters, and inside jokes, such as Homsar, Trogdor, Senor Cardgage, ], the ] shorts, and Homestar Runner Emails (also known as "hremails"). The format, however, has remained largely unchanged. Each episode typically begins with Strong Bad singing a short song to himself while booting up his computer to check fan emails. Starting a reply, he typically mocks the sender's name, spelling, and grammar, and rarely answers questions directly. While early episodes focused mostly on Strong Bad sitting at the computer with occasional cutaways, the cutaways would become more elaborate over time, allowing for more complex story lines to develop, growing tangentially from the initial email. Each episode closes with Strong Bad finishing his reply, closing the episode with a link to email Strong Bad appearing via "The Paper", a ] at the top of the screen. In later episodes, it is replaced with the "New Paper", an ]; then with the "Compé-per", a ]; and finally with a ] version of the original Paper, which instead promotes Strong Bad's ] account. As of April 1, 2022, 209 Strong Bad Emails have been released on the website (with another six exclusive to DVD releases), separable into distinct eras by Strong Bad's different computers; the Tandy 400, the Compy 386, the Lappy 486, the Compé, and his current computer, the Lappier. | |||
{{Further|]}} | |||
''Homestar Runner'' features several "sub-cartoons" and spin-offs. Some of these cartoons take place outside the normal ''Homestar Runner'' universe, and the main characters of the normal cartoons do not necessarily appear in them. When they do, it is often not in the same way they appear in the main ''Homestar Runner'' world — most of the main characters also have alter-egos that appear occasionally, including a futuristic ]-style (20X6) alter-ego and an Old-Timey (circa 1936) alter-ego. | |||
=== Holiday Specials === | |||
There is a host of other minor characters who sporadically appear in various emails and the other recurring mini-cartoons. Some of these characters include Señor Cardgage, ], Marshie the Marshmallow (spokes-thing for Fluffy Puff Marshmallows), Stinkoman (] parody), The Goblin (usually appearing in ]-themed toons), Sterrance (Strong Bad's final result of attempting a made-up animal), and the band ]. | |||
Prior to the 2010 hiatus, holiday specials were a regular feature of the site, released to coincide with popular holidays, specifically ] and Decemberween (a fictional holiday similar to ] also celebrated on December 25). Halloween shorts typically feature the main characters celebrating a traditional aspect of the holiday (such as ], ]ing or ]) in costume, often making obscure pop culture references. The site also usually releases a separate Halloween video where Strong Bad views a slideshow and mocks and/or appraises photos sent in by real life fans of their Halloween costumes and props modeled after ''Homestar Runner'' characters and other elements. Similarly, Decemberween cartoons typically satirize Christmas traditions such as gift-giving and carol-singing. The fact that it takes place on the same day as Christmas has been presented as just a coincidence, having been stated that Decemberween takes place "55 days after Halloween". ] features various gags, such as turning the site into a paid subscription service, or turning it upside down. | |||
Other holidays celebrated include ], "The Big Game" (around the time of the ]), ], ], "Senorial Day" (a parody of ] featuring the character Senor Cardgage), ], ], ] (occasionally referred to as "Labor Dabor"), ], and ]. | |||
===Teen Girl Squad=== | ===Teen Girl Squad=== | ||
Teen Girl Squad is a crudely drawn ] narrated by Strong Bad, using a ] voice. The series was a spin off of Strong Bad Email #53, ''comic'', in which Strong Bad is asked to make a comic strip of a girl and her friends.<ref name="comic">{{Cite web |title=Strong Bad Email 53 |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail53.html |year=2002 |website=homestarrunner.com |access-date=December 19, 2006 |archive-date=January 14, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070114181018/http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail53.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.polygon.com/animation-cartoons/22371710/strong-bad-email-homestar-runner | title = Strong Bad ... thank you | first = Dan | last = Sheehan | date = April 13, 2021 | access-date = April 15, 2021 | work = ] | archive-date = April 14, 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210414234407/https://www.polygon.com/animation-cartoons/22371710/strong-bad-email-homestar-runner | url-status = live }}</ref> The comic features four archetypal teenage girls, "Cheerleader", "So and So", "What's Her Face" and "The Ugly One", and satirizes high school life, teen movies, and television. Each episode follows the girls in typical high school situations, often leading to their gruesome deaths. A spinoff of this series is "4 Gregs", which follows four of the squad's nerdy classmates, all named Greg. | |||
{{main|Teen Girl Squad}} | |||
'''Teen Girl Squad''' is a crudely drawn ] narrated by Strong Bad, using a ] voice. It began after Strong Bad received an email asking him to make a comic strip of a girl and her friends.<ref name="comic">{{cite web | author=| year=2002| title=Strong Bad Email 53 | format= | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail53.html|accessdate=2006-12-19}}</ref> The comic features four archetypal high-school girls, parody evident in the characters' nondescript names: "Cheerleader", "So-And-So", "What's-Her-Face", and "The Ugly One". In their quest to become unique and popular, the characters are bland and monotonous. Though they are just ]s, Strong Bad often subjects them to gruesome and unusual deaths which are described with words using in a "'D" suffix—like "LATHE'D!", which means their deaths were caused by a ], or "MANIAC IN A SPEEDO'D!" which means they were killed by a ] in a ] with a ]. <!-- It was actually 'ARROWED' the first time. The "'d" thing didn't start until later. --> Later, three months after the email, new Teen Girl Squad episodes were made. As of February 2007, there are twelve episodes, the tenth one being colored and in 3-D, since it celebrates the strip's "tenthennial issueversary". The twelfth one, being released on February 14, 2007, is a "vamlumtimes day" special. In many episodes, one can click on the "O" and/or the "!" of the ending screen where it states "(Now) It's Over!" to see extra footage, much like the "Strong Bad Emails". The Teen Girl Squad comics also have a recurring theme which features an opening sequence with a flock of birds in the background who are always killed in an obscure and gruesome way (ex: the ] turns into a ] and chops them to pieces). | |||
===Marzipan's Answering Machine=== | |||
===Old-Timey=== | |||
Marzipan's Answering Machine is a series of cartoons with almost no animation. It features messages from the other characters, being played on the answering machine belonging to the character Marzipan. In early episodes, the episode number ended in .0 (for example, Marzipan's Answering Machine Version 5.0), but since Marzipan changed to a new answering machine, the number ends in .2 (for example, Marzipan's Answering Machine Version 15.2). In every episode, Strong Bad ]s Marzipan, badly pretending to be someone else, such as "Detective Everybody", "Safety Dan", and sometimes other characters. Although the animation is usually just a picture of the answering machine, sometimes there are short animated segments featuring the characters. As of April 1, 2016, there are 17 Marzipan's Answering Machines. | |||
] | |||
Some cartoons take place in an "old-timey" setting, sometimes referred to as ], with most of the ''Homestar Runner'' characters having direct counterparts in the Old-Timey cartoons. These cartoons are in black and white with film grain and scratchy, noisy sound. They parody the distinctive style of ]s during the ] and ], and can at first be seen as perhaps purposely unfunny, to make a slanted joke about such old-style cartoons. The earliest cartoons in this style did not include speech, and thus were in the style of ]. But most of the more recent Old-Timey cartoons do include voices. One such cartoon features an original song ("The Ballad of The Sneak") by the comedic ] ensemble ]. | |||
=== |
===Puppet Stuff=== | ||
These are live action shorts in which the regular characters are depicted by puppets. These may be ], or musical performances with ]. Many Puppet Stuff videos feature the characters interacting with children, often related to ]. One spin-off series, "Biz Cas Fri", depicts Homestar and Strong Bad's interactions from his office cubicle at work. The first Biz Cas Fri video arguably first coined the term '']''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=About Doge |url=https://very.auction/doge-history |access-date=2024-12-15 |website=very.auction |language=en}}</ref> | |||
'''Stinkoman K 20X6''' (abbreviated to '''20X6'''; pronounced "Twenty Exty-Six") is yet another cartoon in response to an email, asking Strong Bad what would he look like if he were a ] character. The main character, Stinkoman, is an anime version of Strong Bad with ], a shiny body, and "cool robot boots." He goes around looking for "a challenge, or maybe some light fighting" (in fact, the whole 20X6 world seems to rotate around "challenge and fighting"). His features are based on the popular conception of ] characters of anime and ] ] (predominantly ]). Also featured are the stylized versions of Homestar ("]", always referred to by Stinkoman as "just a kid"), Pom-Pom ("Pan Pan", colored like a panda) The Cheat ("Cheatball", talks with only his name, like ]) and Marzipan (heavy '']'' influence, though she only appears once; she also does the "Yatta!" victory pose of ]'s Chun-Li). A 20X6 counterpart for ] has also been made, though his exact name and full appearance has not been revealed. Another character introduced in a short toon, Sticklyman, is a parody of the "under construction" GIF seen on many websites, and shovels ]. Some fans believe that Stickly Man is the 20X6 version of ] because of this, but any connection between the two has been hotly contested. Furthermore, his appearance fighting with Stinkoman doubles as a spoof on the popular ] series of Flash animations, which detail stick figures in highly animated, effects-laden battles of ] and ] with one another. There is also the dragon "Trogador", a 20X6 spin-off of Trogdor, whose first official appearance is in "]". | |||
===Powered By The Cheat=== | |||
The name "Stinkoman" is a reference to Strong Bad email 52 entitled "island." In the cartoon Homestar and Strong Bad end up stranded on an island in the middle of the ocean, and Homestar calls Strong Bad "Stinkoman." The year 20X6 is a reference to the ambiguous year 20XX in which the '']'' series takes place (21XX for the '']'' series), and also the ]{{Fact|date=February 2007}}. It may also be a reference to the first '']'' game, which takes place in 20X5. The series also draws inspiration from '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'' and others. The Stinkoman theme song is one of the selectable stage tunes from the ]game '']'' (written by ]) with "neo-]" lyrics (i.e. "Challenge and fighting and fighting that challenge tonight!"). | |||
In-universe, “Powered By The Cheat” videos are short cartoons made by the character of The Cheat, and are often music videos done for other characters. During these segments, Matt Chapman does the animation and Mike Chapman provides the voices, a switching of their usual roles. As a result, the cartoons are deliberately poorly animated. | |||
=== Alternate Universes === | |||
The games section of the ''Homestar Runner'' website includes a Stinkoman 20X6 ] in the style of early 1990s ] or ] games. It is especially similar to ''Mega Man'' games. It also includes mock ] phrases such as, "And other victory for Stinkoman." As the site is updated, new levels are being added to the game, extending its playability as well as adding new features (a ] level, introducing 1-Up (who is Homestar Runner's 20X6 counterpart) as a playable character, new pages into the "manuél"<!--sic-->, etc.). | |||
Over time, many alternate versions of the Homestar Runner world and characters would appear, parodying other cartoons and animation styles. Many of these feature in their own cartoons. The many alternate universes would later cross over in some cartoons, such as the 150th Strong Bad Email, ''alternate universe''. | |||
Old-Timey cartoons take place in an old-time setting, with most of the characters being Old-Timey counterparts of the ''Homestar Runner'' characters. These cartoons are in black and white with a film grain effect and scratchy audio quality. They parody the distinctive style of ]s during the 1920s and 1930s (à la ]), and can be seen as perhaps deliberately unfunny, to make a slanted joke about such old-style cartoons. | |||
===Powered by The Cheat=== | |||
Some shorts are portrayed as being drawn by The Cheat, who has his own distinctive animation style that he produces on his old ]-like computer, "]s". The drawings usually consist of an amalgam of clashing textures, pixellated ]s used as objects, and uncoordinated voices. The cartoon characters also have amorphous appendages. This style has appeared in many forms, such as in Strong Bad e-mails, cartoons, and even its own welcome page. In Powered by The Cheat segments, Mike Chapman provides intentionally poor imitations of his brother Matt's normal voice work. The animation style itself is designed to mock stereotypical amateur ], and features simple ] instead of frame-by-frame animation and purposely has an unpolished, rushed look that is common in that setting. Some of the humor in these clips require some knowledge of Flash creation to understand, such as items being placed on the wrong animation layers and parts of the scenery of one scene remaining visible in the next scene. | |||
''20X6'' (pronounced "twenty exty-six"), a parody of the ] and ] games' "year 200X", originated from Strong Bad Email #57, ''japanese cartoon'', an email asking Strong Bad what he would look like if he were in a ]ese ]. The main character, Stinkoman, is an anime version of Strong Bad with ], a shiny body and robot boots. He is always looking for a fight, asking various characters he interacts with to engage him in a "challenge" ("Are you asking for a challenge?"). There is also a game, ''Stinkoman 20X6'', which is heavily based on the ] series. | |||
Note that these animations clue us into The Cheat's fantasies and insecure personality. Strong Bad Email #87 ("mile") is an ideal example of what he most desires yet cannot possibly possess.<ref>{{cite web | author=] |coauthors=]| year=2004| title=Strong Bad Email 87 "mile" | format=SWF | work=homestarrunner.com | url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sbemail87.html | accessdate=2006-05-28}}</ref> The Cheat, ], shamelessly elevates his status in the eyes of others through praise given by his boss Strong Bad while Marzipan finally gives him the attention and affection he has been craving (notice that the two rarely exchange words) à la ]. | |||
''Cheat Commandos'' is a parody of '']'' that features a cast of characters that are the same species as The Cheat.<ref name="io9 oral" /> Most are based on G.I. Joe characters, or characters from other 1980s cartoons. The cartoon is constantly advertising its products in the cartoons by such methods as referring to the areas they are in as "playsets", a convoy truck as an "action figure storage vehicle", and by ending each cartoon with the phrase "Buy all our playsets and toys!", sung in a patriotic way. It also parodies the G.I. Joe cartoons' use of ], referring to nonsensical things like "peer-2-teen choice behaviors". Some cartoons feature the character Crack Stuntman, the fictional voice actor for the Cheat Commandos character Gunhaver.<ref name="io9 oral" /> | |||
===Cheat Commandos=== | |||
The ''']''' are a ] line of ]s that all resemble The Cheat wearing different outfits. The Commandos are an extensive parody of the popular '80s version of the '']'' action figures and cartoon. As with G.I. Joe, the Cheat Commandos figurines are all nearly exactly the same; the cartoon has silly dialogue, bad animation, mindless action sequences, and stereotypical characterization; and the entire series exists to sell merchandise (The Cheat Commandos theme song ends with, "Buy all our playsets and toys!"). The Cheat Commandos fight an evil organization known as Blue Laser (or Blue Lazer), a clear parody of G.I. Joe's arch-nemesis ], and its hopelessly incompetent and hotheaded leader Red Lazer (known in the UK as "Red Laser"). The series parodies some other elements of G.I. Joe's cartoons, such as the dispensability of the "green helmets", or the fact that the Cheat Commandos' computer screen can at any time display where Blue Laser is and vice versa, including in each others' hideouts. | |||
==Other media== | |||
The Cheat Commandos were inspired by the Strong Bad Email "Army"(), in which Strong Bad commands The Cheat to spy on Homestar Runner and his Homestarmy (Strong Sad, Homsar, a painting of a man holding a big knife, and a hot-air popcorn popper named Frank Benedetto), poised to attack Strong Badia. The Cheat is dressed in his black commando gear, and demands to be referred to as "Firebert", which Strong Bad reluctantly does, though "it's just not a good commando name." An Easter egg in this email shows Firebert's action figure package, which is also featured in the first Cheat Commandos cartoon. | |||
=== |
=== Music === | ||
The Homestar Runner site frequently features songs and videos within their animated shorts or as stand-alone entities. These are primarily sung and performed either by the characters or by fictitious artists serving as parodies of various genres. Real-life musicians ] have collaborated multiple times with the Homestar Runner site. In 2004, the Homestar Runner characters were featured in the music video to their song ]. Additionally, they have performed multiple times with a puppet of Homestar Runner. They have also collaborated on several other shorts, including Strong Bad Email #200, ''email thunder''. | |||
Several episodes have been dedicated to special days of the year. For example, every ], a cartoon is released that features all the characters in costumes celebrating some traditional aspect of Halloween (such as ], ]ing, or ]). The characters' costumes have gotten famously esoteric in recent years, full of obscure pop culture references. For example, in 2005 Strong Bad dressed up as Jambi, the Genie from '']''. | |||
In Strong Bad Email #58, ''dragon'', Strong Bad is asked to draw a ], creating '''Trogdor, the Burninator''' (stylized as '''TROGDOR, the BURNİNATOR'''), and performing his heavy metal theme song. Trogdor's popularity saw the character appear on merchandise such as T-shirts, hoodies, and posters, with an extended version of the song appearing on the CD ''Strong Bad Sings''. | |||
On ] ], fans were greeted with a page which stated that fans would be required to purchase a membership to continue viewing the site. The page contained a full "Tour" which parodied paid membership websites. It also featured 3 short clips (Homestar counting in a seven-second time frame; a Strong Bad email segment; and a Teen Girl Squad/Sweet Cuppin' Cakes ] episode) and a "trial version" game which lampooned '']''. On the same day in 2004, the main page was replaced with an "Under Construction" page which turned out to be a 20X6 cartoon in disguise. In 2003, the main page was replaced with a . | |||
In 2002, a fictional ] band, Limozeen, was introduced as a parody of 1980s bands such as ], ] and ]; with songs including "Because, It's Midnite" and "Nite Mamas". On March 17, 2008, "Limozeen" (actually the Atlanta indie band ] along with Matt Chapman on vocals) performed a live show in Atlanta, Georgia,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Limozeen Live! |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/limolive.html |last1=Chapman, Matt |last2=Chapman, Mike |year=2008 |website=homestarrunner.com |format=SWF |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080321133118/http://www.homestarrunner.com/limolive.html |archive-date=March 21, 2008}}</ref> and again on November 8, 2008, opening for indie pop band ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Zeenin' into Larger Venues! |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/limolive_om.html |last1=Chapman, Matt |last2=Chapman, Mike |year=2008 |website=homestarrunner.com |format=SWF |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081016061032/http://www.homestarrunner.com/limolive_om.html |archive-date=October 16, 2008}}</ref> A ] band called Sloshy (with the logo stylized in lower case and rotated 180 degrees, with the "o" being a different color, as "'''ʎɥs<span style="color:red">o</span>ןs'''") was introduced in 2007. Sloshy features songs in the musical vein of ] such as "We Don't Really Even Care About You" and "The B-est of B-Sides". Other fictitious artists include Scandinavian ] parody Taranchula (although performing more in a ]/] style); rapper Peacey P, with a rapping style resembling that of ]; and the self-absorbed R&B artist Tenerence Love, a parody of ] and such artists. | |||
For ] ], the entire website and all of its content was turned upside down. This caused problems with some of the content of the site – many pages which were of a different size so the default 550x400 would not be centered properly, and some pages with a lot of ] would fail, including many of the older games. This also caused problems with the Strong Bad email menu. It caused an empty e-mail list and a nonworking "random" button. But some of those were fixed a few minutes or a few hours after turning pages upside down. | |||
===Browser games=== | |||
The characters also celebrate an annual holiday called "Decemberween", which features gift-giving, carol-singing, and decorated trees. The fact that it takes place on ]th has been presented as just a coincidence, stating that Decemberween traditionally takes place "55 days after Halloween". In 2004, however, the traditional Decemberween toon was replaced with a Decemberween in July toon in July, a clear parody of ]. The holiday in and of itself is a replacement of ]—perhaps to include non-] viewers, or to parody non-denominational holiday advertising (i.e. "Happy Holidays!"). | |||
Beyond cartoons, ''Homestar Runner'' offers a variety of online games. Early games such as the Homestar ], "Homestar Talker",<ref>{{Cite web |title=Homestar Talker |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/talky2.html |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010124043000/http://www.homestarrunner.com/talky2.html |archive-date=January 24, 2001 |access-date=May 28, 2006}}</ref> and ] emulator "Astro-Lite 2600"<ref>{{Cite web |title=Astro-Lite 2600 |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/litebrite.html |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030805010718/http://www.homestarrunner.com/litebrite.html |archive-date=August 5, 2003 |access-date=April 30, 2008}}</ref> are basic web toys featuring the characters, and can now be found on the "Old Games" section of the site. Over time, more recent games have diversified and become more complex, with many being released as products of "Videlectrix", a game company within the world of Homestar Runner and a side project of The Brothers Chaps, spoofing games of the 1980s. Often the games would originate as video games played by the characters in the cartoon, such as ''Secret Collect'', ''StrongBadZone'', and ''Strong Bad's RhinoFeeder'', all parodies of early ] and arcade games, originating in the Strong Bad Email ''video games''. | |||
''TROGDOR!'' which previously appeared in the ''Arcade Game'' short, features the titular dragon Trogdor the Burninator attempting to burn all the cottages on each stage without being slain by knights. A spin-off of ''TROGDOR!'', called ''Peasant's Quest'', is an ] featuring Rather Dashing, a young peasant in short pants. After he finds his cottage burned to the ground, he vows to kill the destroyer of his cottage, Trogdor. The game uses a system that is a near-replica of ]'s ], used in '']'', '']'' and several other early Sierra titles. This system is something like ] games yet it has simple visuals. ''Stinkoman 20X6'' is a ]-style ] featuring the characters and world of anime parody ]. Nine levels were added to the game over the course of 2005, while the tenth and final level was not released until December 2020, days before Flash would no longer be supported by browsers.<ref name="Stinkoman">{{cite web | url = https://www.engadget.com/homestar-runner-stinkoman-15-year-old-flash-game-162009778.html | title = 'Homestar Runner' creators revive 15-year-old game right before Flash dies | first = Nathan | last = Ingraham | date = December 21, 2020 | access-date = December 21, 2020 | work = ] | archive-date = December 21, 2020 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201221162521/https://www.engadget.com/homestar-runner-stinkoman-15-year-old-flash-game-162009778.html | url-status = live }}</ref> | |||
Other holidays celebrated include ], "The Big Game" (around the time of the ]), ], ], "Senorial Day" (a reference to ] and ]), ], ] (which Homestar calls "Happy Fireworks"), ], and ]. Most holiday cartoons are archived on the Toons page and can be accessed using the "Holiday" button on the top right of the remote. | |||
The ''Thy Dungeonman'' series are parodies of text adventure games originating from Strong Bad Email #94, ''video games''. In each game, your goal is to "get ye flask". Though the game purports to be set in the ] era, the text is actually rendered in mock ], in the style of ]. ''Thy Dungeonman'' has two sequels: ''Thy Dungeonman II'', which expands on the features of the original game and can only be found on the Videlectrix site, and ''Thy Dungeonman III'' which adds basic graphics and can be found on the Homestar Runner site. "Ye Flask" and "You can't get ye flask" have become catch-phrases in the Homestar Runner universe, eventually spawning a T-shirt in the Homestar Runner store. | |||
===Puppet Stuff=== | |||
] | |||
Some sketches use live-action ]s of Homestar, Strong Bad, and The Cheat. From time to time, the characters are featured with a little girl known simply as Little Girl, actually the niece of ]. Several "Puppet Stuff" sketches feature Homestar Runner singing with ] and ] of the rock band ]. Furthermore, the Chapmans themselves occasionally make cameo appearances with their own characters in various skits, most notably in the puppets' appearances on the ''Strongbad_email.exe'' DVDs as bonus features and Easter eggs. This DVD set also contains extensive puppet content including a scene in which Homestar Runner plays Mike Chapman in a game of basketball. | |||
In 2007, the website produced ] versions of some of the games on the site, for the Wii internet browser. When played on a computer, they use the mouse only.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Viidelectrix |url=http://www.videlectrix.com/vii |website=videlectrix.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070206213156/http://www.videlectrix.com/vii/ |archive-date=February 6, 2007 |access-date=June 29, 2008}}</ref> | |||
===Marzipan's Answering Machine=== | |||
These are the messages left on Marzipan's answering machine by Homestar, Strong Bad, Strong Sad, and others of the town. The messages are not updated as frequently as Strong Bad's emails. They tend to include prank calls from Strong Bad as well as calls of various sorts from other characters. Also in the early answering machine, it hints that some of the other characters are in love with Marzipan (most notably Coach Z). | |||
Two point-and-click adventure game titles by the Brothers Chaps made in ] have been released to ] and ], ''Halloween Hide & Seek'' and ''Dangeresque: The Roomisode Triungulate'', an expanded remake of the original ''Dangeresque: Roomisode 1'' web game that adds two new episodes.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Serin |first=Kaan |date=May 31, 2023 |title=Telltale can "no longer sell" Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People |url=https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/telltale-can-no-longer-sell-strong-bads-cool-game-for-attractive-people |website=Rock, Paper, Shotgun}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.destructoid.com/dangeresque-the-roomisode-triungulate-is-gonna-have-to-jump-to-pc/ | title=Dangeresque: The Roomisode Triungulate is gonna have to jump to PC | date=May 25, 2023 }}</ref> | |||
===Limozeen=== | |||
Limozeen is a fictional 80's ] band that acts as a recurring segment. This features The Brothers Chaps and others as the band, all voice-overed by Matt. Strong Bad brandishes a tape of their short-lived ] in one e-mail, and apparently voice-chats with the lead singer. Limozeen is not simply a hair metal band; they are the ultimate stereotype of the hair metal genre, as evidenced by the lyrics of their song "Because It's Midnite". | |||
===Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People=== | |||
===Sweet Cuppin' Cakes=== | |||
{{Main|Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People}} | |||
Sweet Cuppin' Cakes is a cartoon created by Strong Bad in response to an to make a crazy cartoon. The cartoon, designed to be as "kah-razy" as possible is largely based on ] ] cartoons from the 1980s. It takes place on a surreal multi-colored plane resembling a ] dance floor. Violation of reality is the miniseries' forte. The central character is Sherlock, "a cross between a cow and a helicopter" who communicates through a series of weird noises and spends each episode trying to catch a worm that crawls in and out of the ground. Other characters include "]", an anthropomorphic polygon with a swirly mouth and a Greek pattern on his body that appears once an episode to deliver his eponymous catch phrase, "Eh! Steve," and the Wheelchair (voiced by Bubs), whose goal in life is to destroy Eh! Steve. Strong Bad also placed himself in the cartoon, although his head is an old ] VL-Tone keyboard. Whenever he becomes angry, it plays the demo (the German folk song "Unterlander's Heimweh"). Also featured is another small, anthropomorphic polygon named "Ready for Primetime" with blonde tufts of hair that, according to Homestar, does a "tiny, tiny dance". This "tiny, tiny dance-man" is based on the "Ready for Primetime" eyebrow style Strong Bad made for Strong Mad in the e-mail entitled "haircut" (hence the name). Upon seeing it, Strong Mad said "SWEETY CAKES!", and Strong Bad remarked that "it does look a little bit like one of them 'Sweet Cuppin Cakes' guys." | |||
On April 10, 2008, an episodic licensed game based on the series centering around Strong Bad titled '']'' (abbreviated as ''SBCG4AP'') was announced for the ]'s ] service and Microsoft Windows, developed by ] in partnership with Videlectrix.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.telltale.com/company/pressreleases/id-65/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080413214148/http://www.telltalegames.com/company/pressreleases/id-65|url-status=dead|title=Announcing Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People for WiiWare|archive-date=April 13, 2008|website=www.telltale.com}}</ref> The first episode, ''Homestar Ruiner'', premiered on August 11, 2008 on Telltale Games' website and in North America on Nintendo's WiiWare service on August 11, 2008. It was also released in Europe and Australia the following Friday (August 15, 2008). The second episode, ''Strong Badia the Free'', was released on September 15 on the WiiWare service in North America and on the Telltale Games' website, and in the PAL region on October 3. The third episode, ''Baddest of the Bands'', was released on Telltale Games' website and the WiiWare service in North America on October 27, and to the PAL region on November 21. The fourth episode, ''Dangeresque 3: The Criminal Projective'', was released on Telltale Games' website and WiiWare in North America on November 17, and in the PAL region on December 5. The fifth and final episode, ''8-Bit is Enough'', was released to North America on December 15 and in the PAL region on January 2, 2009. In 2010, it was decided that Telltale games would release ''SBCG4AP'' for the Mac operating system after a vote on the Telltale Games website. | |||
===Poker Night at the Inventory=== | |||
==Online video games== | |||
{{Main|Poker Night at the Inventory}} | |||
''Homestar Runner'' offers a variety of online games that feature one or more of their characters. The first games were simple in nature and are now found under ''Super Old Games-n-Such''. Among them are the "Homestar Talker",<ref>{{cite web | author=| year=| title=Homestar Talker | format= | work=homestarrunner.com| url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/talky2.swf | accessdate=2006-05-28}}</ref> a ] starring Homestar, and "Who Said What?", a parody of the popular children's toy ]. Also, at the end of the email Duck Pond, you can play the duck pond simulator featured in the email. More recent games have been released as products of "]", a side project of the brothers. These games are far more complex, spoofing many popular 80's videogames. Their greatest gaming endeavor, "]", is an ] featuring a young peasant in short pants named Rather Dashing, who vows to kill the destroyer of his cottage: Trogdor. The game uses a system that is a near replica of ]'s ], used in ], ] and several other early Sierra titles. The most recent addition to the website is "]", a 2-D racing game, in which you play as an overweight kid running a foot race against other athletes. One video game known as , originating in the Strong Bad Email video games, started the Internet catchphrase "Your head a splode." The phrase, used by the game as a ] message, is a reference to translation errors in Japanese games imported to an English speaking country, such as "]". | |||
Strong Bad appears as one of the computer-controlled opponents in Telltale's ''Poker Night at the Inventory'', using the same model from SBCG4AP. Players can unlock in-game card sets and table designs based on Homestar Runner. Additionally, Strong Bad will occasionally bet Dangeresque Too's sunglasses in place of in-game cash; defeating him after doing so will unlock the glasses as an equippable cosmetic item for the Demoman in '']''. The game was released for PC and Mac on November 22, 2010. | |||
===Trogdor!! The Board Game=== | |||
The December 2005 issue of Wired Magazine claimed that a new ''Homestar Runner'' video game would soon be coming to the Atari 2600, but this has yet to be seen. The ] with the Brothers Chaps by ] reported that the game was in limbo because the game's developer, Paul Slocum, was getting overwhelmed by the sheer amount of work and was pushing the limits of the Atari 2600. The price was set at $40. | |||
''Trogdor!! The Board Game'' is a board game made by The Brothers Chaps in collaboration with ]. The campaign was put on ] on Tuesday, July 17, 2018, with a goal of $75,000, which was surpassed in the first few hours. The campaign ended on Wednesday, August 15, 2018, with a total of $1,421,903 (nearly 20 times the goal) and 23,338 backers. In 2022, an expansion pack titled ''Majicks & 'Mergencies Expando Deck'' was released, adding new cards and gameplay elements. Extra copies are sold in the website's store. | |||
Trogdor!! is described as a cooperative puzzle area control game in which the players work together to burninate all of the game tiles, thatched-roof cottages, and peasants. Every player controls Trogdor, assuming the role of one of the twelve "Keepers of Trogdor". Each Keeper has unique powers and items, both decided by cards. The game is for one to six players, and play time is 30 minutes with variable levels of difficulty the players can set. The recommended age is 14+. It comes with a mini-game titled "Stack 'Em To The Heavens" in which you stack the meeples in different ways. An album titled ''Trogdor!! The Board Game Rulebook EP'', was made to explain the rules of the game. | |||
Recently, the website has produced Wii versions of some of the games on the site, for the Wii browser. When played on the computer, these use the mouse only. | |||
===Unofficial email worm=== | |||
==Collaborations with artists== | |||
An ] named Lacon, which featured Homestar Runner characters, was created and distributed by someone going by the name of DimenZion in 2003.<ref name="vice.com">{{cite web |last1=danooct1 |title=This Worm Virus Forced Windows Users to Watch 'Homestar Runner' |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/59pj8q/this-worm-virus-forced-windows-users-to-watch-homestar-runner |website=Vice |date=July 17, 2017 |access-date=11 February 2021 |archive-date=February 11, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210211201746/https://www.vice.com/en/article/59pj8q/this-worm-virus-forced-windows-users-to-watch-homestar-runner |url-status=live }}</ref> It affected 32-bit Windows computers on the 10th of each month, emailing copies of itself to contacts in the computer's address book, and also adding various .exe files to the hard drive.<ref name="vice.com"/> Its final payload showed a Homestar Runner Flash animation called "The System is Down" in a browser window.<ref>{{cite web |last1=danooct1 |title=Email-Worm.Win32.Lacon |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTfTts205s0 |website=YouTube |access-date=11 February 2021 |archive-date=January 25, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210125112505/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTfTts205s0&ab_channel=danooct1 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
{{expand-section|artists other than those listed here and more details|date=January 2007}} | |||
]]] | |||
The ] on occasion have partnered up with the rock band ]. The Brothers Chaps supplied animation for a music video of their song "]."<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.homestarrunner.com/expfilm.html | title = Experimental Film | publisher = ''homestarrunner.com'' | author = ]; ] | accessmonthday = January 3 | accessyear = 2007}}</ref> The creators of ''Homestar Runner'' spent a day with the band, and those songs have found their way onto the website in the form of "Puppet Jam", a subset of "Puppet Stuff", where Puppet Homestar rocks out with TMBG.<ref>{{citeweb | url = http://www.homestarrunner.com/puppetjam1.html | publisher = ''homestarrunner.com'' | title = Puppet Jam: Bad Jokes|author = ]; ] | accessdate = January 3 | accessyear = 2007}}</ref> TMBG also wrote the music for Strong Bad Email #99, "Different Town."<ref>{{citeweb | url = http://theymightbegiants.com/news.htm | publisher = TMBG | title = TMBG-News | accessdate = January 3 | accessyear = 2007}}</ref> | |||
== Impact == | |||
Another group, ], helped ] create "The Cheat Theme Song."<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.homestarrunner.com/cheatvideo.html | title = The Cheat Theme Song | publisher = ''homestarrunner.com'' | author = ]; ]; ] | accessmonthday = February 2 |accessyear = 2007}}</ref> As well, a band named ] helped with the ] CD, as well as on the ] DVDs. | |||
=== Collaborations with other artists === | |||
] also employed the services of the erstwhile acapella band ] to create a theme song for the old timey version of The Cheat, called "Ballad of The Sneak"."<ref>{{citeweb | url = http://www.homestarrunner.com/sneakvideo.html | publisher = ''homestarrunner.com''| title = Ballad of the Sneak| accessdate = March 20 | accessyear = 2007}}</ref> | |||
The Brothers Chaps have partnered up with rock band ] and supplied animation for a ] of their song "]".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Experimental Film |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/expfilm.html |last1=Chapman, Matt |last2=Chapman, Mike |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070101044204/http://www.homestarrunner.com/expfilm.html |archive-date=January 1, 2007 |access-date=January 3, 2007}}</ref> The creators of ''Homestar Runner'' spent time with the band and wrote songs that have been released on the website as "Puppet Jam", a spin-off of "Puppet Stuff", where Puppet Homestar sings with TMBG.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Puppet Jam: Bad Jokes |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/puppetjam1.html |last1=Chapman, Matt |last2=Chapman, Mike |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051029025603/http://www.homestarrunner.com/puppetjam1.html |archive-date=October 29, 2005 |access-date=January 3, 2007}}</ref> TMBG also wrote the music for Strong Bad Email #99, ''different town'', and the band wrote and vocalized the intro song of the 200th Strong Bad Email.<ref>{{Cite web |title=TMBG-News |url=http://theymightbegiants.com/news.htm |publisher=TMBG |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070103173331/http://www.theymightbegiants.com/news.htm |archive-date=January 3, 2007 |access-date=January 3, 2007}}</ref> Another group, The Skate Party, helped The Brothers Chaps create "The Cheat Theme Song".<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Cheat Theme Song |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/cheatvideo.html |last1=The Skate Party |last2=Chapman, Matt |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020306000146/http://homestarrunner.com/cheatvideo.html |archive-date=March 6, 2002 |access-date=February 2, 2007 |last3=Chapman, Mike}}</ref> The band ] helped with the ] and Other Type Hits CD, as well as songs on the ]<!-- INTENTIONAL UNDERSCORE! Please don't change that. --> DVDs. The Brothers Chaps also employed the services of ] of the a cappella band ] to create a theme song for the Old-Timey version of The Cheat, called "Ballad of The Sneak"; the duo later wrote the theme tune for the ''Stinkoman 20X6'' game.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ballad of the Sneak |url=http://www.homestarrunner.com/sneakvideo.html |website=homestarrunner.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030626013827/http://www.homestarrunner.com/sneakvideo.html |archive-date=June 26, 2003 |access-date=March 20, 2007}}</ref> Matt Chapman provided guest vocals as Strong Bad on ]' "Pink Pants!" from their 2011 album, '']''. Strong Bad's voice also appears on ]'s "Genuine Lulabelle" off the album "]" from 2007. | |||
==Reception== | |||
The site receives several million hits a month, and almost a thousand emails a day.<ref>{{cite news | first=Mandy | last=Jenkins | pages= | title=Cult is chasing wacky Web toon |date=August 1, 2003 | publisher=Cincinnati Enquirer | url=http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2003/08/01/tem_homestar01.html}}</ref> According to Matt Chapman, the site did no real advertising, but grew on word of mouth and endorsements; "Certain bands, like fairly popular bands and stuff would link us on their site and, you know we were shockwave site of the day a couple of times over the years."<ref name="Wired" /> | |||
Discussing how he and his sibling decide which projects to work on, Mike Chapman said, "We learned how to politely say no to things that were going to affect our lives negatively. If it's going to be fun, if we're going to enjoy doing it, and if the end project is going to be something we want to have happen, we say yes."<ref name="Mike Chapman quote">{{Cite book |last=Kirsner |first=Scott |url=http://www.scottkirsner.com/fff |title=Fans, Friends & Followers: Building an Audience and a Creative Career in the Digital Age |publisher=CinemaTech Books |year=2009 |isbn=978-1-4421-0074-9 |location=Boston, MA |page=44 |access-date=April 10, 2009 |archive-date=June 30, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190630034130/http://www.scottkirsner.com/fff/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
A review published in the '']'' characterized the site's humor as having | |||
"the innocence of ] with sharp satire of American popular culture" — humor that "tends to be cultural, not political."<ref name="natlreview">{{cite news | first=Peter | last=Wood | pages= | title=Everybody to the Limit |date=August 27, 2003 | publisher=National Review|url=http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-wood082703.asp}}</ref> Free Country is "definitely a guys' place, where video games, monster trucks, and smashing things take priority over sensitive male themes."<ref name="natlreview" /> Homestarrunner.com is the "Internet equivalent to ], the comic introduced by ] in the '']'' in 1896.<ref name="natlreview" /> | |||
===Reception=== | |||
''Homestar Runner'''s popularity, coupled with its positive critical response, has led to the website (and its creators, the Chapman brothers) to receive national coverage. ''Homestar Runner'' has been featured in Wired Magazine, the National Review, Entertainment Weekly, G4 television, and NPR's "All Things Considered," to name a few. They were also obliquely referenced on an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer (when a character mentioned the popular character Trogdor's name). | |||
In 2003, the site received several million hits a month and almost a thousand emails a day.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Jenkins |first=Mandy |date=August 1, 2003 |title=Cult is chasing wacky Web toon |work=Cincinnati Enquirer |url=http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2003/08/01/tem_homestar01.html}}</ref> According to Matt Chapman, the site did no advertising, but grew on word of mouth and endorsements. "Certain bands, like fairly popular bands and stuff would link us on their site and, you know we were ] site of the day a couple of times over the years."<ref name="Wired" /> ''Homestar Runner''{{'s}} popularity, coupled with its positive critical response, has led to the website receiving widespread coverage. ''Homestar Runner'' has been featured in '']'', '']'', '']'', ''Total Gamer'', ], and ]'s '']''.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Ydstie |first=John |date=May 8, 2004 |title=Strong Bad Walks in Footsteps of Darth, Lex, J.R. |url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4634837 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071117230936/http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4634837 |archive-date=November 17, 2007 |access-date=November 9, 2007 |work=] |publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
A review published in ''National Review'' characterized the site's humor as having "the innocence of ] with sharp satire of American popular culture" — humor that "tends to be cultural, not political."<ref name="natlreview">{{Cite magazine |last=Wood |first=Peter |date=August 27, 2003 |title=Everybody to the Limit |url=http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-wood082703.asp |magazine=National Review |access-date=May 28, 2006 |archive-date=May 11, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060511203728/https://nationalreview.com/comment/comment-wood082703.asp |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
On ], ], an image was leaked confirming Trogdor's theme song to be a bonus track in ]. This marks Trogdor's first appearance in a non-Videlectrix video game beyond a simple reference . The song has since been confirmed as an unlockable bonus track in the final version of the game, released on ], ]. This song is the same one found on the "Strong Bad Sings (And Other Type Hits)" CD. | |||
The site-generated music has enjoyed surprising popularity, such that two songs, "Trogdor" by the character ] and "Because, It's Midnite" by Limozeen, have been included in the successful '']'' and '']'' video games, respectively. | |||
==Merchandise== | |||
The Chapman brothers have created a very large collection of , ranging from ]s to ]s. The most popular item in their store is the ] ], which mostly includes songs sung by Strong Bad (but also includes songs by other characters). Also available in the store is the collectible figurines of the website's characters. There are two different sets of figurines available that feature the main ''Homestar Runner'' characters, and another set for the Cheat Commandos. | |||
== The Homestar Runner Wiki == | |||
] | |||
'''The Homestar Runner Wiki''', commonly abbreviated to HRWiki, is a Homestar Runner ] fansite running on ] software. It was founded on ], ] and is owned and operated by Joey Day. The wiki was originally powered by ] wiki software. After users began signing up, and content grew, it was moved to its own domain, and upgraded to its current format running MediaWiki on ] ]. The HRWiki is not affiliated with ], though they often use the Wiki to help them remember their own continuity. They have praised it on multiple occasions and once even donated money to it. | |||
The Homestar Runner Wiki contains detailed information on all of the ], ] emails, ] and ] from the main site as well as other minutiae. These articles include full transcripts, easter eggs, fun facts and trivia, and links to external resources. A complete list of items sold in the ''Homestar Runner'' ] along with detailed descriptions of the ], prices and even ] found in the . Other pages found on the wiki include secret pages, places, ]s, ] and cartoons that are no longer on the site. | |||
The Homestar Runner Wiki recently acquired the domain made famous by the ] cartoon. This site has become the Homestar Runner Community Portal. | |||
== Cameos == | |||
In the ] comedy series, ], a poster of Homestar and Strong Bad can be seen in Brian and Steve's Apartment. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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Latest revision as of 23:12, 2 January 2025
American comedy Flash-animated series
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Homestar Runner is an American comedy animated web series and website created by Mike and Matt Chapman, known collectively as The Brothers Chaps. The series centers on the adventures of a large and diverse cast of characters, headed by the titular character, Homestar Runner. It uses a blend of surreal humor, self-parody, satire, and references to popular culture, in particular video games, classic television, and popular music.
Homestar Runner originated in 1996 as a book written by Mike Chapman and Craig Zobel, intended as a parody of children's literature. While learning Macromedia Flash, Mike and his brother Matt expanded the concept into a website, which was launched on New Year's Day 2000. While the site originally centered on the title character, the Strong Bad Email cartoon skits quickly became the site's most popular and prominent feature, with Strong Bad, initially the series' main antagonist, becoming a breakout character. Since 2000, the site has grown to encompass a variety of cartoons and web games featuring Homestar, Strong Bad, and numerous other characters.
At the peak of its popularity, the site was one of the most-visited sites with collections of Flash cartoons on the web, spreading via word of mouth. The site sustains itself through merchandise sales and has never featured advertisements. The Brothers Chaps have turned down offers to make a television series.
After a four-year hiatus beginning in 2010, Homestar Runner returned with a new Holiday Toon on April 1, 2014, for April Fools' Day. Afterwards, co-creator Matt Chapman announced plans to give the site semi-regular updates. Since global support for Flash ended on December 31, 2020, homestarrunner.com has maintained a fully functional website through the Flash emulator Ruffle. More cartoons have since been released on the website and its YouTube channel on an occasional basis, usually to celebrate holidays.
History
1996–2000: Development
Homestar Runner was created in Atlanta in 1996 by University of Georgia students Mike Chapman and friend Craig Zobel, who wrote the original picture book, The Homestar Runner Enters the Strongest Man in the World Contest, while working summer jobs surrounding the 1996 Summer Olympics.
Matt described the origin of the name "Homestar Runner" as an in-joke between themselves and James Huggins, a childhood friend of the Chapman brothers while growing up in Dunwoody, Georgia.
It actually comes from a friend of ours . There was an old local grocery store commercial, and we live in Atlanta, and it advertised the Atlanta Braves. It was like, "the Atlanta Braves hit home runs, and you can hit a home run with savings here!" And so there was this player named Mark Lemke, and they said something like "All star second baseman for the Braves". And our friend knows nothing about sports, and so he would always do his old-timey radio impression of this guy, and not knowing any positions in baseball or whatever, he would just be like, "homestar runner for the Braves". And we were just like, "Homestar Runner? That's the best thing we've ever heard!"
When Mike and Craig were in a bookstore and made a remark about how "awful" the children's books were, the idea to write their own children's book occurred to them. They spent around two hours designing the look of Homestar Runner, Pom Pom, Strong Bad, and The Cheat, and completed the book within a day. They only printed about five to ten copies to share with friends, and had no intention to publish it. However, they had no idea that their father had sent out the book as a manuscript for submission to about 80 different publishers, but they only got rejection letters back, if anything. The pair began to work on a sequel, Homestar Runner Goes for the Gold, which would have introduced Strong Bad's brothers, Strong Mad and Strong Sad, but was eventually abandoned. They later used the Super NES video game Mario Paint to create the first cartoon featuring the characters.
2000–2009: Launch and initial popularity
Around 1999, Mike recognized how popular Flash animation was taking off, and he and his younger brother Matt Chapman started to learn Flash on their own. Looking for something on which to practice, they found inspiration in the old "children's" book. Their initial cartoons were launched on their dedicated website, homestarrunner.com, by 2000. Mike animated the cartoons, Matt provided the voices of the male characters, and Mike's girlfriend (now wife) Missy Palmer provided the voice of Marzipan.
They initially started off with shorts that featured competitions between Homestar Runner as a heroic character and Strong Bad as the villain, but these did not really capture viewers. Mike and Matt came up with the idea of animating the scenes between competitions; Matt stated "that was the stuff that was funnier, the stuff happening between the plot points, which is hilarious because we hadn't even established a routine of making cartoons about competitions, we'd made like one". From May 2000 to February 2001, the website and cartoons started out with different art styles. In February 2001, it gained a new look, which has largely remained consistent to the present with minor changes.
The site grew slowly at first and primarily through word-of-mouth. They were able to sell a "few dozen" T-shirts by 2001. Mike moved back to New York in mid-2001 and he and Matt started crafting the first Strong Bad Email some kinda robot, intending this to be a weekly feature. The Strong Bad Email series proved very popular, generating significant interest in the site; when the brothers were late in publishing a new Strong Bad Email, they received angry emails asking where the new short was, which Matt said was "a cool feeling to know you're as important as a cup of coffee or morning crossword to some folks". Their father suggested Matt quit his full-time job to devote time to creating more Homestar Runner shorts. With the number of visitors to the site growing, by January 2003 the site had outgrown its original web host, Yahoo. Merchandise sales paid for all of the costs of running the website as well as living costs of the creators, whose retired parents managed many of the business aspects.
The brothers considered the period between 2002–2005 to be their most creative and successful, exploring various different media for the shorts and having a large quantity of merchandise. Matt considered a day in February 2004 to be the highlight of the series, having received a demo tape from They Might Be Giants for a song to use in a Strong Bad Email short and a life-sized replica of Tom Servo from Mystery Science Theater 3000 producer Jim Mallon on the same day. They also reflected on how Homestar Runner had been a common point of reference over which newly formed couples bonded and how Joss Whedon incorporated references to Homestar Runner into his television shows Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel as further signs of success.
2009−2014: Hiatus
Through 2010, Homestar Runner remained financially viable for the brothers through sales of related merchandise. Both brothers were married by 2010 and had their children to care for, and they recognized that they would need to find other jobs to support their respective families. When Matt had a second daughter, the two agreed to put the series on hiatus, knowing they would want to come back to it but could not guarantee a time frame. Mike also noted that they had spent nearly ten years delivering a weekly cartoon, and believed that, creatively, they needed a break. The success of Homestar Runner led to Matt and Mike getting writing jobs for television animated series Yo Gabba Gabba!, Gravity Falls, The Aquabats! Super Show!, and Wander Over Yonder.
During this hiatus, the brothers released a small number of Homestar Runner cartoons, including ones for 2010's April Fools' Day and Decemberween holidays. They also made a special video featuring Homestar and Strong Bad for the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con to introduce a panel regarding the history of W00tstock.
2014–present: Return
Matt, after completing work on Gravity Falls, moved back to Atlanta in 2014 where Mike was living, and the two agreed that they now had the opportunity to return to Homestar Runner on a semi-regular basis. Their first short in nearly four years, posted on April 1, 2014, poked fun at how they had not updated the site in years. Matt confirmed their commitment to continue the series in July 2014. Since then, the site has featured occasional updates, usually for holidays. Until 2017, this was mostly due to the brothers' involvement in developing the Disney XD animated show Two More Eggs.
With the impending discontinuation of Adobe Flash in December 2020, most new Homestar Runner animations were released directly as videos to YouTube; the brothers also worked to transfer the older Flash content into video format for archival purposes. Prior to Flash's discontinuation, the Internet Archive included Homestar Runner content in its collection of Flash animations and games. The content is directly viewable in modern browsers through the Ruffle Flash emulator. The Homestar Runner website itself was also updated to use Ruffle, restoring much of its original functionality.
Characters
See also: Strong BadHomestar Runner cartoons typically center on Homestar Runner, Strong Bad, and the other ten main characters: The Cheat, Marzipan, Coach Z, Bubs, Strong Sad, Strong Mad, Pom Pom, the King of Town, the Poopsmith, and Homsar. The Brothers Chaps have described them as “dumb animal characters”. These characters all live in the fictional town of Free Country, USA. Each character has multiple alternate versions of themselves, such as "Old-Timey" and "20X6" versions.
Cartoons
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Homestar Runner features several spin-off series from the main "shorts" and "big toons", including the most well-known, Strong Bad Email.
Strong Bad Email
Strong Bad Emails (also known as "sbemails") is a series featuring Strong Bad answering emails from fans. Since starting in August 2001, the initially brief episodes have grown in length and scope, introducing numerous spin-offs, characters, and inside jokes, such as Homsar, Trogdor, Senor Cardgage, 20X6, the Teen Girl Squad shorts, and Homestar Runner Emails (also known as "hremails"). The format, however, has remained largely unchanged. Each episode typically begins with Strong Bad singing a short song to himself while booting up his computer to check fan emails. Starting a reply, he typically mocks the sender's name, spelling, and grammar, and rarely answers questions directly. While early episodes focused mostly on Strong Bad sitting at the computer with occasional cutaways, the cutaways would become more elaborate over time, allowing for more complex story lines to develop, growing tangentially from the initial email. Each episode closes with Strong Bad finishing his reply, closing the episode with a link to email Strong Bad appearing via "The Paper", a dot matrix printer at the top of the screen. In later episodes, it is replaced with the "New Paper", an inkjet printer; then with the "Compé-per", a pop-up balloon; and finally with a CGI version of the original Paper, which instead promotes Strong Bad's Twitter account. As of April 1, 2022, 209 Strong Bad Emails have been released on the website (with another six exclusive to DVD releases), separable into distinct eras by Strong Bad's different computers; the Tandy 400, the Compy 386, the Lappy 486, the Compé, and his current computer, the Lappier.
Holiday Specials
Prior to the 2010 hiatus, holiday specials were a regular feature of the site, released to coincide with popular holidays, specifically Halloween and Decemberween (a fictional holiday similar to Christmas also celebrated on December 25). Halloween shorts typically feature the main characters celebrating a traditional aspect of the holiday (such as ghost stories, trick-or-treating or pumpkin carving) in costume, often making obscure pop culture references. The site also usually releases a separate Halloween video where Strong Bad views a slideshow and mocks and/or appraises photos sent in by real life fans of their Halloween costumes and props modeled after Homestar Runner characters and other elements. Similarly, Decemberween cartoons typically satirize Christmas traditions such as gift-giving and carol-singing. The fact that it takes place on the same day as Christmas has been presented as just a coincidence, having been stated that Decemberween takes place "55 days after Halloween". April Fools' Day features various gags, such as turning the site into a paid subscription service, or turning it upside down.
Other holidays celebrated include New Year's Day, "The Big Game" (around the time of the Super Bowl), St. Valentine's Day, Mother's Day, "Senorial Day" (a parody of Memorial Day featuring the character Senor Cardgage), Flag Day, Independence Day, Labor Day (occasionally referred to as "Labor Dabor"), Thanksgiving, and Easter.
Teen Girl Squad
Teen Girl Squad is a crudely drawn comic strip narrated by Strong Bad, using a falsetto voice. The series was a spin off of Strong Bad Email #53, comic, in which Strong Bad is asked to make a comic strip of a girl and her friends. The comic features four archetypal teenage girls, "Cheerleader", "So and So", "What's Her Face" and "The Ugly One", and satirizes high school life, teen movies, and television. Each episode follows the girls in typical high school situations, often leading to their gruesome deaths. A spinoff of this series is "4 Gregs", which follows four of the squad's nerdy classmates, all named Greg.
Marzipan's Answering Machine
Marzipan's Answering Machine is a series of cartoons with almost no animation. It features messages from the other characters, being played on the answering machine belonging to the character Marzipan. In early episodes, the episode number ended in .0 (for example, Marzipan's Answering Machine Version 5.0), but since Marzipan changed to a new answering machine, the number ends in .2 (for example, Marzipan's Answering Machine Version 15.2). In every episode, Strong Bad prank calls Marzipan, badly pretending to be someone else, such as "Detective Everybody", "Safety Dan", and sometimes other characters. Although the animation is usually just a picture of the answering machine, sometimes there are short animated segments featuring the characters. As of April 1, 2016, there are 17 Marzipan's Answering Machines.
Puppet Stuff
These are live action shorts in which the regular characters are depicted by puppets. These may be skits, or musical performances with They Might Be Giants. Many Puppet Stuff videos feature the characters interacting with children, often related to The Brothers Chaps. One spin-off series, "Biz Cas Fri", depicts Homestar and Strong Bad's interactions from his office cubicle at work. The first Biz Cas Fri video arguably first coined the term Doge.
Powered By The Cheat
In-universe, “Powered By The Cheat” videos are short cartoons made by the character of The Cheat, and are often music videos done for other characters. During these segments, Matt Chapman does the animation and Mike Chapman provides the voices, a switching of their usual roles. As a result, the cartoons are deliberately poorly animated.
Alternate Universes
Over time, many alternate versions of the Homestar Runner world and characters would appear, parodying other cartoons and animation styles. Many of these feature in their own cartoons. The many alternate universes would later cross over in some cartoons, such as the 150th Strong Bad Email, alternate universe.
Old-Timey cartoons take place in an old-time setting, with most of the characters being Old-Timey counterparts of the Homestar Runner characters. These cartoons are in black and white with a film grain effect and scratchy audio quality. They parody the distinctive style of animated cartoons during the 1920s and 1930s (à la Steamboat Willie), and can be seen as perhaps deliberately unfunny, to make a slanted joke about such old-style cartoons.
20X6 (pronounced "twenty exty-six"), a parody of the Mega Man and EarthBound games' "year 200X", originated from Strong Bad Email #57, japanese cartoon, an email asking Strong Bad what he would look like if he were in a Japanese anime. The main character, Stinkoman, is an anime version of Strong Bad with blue hair, a shiny body and robot boots. He is always looking for a fight, asking various characters he interacts with to engage him in a "challenge" ("Are you asking for a challenge?"). There is also a game, Stinkoman 20X6, which is heavily based on the Mega Man series.
Cheat Commandos is a parody of G.I. Joe that features a cast of characters that are the same species as The Cheat. Most are based on G.I. Joe characters, or characters from other 1980s cartoons. The cartoon is constantly advertising its products in the cartoons by such methods as referring to the areas they are in as "playsets", a convoy truck as an "action figure storage vehicle", and by ending each cartoon with the phrase "Buy all our playsets and toys!", sung in a patriotic way. It also parodies the G.I. Joe cartoons' use of public service announcements, referring to nonsensical things like "peer-2-teen choice behaviors". Some cartoons feature the character Crack Stuntman, the fictional voice actor for the Cheat Commandos character Gunhaver.
Other media
Music
The Homestar Runner site frequently features songs and videos within their animated shorts or as stand-alone entities. These are primarily sung and performed either by the characters or by fictitious artists serving as parodies of various genres. Real-life musicians They Might Be Giants have collaborated multiple times with the Homestar Runner site. In 2004, the Homestar Runner characters were featured in the music video to their song Experimental Film. Additionally, they have performed multiple times with a puppet of Homestar Runner. They have also collaborated on several other shorts, including Strong Bad Email #200, email thunder.
In Strong Bad Email #58, dragon, Strong Bad is asked to draw a dragon, creating Trogdor, the Burninator (stylized as TROGDOR, the BURNİNATOR), and performing his heavy metal theme song. Trogdor's popularity saw the character appear on merchandise such as T-shirts, hoodies, and posters, with an extended version of the song appearing on the CD Strong Bad Sings.
In 2002, a fictional hair metal band, Limozeen, was introduced as a parody of 1980s bands such as Skid Row, White Lion and Poison; with songs including "Because, It's Midnite" and "Nite Mamas". On March 17, 2008, "Limozeen" (actually the Atlanta indie band Y-O-U along with Matt Chapman on vocals) performed a live show in Atlanta, Georgia, and again on November 8, 2008, opening for indie pop band of Montreal. A college rock band called Sloshy (with the logo stylized in lower case and rotated 180 degrees, with the "o" being a different color, as "ʎɥsoןs") was introduced in 2007. Sloshy features songs in the musical vein of Pavement such as "We Don't Really Even Care About You" and "The B-est of B-Sides". Other fictitious artists include Scandinavian death metal parody Taranchula (although performing more in a thrash metal/sludge metal style); rapper Peacey P, with a rapping style resembling that of Snoop Dogg; and the self-absorbed R&B artist Tenerence Love, a parody of Barry White and such artists.
Browser games
Beyond cartoons, Homestar Runner offers a variety of online games. Early games such as the Homestar Soundboard, "Homestar Talker", and Lite-Brite emulator "Astro-Lite 2600" are basic web toys featuring the characters, and can now be found on the "Old Games" section of the site. Over time, more recent games have diversified and become more complex, with many being released as products of "Videlectrix", a game company within the world of Homestar Runner and a side project of The Brothers Chaps, spoofing games of the 1980s. Often the games would originate as video games played by the characters in the cartoon, such as Secret Collect, StrongBadZone, and Strong Bad's RhinoFeeder, all parodies of early Atari and arcade games, originating in the Strong Bad Email video games.
TROGDOR! which previously appeared in the Arcade Game short, features the titular dragon Trogdor the Burninator attempting to burn all the cottages on each stage without being slain by knights. A spin-off of TROGDOR!, called Peasant's Quest, is an adventure game featuring Rather Dashing, a young peasant in short pants. After he finds his cottage burned to the ground, he vows to kill the destroyer of his cottage, Trogdor. The game uses a system that is a near-replica of Sierra Entertainment's Adventure Game Interpreter, used in King's Quest, Space Quest and several other early Sierra titles. This system is something like text adventure games yet it has simple visuals. Stinkoman 20X6 is a Mega Man-style platform game featuring the characters and world of anime parody 20X6. Nine levels were added to the game over the course of 2005, while the tenth and final level was not released until December 2020, days before Flash would no longer be supported by browsers.
The Thy Dungeonman series are parodies of text adventure games originating from Strong Bad Email #94, video games. In each game, your goal is to "get ye flask". Though the game purports to be set in the medieval era, the text is actually rendered in mock Early Modern English, in the style of William Shakespeare. Thy Dungeonman has two sequels: Thy Dungeonman II, which expands on the features of the original game and can only be found on the Videlectrix site, and Thy Dungeonman III which adds basic graphics and can be found on the Homestar Runner site. "Ye Flask" and "You can't get ye flask" have become catch-phrases in the Homestar Runner universe, eventually spawning a T-shirt in the Homestar Runner store.
In 2007, the website produced Wii versions of some of the games on the site, for the Wii internet browser. When played on a computer, they use the mouse only.
Two point-and-click adventure game titles by the Brothers Chaps made in Unity have been released to Steam and Itch.io, Halloween Hide & Seek and Dangeresque: The Roomisode Triungulate, an expanded remake of the original Dangeresque: Roomisode 1 web game that adds two new episodes.
Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People
Main article: Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive PeopleOn April 10, 2008, an episodic licensed game based on the series centering around Strong Bad titled Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People (abbreviated as SBCG4AP) was announced for the Wii's WiiWare service and Microsoft Windows, developed by Telltale Games in partnership with Videlectrix. The first episode, Homestar Ruiner, premiered on August 11, 2008 on Telltale Games' website and in North America on Nintendo's WiiWare service on August 11, 2008. It was also released in Europe and Australia the following Friday (August 15, 2008). The second episode, Strong Badia the Free, was released on September 15 on the WiiWare service in North America and on the Telltale Games' website, and in the PAL region on October 3. The third episode, Baddest of the Bands, was released on Telltale Games' website and the WiiWare service in North America on October 27, and to the PAL region on November 21. The fourth episode, Dangeresque 3: The Criminal Projective, was released on Telltale Games' website and WiiWare in North America on November 17, and in the PAL region on December 5. The fifth and final episode, 8-Bit is Enough, was released to North America on December 15 and in the PAL region on January 2, 2009. In 2010, it was decided that Telltale games would release SBCG4AP for the Mac operating system after a vote on the Telltale Games website.
Poker Night at the Inventory
Main article: Poker Night at the InventoryStrong Bad appears as one of the computer-controlled opponents in Telltale's Poker Night at the Inventory, using the same model from SBCG4AP. Players can unlock in-game card sets and table designs based on Homestar Runner. Additionally, Strong Bad will occasionally bet Dangeresque Too's sunglasses in place of in-game cash; defeating him after doing so will unlock the glasses as an equippable cosmetic item for the Demoman in Team Fortress 2. The game was released for PC and Mac on November 22, 2010.
Trogdor!! The Board Game
Trogdor!! The Board Game is a board game made by The Brothers Chaps in collaboration with James Ernest. The campaign was put on Kickstarter on Tuesday, July 17, 2018, with a goal of $75,000, which was surpassed in the first few hours. The campaign ended on Wednesday, August 15, 2018, with a total of $1,421,903 (nearly 20 times the goal) and 23,338 backers. In 2022, an expansion pack titled Majicks & 'Mergencies Expando Deck was released, adding new cards and gameplay elements. Extra copies are sold in the website's store.
Trogdor!! is described as a cooperative puzzle area control game in which the players work together to burninate all of the game tiles, thatched-roof cottages, and peasants. Every player controls Trogdor, assuming the role of one of the twelve "Keepers of Trogdor". Each Keeper has unique powers and items, both decided by cards. The game is for one to six players, and play time is 30 minutes with variable levels of difficulty the players can set. The recommended age is 14+. It comes with a mini-game titled "Stack 'Em To The Heavens" in which you stack the meeples in different ways. An album titled Trogdor!! The Board Game Rulebook EP, was made to explain the rules of the game.
Unofficial email worm
An email worm named Lacon, which featured Homestar Runner characters, was created and distributed by someone going by the name of DimenZion in 2003. It affected 32-bit Windows computers on the 10th of each month, emailing copies of itself to contacts in the computer's address book, and also adding various .exe files to the hard drive. Its final payload showed a Homestar Runner Flash animation called "The System is Down" in a browser window.
Impact
Collaborations with other artists
The Brothers Chaps have partnered up with rock band They Might Be Giants and supplied animation for a music video of their song "Experimental Film". The creators of Homestar Runner spent time with the band and wrote songs that have been released on the website as "Puppet Jam", a spin-off of "Puppet Stuff", where Puppet Homestar sings with TMBG. TMBG also wrote the music for Strong Bad Email #99, different town, and the band wrote and vocalized the intro song of the 200th Strong Bad Email. Another group, The Skate Party, helped The Brothers Chaps create "The Cheat Theme Song". The band Y-O-U helped with the Strong Bad Sings and Other Type Hits CD, as well as songs on the strongbad_email.exe DVDs. The Brothers Chaps also employed the services of Paul and Storm of the a cappella band Da Vinci's Notebook to create a theme song for the Old-Timey version of The Cheat, called "Ballad of The Sneak"; the duo later wrote the theme tune for the Stinkoman 20X6 game. Matt Chapman provided guest vocals as Strong Bad on The Aquabats' "Pink Pants!" from their 2011 album, Hi-Five Soup!. Strong Bad's voice also appears on Shellac's "Genuine Lulabelle" off the album "Excellent Italian Greyhound" from 2007.
Discussing how he and his sibling decide which projects to work on, Mike Chapman said, "We learned how to politely say no to things that were going to affect our lives negatively. If it's going to be fun, if we're going to enjoy doing it, and if the end project is going to be something we want to have happen, we say yes."
Reception
In 2003, the site received several million hits a month and almost a thousand emails a day. According to Matt Chapman, the site did no advertising, but grew on word of mouth and endorsements. "Certain bands, like fairly popular bands and stuff would link us on their site and, you know we were Shockwave site of the day a couple of times over the years." Homestar Runner's popularity, coupled with its positive critical response, has led to the website receiving widespread coverage. Homestar Runner has been featured in Wired, National Review, Entertainment Weekly, Total Gamer, G4, and NPR's All Things Considered.
A review published in National Review characterized the site's humor as having "the innocence of slapstick with sharp satire of American popular culture" — humor that "tends to be cultural, not political."
The site-generated music has enjoyed surprising popularity, such that two songs, "Trogdor" by the character Strong Bad and "Because, It's Midnite" by Limozeen, have been included in the successful Guitar Hero II and Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s video games, respectively.
References
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - danooct1. "Email-Worm.Win32.Lacon". YouTube. Archived from the original on January 25, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Chapman, Matt; Chapman, Mike. "Experimental Film". homestarrunner.com. Archived from the original on January 1, 2007. Retrieved January 3, 2007.
- Chapman, Matt; Chapman, Mike. "Puppet Jam: Bad Jokes". homestarrunner.com. Archived from the original on October 29, 2005. Retrieved January 3, 2007.
- "TMBG-News". TMBG. Archived from the original on January 3, 2007. Retrieved January 3, 2007.
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- "Ballad of the Sneak". homestarrunner.com. Archived from the original on June 26, 2003. Retrieved March 20, 2007.
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- Jenkins, Mandy (August 1, 2003). "Cult is chasing wacky Web toon". Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Ydstie, John (May 8, 2004). "Strong Bad Walks in Footsteps of Darth, Lex, J.R." All Things Considered. NPR. Archived from the original on November 17, 2007. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
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