List of Johnny Bravo episodes
Johnny Bravo is an American animated television series created by Van Partible for Cartoon Network. The series initially debuted as a trio of animated shorts on Cartoon Network's World Premiere Toons (later renamed What a Cartoon!), an animated shorts showcase that also featured potential series pilots from Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter's Laboratory), Craig McCracken (The Powerpuff Girls), and Seth MacFarlane (The Life of Larry and Larry & Steve and Family Guy). What a Cartoon! premiered the first Johnny Bravo short on March 26, 1995. After a full series was greenlit by Cartoon Network, the shorts were later incorporated as the first episode of the show's first season, which premiered on the channel on July 7, 1997.[1] Following a change in the main character's theme from being a womanizing Elvis impersonator to a brawny halfwit, the series entered its second season, which premiered on July 2, 1999. Partible left the series after the first season, but he returned for its fourth, which premiered on February 20, 2004, and ended on August 27, 2004.
Series overview
[edit]Season | Segments | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | ||||
1 | 38 | 13 | March 26, 1995[2] | December 15, 1997[2] | Cartoon Network | |
2 | 66 | 22 | July 2, 1999[3] | January 28, 2000[3] | ||
3 | 51 | 17 | August 11, 2000[4] | June 14, 2002[4] | ||
4 | 24 | 13 | February 20, 2004[5] | August 27, 2004[5] | ||
Specials | N/A | 2 | December 7, 2001 | February 14, 2004 | ||
India special | 2011 | Cartoon Network (India) |
Episodes
[edit]Season 1 (1995–97)
[edit]The first three segments aired as part of World Premiere Toons, later renamed What a Cartoon!. They all later incorporated into the show's first season as the first episode.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date [2] | Prod. code [6] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1a | 1a | "Johnny Bravo" | Van Partible | TBA | TBA | March 26, 1995[7] July 7, 1997 (green-lit series) | (World Premiere Toons)WPT01 |
A dimwitted man named Johnny Bravo plays the role of a superhero as a 900-pound gorilla escapes from the zoo. | |||||||
1b | 1b | "Jungle Boy in Mr Monkeyman" | Van Partible | Van Partible | Butch Hartman | October 9, 1996 July 7, 1997 (green-lit series) | (World Premiere Toons)WPT02 |
The evil King Raymond (Michael McKean) attempts to frame Jungle Boy to reclaim the praise that the other animals used to give him. | |||||||
1c | 1c | "Johnny Bravo and the Amazon Women" | Van Partible | Van Partible | Robert Ramirez | January 1, 1997 July 7, 1997 (green-lit series) | (World Premiere Toons)HH00615-94052 |
In what seems to be a dream come true for Johnny, he falls off a ship and finds himself on an island surrounded by beautiful Amazon women. | |||||||
2a | 2a | "Super Duped" | Rumen Petkov | Butch Hartman | Cos Anzilotti & Brad Vandergrift | July 14, 1997[1] | 96-001 |
In an effort to impress Suzy's beautiful teacher, Johnny goes along with a gag that he is "Bravo-Man", his superhero alter-ego. | |||||||
2b | 2b | "Bungled in the Jungle" | Rumen Petkov | Steve Marmel | Zac Moncrief & Eugene Mattos | July 14, 1997[1] | 96-002 |
Flying high above the jungle on a plane, Johnny makes a stewardess angry by his constant flirting with her. As a result, the stewardess boots Johnny off the airplane mid-flight. When Johnny comes down, he soon meets Jungle Boy. | |||||||
2c | 2c | "Bearly Enough Time!" | Butch Hartman | Steve Marmel | Butch Hartman & Barrington Bunce | July 14, 1997[1] | 96-004 |
When Johnny has reason to believe that his mother, Bunny Bravo, is out in the forest lost, he goes on a quest to find her, only to awaken Chronos the Bear (Brock Peters), a very large and hungry grizzly bear. | |||||||
3a | 3a | "The Sensitive Male!" | Butch Hartman | Story by : Steve Marmel Teleplay by : Seth MacFarlane | Butch Hartman & Don Manuel | July 21, 1997 | 96-003 |
Johnny tries to get a date with a girl who is in love with a sensitive dancer. A man (Jack Sheldon, of Schoolhouse Rock! fame) comes along and offers Johnny lessons on how to be the kind of sensitive guy that women want. | |||||||
3b | 3b | "Bravo Dooby-Doo" | John McIntyre | Michael Ryan | Seth MacFarlane & Brad Vandergrift | July 21, 1997 | 96-008 |
When Johnny's elderly aunt, Aunt Jebedissa Bravo, disappears, he enlists the help of Scooby-Doo, Shaggy Rogers (played by Casey Kasem), Fred Jones, Daphne Blake and Velma Dinkley to crack the case and capture a Ghost. Note: This was shown as a bonus episode on the 1997 home video release of Scooby Goes Hollywood. | |||||||
4a | 4a | "Date with an Antelope" | John McIntyre | Seth MacFarlane | Sean Bishop | July 28, 1997 | 96-006 |
A lonely Johnny decides to try internet dating, but unwittingly to be set up with a female antelope named Carol (Gabrielle Carteris). | |||||||
4b | 4b | "Did You See a Bull Run by Here?" | Rumen Petkov | Story by : Van Partible Teleplay by : Michael Ryan | Barrington Bunce | July 28, 1997 | 96-007 |
Johnny pays a visit to Pamplona to watch the running of the bulls, but he ends up in a bullfight of his own. | |||||||
4c | 4c | "Cookie Crisis" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman | Zac Moncrief | July 28, 1997 | 96-016 |
Little Suzy plays a Buttercup Scout who is determined to get Johnny to buy some of her delicious cookies. Johnny, not wanting to break his strict diet, travels all across town to escape Suzy, who foils his every attempt to get away. The episode spoofs Dr. Seuss' Green Eggs and Ham. | |||||||
5a | 5a | "I Used to Be Funny" | John McIntyre | Story by : Van Partible Teleplay by : Michael Ryan & Steve Marmel | Eugene Mattos | August 4, 1997 | 96-009 |
Two clowns – one more old-fashioned (Jonathan Winters), one trendier (Kevin McDonald), each lay claim to a particular street corner in Aron City, and decide to play a series of pranks on an unsuspecting bystander to determine which of them is funnier. That bystander happens to be the clown-hating Johnny, who finds himself repeatedly humiliated by their practical jokes. | |||||||
5b | 5b | "My Fair Dork" | John McIntyre | Seth MacFarlane | Eugene Mattos | August 4, 1997 | 96-010 |
When the school geek wants to take Suzy to the school dance, Johnny decides to help. However, he soon learns that his lady-grabbing tactics work better for the geek than they do for him, as the student becomes the master. | |||||||
5c | 5c | "'Twas the Night" | Rumen Petkov | Story by : Butch Hartman & Steve Marmel Teleplay by : Steve Marmel | Brad Vandergrift | August 4, 1997 | 96-011 |
When Johnny mistakes Santa Claus for a burglar and knocks out jolly old Saint Nick (Tom Bosley), he must don the red cap to save Christmas. | |||||||
6a | 6a | "Blarney Buddies" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman | Jeff DeGrandis | August 11, 1997 | 96-012 |
Johnny is in Ireland and reads about the Blarney Stone, which he mistakes for a leprechaun named Barney Stone (Frank Gorshin), who can grant wishes. Johnny tries to track Barney down, and after much coaxing, Barney finally grants Johnny his wish, which is to be attracted by chicks. But it turns out Johnny becomes attractive to chickens. | |||||||
6b | 6b | "Over the Hump!" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman | Kirk Hanson | August 11, 1997 | 96-017 |
Johnny accidentally joins the French Foreign Legion and soon finds himself on a game show in Ancient Egypt, where he must find a way through the desert with the help of a reluctant camel named Lawrence (Michael Jeter). | |||||||
6c | 6c | "Johnny Meets Farrah Fawcett" | Rumen Petkov | Story by : Van Partible Teleplay by : Michael Ryan | Zac Moncrief | August 11, 1997 | 96-014 |
Suzy invites Johnny to her birthday party, but Johnny refuses. All of that changes when Johnny finds out that Farrah Fawcett, Suzy's cousin, will be at the party. | |||||||
7a | 7a | "Blanky Hanky Panky" | Rumen Petkov | Steve Marmel | Eugene Mattos | August 18, 1997 | 96-015 |
All the wool in the city (including Johnny's blanky) is being stolen by an evil, wool-loving thief named Dr. Filaniest (Jeffrey Tambor) and his kind pet kitten, Pooky the Cat (Billy West). Johnny plays the role of hero, as he tracks down and defeats Dr. Filaniest. | |||||||
7b | 7b | "Talk to Me, Baby" | John McIntyre | Steve Marmel | Eugene Mattos | August 18, 1997 | 96-005 |
Johnny goes on a television talk show hosted by a model named Vendela. | |||||||
7c | 7c | "Hip Hop Flop" | John McIntyre | Steve Marmel | Mucci Fassett | August 18, 1997 | 96-013 |
Johnny tries to get a date with a female hip-hop fan by claiming he knows "The Round Pound," her favorite group. As it happens, the rappers of the Round Pound need help replacing some equipment, and when Johnny provides it, they agree to teach him how to become a hip-hop star. Note: The hip-hop group The Round Pound is a reference to The Fat Boys; its members are CD Biggains (Chuck D), Heavy C (Heavy D), and Main Flavor (Flavor Flav). | |||||||
8a | 8a | "Beach Blanket Bravo" | John McIntyre | Story by : Michael Ryan & Robert Ramirez Teleplay by : Michael Ryan | Barrington Bunce | August 25, 1997 | 96-018 |
When Johnny takes a trip to the beach, he winds up at a party, where a hot girl named Franny (Maureen McCormick) uses him to make her rude and selfish boyfriend, Andy (Rick Springfield), jealous. An angry Andy challenges Johnny to the "King of the Beach" contest to determine which of them will get to win Franny's heart. Along the way, they must escape a great white shark named Buster (name unmentioned in the episode) who pretends he's Richard Nixon and later Martha Washington so he can eat swimmers. | |||||||
8b | 8b | "The Day the Earth Didn't Move Around Very Much" | Butch Hartman | Seth MacFarlane | Don Manuel | August 25, 1997 | 96-019 |
Johnny is brought before a courtroom to explain his actions from the previous day. A flashback begins, and Johnny explains that after seeing his blinking alarm clock that morning, he firmly believed that time had frozen and left him the only person able to move. A series of incredibly odd coincidences repeatedly affirms Johnny's claim, and he abuses his power by stealing candy, dining in a high-class restaurant, and sleeping in a five-star hotel without paying. | |||||||
8c | 8c | "The Aisle of Mixed-Up Toys" | Rumen Petkov | Story by : Michael Ryan Teleplay by : Seth MacFarlane | Cos Anzilotti | August 25, 1997 | 96-020 |
When Johnny wants a little girl's older sister to fall for him, he must go into the discount toy-aisle to buy some toys for them. | |||||||
9a | 9a | "Substitute Teacher" | John McIntyre | Michael Ryan | Barrington Bunce | September 1, 1997 | 96-021 |
When a criminal (Mark Hamill) robs Johnny's karate dojo, he dupes Johnny into believing he is the substitute teacher. | |||||||
9b | 9b | "A Wolf in Chick's Clothing" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman | Ace Conrad | September 1, 1997 | 96-022 |
Johnny meets an amazing, seductive girl named Fluffy (Anne Bloom), only to find out she is actually a werewolf. She promises that she will offer Johnny a great time if he can make it through one night with her transformed state. Unfortunately, on Wednesdays, she turns into a fat, short, bald, and annoying man named Melvin who collects stamps. | |||||||
9c | 9c | "Intensive Care" | Rumen Petkov | Story by : Michael Ryan & Robert Ramirez Teleplay by : Michael Ryan | Butch Hartman | September 1, 1997 | 96-023 |
Johnny goes to the hospital to visit Suzy, only to find a beautiful nurse tending to her. Unfortunately, another employee continues to get in his way. | |||||||
10a | 10a | "Jumbo Johnny" | Rumen Petkov | Story by : Steve Marmel Teleplay by : Seth MacFarlane | Eugene Mattos & Zac Moncrief | September 8, 1997 | 96-024 |
Johnny, hoping to gain more muscle, buys a protein shake called "Uber Mass" from a shady scientist (John Astin) at the gym. He ignores the instructions in favor of drinking it all at once, and bloats up to a massively obese size. After drinking even more Uber Mass, Johnny grows to Godzilla-like proportions and decides to seek an antidote. Note: A poster of Attack of the 50ft Woman can be seen while Johnny searches for the Uber Mass factory. | |||||||
10b | 10b | "The Perfect Gift" | John McIntyre | Steve Marmel | Bob Onorato | September 8, 1997 | 96-025 |
With Mother's Day just around the corner, Johnny tries to find a way to make money to buy his mama a gift. While Suzy becomes ridiculously wealthy with her simple lemonade stand, Johnny goes through all manner of jobs in an effort to raise the cash he needs. | |||||||
10c | 10c | "Bravo, James Bravo" | Butch Hartman | Steve Marmel | Brad Vandergrift | September 8, 1997 | 96-033 |
Johnny hits on a beautiful woman named Jane (Moira Quirk), who turns out to be a secret agent. When Johnny compromises security at Jane's headquarters, her boss makes them work together to defeat the evil Dr. Pencilneck (Richard Steven Horvitz) and thwart his nefarious–yet incredibly politically correct–scheme. | |||||||
11a | 11a | "Going Batty" | Rumen Petkov | Steve Marmel | Eugene Mattos | December 1, 1997 | 96-027 |
A beautiful vampire named Lois (Alison La Placa) decides to use Johnny to make Woody (Marvin Kaplan), her current boyfriend, jealous. | |||||||
11b | 11b | "Berry the Butler" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman | Zac Moncrief | December 1, 1997 | 96-035 |
Bunny wins a contest, that makes Berry Vanderbolten (Tom Kane), a famous singer, be her butler for the day. Yet, Johnny takes advantage of the situation and abuses it, as he nearly makes Berry his slave. | |||||||
11c | 11c | "Red Faced in the White House" | John McIntyre | Steve Marmel | Cos Anzilotti | December 1, 1997 | 96-029 |
Johnny goes on a date with the President's daughter (Mayim Bialik), only to outrage and humiliate her with his lack of knowledge of Washington by accident. Johnny then finds himself, beaten up by her bodyguards (who are secret service agents), Agent Pim and Agent Shlomo. However, Pim and Shlomo are more skilled as fighters than Johnny is in karate, jujitsu, and interpretive dance. | |||||||
12a | 12a | "The Man Who Cried 'Clown'" | Rumen Petkov | Michael Ryan | Barking Bullfrog Cartoon Company, Inc. | December 8, 1997 | 96-030 |
Johnny and Bunny book passage on a plane. When Johnny sees a clown on the wing of the plane, he tries to warn everyone of the danger. When no one believes him, Johnny takes matters into his own hands and removes one of the clowns by pushing him off the plane. His actions embarrasses everyone when the furious pilots explains the hiring of the clowns and punishes him by being a clown himself. | |||||||
12b | 12b | "Johnny Real Good" | John McIntyre | Seth MacFarlane | Barking Bullfrog Cartoon Company, Inc. | December 8, 1997 | 96-031 |
Johnny answers an ad to babysit for a boy named Timmy (Kevin McDonald), who has god-like superpowers. Johnny's sheer idiocy puts him at odds with the omnipotent Timmy, who repeatedly transports him to a cornfield just outside the house. | |||||||
12c | 12c | "Little Talky Tabitha!" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman | Barking Bullfrog Cartoon Company, Inc. | December 8, 1997 | 96-032 |
Suzy has a new doll named Talky Tabitha (Jean Kasem), and invites Johnny over for a tea party to play with her – but Tabitha starts talking independently, and says she doesn't like Johnny. Johnny squares off against the doll, who repeatedly thwarts his efforts to destroy her. | |||||||
13a | 13a | "Johnny Bravo Meets Adam West!" | Butch Hartman | Butch Hartman & Seth MacFarlane | Barrington Bunce | December 15, 1997 | 96-026 |
Johnny watches Adam West solve children's problems on TV while waiting for Bunny to return home from her trip to the market. When she is a minute late, Johnny immediately assumes that something has gone wrong, and seeks out West's help to find her. The TV hero proves to be truly bizarre and illogical, and leads Johnny on a wild goose chase by interpreting "clues" such as trash and Chinese restaurant names. | |||||||
13b | 13b | "Under the Big Flop" | Rumen Petkov | Michael Ryan | Barrington Bunce | December 15, 1997 | 96-028 |
Johnny takes Suzy to the circus, only to find that an evil ringmaster named Vivian Vixen (Suzie Plakson) has Jungle Boy under a mind control device. | |||||||
13c | 13c | "Johnny Meets Donny Osmond" | John McIntyre | Seth MacFarlane | Don Manuel | December 15, 1997 | 96-034 |
Bunny fears that Johnny has grown out of control without supervision, and decides to hire him a nanny. She settles on Donny Osmond, whose overly cheerful attitude and childish ideas of fun drive Johnny crazy. |
Season 2 (1999–2000)
[edit]No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date [3] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14a | 1a | "Bikini Space Planet!" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall, Drew Graybeal, and Michael Diederich | July 2, 1999[8] | |
Johnny is kidnapped by two beautiful female aliens, who believe him to be the perfect human specimen. | |||||||
14b | 1b | "Moby Jerk" | Kirk Tingblad | Story by : Wendell Morris & Jed Spingarn Teleplay by : Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Mary Hanley | July 2, 1999[8] | |
After winning a cruise on a boat, Johnny accidentally gets on the wrong boat. Here, Johnny meets Captain Spleen, who expects Johnny to catch a legendary bad-mouth merman named Moby Jerk. | |||||||
14c | 1c | "A Gel for Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | July 2, 1999[8] | |
One of Johnny's worst nightmares becomes reality when he runs out of "Mr. Kevin's Triple-Strength Hair Cement", his hair gel. | |||||||
15a | 2a | "Johnny Get Your Tutu" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | July 30, 1999 | |
After accidentally sending a picture of Suzy with his career test, Johnny is selected as a ballerina in a studio. | |||||||
15b | 2b | "Johnny's Inferno" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | July 30, 1999 | |
Johnny unwittingly follows the instructions of a satanic notebook in an attempt to get buff, thus summoning a devil named Derek that enlists him to join on an evil rampage. When Johnny's attempts to help him end up becoming good things, he possesses Johnny to use his body to wreak havoc on the entire world. | |||||||
15c | 2c | "Forest Chump" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Neal Sternecky | July 30, 1999 | |
After being swept over a waterfall, Johnny and Carl come across hot native chicks. | |||||||
16a | 3a | "Karma Krisis" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Bob Onorato | August 6, 1999 | |
Johnny does not listen to Bunny's advice, and he rips up a chain letter. This results in a long run of bad luck, and a timely appearance by Dionne Warwick. | |||||||
16b | 3b | "A Star Is Bruised" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Bob Jaques | August 6, 1999 | |
Johnny meets his hero, Squint Ringo, and performs the stuntman for his show. | |||||||
16c | 3c | "The Prince and the Pinhead" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | August 6, 1999 | |
A prince from a far kingdom is bored of being ruler and sees that Johnny looks exactly like him. Thus, the two switch places, and Johnny gets to be prince. | |||||||
17a | 4a | "Claws" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | August 13, 1999 | |
To make a special dinner for his mother, Johnny buys a lobster. Unfortunately, the lobster will not cooperate. | |||||||
17b | 4b | "To Helga and Back" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Lynell H. Forestall | August 13, 1999 | |
Johnny sends away for a mail order perfect woman, but accidentally picks a Swedish fat woman named Helga instead. In an effort to ruin their "relationship", Johnny takes Helga to Steel Cage wrestling. | |||||||
17c | 4c | "Cover Boy" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Tom Mazzocco | August 13, 1999 | |
With a little help from Carl and Pops, Johnny gets a job as a fashion model (so he can meet female models). Unfortunately, Johnny gets exposed to poison ivy, and gets fired in the process. | |||||||
18a | 5a | "Endless Bummer" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Tom Mazzocco | August 20, 1999 | |
Johnny plays lifeguard in hopes to attract chicks. | |||||||
18b | 5b | "Jailbird Johnny" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | August 20, 1999 | |
A mistake in the judicial system gets Johnny thrown into a women's prison. | |||||||
18c | 5c | "Bravo 13" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | August 20, 1999 | |
Johnny becomes an astronaut when he is mistakenly launched into space with an annoying chimpanzee. | |||||||
19a | 6a | "Doomates" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo and John Crane | Michael Diederich | August 27, 1999 | |
When Bunny puts in a V-chip to limit Johnny's TV-watching, he moves into a trailer, with Carl as his new roommate. Johnny and Carl soon begin to argue about the TV, and Carl wins the battle, only for the trailer to fall down a cliff, sending Johnny and Carl tumbling down. | |||||||
19b | 6b | "Johnny's Telethon" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Neal Sternecky | August 27, 1999 | |
When it is announced that Johnny's favorite beef jerky store will be going out of business, Johnny decides to stage a telethon to save it. | |||||||
19c | 6c | "Johnny's Guardian Angel" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Doug Compton | August 27, 1999 | |
After causing numerous disasters for Carl, Bunny, and Suzy, Johnny wishes that he had never been born. Maurice, Johnny's guardian angel, shows him what life would be like if he was never born, which actually turns out to be much better. | |||||||
20a | 7a | "I, Fly" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | TBA | September 3, 1999 | |
While guarding Carl's science project, Johnny accidentally turns himself into a fly. | |||||||
20b | 7b | "Schnook of the North" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Tom Mazzocco | September 3, 1999 | |
When Johnny loses Bunny in a grocery store, he is given away to a foster family in Antarctica. | |||||||
20c | 7c | "Charm School Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | September 3, 1999 | |
Johnny talks to a beautiful woman eating at Pops' restaurant, and she tells Johnny that he is no gentleman. Pops attempts to take Johnny and turn him into a gentleman, worthy of high society, within seven days. | |||||||
21a | 8a | "Johnny and the Beanstalk" | Russell Calabrese | Russell Calabrese and Dave Schwartz | Dave Schwartz | September 10, 1999 | |
Parodying with Jack and the Beanstalk, Johnny trades the family cow for some magical hair tonic. | |||||||
21b | 8b | "A Boy and His Bird" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Neal Sternecky | September 10, 1999 | |
In an attempt to get a date with a beautiful dog-loving chick, Johnny adopts a pet emu, which proves to be more than he bargained for. | |||||||
21c | 8c | "Ape Is Enough" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn, Gene Grillo, and Wendell Morris | Michael Diederich | September 10, 1999 | |
Johnny visits the South Seas, where a giant female gorilla falls in love with him. | |||||||
22a | 9a | "Panic in Jerky Town" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Lynell H. Forestall | September 17, 1999 | |
Johnny wins a free trip to Jerky Town and takes Pops with him. Johnny is going to be named successor of Jerky Town until Pops finds out the secret ingredient in the jerky. Pops reveals it, and Jerky gets Johnny and Pops thrown out. | |||||||
22b | 9b | "Alien Confidential" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn | Tom Mazzocco | September 17, 1999 | |
An alien lands on Earth with the secret of universal peace. After Johnny takes the alien to Pops, a mob starts chasing them. | |||||||
22c | 9c | "Mama's New Boyfriend" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | September 17, 1999 | |
Bunny gets a new boyfriend named Raul Montoya, but Johnny thinks that he is only dating her for her money. | |||||||
23a | 10a | "Welcome Back, Bravo" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | September 24, 1999 | |
A clerical error results in Johnny having to pass the 4th grade all over again. | |||||||
23b | 10b | "The Man with the Golden Gut" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Neal Sternecky | September 24, 1999 | |
Johnny orders an ab machine, but instead of getting a six pack, his muscles form the shape of Mount Rushmore, making him a tourist attraction. Then, he gets a big fat belly. | |||||||
23c | 10c | "Aunt Katie's Farm" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | September 24, 1999 | |
Johnny takes Suzy to her favorite children's show and ends up as one of the stars. | |||||||
24a | 11a | "A League of His Own" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | October 1, 1999 | |
Johnny poses as a girl who is "large for her age" to help out Bunny and Suzy's softball team. | |||||||
24b | 11b | "Johnny Goes to Camp" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | October 1, 1999 | |
Johnny gets on the wrong bus and ends up at computer camp, with Carl as his counselor. | |||||||
24c | 11c | "Buffoon Lagoon" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Lynell H. Forestall | October 1, 1999 | |
Johnny is shipwrecked with a pretty woman who is very cranky and spends her time running away from him. | |||||||
25a | 12a | "Brave New Johnny" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Michael Diederich | October 8, 1999 | |
Johnny falls into a pool of hair gel and is broken out of the amber-like mass 500 years into the future by Carl Chryniszzswics the 6th. | |||||||
25b | 12b | "Witless" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Neal Sternecky | October 8, 1999 | |
Johnny joins an Amish community, and everybody thinks that Johnny is a relative from very far. | |||||||
25c | 12c | "Carl Be Not Proud" | Russell Calabrese | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Doug Compton | October 8, 1999 | |
Johnny decides to be nice to Carl, thinking that he is going to die, but Carl takes advantage of him. | |||||||
26a | 13a | "El Bravo Magnifico" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall, Mary Hanley, Dave Schwartz, and Neal Sternecky | October 15, 1999 | |
Johnny is mistaken for a karate expert, and agrees to help a "South of the border" town defeat an evil Mexican thief. | |||||||
26b | 13b | "Johnny-O & Juliet" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Lynell H. Forestall | October 15, 1999 | |
Johnny tries to end the feud between Bunny and Mona Herschbum, the new next door neighbor, so he can go on a date with Mona's beautiful tuba-playing daughter, Juliet "Julie" Herschbum. | |||||||
26c | 13c | "Clan of the Cave Boob" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | October 15, 1999 | |
On an archeological dig, Carl tells Johnny of what he was like as a caveman, who struggled to find a home for himself. Note: This is the last episode to use traditional cel animation before switching to digital ink and paint. | |||||||
27a | 14a | "Galaxy Boy" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | October 22, 1999 | |
Johnny bumps into a starship captain in the park and is beamed aboard his ship. There Johnny wages war against Kharlok, the evil alien captain. Note: This is the first episode to use digital ink and paint. | |||||||
27b | 14b | "Damien's Day Out" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | October 22, 1999 | |
Johnny takes care of a little baby left on his porch, but he realizes that the baby can unleash evil powers. | |||||||
27c | 14c | "Noir Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Mary Hanley | October 22, 1999 | |
Johnny becomes a detective and takes the case of Suzy's missing doll. | |||||||
28a | 15a | "Hail to the Chump" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | October 29, 1999 | |
When the entire town council comes down with food poisoning at the annual picnic, Johnny is given the duty of mayor. | |||||||
28b | 15b | "A Fool for Sister Sara" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Dave Schwartz | October 29, 1999 | |
Sister Sara helps Johnny after a cologne-induced hallucination and tells him she would have a date with him if he is nice. | |||||||
28c | 15c | "Days of Blunder" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | October 29, 1999 | |
When Johnny takes Bunny's hot rod, Carl convinces him to enter an auto race, where Carl controls it by a joystick. When the joystick short-circuits, Johnny is left to drive on his own. | |||||||
29a | 16a | "Pop Art Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | November 5, 1999 | |
Johnny takes Suzy to an art museum, and Johnny becomes an artist after he makes a butt print on the wall. The fame then starts to go to his head. | |||||||
29b | 16b | "Dude Ranch Doofus" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Mark Zoeller | November 5, 1999 | |
Johnny and Bunny spend a day at a dude ranch where Johnny attempts to train a horse named Diablo to win a woman's heart. | |||||||
29c | 16c | "A Cake Too Far" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn and Kirk Tingblad | Charles Visser | November 5, 1999 | |
Bunny and Suzy enter a baking contest, but after Bunny accidentally injures herself playing football, Johnny has to take her place. Unfortunately, Johnny loses the recipe by accident. | |||||||
30a | 17a | "Look Who's Drooling" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane and Tammy K. List | Lynell H. Forestall | November 12, 1999 | |
When Johnny takes a bite out of Pops' hot chili, he uses Carl's fountain of youth potion to cool down the flames. This makes Johnny revert to a baby until 4:00 PM, but Bunny likes the idea of Johnny being little again. | |||||||
30b | 17b | "Law and Disorder" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane, Jed Spingarn, & Gene Grillo | Doug Compton | November 12, 1999 | |
Johnny becomes a security guard at the mall for a power trip. Instead of stopping thieves, Johnny tries to pick up chicks and plays video games. Bunny comes to the rescue when Johnny is held hostage by a thief. | |||||||
30c | 17c | "Tooth or Consequences" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | November 12, 1999 | |
Johnny poses as the Tooth Fairy after feeling guilty for telling little Suzy that she was not real. To prove that Johnny truly is the Tooth Fairy, Suzy forces him to grant her three wishes. | |||||||
31a | 18a | "The Unsinkable Johnny Bravo" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Charles Visser | November 19, 1999 | |
Johnny is a poor second class peasant who falls in love with a rich first class girl named Shelia on board the lake-tour liner, the S S Muronic. The boat sinks when it hits a tin can, and Shelia breaks up with Johnny and throws the ring he gave her into the (shallow) water. | |||||||
31b | 18b | "Rashomoron" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | November 19, 1999 | |
Three different variations on a story taken place in the part where everyone is hurt, told by Carl, Suzy, and Johnny. | |||||||
31c | 18c | "Free Pookey" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Dave Schwartz | November 19, 1999 | |
The annual Weasel Roundup is interrupted by a beautiful animal rights activist. She says she would think differently of Johnny if he would help animals. With the best of intentions, Johnny saves a piñata he names Pookey to return it to its native Mexico. | |||||||
32a | 19a | "Good Knight Johnny" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | January 7, 2000 | |
Johnny follows a hot girl dressed as a princess to a renaissance carnival. He believes that he has gone through a time portal and is really back in the Middle Ages. He attempts to impress the locals with his 20th century knowledge, only to ruin all of the events at the carnival by accident. | |||||||
32b | 19b | "Balloon Platoon" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo and Lynell H. Forestall | Mary Hanley | January 7, 2000 | |
After getting hit by a kid with a crush on Suzy, Johnny recruits the best that he can to overcome their evil forces. | |||||||
32c | 19c | "The Clueless Kid" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | January 7, 2000 | |
Master Hamma claims the worst of his students could beat the best of his rival's. Hamma's rival takes him up on the challenge, and to protect the honor of the dojo, Johnny must utilize all he has learned to defeat the rival's student. | |||||||
33a | 20a | "Yukon Yutz" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Lynell H. Forestall | January 14, 2000 | |
Johnny and Bunny go to Canada, and Johnny attempts to get a mountie girl. He ends up catching a criminal called Will Joon Gi by accident. | |||||||
33b | 20b | "Prep School Johnny" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo and John Crane | Dave Schwartz | January 14, 2000 | |
Johnny goes to a prep school, and three students named Nigel, Eurhart, and Piggy attempt to get him in trouble. | |||||||
33c | 20c | "Send in the Clones" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Doug Compton | January 14, 2000 | |
Bunny has Johnny deliver the cable TV bill, but he accidentally goes to a mad scientist's laboratory, where he is cloned. Johnny must prove to everyone else that he is the real Johnny. | |||||||
34a | 21a | "Loch Ness Johnny" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Vaughn Tada | January 21, 2000 | |
Johnny and Bunny go to Scotland, and Johnny buys himself some haggis, causing problems when the Loch Ness Monster attempts to claim the dish for her own. | |||||||
34b | 21b | "Den Mother Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Mary Hanley | January 21, 2000 | |
Johnny gives his mother smushweed (which she is allergic to), and Johnny has to take over Bunny's duties as den mother to Suzy's troop. | |||||||
34c | 21c | "Quo Doofus" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | January 21, 2000 | |
Carl shoves Johnny through a time portal prop he bought from a TV show. The portal works, and Johnny is sent back to Ancient Rome, where he meets Julius Caesar, foils Brutus, and eventually ends up in the Coliseum. The timely eruption of Mt. Vesuvius sends Johnny back home. | |||||||
35a | 22a | "As I Lay Hiccupping" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Michael Diederich | January 28, 2000 | |
Johnny eats too quickly and gets a severe case of the hiccups. He visits a beautiful doctor who tells him that if his hiccups persist, he can come back for her hands-on treatment. To keep his hiccups going, Johnny tries to avoid the remedies of everyone in town. | |||||||
35b | 22b | "Marine Maroon" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Charles Visser | January 28, 2000 | |
Johnny is taken to Sea Land when he is caught in a fishing net after he was sucked into the sea by a riptide. However, Johnny believes that he found the lost city of Atlantis. | |||||||
35c | 22c | "Thunder God Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | January 28, 2000 | |
Johnny pulls a hammer from a block of ice and becomes a Viking god with all sorts of power. Johnny is told by the Gods that he must fight an ice giant. |
Season 3 (2000–02)
[edit]No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date [4] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
36a | 1a | "Luke Perry's Guide to Love" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | August 11, 2000 | |
When Johnny saves Luke Perry's life, Luke reluctantly agrees to coach Johnny on one date, using a microscopic headphone placed in Johnny's ear. | |||||||
36b | 1b | "In the Line of Johnny" | Russell Calabrese | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Dave Schwartz | August 11, 2000 | |
Johnny becomes a security guard for the Soy's Harvest Parade, but he spends all his times fighting things that were actually never to happen. | |||||||
36c | 1c | "Fugitive Johnny" | Russell Calabrese and Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Vaughn Tada | August 11, 2000 | |
Johnny is on the run when the police believe he stole a fresh batch of chocolate chip cookies at their bakery sale. | |||||||
37a | 2a | "Virtual Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo and Kirk Tingblad | Mary Hanley | August 18, 2000 | |
Johnny takes Suzy to the toy store and suddenly becomes interested in the Biff Proton VR game and decides to play it. As Johnny progress through the game, his actions begin to have an effect on reality. | |||||||
37b | 2b | "Hold That Schmoe" | Russell Calabrese | Gene Grillo | Doug Compton | August 18, 2000 | |
—Knowing that it will sell millions, Johnny attempts to get the first issue of "Man Bean, the Bean That Walks Like a Man". The comic is guarded by a ghost, and Johnny and Carl attempt to take it on—Ghostbusters style. | |||||||
37c | 2c | "Hunted!" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane & Gene Grillo | TBA | August 18, 2000 | |
Bunny gambles Johnny away to Colonel Fatman, where Johnny is forced to be hunted. But when it comes to hunting down Johnny, he is no professional in hiding! | |||||||
38a | 3a | "Candidate Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Drew Graybeal | September 1, 2000 | |
Johnny and Carl both run for Litter Commissioner to pick up girls. | |||||||
38b | 3b | "Air Bravo" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | September 1, 2000 | |
Johnny meets Enormous Ferguson, the famous basketball player. Johnny wants to help Ferguson and the Pogatuck Ferrets take on the Townsville Titans. | |||||||
38c | 3c | "Johnny B. Badd" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | September 1, 2000 | |
Suzy's "Funky Monkey" song is a hit with the neighbors. Pops decides to make Suzy, Carl, and Bunny stars, but Johnny wants to be the lead singer. Pops cuts his microphone chord to make things safe. | |||||||
39a | 4a | "Scoop Bravo" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane & Gene Grillo | Alejandro Almaguer | September 8, 2000 | |
To impress a beautiful newspaper editor, Johnny attempts to follow a story that proves cats are actually aliens from outer space. | |||||||
39b | 4b | "The Incredible Shrinking Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | September 8, 2000 | |
Johnny begins shrinking after a mysterious person casts a spell on him. | |||||||
39c | 4c | "Backdaft" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Charles Visser | September 8, 2000 | |
Johnny signs up to be a fireman to impress girls, but he cannot do anything right. | |||||||
40a | 5a | "The Johnny Bravo Affair" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Vaughn Tada | September 22, 2000 | |
Johnny falls asleep in a mummy casket and is awoken when a cat burglar attempts to steal the world's largest piece of cubic zirconia. After Johnny accidentally eats it, he is kidnapped and taken back to her place (to his excitement), where Bunny saves Johnny. | |||||||
40b | 5b | "Biosphere Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | September 22, 2000 | |
Johnny locks himself in the biosphere with a pretty lady scientist, Carl, and others, where he destroys all of their resources. | |||||||
40c | 5c | "Spa Spaz" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | September 22, 2000 | |
Johnny checks into a spa to get pampered and meet hot chicks. The manager sees how many toxins are in Johnny's system and decides that she will take him as her project that will "put her spa on the map". | |||||||
41a | 6a | "Fool for a Day" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | October 13, 2000 | |
After being the butt of everyone's April Fool's jokes (including Suzy's class), Johnny thinks of a way to get revenge on their teacher, but when he does, it is not April Fool's anymore, and the teacher beats him up. | |||||||
41b | 6b | "In Your Dreams" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | October 13, 2000 | |
Johnny finally meets the girl of his dreams, due to the fact it really is a dream, causing things to go awry when he keeps dreaming things to go wrong | |||||||
41c | 6c | "Some Like It Stupid" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | October 13, 2000 | |
On the run from Fish Lips Malone, Johnny and Carl disguise themselves as women for the Miss Perky beauty pageant. | |||||||
42a | 7a | "Dental Hijinks" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn & Gene Grillo | Doug Compton | November 3, 2000 | |
Johnny has to go to the dentist because of a toothache, but he tries to escape. | |||||||
42b | 7b | "Little Red Riding Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Troy Adomitis | November 3, 2000 | |
Johnny is trying to get Squid Ringo's tungsten knuckles, but they do not have any more of Krelmann's Prune Spread. Johnny thinks that Suzy is taking some to her grandmother in the woods. | |||||||
42c | 7c | "Pouch Potato" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | November 3, 2000 | |
After being kicked off an outback tour, Johnny is adopted by a mother kangaroo. He is an outcast until he defends the herd from the infamous Boomerang Caine. | |||||||
43a | 8a | "Jurassic Dork" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul Kozlowsky & Gene Grillo | Lynell H. Forestall | November 17, 2000 | |
Johnny gets his hands on a real prehistoric dinosaur egg, which hatches. Johnny thinks that the dinosaur is a hamster, and he must keep his new pet (named Mr. Wuggles) from wreaking havoc in Aron City. | |||||||
43b | 8b | "Mascot Academy" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul Kozlowsky, Jed Spingarn, & Gene Grillo | Alejandro Almaguer | November 17, 2000 | |
Johnny wants to be admired by football cheerleaders, but he has no chance of being a player. Instead, he joins the Mascot Academy as a "stinky fish head" to get the cheerleaders to go out with him. | |||||||
43c | 8c | "Full Metal Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo | Vaughn Tada | November 17, 2000 | |
While applying for dodgeball camp, Johnny accidentally signs up for the army and has to deal with the roughest drill instructor ever, Sergeant Trixie. | |||||||
44a | 9a | "Johnny on Ice!" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul Kozlowski, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | November 17, 2000 | |
While on a trip to the mountains, Johnny is frozen and thawed out by a scientist who thinks that he is a primitive caveman. Upon catching a glimpse of the scientist's lovely daughter, Johnny plays along. | |||||||
44b | 9b | "Robo-Mama" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul F. Kozlowski, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Troy Adomitis | November 17, 2000 | |
When Bunny has to go away to Vegas for a Bingo tournament, leaving Johnny by himself for a few days, she gets a mail-order robot mother to replace her. | |||||||
44c | 9c | "20,000 Leagues Over My Head" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | November 17, 2000 | |
While searching for Clam-League 9000 toys, Johnny works with an environmentalist named Debbie to save fishes. | |||||||
45a | 10a | "I Dream of Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | December 15, 2000 | |
Johnny finds a magic lamp and is given three wishes. | |||||||
45b | 10b | "One Angry Bravo" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | December 15, 2000 | |
Johnny is forced into jury service. | |||||||
45c | 10c | "Carnival of the Darned" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo | Vaughn Tada | December 15, 2000 | |
Johnny becomes the star attraction at the circus when he runs away from home. | |||||||
46a | 11a | "A Walk on the Stupid Side" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul F. Kozlowski, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | February 2, 2001 | |
Suzy convinces Johnny to walk for charity. After accidentally walking around the world, they must stop him or else with their donations they will need to pay billions of dollars. | |||||||
46b | 11b | "Lone Star Bravo" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo, Jed Spingarn, and Paul F. Kozlowski | Alejandro Almaguer | February 2, 2001 | |
While looking at the family scrapbook, Mama tells Johnny the tale of Lonestar Bravo and how he became the sheriff of Moist Rock to impress frontier chicks. | |||||||
46c | 11c | "Enter the Chipmunk" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | February 2, 2001 | |
When a chipmunk falls in Johnny's shirt during a karate match and ends up leveling everyone, his master's rival is so impressed he kidnaps Johnny until he will teach him his move. | |||||||
47a | 12a | "The Great Bunny Book Ban" | Kirk Tingblad and Dave Schwartz | Jed Spingarn, Gene Grillo, and Paul F. Kozlowski | Lynell H. Forestall | February 23, 2001 | |
The "Harold and the Fuzzy Bunny Book" has been taken off all library shelves by a greedy censorer named Mr. Blowhart, and Suzy must make him change his mind. | |||||||
47b | 12b | "Toy Boy Johnny" | Nathan Chew | Paul F. Kozlowski, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | February 23, 2001 | |
Johnny is named CEO of a major toy conglomerate and invents (defective) action figures of himself for the holiday season. | |||||||
47c | 12c | "Frankenbravo" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Gary Hartle | February 23, 2001 | |
Johnny meets a mad scientist who has made the perfect female monster, and she and Johnny are on the run from an angry mob. | |||||||
48a | 13a | "Lodge Brother Johnny" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | April 6, 2001 | |
When Johnny agrees to take the initiation trial for the "Brotherhood of the Gnu", a fraternity that Pops and Carl are members of, he must face the daunting tasks of eating one potato chip and listening to Brother Ernie's unnecessarily long story of buying a new couch. | |||||||
48b | 13b | "Chain Gang Johnny" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Vaughn Tada | April 6, 2001 | |
Johnny and Carl get arrested and try to escape from jail. | |||||||
48c | 13c | "Lumberjack Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Lynell H. Forestall | April 6, 2001 | |
Johnny becomes a lumberjack. | |||||||
49a | 14a | "Lord of the Links" | Kirk Tingblad | John Crane, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | April 27, 2001[9] | |
Johnny becomes a golfer to earn money. | |||||||
49b | 14b | "Bootman" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul F. Kozlowski, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | April 27, 2001[9] | |
When the Green Swoosh (a Green Lantern-like superhero) gets injured by a falling meteor, Johnny gets his super boots, the source of his power. Armed with super strength and speed, Johnny tries his hand at being a superhero. | |||||||
49c | 14c | "Freudian Dip" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | April 27, 2001[9] | |
Johnny keeps having horrible nightmares about a monster, and it is driving Mama crazy. Suzy, armed with a degree in psychology she earned over the internet, decides to psychoanalyze Johnny and find the root of his terrifying dreams. | |||||||
50a | 15a | "Auteur! Auteur!" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Doug Compton | May 11, 2001 | |
Johnny is a film director, writer, and a star of a new movie that he created using a $7 million arts grant from the government of the United States of America. | |||||||
50b | 15b | "Runaway Train" | Kirk Tingblad | Paul F. Kozlowski, Gene Grillo, & Jed Spingarn | TBA | May 11, 2001 | |
Johnny mistakenly boards the Blue Goose 9000, a supersonic train prototype, instead of a commuter train heading to visit his aunt. | |||||||
50c | 15c | "A Reject Runs Through It" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Michael Diederich | May 11, 2001 | |
Carl and Pops dare Johnny to travel to Alaska and catch a rare fish, the "sassy-mouth salmon". | |||||||
51a | 16a | "The Island of Mrs. Morceau" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Vaughn Tada | June 7, 2002 | |
After traveling to an island to meet babes, Johnny is turned into half-man, half-hamster. Enraged by this, Johnny vows to destroy the mutating machine. | |||||||
51b | 16b | "The Color of Mustard" | Kirk Tingblad | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Mary Hanley | June 7, 2002 | |
Johnny has retired from professional badminton because of a courtside accident, but after being challenged by a pretty girl and a prize of a date with her, he quickly agrees to a match. | |||||||
51c | 16c | "Third Dork from the Sun" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Dave Schwartz | June 7, 2002 | |
Johnny is sucked into an alien game show by an alien civilization. He wins the first two rounds and competes in a game called "Suck My Brain Out". | |||||||
52a | 17a | "The Hansel & Gretel Project" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn, Gene Grillo, and Paul F. Kozlowski | Lynell H. Forestall | June 14, 2002 | |
Little Suzy and Carl convince Johnny to help them make a movie about the Hansel and Gretel witch who lives at the edge of town. | |||||||
52b | 17b | "I.Q. Johnny" | Kirk Tingblad | Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer | June 14, 2002 | |
Johnny buys a drink designed to make chimps smart. This makes Johnny smart just in time to save the town during a nuclear meltdown. | |||||||
52c | 17c | "Get Stinky!" | Nathan Chew | Gene Grillo, Paul F. Kozlowski, & Jed Spingarn | Alejandro Almaguer, Michael Diederich, Mary Hanley, Dave Schwartz, Vaughn Tada, and Lynell H. Forestall | June 14, 2002 | |
Johnny's childhood nemesis, Stinky Brownstein, moves back to town. She is now very beautiful and actually interested in him, but he is unable to see past the memories of all the practical jokes she played on him when they were children. Note: This is the last episode from when Cartoon Network Studios was still a subsidiary of Hanna-Barbera before branching off when H-B was folded into Warner Bros. Animation. |
Season 4 (2004)
[edit]No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date [5] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
53 | 1 | "Johnny Bravo Goes to Hollywood" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Van Partible & Craig Lewis | Dan Haskett & Vaughn Tada | February 20, 2004 | |
Johnny Bravo is offered a role in the upcoming movie "Lunch Lady S'urprise" and will get to star with Don Knotts, Jessica Biel, a Hobbit, and Alec Baldwin. When his part gets written out of the script, he tries desperately to squeeze a few more seconds out of his 15 minutes of fame. | |||||||
54a | 2a | "Traffic Troubles" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Craig Bartlett | Vaughn Tada | March 5, 2004 | |
A jaywalking incident lands Johnny in "Musical Comedy Traffic School". Unfortunately, Johnny cannot sing a note, and he seeks the help of a kindly old lady in figuring out how to make the grade and impress the Token Spunky Girl. | |||||||
54b | 2b | "My Funny Looking Friend" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Craig Lewis | Alex Almaguer | March 5, 2004 | |
Inspired by the antics of a fellow macho-man at the mall, Johnny enlists the aid of a funny-looking friend to impress girls. After looking high and low for the perfect funny-looking friend, Johnny finds a pro who knows how to reel in the chicks. | |||||||
55a | 3a | "Win an El Toro Guapo" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Craig Bartlett | Jim Schumann | March 12, 2004 | |
Johnny tries to enter a contest to win an "El Toro Guapo" pick-up truck, and he must outlast a host of competitors in holding on to a rather talkative bull. | |||||||
55b | 3b | "Witch-ay Woman" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Amy Keating Rogers | Dan Haskett & Charlie Bean | March 12, 2004 | |
Johnny gets on the bad side of a gypsy lady with his clumsy passes, and she casts a spell on him, turning him into a woman ("Jenny Brava"). | |||||||
56 | 4 | "Home Alone" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Craig Lewis | Vaughn Tada & Alex Almaguer | March 19, 2004 | |
Mama Bravo goes out of town on vacation, and Johnny convinces her to let him stay home alone for the week. Things do not go as well as Johnny would have hoped, as one disaster after another strikes his home, culminating in a band of fairy tale creatures storming into his house and throwing a wild party. | |||||||
57a | 5a | "Mini JB" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Amy Keating Rogers | Octavio E. Rodriguez | March 26, 2004 | |
Johnny finds himself stuck looking after a baby boy and decides to teach the kid to be more like him in order to make the situation bearable. Much to his surprise, the ladies are quite smitten with what they believe to be a father-son duo, and Johnny plans on using the kid as a babe magnet. | |||||||
57b | 5b | "Back from the Future" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Craig Bartlett | Jim Schumann | March 26, 2004 | |
After Johnny is knocked out by a woman he was flirting with, a band of sci-fi geeks find a dazed Johnny and become convinced he is a time traveler from 1963. | |||||||
58a | 6a | "That's Entertainment!" | Kevin Petrilak & Van Partible | Van Partible | Vaughn Tada | July 2, 2004 | |
When the Bravos' TV breaks on movie night, Mama suggests that she, Johnny, Little Suzy, and Donny Osmond (who shows up later on) take turns telling stories to keep themselves entertained. | |||||||
58b | 6b | "Non, Oui, Oui Pour Johnny" | David Brain & Van Partible | Amy Keating Rogers | Alex Almaguer | July 2, 2004 | |
Johnny takes up French class with Mama for their upcoming trip to Paris, France, but Johnny is a slow learner. | |||||||
59a | 7a | "Get Shovelized" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Craig Lewis | Octavio E. Rodriguez | July 9, 2004 | |
Johnny orders a seemingly complex work-out device over the phone, which turns out to be a rusty, worn-out shovel. | |||||||
59b | 7b | "T Is for Trouble" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Craig Lewis | Jim Schumann | July 9, 2004 | |
Mr. T pays Johnny a visit to teach him about self-defense. | |||||||
60a | 8a | "Gray Matters" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Amy Keating Rogers | Vaughn Tada | July 16, 2004 | |
Johnny freaks out when he awakens with a gray hair. | |||||||
60b | 8b | "Double Vision" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Craig Bartlett | Alex Almaguer | July 16, 2004 | |
Johnny goes home from the grocery store with a look-alike of his mother. | |||||||
61a | 9a | "It's a Magical Life" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Craig Bartlett | Octavio E. Rodriguez | July 23, 2004 | |
Johnny believes a magician makes him invisible. | |||||||
61b | 9b | "The Hunk at the End of This Cartoon" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Craig Lewis | Jim Schumann | July 23, 2004 | |
Johnny fears the new hunk in town. | |||||||
62a | 10a | "The Time of My Life" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Story by : Amy Keating Rogers Teleplay by : Van Partible | Vaughn Tada | July 30, 2004 | |
Johnny tells Suzy a story about his first crush, and how he went from skinny to muscular. | |||||||
62b | 10b | "Run Johnny Run" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Craig Bartlett | Alex Almaguer | July 30, 2004 | |
Johnny has to make it to his blind date in time, but when he fails the first time, he grabs the remote and restarts the cartoon. | |||||||
63a | 11a | "Wilderness Protection Program" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Adam Pava | Octavio E. Rodriguez | August 6, 2004 | |
A moose pretends that she and Johnny are married elephants because she is on the run from people she thinks are a mob out to take over the world. | |||||||
63b | 11b | "A Page Right Out of History" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Amy Keating Rogers & Craig Bartlett | Jim Schumann | August 6, 2004 | |
In the distant past, a same-named ancestor of Johnny living in Bedrock is rescued by Fred Flintstone and soon finds himself doing Fred's chores as a way of repaying Fred. | |||||||
64a | 12a | "Some Walk by Night" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Van Partible | Vaughn Tada | August 20, 2004 | |
Johnny ends up on a reality TV show as a detective. | |||||||
64b | 12b | "Adam West's Date-O-Rama" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Craig Lewis | Alex Almaguer | August 20, 2004 | |
Johnny is on a dating show and gets a blind date with the Black Widow. | |||||||
65a | 13a | "Johnny Makeover" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Adam Pava | Dan Haskett & Octavio E. Rodriguez | August 27, 2004 | |
Johnny Bravo becomes the target of Don Knotts, "Weird Al" Yankovic, and the Blue Falcon for their reality show, Cartoon Makeover. The trio attempts to completely revamp him to make him a huge hit for the new youth generation, but their tactics only make things worse for Johnny. Note: The Powerpuff Girls are mentioned at the end of the segment. | |||||||
65b | 13b | "Back on Shaq" | James Tim Walker & Van Partible | Story by : Amy Keating Rogers Teleplay by : Van Partible | Jim Schumann | August 27, 2004 | |
At a basketball game, Shaquille O'Neal discovers that Johnny Bravo brings him good luck. This holds true until Shaq's showdown match with Seth Green who has brought along his own good luck charm by the name of Huckleberry Hound. |
Specials (2001–2004)
[edit]No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S1 | "A Johnny Bravo Christmas" | Robert Alvarez and Van Partible | Van Partible | Vaughn Tada and Brian Kindregan | December 7, 2001[10] | |
Johnny forgets to send a letter to Santa Claus and must reach the North Pole before Christmas. When the post office tells him there is no way to get the letters to the North Pole, Johnny journeys to the North Pole himself. Unsure of where Santa lives, he agrees to take little Suzy along with him. They at first become stowaways on a plane, but after getting dropped out along with circus animals, Suzy contacts a trucker to give them a ride to the airport. There they get a lift going towards the North Pole, along the way picking up the infamous Donny Osmond. | ||||||
S2 | "It's Valentine's Day, Johnny Bravo!" | Robert Alvarez & Van Partible | Van Partible | Dan Haskett and Vaughn Tada | February 14, 2004[11] | |
In celebration of Valentine's Day, which is also Johnny's birthday, Johnny invites everyone as he goes out in search of the perfect date. However, it seems that his mother had already arranged a date for him. Refusing to go with a girl his mother decided for him, he goes out on his own. Despite all his attempts, every single woman rejects him as usual, and he becomes deeply depressed at the worst birthday in his life. Ultimately he ends up running into the woman his mother arranged for him, and she turns out to be an attractive, buxom redhead who, for all intents and purposes, is similar to Johnny in many ways. They end up going on a fantastic date, and Johnny decides that this was his best birthday ever. |
India special (2009)
[edit]No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date [7] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
B1 | "Johnny Bravo Goes to Bollywood" | E. Suresh | Van Partible, E. Suresh, Keegan Pinto, and Keith Menon | Van Partible, Orlon Ross, Silas Hickey, and E. Suresh | 2011 | |
After watching a True Hollywood Stories-type documentary in which he is considered a forgotten star, Johnny Bravo travels to Mumbai, the entertainment capital of India, to prove himself he is still popular, confusing Bollywood, India, with Hollywood and Indiana respectively. Eventually Johnny finds himself in the middle of a murder plot to kill Bollywood's greatest star, Jiggy (Johnny's Indian equivalent and rival). |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Boedecker, Hal (July 14, 1997). "Cartoon Network zany relief". Orlando Sentinel. Tribune Company. Archived from the original on March 1, 2017. Retrieved 2013-01-22.
- ^ a b c "Johnny Bravo: Episode Guide (season 1)". Zap2it. Retrieved 2018-02-08.[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c "Johnny Bravo: Episode Guide (season 2)". Zap2it. Retrieved 2018-02-08.[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c "Johnny Bravo: Episode Guide (season 3)". Zap2it. Retrieved 2018-02-08.[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c "Johnny Bravo: Episode Guide (season 4)". Zap2it. Retrieved 2018-02-08.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Johnny Bravo - Copyright Catalog
- ^ a b "Johnny Bravo Episodes". TV.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-03. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
- ^ a b c "Turner Pressroom - Viva, JOHNNY BRAVO! Cartoon Network Launches New Season of Hot Show". 13 November 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-11-13. Retrieved 26 June 2024.
- ^ a b c "TV: Schedule Page". Cartoon Network. Archived from the original on March 30, 2001. Retrieved 2013-01-22.
- ^ "TV: Schedule Page". Cartoon Network. Archived from the original on 2001-12-04. Retrieved 2013-01-22.
- ^ "Cartoon Network | TV Schedule". Archived from the original on 2004-02-10. Retrieved 2004-02-10.
- ^ "Johnny Goes To Bollywood « Van Partible". Archived from the original on November 7, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
- ^ "Johnny Bravo: Season 2 | DVD | Buy Now | at Mighty Ape Australia". Archived from the original on February 4, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2015.