Revision as of 01:18, 17 September 2010 edit98.217.131.172 (talk) →Season 2← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 17:24, 27 December 2024 edit undoEscape Orbit (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers74,208 edits Reverted 2 edits by 2600:1702:5F17:E810:C03:EB0E:D0CD:96C2 (talk): Persistent unsourced changing of dates by IP jumperTags: Twinkle Undo | ||
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{{Short description|none}} | |||
{{orphan|date=March 2010}} | |||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:List of ''CatDog'' episodes}} | |||
This is a list of episodes from the animated |
This is a list of episodes from the animated '']'' television series. | ||
== |
==Series overview== | ||
Sixty-eight episodes from four seasons and one ], ''CatDog and the Great Parent Mystery'', were produced. | |||
<!--Note: Full section linking is being used here for transclusion to main article--> | |||
<onlyinclude> | |||
{{Series overview | |||
| color1 = #F9CF00 | |||
| link1 = <includeonly>List of CatDog episodes</includeonly>#Season 1 (1998) | |||
| episodes1 = 20 | |||
| start1 = {{Start date|1998|4|4}} | |||
| end1 = {{End date|1998|10|29}} | |||
| color2 = #FF9B00 | |||
==Season 1== | |||
| link2 = <includeonly>List of CatDog episodes</includeonly>#Season 2 (1999–2000) | |||
{| class="wikitable" width=99% | |||
| episodes2 = 20 | |||
|- | |||
| start2 = {{Start date|1999|2|15}} | |||
! style="background-color: #FFFF00" | Prod. No. | |||
| end2 = {{End date|2000|3|16}} | |||
! style="background-color: #FFFF00" | Title | |||
! style="background-color: #FFFF00" | Original airdate | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 1 || ''']''' || April 4, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 2 || '''Flea or Die! / CatDog Food''' || May 8, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 3 || '''Full Moon Fever / War of the CatDog''' || May , 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 4 || '''Pumped / Dummy Dummy''' || May 22, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 5 || '''Nightmare / CatDogPig''' || May 29, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 6 || '''Squirrel Dog / Brother's Day''' || June 14, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 7 || '''The Island / All You Need is Lube''' ||May 15, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 8 || '''Party Animal / Mush, Dog, Mush!''' || May 15, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 9 || '''Diamond Fever / The Pet''' || May 29, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 10 || '''Shriek Loves Dog / Work Force''' || May 15, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 11 || '''Escape From the Deep End / The Collector''' || October 15, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 12 || '''CatDog's End / Siege On Fort CatDog''' || November 4, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 13 || '''Armed and Dangerous / Fistful of Mail!''' || October 12, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 14 || '''Safety Dog / Dog Come Home!''' || October 20, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 15 || '''New Neighbors / Dead Weight''' || October 22, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 16 || '''All About Cat / Trespassing''' || October 29, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 17 || '''Just Say CatDog Sent Ya / Dog's Strange Condition''' || October 27, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 18 || '''Home is Where the Dirt is / New Leash on Life''' || October 26, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 19 || '''Neferkitty / Curiosity Almost Killed the Cat''' || October 23, 1998 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 20 || '''Smarter Than the Average Dog / CatDog Doesn't Live Here Anymore''' || October 28, 1998 | |||
|} | |||
| color3 = #6E1615 | |||
==Season 2== | |||
| link3 = <includeonly>List of CatDog episodes</includeonly>#Season 3 (1999–2001) | |||
{| class="wikitable" width=99% | |||
| episodes3 = 20 | |||
|- | |||
| start3 = {{Start date|1999|10|9}} | |||
! style="background-color: #FFA500" | Prod. No. | |||
| end3 = {{End date|2001|5|18}} | |||
! style="background-color: #FFA500" | Title | |||
! style="background-color: #FFA500" | Original airdate | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 21 || '''Send in the CatDog / Fishing For Trouble / Fetch''' || January 2, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 22 || '''The Lady is a Shriek / Dog the Mighty''' || January 8, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 23 || '''Hail the Great Meow Woof / Battle of the Bands''' || January 16, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 24 || '''Adventures in Greaser Sitting / The Cat Club / Cat Diggety Dog''' || January 23, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 25 || '''Climb Every CatDog / Canine Mutiny''' || March 1, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 26 || '''Fred the Flying Fish / CatDog Divided''' || February 19, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 27 || '''The Unnatural / Dog Ate It / Dopes on Slopes''' || February 23, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 28 || '''Spaced Out / Nine Lives''' || February 24, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 29 || '''Dem Bones / Winslow's Home Videos / You're Fired''' || February 25, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 30 || '''Showdown at Hole 18 / Sneezie Dog''' || May 30, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 31 || '''Surfin' CatDog / Guess Who's Going to be Dinner!''' || July 24, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 32 || '''It's a Wonderful Half Life / Shepherd Dog''' || July 3, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 33 || '''Dog Power / It's a Jungle in Here!''' || July 30, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 34 || '''The House of CatDog / CatDog Campers''' || August 14, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 35 || '''Let the Games Begin! / Winslow Falls in Love''' || August 21, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 36 || '''Royal Dog / Springtime For CatDog''' || March 9, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 37 || '''A Dog Ate My Homework / The End''' || March 9, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 38 || '''Extra! Extra! / CatDog Squared''' || December 11, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 39 || '''Cliff's Little Secret / Freak Show''' || March 16, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 40 || '''CatDogula''' || October 31, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
|} | |||
| color4 = #00002D | |||
==Season 3== | |||
| link4 = <includeonly>List of CatDog episodes</includeonly>#Season 4 (2000–05) | |||
{| class="wikitable" width=99% | |||
| episodes4 = 8 | |||
|- | |||
| start4 = {{Start date|2000|11|25}} | |||
! style="background-color: #FF0000" | Prod. No. | |||
| end4 = {{End date|2005|6|15}} | |||
! style="background-color: #FF0000" | Title | |||
}}</onlyinclude> | |||
! style="background-color: #FF0000" | Original airdate | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 41 || '''Fire Dog / Dog Show''' || October 23, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 42 || '''Sumo Enchanted Evening / Hotel CatDog''' || October 9, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 43 || '''Shriek on Ice / No Thanks for the Memories''' || October 16, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 44 || '''Rodeo CatDog / Teeth For Two''' || October 23, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 45 || '''Remain Seated / CatDog Catcher''' || November 6, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 46 || '''Silents Please! / Gorilla My Dreams''' || January 1, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 47 || '''Sweet and Lola / Rich Shriek, Poor Shriek''' || October 30, 1999 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 48 || '''The Geekers / The Golden Hydrant''' || March 23, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 49 || '''Lube in Love / Picture This''' || March 23, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 50 || '''Stunt CatDog / Greasers in the Mist''' || March 30, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 51 || '''Doo Wop Diggety / CatDogumentary''' || March 3, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 52 || '''Rinky Dinks / Hypno-Teased''' || Janauary 1, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 53 || '''Monster Truck Folly / CatDog's Gold''' || August 12, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 54 || '''CatDog Candy / Movin' On Up''' || January 1, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 55 || '''New Cat in Town / CatDog's Booty''' || May 18, 2001 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 56 || '''Seeing Eye Dog / Beware of Cliff''' || May 15, 2001 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 57 || '''CatDog 3001 / Cloud Bursting''' || May 11, 2001 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 58 || '''Talking Turkey''' || October 26, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 59 || '''A Very CatDog Christmas''' || November 30, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 60 || '''Kooky Prank Day / Back to School''' || June 19, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
|} | |||
== |
==Episodes== | ||
===Season 1 (1998)=== | |||
{| class="wikitable" width=99% | |||
{{Episode table|background=#F9CF00|overall=|season=|title=|director=|directorT=Animation directed by|writer=|aux2=|aux2T=Storyboard by|airdate=|prodcode=|episodes= | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|NumParts=3 | |||
|EpisodeNumber=1 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=1 | |||
|Title_1=Dog Gone | |||
|DirectedBy_1=George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy_1=], ] & Robert Porter | |||
|Aux2_1=Derek Drymon & Robert Porter, Robert Porter (director) | |||
|Title_2=Fan Mail | |||
|DirectedBy_2=- | |||
|WrittenBy_2=- | |||
|Aux2_2=- | |||
|Title_3=All You Can't Eat | |||
|DirectedBy_3=George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy_3=Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2_3=Dominic Orlando, Karen Heathwood, Barry Bunce & Sam Kirson, Derek Drymon (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|04|04}} | |||
|ProdCode=101 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Dog Gone''' — Dog puts on a costume to give Cat some time to himself.<br>'''Fan Mail''' — In a filler segment, since the pilot was too short, CatDog read their fan mail, but since Winslow claims there is no mail for them, Dog makes up a wild version of their origin story.<br>'''All You Can't Eat''' — CatDog are banned from an all-you-can-eat taco restaurant by Rancid Rabbit, but they find clever ways to sneak back in. However, the ban is lifted after Rancid is fired from his job and CatDog’s friend Dunglap becomes the new manager of the restaurant. | |||
'''''Note''''': The series pilot, "Dog Gone" was completed on August 13, 1997, but did not air until April 4, 1998 due to the length of the pilot being too short for entertainment.<ref name="Varietyleash">{{cite news|title=Nick leashes 'CatDog' to 40 episodes|url=https://www.variety.com/article/VR1116678594|date=August 14, 1997|work=]|publisher=]|access-date=May 29, 2010}}</ref> The original pilot version, however, was included as a pre-show for pay-per-view airings of ] (presumably between January–March 1998).<ref name="CatDog (1997) pilot)">{{cite web |title=CatDog: Dog Gone (1997 pilot version) |url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1J01BUT5by1hQzEqcHhNXELzLZiWgzxzi/view}}</ref> | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|NumParts=2 | |||
|EpisodeNumber=2 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=2 | |||
|Title_1=Flea or Die! | |||
|DirectedBy_1=] | |||
|WrittenBy_1=Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2_1=Derek Drymon (also director) | |||
|Title_2=CatDog Food | |||
|DirectedBy_2=George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy_2=Lance Khazei & Michael Karnow | |||
|Aux2_2=Robert Porter & Antoine Guilbaud | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|5}} | |||
|ProdCode=102 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Flea or Die''' — When CatDog get fleas, Cat chooses to wear a flea belt over taking a bath, but Cat does not want to wear it when the new belt-free fashion trend leaves him pushing it on to Dog to impress the ladies.<br>'''CatDog Food''' — Rancid Rabbit makes CatDog the mascot of "CatDog Food", and it goes to Cat's head. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|NumParts=2 | |||
|EpisodeNumber=3 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=3 | |||
|Title_1=The Island | |||
|DirectedBy_1=Alan Smart | |||
|WrittenBy_1=] | |||
|Aux2_1=], Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|Title_2=All You Need is Lube | |||
|DirectedBy_2=Gary McCarver | |||
|WrittenBy_2=Magda Liolis | |||
|Aux2_2=Karen Heathwood, Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|6}} | |||
|ProdCode=107 | |||
|ShortSummary='''The Island''' — CatDog are stranded on an island surrounded by traffic.<br>'''All You Need is Lube''' — When Cat saves Lube from a tick, Lube becomes his bodyguard. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=4 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=4 | |||
|Title=Shriek Loves Dog<hr>Work Force | |||
|DirectedBy=Alan Smart | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>] & John Bolton | |||
|Aux2=Gary Goldstein (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Gary Goldstein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|7}} | |||
|ProdCode=110 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Shriek Loves Dog''' — Cat and Winslow set up a date for Dog and Shriek, but the Greasers want Dog to marry her.<br>'''Work Force''' — CatDog work in Rancid's cereal factory licking the boxes shut, but when Dog gets promoted to a prize stuffer, he lets the power go to his head. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=5 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=5 | |||
|Title=Diamond Fever<hr>The Pet | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney<hr>George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Rick Rodgers & ] | |||
|Aux2=Antoine Guilbaud<br>Chuck Klein (director)<hr>]<br>Gary Goldstein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|8}} | |||
|ProdCode=109 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Diamond Fever''' — Cat and Dog start mining for diamonds, causing Cat to get a bit greedy.<br>'''The Pet''' — CatDog find an injured cockroach and Dog wants to take it home. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=6 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=6 | |||
|Title=Party Animal<hr>Mush, Dog, Mush! | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas<hr>Russ Mooney | |||
|WrittenBy=Rachel Powell<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|9}} | |||
|ProdCode=108 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Party Animal''' — Cat throws a house party, but almost no one shows up. Winslow's party turns out amazing, and everyone else (including Dog) ends up going.<br>'''Mush, Dog, Mush!''' — Cat enters Dog in the ] competition and trains Dog to the extreme. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=7 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=7 | |||
|Title=Armed and Dangerous<hr>Fistful of Mail! | |||
|DirectedBy=Tim Long<hr>George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy=Dean Stefan<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Gary Hoffman (director)<hr>Barry Bunce and Vikki Barrett | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|12}} | |||
|ProdCode=113 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Armed and Dangerous''' — Cat's ] Ingrid is coming to visit him, but he has to disguise Dog as a regular tail because he told Ingrid that he was a normal cat. He also gets his hands stuck in a jar and has to use Dog's hands instead.<br>'''Fistful of Mail!''' — Dog tries to bite the butt of the new mailman, who seems to know every trick in the book. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=8 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=8 | |||
|Title=Pumped<hr>Dummy Dummy | |||
|DirectedBy=Alan Smart<hr>George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy=Evan Bailey<hr>Peter Hannan, Robert Porter, and Antoine Guilbaud | |||
|Aux2=Gary Goldstein and Kelly Kennedy (directors)<hr>Robert Porter and Antoine Guilbaud | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|13}} | |||
|ProdCode=104 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Pumped''' — When the Greasers steal Catdog's frisbee, Dog drinks a muscle building protein shake so he can fight the Greasers and get their frisbee back. A side effect is that Dog becomes very aggressive. <br>'''Dummy Dummy''' — Cat feels threatened when Dog gets a new toy called "Little Cat". | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=9 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=9 | |||
|Title=Squirrel Dog<hr>Brother's Day | |||
|DirectedBy=Alan Smart | |||
|WrittenBy=Chris Kelly & John Bolton<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Kelly Kennedy<br>Derek Drymon and Gary Goldstein (directors)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Gary Goldstein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|14}} | |||
|ProdCode=106 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Squirrel Dog''' — Eddie is accidentally glued to Cliff's jacket, causing Cliff to be kicked out of the Greasers. He goes to CatDog for support on how to deal with his new two-headed lifestyle.<br>'''Brother's Day''' — CatDog are broke and cannot afford to buy each other a Brother's Day gift. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=10 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=10 | |||
|Title=Escape From the Deep End<hr>The Collector | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney<hr>George Chialtas | |||
|WrittenBy=Andy Rheingold<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|15}} | |||
|ProdCode=111 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Escape From the Deep End''' — When Dog breaks the public pool's very strict set of rules, Rancid puts CatDog behind bars.<br>'''The Collector''' — Cat becomes obsessed with collecting Mean Bob action figures, but Dog just wants to play with them. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=11 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=11 | |||
|Title=Full Moon Fever<hr>War of the CatDog | |||
|DirectedBy=Gary McCarver<hr>Russ Mooney | |||
|WrittenBy=John Loy<hr>Andy Rheingold and Scott Sonneborn | |||
|Aux2=Greg Miller<br>Barry Bunce (director)<hr>Antoine Guilbaud<br>Chuck Klein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|16}} | |||
|ProdCode=103 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Full Moon Fever''' — Dog's primal instincts come out when he sees the full moon.<br>'''War of the CatDog''' — CatDog's family reunion is halted by a battle over a trophy. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=12 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=12 | |||
|Title=CatDog's End<hr>Siege on Fort CatDog | |||
|DirectedBy=Alan Smart | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Antoine Guilbaud<br>Chuck Klein (director)<hr>Erik Wiese, Roy Wilson, and Karen Heathwood | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|19}} | |||
|ProdCode=112 | |||
|ShortSummary='''CatDog's End''' — Cat wants to be physically separated from Dog, while Dog wants to be attached to their new friend Randolf.<br>'''Siege on Fort CatDog''' — CatDog fight the Greaser Dogs military style. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=13 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=13 | |||
|Title=Safety Dog<hr>Dog Come Home! | |||
|DirectedBy=Tim Long<hr>Alan Smart | |||
|WrittenBy=Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Gary Goldstein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|20}} | |||
|ProdCode=114 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Safety Dog''' — Dog becomes overcautious when Cat reminds him that dogs do not have nine lives like cats do.<br>'''Dog Come Home!''' — Dog is tired of Cat's bossiness and runs away. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=14 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=14 | |||
|Title=Nightmare<hr>CatDogPig | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney<hr>Gary McCarver | |||
|WrittenBy=Andy Rheingold<hr>Lance Khazei & Michael Karnow | |||
|Aux2=Antoine Guilbaud<br>Derek Drymon and Chuck Klein (directors)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Gary Goldstein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|21}} | |||
|ProdCode=105 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Nightmare''' — After watching a scary movie, Dog is terrified of "Toothpickhead".<br>'''CatDogPig''' — Cat hires a pig to be a tiebreaker when CatDog vote on things. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=15 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=15 | |||
|Title=New Neighbors<hr>Dead Weight | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas<hr>Alan Smart | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Gary Hoffman (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|22}} | |||
|ProdCode=115 | |||
|ShortSummary='''New Neighbors''' — Dog thinks his new neighbors might be aliens from outer space.<br>'''Dead Weight''' — Cat tries to impress a pair of sisters by appearing on a TV show called "Really Incredible People", but Dog, who did not sleep the night before, is sound asleep when the camera crew shows up. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=16 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=16 | |||
|Title=Neferkitty<hr>Curiosity Almost Killed the Cat | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas<hr>Brian Ray | |||
|WrittenBy=Julia Lewald<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Chuck Klein (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Gary Hoffman (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|23}} | |||
|ProdCode=119 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Neferkitty''' — Cat tells Dog a story about ancient Egyptian life.<br>'''Curiosity Almost Killed the Cat''' — Dog starts writing in a diary after he sees Cat writing in his own, but Cat breaks the iconic "Don't Read other people's diary" rule wanting to know what Dog wrote about him, prompting Winslow to blackmail him. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=17 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=17 | |||
|Title=Home is Where the Dirt is<hr>New Leash on Life | |||
|DirectedBy=Alan Smart<hr>Tim Long | |||
|WrittenBy=Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=] (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|26}} | |||
|ProdCode=118 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Home is Where the Dirt is''' — CatDog argue with the gopher about what belongs to them below ground.<br>'''New Leash on Life''' — Tired of Dog's behavior, Cat puts Dog on a leash for dog walking and treats him like his pet. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=18 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=18 | |||
|Title=Just Say CatDog Sent Ya<hr>Dog's Strange Condition | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas<hr>Marlene Robinson May | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Dean Stefan | |||
|Aux2=Gary Goldstein (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|27}} | |||
|ProdCode=117 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Just Say CatDog Sent Ya''' — Farburg bones, a favorite of Dog's, are made illegal, but Cat sets up a ] selling them to make profit, but Dog quickly eats every snack.<br>'''Dog's Strange Condition''' — After experiencing an allergic reaction to pecans following a pecan pie eating contest, a tree suddenly sprouts from Dog's head as part of a disease called "pecanitis". | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=19 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=19 | |||
|Title=Smarter than the Average Dog<hr>CatDog Doesn't Live Here Anymore | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas<hr>Brian Ray | |||
|WrittenBy=Patti Carr & Lara Runnels<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|28}} | |||
|ProdCode=120 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Smarter than the Average Dog''' — Cat wants to make Dog smarter, so he lets him watch educational videos. Dog soon becomes incredibly smart, but Cat loses almost all of his intelligence as a result. Things get worse when they test the flying machine they built for Nearburg's Invention Convention.<br>'''CatDog Doesn't Live Here Anymore''' — CatDog go on vacation to get away from everyone, but in their absence the Greasers and Winslow realize they actually miss CatDog. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=20 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=20 | |||
|Title=All About Cat<hr>Trespassing | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene Robinson May | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Mike Allen | |||
|Aux2=Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1998|10|29}} | |||
|ProdCode=116 | |||
|ShortSummary='''All About Cat''' — Cat auditions for the lead role in Rancid's musical "Abe" about ]. The part goes instead to Dog, and Cat ends up with the role of Abe's donkey.<br>'''Trespassing''' — As Dog waits at a fire hydrant for a "trespasser" who marked his territory, Cat tries to get him home when their house catches fire. | |||
|LineColor=F9CF00 | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
=== Season 2 (1999–2000) === | |||
{{Episode table|background=#FF9B00|overall=|season=|title=|director=|directorT=Directed by|writer=|aux2=|aux2T=Storyboard by|airdate=|prodcode=|episodes= | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=21 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=1 | |||
|Title=Send in the CatDog<hr>Fishing for Trouble<hr>Fetch | |||
|DirectedBy=Brian Ray (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation)<hr>], Robert Porter, and ]<br>Christine Kolosov (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=]<hr>Andy Rheingold<hr>Dean Stefan and Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Antoine Guilbaud<br>Barry Bunce (director)<hr>] and Vikki Barrett<hr>Rob Porter, Derek Drymon, ], <br>Vikki Barrett, and Miyuki Hoshikawa | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|15}}<hr>{{Start date|1999|2|15}}<hr>{{Start date|1998|11|20}} {{small| (cinemas)}}<br />{{Start date|1999|2|15}} | |||
|ProdCode=201 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Send in the CatDog''' — CatDog enroll in a military-like clown school where Dog excels and Cat does not, but Cat might just have it in him to get one of their hardest cases to smile.<br>'''Fishing for Trouble''' — Cat feels guilty after eating Dog's new pet fish, and he ventures inside Dog's mouth in search for it.<br>'''Fetch''' — Cat tries to win a contest on the radio. | |||
'''''Note''''': "Fetch" was shown as a theatrical short before the 1998 Nickelodeon film, '']'', meaning that season 2 started production in early October 1998. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=22 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=2 | |||
|Title=The Lady is a Shriek<hr>Dog the Mighty | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>Marlene May (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Don Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|16}} | |||
|ProdCode=202 | |||
|ShortSummary='''The Lady is a Shriek''' — Shriek tries to become more feminine so she can get Dog to notice her at CatDog’s barbecue party.<br>'''Dog the Mighty''' — Rancid Rabbit gives Dog a medal after he saves him from being squashed, and Dog is convinced he is a superhero. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=23 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=3 | |||
|Title=Hail the Great Meow Woof<hr>Battle of the Bands | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>] (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Dean Stefan<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Erik Wiese<br>Gary Goldstein (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|17}} | |||
|ProdCode=203 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Hail the Great Meow Woof''' — Dog's kite drags him and Cat faraway to an island where they are thought to be gods. But when they crush his statue from when they entered, the Great Rancid wants revenge on them.<br>'''Battle of the Bands''' — CatDog enter the Battle of the Bands contest using their own homemade instruments. But the Greasers change all that. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=24 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=4 | |||
|Title=Adventures in Greaser Sitting<hr>The Cat Club<hr>Cat Diggety Dog | |||
|DirectedBy=Mike Svayko (animation)<hr>Marlene May (animation)<hr>N/A | |||
|WrittenBy=Dean Stefan<hr>Steven Banks<hr>] | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Jordan Reichek (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|18}} | |||
|ProdCode=204 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Adventures in Greaser Sitting''' — Cliff makes CatDog babysit his niece, but they lose track of her before he gets back.<br>'''The Cat Club''' — Cat joins a secret "cats only" society.<br>'''Cat Diggety Dog''' — A musical number telling how CatDog get along. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=25 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=5 | |||
|Title=Climb Every CatDog<hr>Canine Mutiny | |||
|DirectedBy=Mike Svayko (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Dean Stefan<hr>Patti Carr & Lara Runnels | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Steve Owen<br>Barry Bunce and Chuck Klein (directors) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|19}} | |||
|ProdCode=205 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Climb Every CatDog''' — Cat wants to climb Mount Nearburg so it can be named after him instead of his old rival Mindy Wonderful.<br>'''Canine Mutiny''' — CatDog, Mervis, and Mr Sunshine end up in a dumpster floating in water, and Cat starts acting like the captain of a pirate ship. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=26 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=6 | |||
|Title=Fred the Flying Fish<hr>CatDog Divided | |||
|DirectedBy=Ron Myrick (animation)<hr>Russ Mooney (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Jordan Reichek (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|22}} | |||
|ProdCode=206 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Fred the Flying Fish''' — Cat tries to disprove a myth about a flying fish.<br>'''CatDog Divided''' — Cat and Dog are separated after a magic trick gone wrong from a crooked magician. Now the duo has to find the guy, who's running from the cops. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=27 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=7 | |||
|Title=The Unnatural<hr>Dog Ate It<hr>Dopes on Slopes | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>Alan Smart (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=]<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Steve Owen<br>Chuck Klein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|23}} | |||
|ProdCode=207 | |||
|ShortSummary='''The Unnatural''' — Cat and Dog play baseball with the Greasers on opposite teams, but when Cat's skills are not up to bat, he uses a pair of disguises to switch places with ace ball player Dog.<br>'''Dog Ate It''' — Cat tries to get Dog to lose weight.<br>'''Dopes on Slopes''' — Cat tries to teach Dog how to ski. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=28 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=8 | |||
|Title=Spaced Out<hr>Nine Lives | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene May (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Agi Fodor & Chris Gilligan<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Antoine Gilbaud<br>Barry Bunce and Mario Piluso (directors)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|24}} | |||
|ProdCode=208 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Spaced Out''' — Tired of watching the Mean Bob movie over and over again with Dog, Cat tries to sabotage the film, but his attempts put the duo into the movie itself.<br>'''Nine Lives''' — While cleaning the attic, Dog accidentally lets loose Cat's eight extra life spirits. Now the duo has to collect them before they destroy all of Nearburg. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=29 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=9 | |||
|Title=Dem Bones<hr>Winslow's Home Videos<hr>You're Fired | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene May (animation)<hr>Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Dean Stefan and Dan Povenmire<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=Antoine Guilbaud<br>Barry Bunce and Scott Wood (directors)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando and Dan Povenmire (directors)<hr>Steve Owen<br>Chuck Klein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|25}} | |||
|ProdCode=209 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Dem Bones''' — Dog gets a craving for dinosaur bones when Cat takes him to a museum, but he tells Dog not to eat the bones as they are very old. The bones mysteriously appear in CatDog's house the next morning after Dog dreams about them.<br>'''Winslow's Home Videos''' — Winslow shows clips of some of his favorite home videos featuring CatDog's wacky antics.<br>'''You're Fired''' — Cat wants to impress Tallulah, a famous movie star, but things go awry when Dog eats some hot peppers in the kitchen and CatDog starts breathing fire. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=30 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=10 | |||
|Title=Showdown at Hole 18<hr>Sneezie Dog | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene May (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Wendy Reardon<hr>Sydnie Suskind | |||
|Aux2=Steve Owen<br>Chuck Klein (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Gary Hoffman (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|2|26}} | |||
|ProdCode=210 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Showdown at Hole 18''' — Cat wants to win a lifetime membership at a golf course, but Rancid Rabbit, the owner, bans him from the premises.<br>'''Sneezie Dog''' — Cat and Winslow look to cure Dog's allergies. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=31 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=11 | |||
|Title=It's a Wonderful Half Life<hr>Shepherd Dog | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene May (animation)<hr>Mike Svayko (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|1=Steven Banks|s=]<hr>Steven Banks}} | |||
|Aux2=Barrington Bunce (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Jordan Reichek (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|7|26}} | |||
|ProdCode=212 | |||
|ShortSummary='''It's a Wonderful Half Life''' — Cat and Dog dream about what it would be like if they were just a normal cat and dog.<br>'''Shepherd Dog''' — Dog gets a job herding sheep for a Scottish woman. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=32 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=12 | |||
|Title=Surfin' CatDog<hr>Guess Who's Going to Be Dinner! | |||
|DirectedBy=Michael Svayko (animation)<hr>Russ Mooney (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Neil Martin and Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Paul Young<br>Barrington Bunce (director)<hr>Kelly Kennedy<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|7|27}} | |||
|ProdCode=211 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Surfin' CatDog''' — Cat enters a surfing competition despite being afraid of water.<br>'''Guess Who's Going to Be Dinner!''' — Cat tries to make Dog more civilized, but ends up being the one who needs to be civilized. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=33 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=13 | |||
|Title=Dog Power<hr>It's a Jungle in Here | |||
|DirectedBy=Jamie Diaz (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|1=Andy Rheingold|s=Peter Hannan<hr>Andy Rheingold}} | |||
|Aux2=Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Steve Owen<br>Chuck Klein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|7|28}} | |||
|ProdCode=213 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Dog Power''' — Cat uses Dog's running speed as a power source and sells it to people in town.<br>'''It's a Jungle in Here''' — Dog accidentally turns the CatDog house into a jungle when he uses an entire bag of fertilizer to fill in a patch of grass on the floor. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=34 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=14 | |||
|Title=The House of CatDog<hr>CatDog Campers | |||
|DirectedBy=Mike Svayko (animation)<hr>Russ Mooney (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Steve Owen<br>Chuck Klein (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|7|29}} | |||
|ProdCode=214 | |||
|ShortSummary='''The House of CatDog''' — When Rancid wants to tear down CatDog's house to build a freeway, CatDog explains the house's historical significance.<br>'''CatDog Campers''' — CatDog wants to win the "Forest Fire Boy of the Year" award by camping out in their yard, but they have difficulty cooperating with each other. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=35 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=15 | |||
|Title=Let the Games Begin<hr>Winslow Falls in Love | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>Marlene May (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Andy Rheingold<hr>Neil Martin and Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Barrington Bunce (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|7|30}} | |||
|ProdCode=215 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Let the Games Begin''' — CatDog must team up with the Greasers to win a competition and be freed from the pound.<br>'''Winslow Falls in Love''' — CatDog pairs Winslow up with a female mouse named Sadie Linkletter. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=36 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=16 | |||
|Title=Extra! Extra!<hr>CatDog Squared | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>Mike Svayko (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Andrew Gottlieb and Neil Martin<hr>Andrew Gottlieb | |||
|Aux2=Paul Young<br>Barrington Bunce (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|11|13}} | |||
|ProdCode=218 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Extra! Extra!''' — When Dog chases away all the neighborhood's paper boys, Rancid makes CatDog do the job.<br>'''CatDog Squared''' — CatDog meet another conjoined duo named DanStan. This turns out to be a scam as Dan and Stan are just looking for a place to stay, and for something to steal. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=37 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=17 | |||
|Title=A Very CatDog Christmas | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene May (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Andrew Gottlieb | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|11|30}} | |||
|ProdCode=220 | |||
|ShortSummary=Cat sells himself (and Dog) to Rancid's bratty preschooler niece Rancine as a Christmas gift, but Santa Claus gets angry when he finds out and cancels Christmas. The people of Nearburg are maddened by this, and a hunt for the brothers begins. | |||
'''Guest Stars''': ] as ] | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=38 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=18 | |||
|Title=Royal Dog<hr>Springtime for CatDog | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>Mike Svayko (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Dean Stefan<hr>Andrew Gottlieb | |||
|Aux2=Scott Wood and Barrington Bunce (directors)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|09}} | |||
|ProdCode=216 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Royal Dog''' — CatDog find an old museum painting that greatly resembles Dog. Mr Sunshine tells the story of the painting and how it relates to English royalty.<br>'''Springtime for CatDog''' — Cat and Dog both fall for a girl named Lorraine the Lemur. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=39 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=19 | |||
|Title=A Dog Ate My Homework<hr>The End | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>Marlene May (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Steve Owen<br>Scott Wood (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|09}} | |||
|ProdCode=217 | |||
|ShortSummary='''A Dog Ate My Homework''' — Cat schemes to get rich off having Dog eat people's homework.<br>'''The End''' — CatDog notices a skull-shaped cloud in the sky using Winslow's telescope, and they send everyone into panic fearing it means the apocalypse. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=40 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=20 | |||
|Title=Cliff's Little Secret<hr>Freak Show | |||
|DirectedBy=Glenn Lovett<hr>Eduardo Soriano | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Andrew Gottlieb | |||
|Aux2=Glenn Lovett<hr>Eduardo Soriano, Louie Escaurlage, & David Earl | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|16}} | |||
|ProdCode=219 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Cliff's Little Secret''' — CatDog discovers that Cliff takes ballet lessons.<br>'''Freak Show''' — CatDog joins Randolph's freak show, but no one is impressed. | |||
|LineColor=FF9B00 | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
===Season 3 (1999–2001)=== | |||
{{Episode table|background=#6E1615|overall=|season=|title=|director=|directorT=Directed by|writer=|aux2=|aux2T=Storyboard by|airdate=|prodcode=|episodes= | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=41 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=1 | |||
|Title=Sumo Enchanted Evening<hr>Hotel CatDog | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=]<hr>] | |||
|Aux2=Steven Owen<br>Scott Wood (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|10|09}} | |||
|ProdCode=302 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Sumo Enchanted Evening''' — CatDog get overfull after Rancid invites them to try his new buffet restaurant, but the bill is too steep for them to pay.<br>'''Hotel CatDog''' — Cat turns the CatDog house into a hotel, but he finds it difficult to keep excellent service. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=42 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=2 | |||
|Title=Rodeo CatDog<hr>Teeth for Two | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>Arne Wong (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Jon Ross | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>] (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|10|16}} | |||
|ProdCode=304 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Rodeo CatDog''' — Rancid hires CatDog to become rodeo stars.<br>'''Teeth for Two''' — Cat and Dog learn they affect each other's teeth during a dentist visit. As a result, Cat's teeth become a mess, so he tries to change Dog's diet as well as clean his teeth.{{clarify|date=January 2014|reason=It's not clear what is being said here. Does Dog deliberately mess up Cat's teeth, and Cat takes revenge on Dog?}} | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=43 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=3 | |||
|Title=Sweet and Lola<hr>Rich Shriek, Poor Shriek | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>Eduardo Soriano (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Andrew Gottlieb<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Glen Lovett<br>Trevor Bentley (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|10|23}} | |||
|ProdCode=307 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Sweet and Lola''' — A zoologist named Lola studies CatDog's way of life, which soon gets out of hand.<br>'''Rich Shriek, Poor Shriek''' — Rancid hires CatDog, Cliff, and Lube to cater a fancy party, unaware that the party is for Shriek. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=44 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=4 | |||
|Title=CatDogula | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos and Arne Wong (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks, Andrew Gottlieb, and Mario Piluso | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando and Scott Wood (directors) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|10|26}} | |||
|ProdCode=319 | |||
|ShortSummary=CatDog celebrate Halloween, with Cat dressed as a famous surfer and Dog dressed as a vampire named "CatDogula", little does CatDog know that Nearberg is in great danger by bloodsucking vampire ticks. Now with Dog a vampire, and himself not, Cat has to dump a massive amount of Garlic juice onto Dog by midnight, or the whole town might turn into vampires. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=45 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=5 | |||
|Title=Remain Seated<hr>CatDog Catcher | |||
|DirectedBy=Marlene May and Arne Wong (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Jon Ross | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director)<hr>Steven Owen<br>Scott Wood (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|11|06}} | |||
|ProdCode=305 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Remain Seated''' — Cat tries to avoid going on a gigantic roller coaster at all costs.<br>'''CatDog Catcher''' — When his money bath doesn't fill up to where he wants it, Rancid makes it law that all dogs, and later all animals, in Nearburg have licenses or else they will be captured and forced to pass a very hard test that includes a fee. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=46 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=6 | |||
|Title=Talkin' Turkey | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Paul Young<br>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|11|21}} | |||
|ProdCode=318 | |||
|ShortSummary=Dog tries to save a turkey named Walt from being eaten by Cat and Rancid, but Cat soon takes Dog's side and helps keep their guests' minds on something other than turkey. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=47 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=7 | |||
|Title=Shriek on Ice<hr>No Thanks for the Memories | |||
|DirectedBy=Eduardo Soriano<hr>Glen Lovett | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Andy Rheingold | |||
|Aux2=David Earl & Louie Escauriaga<hr>Glen Lovett | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|12|04}} | |||
|ProdCode=303 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Shriek on Ice''' — Shriek leaves the Greaser Dogs to become an ice skater.<br>'''No Thanks for the Memories''' — Dog gets amnesia after getting hit in the head, and Cat teaches him to be more like him, only for it to backfire when gets Amnesia again. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=48 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=8 | |||
|Title=CatDog 3001<hr>Cloudbursting | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos (animation)<hr>Ron Myrick (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Robert Lamoreaux and Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando and Scott Wood (directors)<hr>Paul Young<br>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|12|31}} | |||
|ProdCode=317 | |||
|ShortSummary='''CatDog 3001''' — CatDog are sent to the year 3001 to save future Nearburg from Winslow's tyrannical descendant.<br>'''Cloudbursting''' — Cat sabotages Lola's rain-making machine to win a contest, but his tanning machine ends up drying out the atmosphere. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=49 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=9 | |||
|Title=Fire Dog<hr>Dog Show | |||
|DirectedBy=Mike Svayko (animation)<hr>George Chialtas (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Jon Ross<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Paul Young<br>Barry Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1999|10|23}} | |||
|ProdCode=301 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Fire Dog''' — CatDog gets a job at the fire department to get a free meal, but what happens when they're the only one's left to save the day?<br>'''Dog Show''' — In order to win a Dog show and win the grand prize to a luxury resort, CatDog puts on a disguise to hide Cat as the butt, but the competition is steep, especially with a scheming repeat entry. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=50 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=10 | |||
|Title=The Geekers<hr>The Golden Hydrant | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos (animation)<hr>Arne Wong (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Andrew Gottlieb<hr>] | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Steven Owen<br>Scott Wood (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|23}} | |||
|ProdCode=308 | |||
|ShortSummary='''The Geekers''' — CatDog and friends form a rival gang to the Greasers called the Geekers.<br>'''The Golden Hydrant''' — Dog finds the legendary golden hydrant, but Cat prevents him from marking his territory. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=51 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=11 | |||
|Title=Lube in Love<hr>Picture This | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>Eduardo Soriano (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Jon Ross | |||
|Aux2=Paul Young<hr>David Earl & Louie Escauriaga<br>Trevor Bentley (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|23}} | |||
|ProdCode=309 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Lube in Love''' — Lube falls in love with a socialite while working at a service station. CatDog offer to teach Lube to be a gentleman if he can fix their car for free.<br>'''Picture This''' — Dog becomes obsessed with taking pictures of everyone, even at their most private moments. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=52 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=12 | |||
|Title=Stunt CatDog<hr>Greasers in the Mist | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>Nelson Recinos (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Andrew Gottlieb | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|30}} | |||
|ProdCode=310 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Stunt CatDog''' — CatDog are hired as a stunt double for Randolph, which Cat wants to use as an excuse to kiss Tallula.<br>'''Greasers in the Mist''' — CatDog and Lola seek out the Greasers' weaknesses. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=53 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=13 | |||
|Title=Doo Wop Diggety<hr>CatDogumentary | |||
|DirectedBy=Eduardo Soriano<hr>Arne Wong (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Andrew Gottlieb<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Glen Lovett<br>Trevor Bentley (director)<hr>Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|03|30}} | |||
|ProdCode=311 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Doo Wop Diggety''' — Winslow organized a ] singing group composed of the Greasers and CatDog.<br>'''CatDogumentary''' — Lola uses the money her boss gave her to make a documentary on CatDog. She then has to make a low-budget documentary because she spent most of her money on an electric hammock. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=54 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=14 | |||
|Title=Kooky Prank Day<hr>Back to School | |||
|DirectedBy=Arne Wong and Ray Pointer (animation)<hr>Arne Wong (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Jon Ross and Dan Povenmire<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Paul Young<br>Barrington Bunce (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|04|01}} | |||
|ProdCode=320 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Kooky Prank Day''' — On ] Cat is the butt of all the days' pranks until he prepares his ultimate practical joke.<br>'''Back to School''' — Cat has never gotten his diploma to attend a school reunion dance, and CatDog must go back to high school for a day for Cat to graduate. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=55 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=15 | |||
|Title=Monster Truck Folly<hr>CatDog's Gold | |||
|DirectedBy=George Chialtas (animation)<hr>Eduardo Soriano (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio<hr>Jon Ross | |||
|Aux2=Paul Young<br>Barrington Bunce (director)<hr>David Earl & Louie Escauriaga<br>Trevor Bentley (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|11|03}} | |||
|ProdCode=313 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Monster Truck Folly''' — Dog enters Cat and himself into a monster truck rally, but Cat's competitive side soon gets the best of him.<br>'''CatDog's Gold''' — Cat and Lola plot to sell honey made fresh in a beehive, but Dog wants to eat it. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=56 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=16 | |||
|Title=Silents Please!<hr>Gorilla My Dreams | |||
|DirectedBy=Mike Svayko (animation)<hr>Nelson Recinos (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks and Dan Povenmire<hr>Jon Ross | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Steven Owen<br>Scott Wood (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2001|05|14}} | |||
|ProdCode=306 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Silents Please!''' — A double outbreak made up of laryngitis and colorblindness transforms the whole town and the rest of the universe into a scene of a silent film.<br>'''Gorilla My Dreams''' — Mervis and Dunglap's pet gorilla ends up at CatDog's house, and later joins the group at the bowling alley. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=57 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=17 | |||
|Title=Seeing Eye Dog<hr>Beware of Cliff | |||
|DirectedBy=N/A<hr>Eduardo Soriano (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Jon Ross<hr>Andrew Gottlieb | |||
|Aux2=Karen Heathwood<br>Kelly Kennedy (director)<hr>Glen Lovett and Kay Lovett | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2001|05|15}} | |||
|ProdCode=316 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Seeing Eye Dog''' — Dog is hired to be the seeing eye dog for a rich blind man named Mr. Wolfington.<br>'''Beware of Cliff''' — Cliff gets trapped under an enormous pile of weights at the gym. He says that if he ever escapes, he will change his mean ways, and he eventually does so after becoming skinny. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=58 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=18 | |||
|Title=Rinky Dinks<hr>Hypno-Teased | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Jon Ross | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2001|05|16}} | |||
|ProdCode=312 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Rinky Dinks''' — CatDog and friends challenge the Greasers to ice hockey on the frozen Lake Nearburg.<br>'''Hypno-teased''' — Winslow uses Dog's new hypnotism kit to trick Cat into thinking he is invincible. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=59 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=19 | |||
|Title=CatDog Candy<hr>Movin' on Up | |||
|DirectedBy=Arne Wong (animation)<hr>Nelson Recinos (animation) | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks<hr>Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio | |||
|Aux2=Vikki Barrett<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Scott Wood (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2001|05|17}} | |||
|ProdCode=314 | |||
|ShortSummary='''CatDog Candy''' — CatDog accidentally makes the greatest candy ever while feuding about their lunch choice.<br>'''Movin' on Up''' — CatDog learn that their uncle HorseDuck has died and willed them his lake, and they pack up everything they own to move there. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=60 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=20 | |||
|Title=New Cat in Town<hr>CatDog's Booty | |||
|DirectedBy=Russ Mooney (animation)<hr>N/A | |||
|WrittenBy=Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Dan Povenmire (director)<hr>Glen Lovett and Kay Lovett | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2001|05|18}} | |||
|ProdCode=315 | |||
|ShortSummary='''New Cat in Town''' — Eddie is outraged when Cliff will not allow him to sit with the Greasers at the movies. The next day CatDog are introduced to Big Cat, who wants to pound the Greasers.<br>'''CatDog's Booty''' — After Cat reads Dog a bedtime story about pirates, they become intrigued by the idea of finding the fabled lost treasure. | |||
|LineColor=6E1615 | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
===Season 4 (2000; 2003-05)=== | |||
This season is the shortest, having 8 episodes (6 if counting ''CatDog and the Great Parent Mystery'' as one episode). 2 episodes did not make it to air in the United States. The series' cancellation in 2001 may be why the final episodes were delayed for several years from airing. | |||
{{Episode table|background=#00002D|overall=|season=|title=|director=|directorT=Animation directed by|writer=|aux2=|aux2T=Storyboard by|airdate=|prodcode=|episodes= | |||
{{Episode list | |||
||EpisodeNumber=61<hr>62<hr>63 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=1<hr>2<hr>3 | |||
|Title= ''CatDog and the Great Parent Mystery'' | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks, Robert Lamoreaux, <br>and Victor Wilson | |||
|Aux2=Vicky Barrett, Mario D'anna, Dominic Orlando, Jordan Riechek, <br>Octavio Rodriguez, Eric Sanford, and Roy Shoshido | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2000|11|25}} | |||
|ProdCode=401<hr>402<hr>403 | |||
|ShortSummary=The Nearburg parent day festival is happening and CatDog is feeling left out. Dog eventually convinces Cat to go on a parent hunt. Along the way, they run into ], a ], ], and ]. Eventually, they find their parents, a ] and ], only to be told they do not know where CatDog came from and that they are CatDog's foster parents; it turns out they were separated by a tornado when CatDog was a baby. Since then, they have searched for their true parents. Winslow then shows up confronting them for leaving, but when offered to stay, he rejects the idea and leaves. Suddenly, the Greaser Dogs and the other characters they have met gang up on them for the trouble they've caused. Luckily, they are flown back to Nearburg by another tornado. Everyone else was gobbled up by the sea monster that popped up afterward. | |||
'''Guest Stars''': ] as Frog and ] as Sasquatch. | |||
|LineColor=00002D | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=64 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=4 | |||
|Title=Harasslin' Match<hr>Dog the Not-So-Mighty | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos | |||
|WrittenBy=]<hr>Robert Lamoreaux | |||
|Aux2=Rhoydon Shishido<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Paul McEvoy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2003|06|15}} | |||
|ProdCode=404 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Harasslin' Match''' — Winslow's niece and nephew humiliate their uncle and force him to leave the house, following Winslow's family tradition.<br>'''Dog the Not-So-Mighty''' — Cat refuses to be Dog's superhero sidekick anymore, but then he realizes how popular "Mighty Dog Day" is and wants his position back. | |||
'''Guest Stars''': ] as Runt and ] as Brat. | |||
|LineColor=00002D | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=65 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=5 | |||
|Title=Mean Bob, We Hardly Knew Ye<hr>CatDog in Winslowland | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos<hr>Russ Mooney | |||
|WrittenBy=Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Octavio Rodriguez<br>Kelly Armstrong (director)<hr>Octavio Rodriguez and Mario D'Anna<br>Jordan Reichek (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|Unaired}} | |||
|ProdCode=405 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Mean Bob, We Hardly Knew Ye''' — Dog starts a fight at the Mean Bob theater production and causes the actor who plays Mean Bob to lose his memory. CatDog brings him back to their house only for Dog to make him think he is the real Mean Bob.<br>'''CatDog in Winslowland''' — Cat tricks Dog into going into Winslow's house, where they learn of Winslow's secret life. | |||
|LineColor=00002D | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=66 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=6 | |||
|Title=Cat Gone Bad<hr>The Old CatDog and the Sea | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos | |||
|WrittenBy=Robert Lamoreaux<hr>John Crane | |||
|Aux2=Rhoydon Shishido<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Erik Sanford<br>Mario D'Anna (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2004|05|30}} | |||
|ProdCode=406 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Cat Gone Bad''' — CatDog's new "cool" cat neighbors keep CatDog awake at night, and soon Cat wants to be just as cool as them.<br>'''The Old CatDog and the Sea''' — While appearing on a talk show named "Talkin' with Tallulah", CatDog make up a tale about a catdog who hunts a swordfish named for Saw-Nose. | |||
|LineColor=00002D | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=67 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=7 | |||
|Title=Cone Dog<hr>The Ballad of Ol' 159 | |||
|DirectedBy=Mike Svayko<hr>Nelson Recinos | |||
|WrittenBy=Robert Lamoreaux<hr>John Crane | |||
|Aux2=Erik Sanford<br>Mario D'Anna (director)<hr>Octavio Rodriguez<br>Kelly Armstrong (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|Unaired}} | |||
|ProdCode=407 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Cone Dog''' — Dog is forced to wear a cone on his head after experiencing an ear injury.<br>'''The Ballad of Ol' 159''' — Pete the Polecat sings a ballad about a garbage truck called Ol' 159. | |||
|LineColor=00002D | |||
}} | |||
{{Episode list | |||
|EpisodeNumber=68 | |||
|EpisodeNumber2=8 | |||
|Title=Vexed of Kin<hr>Meat, Dog's Friends | |||
|DirectedBy=Nelson Recinos<hr>Mike Svayko | |||
|WrittenBy=Barry Stringfellow<hr>Steven Banks | |||
|Aux2=Rhoydon Shishido<br>Dominic Orlando (director)<hr>Vikki Barrett<br>Paul McEvoy (director) | |||
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|2005|06|15}} | |||
|ProdCode=408 | |||
|ShortSummary='''Vexed of Kin''' — Cat thinks his parents love Dog more than him.<br>'''Meat, Dog's Friends''' — Dog finds out that meat comes from animals, which causes him to have a crisis of conscience since his friends are animals. | |||
'''Guest Stars''': ] as Frog and ] as Sasquatch. | |||
|LineColor=00002D | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
==VHS tapes== | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |||
|+VHS releases | |||
! Name | |||
! {{abbr|No.|Number}} of<br>episodes | |||
! Release date | |||
! colspan=2|Episodes include | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=6|''Together Forever'' | |||
| rowspan=6|6 | |||
| rowspan=11|March 30, 1999 | |||
| 2x04c | |||
| Cat-Diggety Dog | |||
|- | |||
| 1x01a | |||
| Dog Gone | |||
|- | |||
| 1x02a | |||
| Flea or Die! | |||
|- | |||
| 1x05a | |||
| Diamond Fever | |||
|- | |||
| 1x12a | |||
| CatDog's End | |||
|- | |||
| 1x04b | |||
| Work Force | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=5|''CatDog vs The Greasers'' | |||
| rowspan=5|5 | |||
| 1x12b | |||
| Siege on Fort CatDog | |||
|- | |||
| 1x09a | |||
| Squirrel Dog | |||
|- | |||
| 1x11a | |||
| Full Moon Fever | |||
|- | |||
| 1x04a | |||
| Shriek Loves Dog | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 1x03b | |||
! style="background-color: #FF0000" | Prod. No. | |||
| All You Need is Lube | |||
! style="background-color: #FF0000" | Title | |||
! style="background-color: #FF0000" | Original airdate | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 61 || '''Cat Gone Bad / The Old CatDog and the Sea''' || June 13, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 62 || '''Cone Dog / The Ballad Of Ole' 159''' || August 17, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 63 || '''Mean Bob, We Hardly Knew Ya / CatDog In Winslow Land''' || January 1, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 64 || '''Harraslin' Match / Dog The Not So Mighty''' || November 28, 2000 | |||
|- style="background-color: #e9e9e9;" | |||
| 65-66-67 || ''']''' || September 3, 2001 | |||
|- style="background-color: #ffffff;" | |||
| 68 || '''Vexed Of Kin / Meat, Dog's Friends''' || September 22, 2000 | |||
|} | |} | ||
== |
== References == | ||
{{reflist|40em}} | |||
* | |||
] | |||
] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:CatDog}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 17:24, 27 December 2024
This is a list of episodes from the animated CatDog television series.
Series overview
Sixty-eight episodes from four seasons and one made-for-TV movie, CatDog and the Great Parent Mystery, were produced.
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 20 | April 4, 1998 (1998-04-04) | October 29, 1998 (1998-10-29) | |
2 | 20 | February 15, 1999 (1999-02-15) | March 16, 2000 (2000-03-16) | |
3 | 20 | October 9, 1999 (1999-10-09) | May 18, 2001 (2001-05-18) | |
4 | 8 | November 25, 2000 (2000-11-25) | June 15, 2005 (2005-06-15) |
Episodes
Season 1 (1998)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Animation directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Dog Gone" | George Chialtas | Peter Hannan, Derek Drymon & Robert Porter | Derek Drymon & Robert Porter, Robert Porter (director) | April 4, 1998 (1998-04-04) | 101 | ||||||||||
"Fan Mail" | - | - | - | ||||||||||||||
"All You Can't Eat" | George Chialtas | Andy Rheingold | Dominic Orlando, Karen Heathwood, Barry Bunce & Sam Kirson, Derek Drymon (director) | ||||||||||||||
Dog Gone — Dog puts on a costume to give Cat some time to himself. | |||||||||||||||||
2 | 2 | "Flea or Die!" | Alan Smart | Andy Rheingold | Derek Drymon (also director) | October 5, 1998 (1998-10-05) | 102 | ||||||||||
"CatDog Food" | George Chialtas | Lance Khazei & Michael Karnow | Robert Porter & Antoine Guilbaud | ||||||||||||||
Flea or Die — When CatDog get fleas, Cat chooses to wear a flea belt over taking a bath, but Cat does not want to wear it when the new belt-free fashion trend leaves him pushing it on to Dog to impress the ladies. CatDog Food — Rancid Rabbit makes CatDog the mascot of "CatDog Food", and it goes to Cat's head. | |||||||||||||||||
3 | 3 | "The Island" | Alan Smart | Steven Banks | Grey Miller, Barry Bunce (director) | October 6, 1998 (1998-10-06) | 107 | ||||||||||
"All You Need is Lube" | Gary McCarver | Magda Liolis | Karen Heathwood, Dominic Orlando (director) | ||||||||||||||
The Island — CatDog are stranded on an island surrounded by traffic. All You Need is Lube — When Cat saves Lube from a tick, Lube becomes his bodyguard. | |||||||||||||||||
4 | 4 | "Shriek Loves Dog Work Force" | Alan Smart | Steven Banks Casper Kelly & John Bolton | Gary Goldstein (director) Kelly Kennedy Gary Goldstein (director) | October 7, 1998 (1998-10-07) | 110 | ||||||||||
Shriek Loves Dog — Cat and Winslow set up a date for Dog and Shriek, but the Greasers want Dog to marry her. Work Force — CatDog work in Rancid's cereal factory licking the boxes shut, but when Dog gets promoted to a prize stuffer, he lets the power go to his head. | |||||||||||||||||
5 | 5 | "Diamond Fever The Pet" | Russ Mooney George Chialtas | Steven Banks Rick Rodgers & Frank Santopadre | Antoine Guilbaud Chuck Klein (director) Erik Wiese Gary Goldstein (director) | October 8, 1998 (1998-10-08) | 109 | ||||||||||
Diamond Fever — Cat and Dog start mining for diamonds, causing Cat to get a bit greedy. The Pet — CatDog find an injured cockroach and Dog wants to take it home. | |||||||||||||||||
6 | 6 | "Party Animal Mush, Dog, Mush!" | George Chialtas Russ Mooney | Rachel Powell Andy Rheingold | Karen Heathwood Dominic Orlando (director) Barry Bunce (director) | October 9, 1998 (1998-10-09) | 108 | ||||||||||
Party Animal — Cat throws a house party, but almost no one shows up. Winslow's party turns out amazing, and everyone else (including Dog) ends up going. Mush, Dog, Mush! — Cat enters Dog in the dogsledding competition and trains Dog to the extreme. | |||||||||||||||||
7 | 7 | "Armed and Dangerous Fistful of Mail!" | Tim Long George Chialtas | Dean Stefan Andy Rheingold | Karen Heathwood Gary Hoffman (director) Barry Bunce and Vikki Barrett | October 12, 1998 (1998-10-12) | 113 | ||||||||||
Armed and Dangerous — Cat's pen pal Ingrid is coming to visit him, but he has to disguise Dog as a regular tail because he told Ingrid that he was a normal cat. He also gets his hands stuck in a jar and has to use Dog's hands instead. Fistful of Mail! — Dog tries to bite the butt of the new mailman, who seems to know every trick in the book. | |||||||||||||||||
8 | 8 | "Pumped Dummy Dummy" | Alan Smart George Chialtas | Evan Bailey Peter Hannan, Robert Porter, and Antoine Guilbaud | Gary Goldstein and Kelly Kennedy (directors) Robert Porter and Antoine Guilbaud | October 13, 1998 (1998-10-13) | 104 | ||||||||||
Pumped — When the Greasers steal Catdog's frisbee, Dog drinks a muscle building protein shake so he can fight the Greasers and get their frisbee back. A side effect is that Dog becomes very aggressive. Dummy Dummy — Cat feels threatened when Dog gets a new toy called "Little Cat". | |||||||||||||||||
9 | 9 | "Squirrel Dog Brother's Day" | Alan Smart | Chris Kelly & John Bolton Andy Rheingold | Kelly Kennedy Derek Drymon and Gary Goldstein (directors) Kelly Kennedy Gary Goldstein (director) | October 14, 1998 (1998-10-14) | 106 | ||||||||||
Squirrel Dog — Eddie is accidentally glued to Cliff's jacket, causing Cliff to be kicked out of the Greasers. He goes to CatDog for support on how to deal with his new two-headed lifestyle. Brother's Day — CatDog are broke and cannot afford to buy each other a Brother's Day gift. | |||||||||||||||||
10 | 10 | "Escape From the Deep End The Collector" | Russ Mooney George Chialtas | Andy Rheingold Steven Banks | Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) | October 15, 1998 (1998-10-15) | 111 | ||||||||||
Escape From the Deep End — When Dog breaks the public pool's very strict set of rules, Rancid puts CatDog behind bars. The Collector — Cat becomes obsessed with collecting Mean Bob action figures, but Dog just wants to play with them. | |||||||||||||||||
11 | 11 | "Full Moon Fever War of the CatDog" | Gary McCarver Russ Mooney | John Loy Andy Rheingold and Scott Sonneborn | Greg Miller Barry Bunce (director) Antoine Guilbaud Chuck Klein (director) | October 16, 1998 (1998-10-16) | 103 | ||||||||||
Full Moon Fever — Dog's primal instincts come out when he sees the full moon. War of the CatDog — CatDog's family reunion is halted by a battle over a trophy. | |||||||||||||||||
12 | 12 | "CatDog's End Siege on Fort CatDog" | Alan Smart | Steven Banks Andy Rheingold | Antoine Guilbaud Chuck Klein (director) Erik Wiese, Roy Wilson, and Karen Heathwood | October 19, 1998 (1998-10-19) | 112 | ||||||||||
CatDog's End — Cat wants to be physically separated from Dog, while Dog wants to be attached to their new friend Randolf. Siege on Fort CatDog — CatDog fight the Greaser Dogs military style. | |||||||||||||||||
13 | 13 | "Safety Dog Dog Come Home!" | Tim Long Alan Smart | Andy Rheingold | Gary Goldstein (director) | October 20, 1998 (1998-10-20) | 114 | ||||||||||
Safety Dog — Dog becomes overcautious when Cat reminds him that dogs do not have nine lives like cats do. Dog Come Home! — Dog is tired of Cat's bossiness and runs away. | |||||||||||||||||
14 | 14 | "Nightmare CatDogPig" | Russ Mooney Gary McCarver | Andy Rheingold Lance Khazei & Michael Karnow | Antoine Guilbaud Derek Drymon and Chuck Klein (directors) Kelly Kennedy Gary Goldstein (director) | October 21, 1998 (1998-10-21) | 105 | ||||||||||
Nightmare — After watching a scary movie, Dog is terrified of "Toothpickhead". CatDogPig — Cat hires a pig to be a tiebreaker when CatDog vote on things. | |||||||||||||||||
15 | 15 | "New Neighbors Dead Weight" | George Chialtas Alan Smart | Steven Banks Andy Rheingold | Karen Heathwood Gary Hoffman (director) | October 22, 1998 (1998-10-22) | 115 | ||||||||||
New Neighbors — Dog thinks his new neighbors might be aliens from outer space. Dead Weight — Cat tries to impress a pair of sisters by appearing on a TV show called "Really Incredible People", but Dog, who did not sleep the night before, is sound asleep when the camera crew shows up. | |||||||||||||||||
16 | 16 | "Neferkitty Curiosity Almost Killed the Cat" | George Chialtas Brian Ray | Julia Lewald Andy Rheingold | Chuck Klein (director) Karen Heathwood Gary Hoffman (director) | October 23, 1998 (1998-10-23) | 119 | ||||||||||
Neferkitty — Cat tells Dog a story about ancient Egyptian life. Curiosity Almost Killed the Cat — Dog starts writing in a diary after he sees Cat writing in his own, but Cat breaks the iconic "Don't Read other people's diary" rule wanting to know what Dog wrote about him, prompting Winslow to blackmail him. | |||||||||||||||||
17 | 17 | "Home is Where the Dirt is New Leash on Life" | Alan Smart Tim Long | Andy Rheingold | Dan Povenmire (director) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) | October 26, 1998 (1998-10-26) | 118 | ||||||||||
Home is Where the Dirt is — CatDog argue with the gopher about what belongs to them below ground. New Leash on Life — Tired of Dog's behavior, Cat puts Dog on a leash for dog walking and treats him like his pet. | |||||||||||||||||
18 | 18 | "Just Say CatDog Sent Ya Dog's Strange Condition" | George Chialtas Marlene Robinson May | Steven Banks Dean Stefan | Gary Goldstein (director) Vikki Barrett Barry Bunce (director) | October 27, 1998 (1998-10-27) | 117 | ||||||||||
Just Say CatDog Sent Ya — Farburg bones, a favorite of Dog's, are made illegal, but Cat sets up a speakeasy selling them to make profit, but Dog quickly eats every snack. Dog's Strange Condition — After experiencing an allergic reaction to pecans following a pecan pie eating contest, a tree suddenly sprouts from Dog's head as part of a disease called "pecanitis". | |||||||||||||||||
19 | 19 | "Smarter than the Average Dog CatDog Doesn't Live Here Anymore" | George Chialtas Brian Ray | Patti Carr & Lara Runnels Steven Banks | Dan Povenmire (director) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) | October 28, 1998 (1998-10-28) | 120 | ||||||||||
Smarter than the Average Dog — Cat wants to make Dog smarter, so he lets him watch educational videos. Dog soon becomes incredibly smart, but Cat loses almost all of his intelligence as a result. Things get worse when they test the flying machine they built for Nearburg's Invention Convention. CatDog Doesn't Live Here Anymore — CatDog go on vacation to get away from everyone, but in their absence the Greasers and Winslow realize they actually miss CatDog. | |||||||||||||||||
20 | 20 | "All About Cat Trespassing" | Marlene Robinson May | Steven Banks Mike Allen | Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) Vikki Barrett Barry Bunce (director) | October 29, 1998 (1998-10-29) | 116 | ||||||||||
All About Cat — Cat auditions for the lead role in Rancid's musical "Abe" about Abraham Lincoln. The part goes instead to Dog, and Cat ends up with the role of Abe's donkey. Trespassing — As Dog waits at a fire hydrant for a "trespasser" who marked his territory, Cat tries to get him home when their house catches fire. |
Season 2 (1999–2000)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 | 1 | "Send in the CatDog Fishing for Trouble Fetch" | Brian Ray (animation) George Chialtas (animation) Derek Drymon, Robert Porter, and Larry Leichliter Christine Kolosov (animation) | Steven Banks Andy Rheingold Dean Stefan and Andy Rheingold | Antoine Guilbaud Barry Bunce (director) Dan Povenmire and Vikki Barrett Rob Porter, Derek Drymon, Eric Wiese, Vikki Barrett, and Miyuki Hoshikawa | February 15, 1999 (1999-02-15) February 15, 1999 (1999-02-15) November 20, 1998 (1998-11-20) (cinemas) February 15, 1999 (1999-02-15) | 201 |
Send in the CatDog — CatDog enroll in a military-like clown school where Dog excels and Cat does not, but Cat might just have it in him to get one of their hardest cases to smile. | |||||||
22 | 2 | "The Lady is a Shriek Dog the Mighty" | George Chialtas (animation) Marlene May (animation) | Steven Banks Andy Rheingold | Vikki Barrett Dan Povenmire (director) Kelly Kennedy Don Orlando (director) | February 16, 1999 (1999-02-16) | 202 |
The Lady is a Shriek — Shriek tries to become more feminine so she can get Dog to notice her at CatDog’s barbecue party. Dog the Mighty — Rancid Rabbit gives Dog a medal after he saves him from being squashed, and Dog is convinced he is a superhero. | |||||||
23 | 3 | "Hail the Great Meow Woof Battle of the Bands" | George Chialtas (animation) Alan Smart (animation) | Dean Stefan Steven Banks | Erik Wiese Gary Goldstein (director) Vikki Barrett Barry Bunce (director) | February 17, 1999 (1999-02-17) | 203 |
Hail the Great Meow Woof — Dog's kite drags him and Cat faraway to an island where they are thought to be gods. But when they crush his statue from when they entered, the Great Rancid wants revenge on them. Battle of the Bands — CatDog enter the Battle of the Bands contest using their own homemade instruments. But the Greasers change all that. | |||||||
24 | 4 | "Adventures in Greaser Sitting The Cat Club Cat Diggety Dog" | Mike Svayko (animation) Marlene May (animation) N/A | Dean Stefan Steven Banks Peter Hannan | Karen Heathwood Jordan Reichek (director) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) Barry Bunce (director) | February 18, 1999 (1999-02-18) | 204 |
Adventures in Greaser Sitting — Cliff makes CatDog babysit his niece, but they lose track of her before he gets back. The Cat Club — Cat joins a secret "cats only" society. Cat Diggety Dog — A musical number telling how CatDog get along. | |||||||
25 | 5 | "Climb Every CatDog Canine Mutiny" | Mike Svayko (animation) George Chialtas (animation) | Dean Stefan Patti Carr & Lara Runnels | Vikki Barrett Dan Povenmire (director) Steve Owen Barry Bunce and Chuck Klein (directors) | February 19, 1999 (1999-02-19) | 205 |
Climb Every CatDog — Cat wants to climb Mount Nearburg so it can be named after him instead of his old rival Mindy Wonderful. Canine Mutiny — CatDog, Mervis, and Mr Sunshine end up in a dumpster floating in water, and Cat starts acting like the captain of a pirate ship. | |||||||
26 | 6 | "Fred the Flying Fish CatDog Divided" | Ron Myrick (animation) Russ Mooney (animation) | Steven Banks | Karen Heathwood Jordan Reichek (director) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) | February 22, 1999 (1999-02-22) | 206 |
Fred the Flying Fish — Cat tries to disprove a myth about a flying fish. CatDog Divided — Cat and Dog are separated after a magic trick gone wrong from a crooked magician. Now the duo has to find the guy, who's running from the cops. | |||||||
27 | 7 | "The Unnatural Dog Ate It Dopes on Slopes" | Russ Mooney (animation) Alan Smart (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb Andy Rheingold | Vikki Barrett Dan Povenmire (director) Steve Owen Chuck Klein (director) | February 23, 1999 (1999-02-23) | 207 |
The Unnatural — Cat and Dog play baseball with the Greasers on opposite teams, but when Cat's skills are not up to bat, he uses a pair of disguises to switch places with ace ball player Dog. Dog Ate It — Cat tries to get Dog to lose weight. Dopes on Slopes — Cat tries to teach Dog how to ski. | |||||||
28 | 8 | "Spaced Out Nine Lives" | Marlene May (animation) | Agi Fodor & Chris Gilligan Andy Rheingold | Antoine Gilbaud Barry Bunce and Mario Piluso (directors) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) | February 24, 1999 (1999-02-24) | 208 |
Spaced Out — Tired of watching the Mean Bob movie over and over again with Dog, Cat tries to sabotage the film, but his attempts put the duo into the movie itself. Nine Lives — While cleaning the attic, Dog accidentally lets loose Cat's eight extra life spirits. Now the duo has to collect them before they destroy all of Nearburg. | |||||||
29 | 9 | "Dem Bones Winslow's Home Videos You're Fired" | Marlene May (animation) Russ Mooney (animation) George Chialtas (animation) | Steven Banks Dean Stefan and Dan Povenmire Andy Rheingold | Antoine Guilbaud Barry Bunce and Scott Wood (directors) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando and Dan Povenmire (directors) Steve Owen Chuck Klein (director) | February 25, 1999 (1999-02-25) | 209 |
Dem Bones — Dog gets a craving for dinosaur bones when Cat takes him to a museum, but he tells Dog not to eat the bones as they are very old. The bones mysteriously appear in CatDog's house the next morning after Dog dreams about them. Winslow's Home Videos — Winslow shows clips of some of his favorite home videos featuring CatDog's wacky antics. You're Fired — Cat wants to impress Tallulah, a famous movie star, but things go awry when Dog eats some hot peppers in the kitchen and CatDog starts breathing fire. | |||||||
30 | 10 | "Showdown at Hole 18 Sneezie Dog" | Marlene May (animation) | Wendy Reardon Sydnie Suskind | Steve Owen Chuck Klein (director) Karen Heathwood Gary Hoffman (director) | February 26, 1999 (1999-02-26) | 210 |
Showdown at Hole 18 — Cat wants to win a lifetime membership at a golf course, but Rancid Rabbit, the owner, bans him from the premises. Sneezie Dog — Cat and Winslow look to cure Dog's allergies. | |||||||
31 | 11 | "It's a Wonderful Half Life Shepherd Dog" | Marlene May (animation) Mike Svayko (animation) | Steven Banks Story by : Doug Lawrence Steven Banks | Barrington Bunce (director) Karen Heathwood Jordan Reichek (director) | July 26, 1999 (1999-07-26) | 212 |
It's a Wonderful Half Life — Cat and Dog dream about what it would be like if they were just a normal cat and dog. Shepherd Dog — Dog gets a job herding sheep for a Scottish woman. | |||||||
32 | 12 | "Surfin' CatDog Guess Who's Going to Be Dinner!" | Michael Svayko (animation) Russ Mooney (animation) | Steven Banks Neil Martin and Steven Banks | Paul Young Barrington Bunce (director) Kelly Kennedy Dominic Orlando (director) | July 27, 1999 (1999-07-27) | 211 |
Surfin' CatDog — Cat enters a surfing competition despite being afraid of water. Guess Who's Going to Be Dinner! — Cat tries to make Dog more civilized, but ends up being the one who needs to be civilized. | |||||||
33 | 13 | "Dog Power It's a Jungle in Here" | Jamie Diaz (animation) George Chialtas (animation) | Andy Rheingold Story by : Peter Hannan Andy Rheingold | Dan Povenmire (director) Steve Owen Chuck Klein (director) | July 28, 1999 (1999-07-28) | 213 |
Dog Power — Cat uses Dog's running speed as a power source and sells it to people in town. It's a Jungle in Here — Dog accidentally turns the CatDog house into a jungle when he uses an entire bag of fertilizer to fill in a patch of grass on the floor. | |||||||
34 | 14 | "The House of CatDog CatDog Campers" | Mike Svayko (animation) Russ Mooney (animation) | Steven Banks | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) Steve Owen Chuck Klein (director) | July 29, 1999 (1999-07-29) | 214 |
The House of CatDog — When Rancid wants to tear down CatDog's house to build a freeway, CatDog explains the house's historical significance. CatDog Campers — CatDog wants to win the "Forest Fire Boy of the Year" award by camping out in their yard, but they have difficulty cooperating with each other. | |||||||
35 | 15 | "Let the Games Begin Winslow Falls in Love" | George Chialtas (animation) Marlene May (animation) | Andy Rheingold Neil Martin and Steven Banks | Vikki Barrett Barrington Bunce (director) Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) | July 30, 1999 (1999-07-30) | 215 |
Let the Games Begin — CatDog must team up with the Greasers to win a competition and be freed from the pound. Winslow Falls in Love — CatDog pairs Winslow up with a female mouse named Sadie Linkletter. | |||||||
36 | 16 | "Extra! Extra! CatDog Squared" | Russ Mooney (animation) Mike Svayko (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb and Neil Martin Andrew Gottlieb | Paul Young Barrington Bunce (director) Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) | November 13, 1999 (1999-11-13) | 218 |
Extra! Extra! — When Dog chases away all the neighborhood's paper boys, Rancid makes CatDog do the job. CatDog Squared — CatDog meet another conjoined duo named DanStan. This turns out to be a scam as Dan and Stan are just looking for a place to stay, and for something to steal. | |||||||
37 | 17 | "A Very CatDog Christmas" | Marlene May (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) | November 30, 1999 (1999-11-30) | 220 |
Cat sells himself (and Dog) to Rancid's bratty preschooler niece Rancine as a Christmas gift, but Santa Claus gets angry when he finds out and cancels Christmas. The people of Nearburg are maddened by this, and a hunt for the brothers begins. Guest Stars: Brian Doyle-Murray as Santa Claus | |||||||
38 | 18 | "Royal Dog Springtime for CatDog" | Russ Mooney (animation) Mike Svayko (animation) | Dean Stefan Andrew Gottlieb | Scott Wood and Barrington Bunce (directors) Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) | March 9, 2000 (2000-03-09) | 216 |
Royal Dog — CatDog find an old museum painting that greatly resembles Dog. Mr Sunshine tells the story of the painting and how it relates to English royalty. Springtime for CatDog — Cat and Dog both fall for a girl named Lorraine the Lemur. | |||||||
39 | 19 | "A Dog Ate My Homework The End" | George Chialtas (animation) Marlene May (animation) | Steven Banks | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) Steve Owen Scott Wood (director) | March 9, 2000 (2000-03-09) | 217 |
A Dog Ate My Homework — Cat schemes to get rich off having Dog eat people's homework. The End — CatDog notices a skull-shaped cloud in the sky using Winslow's telescope, and they send everyone into panic fearing it means the apocalypse. | |||||||
40 | 20 | "Cliff's Little Secret Freak Show" | Glenn Lovett Eduardo Soriano | Steven Banks Andrew Gottlieb | Glenn Lovett Eduardo Soriano, Louie Escaurlage, & David Earl | March 16, 2000 (2000-03-16) | 219 |
Cliff's Little Secret — CatDog discovers that Cliff takes ballet lessons. Freak Show — CatDog joins Randolph's freak show, but no one is impressed. |
Season 3 (1999–2001)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
41 | 1 | "Sumo Enchanted Evening Hotel CatDog" | Russ Mooney (animation) George Chialtas (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb Steven Banks | Steven Owen Scott Wood (director) Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) | October 9, 1999 (1999-10-09) | 302 |
Sumo Enchanted Evening — CatDog get overfull after Rancid invites them to try his new buffet restaurant, but the bill is too steep for them to pay. Hotel CatDog — Cat turns the CatDog house into a hotel, but he finds it difficult to keep excellent service. | |||||||
42 | 2 | "Rodeo CatDog Teeth for Two" | Russ Mooney (animation) Arne Wong (animation) | Jon Ross | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) | October 16, 1999 (1999-10-16) | 304 |
Rodeo CatDog — Rancid hires CatDog to become rodeo stars. Teeth for Two — Cat and Dog learn they affect each other's teeth during a dentist visit. As a result, Cat's teeth become a mess, so he tries to change Dog's diet as well as clean his teeth. | |||||||
43 | 3 | "Sweet and Lola Rich Shriek, Poor Shriek" | George Chialtas (animation) Eduardo Soriano (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb Steven Banks | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) Glen Lovett Trevor Bentley (director) | October 23, 1999 (1999-10-23) | 307 |
Sweet and Lola — A zoologist named Lola studies CatDog's way of life, which soon gets out of hand. Rich Shriek, Poor Shriek — Rancid hires CatDog, Cliff, and Lube to cater a fancy party, unaware that the party is for Shriek. | |||||||
44 | 4 | "CatDogula" | Nelson Recinos and Arne Wong (animation) | Steven Banks, Andrew Gottlieb, and Mario Piluso | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando and Scott Wood (directors) | October 26, 1999 (1999-10-26) | 319 |
CatDog celebrate Halloween, with Cat dressed as a famous surfer and Dog dressed as a vampire named "CatDogula", little does CatDog know that Nearberg is in great danger by bloodsucking vampire ticks. Now with Dog a vampire, and himself not, Cat has to dump a massive amount of Garlic juice onto Dog by midnight, or the whole town might turn into vampires. | |||||||
45 | 5 | "Remain Seated CatDog Catcher" | Marlene May and Arne Wong (animation) George Chialtas (animation) | Steven Banks Jon Ross | Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) Steven Owen Scott Wood (director) | November 6, 1999 (1999-11-06) | 305 |
Remain Seated — Cat tries to avoid going on a gigantic roller coaster at all costs. CatDog Catcher — When his money bath doesn't fill up to where he wants it, Rancid makes it law that all dogs, and later all animals, in Nearburg have licenses or else they will be captured and forced to pass a very hard test that includes a fee. | |||||||
46 | 6 | "Talkin' Turkey" | Russ Mooney (animation) | Steven Banks | Paul Young Barry Bunce (director) | November 21, 1999 (1999-11-21) | 318 |
Dog tries to save a turkey named Walt from being eaten by Cat and Rancid, but Cat soon takes Dog's side and helps keep their guests' minds on something other than turkey. | |||||||
47 | 7 | "Shriek on Ice No Thanks for the Memories" | Eduardo Soriano Glen Lovett | Steven Banks Andy Rheingold | David Earl & Louie Escauriaga Glen Lovett | December 4, 1999 (1999-12-04) | 303 |
Shriek on Ice — Shriek leaves the Greaser Dogs to become an ice skater. No Thanks for the Memories — Dog gets amnesia after getting hit in the head, and Cat teaches him to be more like him, only for it to backfire when gets Amnesia again. | |||||||
48 | 8 | "CatDog 3001 Cloudbursting" | Nelson Recinos (animation) Ron Myrick (animation) | Steven Banks Robert Lamoreaux and Steven Banks | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando and Scott Wood (directors) Paul Young Barry Bunce (director) | December 31, 1999 (1999-12-31) | 317 |
CatDog 3001 — CatDog are sent to the year 3001 to save future Nearburg from Winslow's tyrannical descendant. Cloudbursting — Cat sabotages Lola's rain-making machine to win a contest, but his tanning machine ends up drying out the atmosphere. | |||||||
49 | 9 | "Fire Dog Dog Show" | Mike Svayko (animation) George Chialtas (animation) | Jon Ross Steven Banks | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) Paul Young Barry Bunce (director) | October 23, 1999 (1999-10-23) | 301 |
Fire Dog — CatDog gets a job at the fire department to get a free meal, but what happens when they're the only one's left to save the day? Dog Show — In order to win a Dog show and win the grand prize to a luxury resort, CatDog puts on a disguise to hide Cat as the butt, but the competition is steep, especially with a scheming repeat entry. | |||||||
50 | 10 | "The Geekers The Golden Hydrant" | Nelson Recinos (animation) Arne Wong (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) Steven Owen Scott Wood (director) | March 23, 2000 (2000-03-23) | 308 |
The Geekers — CatDog and friends form a rival gang to the Greasers called the Geekers. The Golden Hydrant — Dog finds the legendary golden hydrant, but Cat prevents him from marking his territory. | |||||||
51 | 11 | "Lube in Love Picture This" | George Chialtas (animation) Eduardo Soriano (animation) | Steven Banks Jon Ross | Paul Young David Earl & Louie Escauriaga Trevor Bentley (director) | March 23, 2000 (2000-03-23) | 309 |
Lube in Love — Lube falls in love with a socialite while working at a service station. CatDog offer to teach Lube to be a gentleman if he can fix their car for free. Picture This — Dog becomes obsessed with taking pictures of everyone, even at their most private moments. | |||||||
52 | 12 | "Stunt CatDog Greasers in the Mist" | Russ Mooney (animation) Nelson Recinos (animation) | Steven Banks Andrew Gottlieb | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) | March 30, 2000 (2000-03-30) | 310 |
Stunt CatDog — CatDog are hired as a stunt double for Randolph, which Cat wants to use as an excuse to kiss Tallula. Greasers in the Mist — CatDog and Lola seek out the Greasers' weaknesses. | |||||||
53 | 13 | "Doo Wop Diggety CatDogumentary" | Eduardo Soriano Arne Wong (animation) | Andrew Gottlieb Steven Banks | Glen Lovett Trevor Bentley (director) Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) | March 30, 2000 (2000-03-30) | 311 |
Doo Wop Diggety — Winslow organized a doo-wop singing group composed of the Greasers and CatDog. CatDogumentary — Lola uses the money her boss gave her to make a documentary on CatDog. She then has to make a low-budget documentary because she spent most of her money on an electric hammock. | |||||||
54 | 14 | "Kooky Prank Day Back to School" | Arne Wong and Ray Pointer (animation) Arne Wong (animation) | Jon Ross and Dan Povenmire Steven Banks | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) Paul Young Barrington Bunce (director) | April 1, 2000 (2000-04-01) | 320 |
Kooky Prank Day — On Kooky Prank Day Cat is the butt of all the days' pranks until he prepares his ultimate practical joke. Back to School — Cat has never gotten his diploma to attend a school reunion dance, and CatDog must go back to high school for a day for Cat to graduate. | |||||||
55 | 15 | "Monster Truck Folly CatDog's Gold" | George Chialtas (animation) Eduardo Soriano (animation) | Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio Jon Ross | Paul Young Barrington Bunce (director) David Earl & Louie Escauriaga Trevor Bentley (director) | November 3, 2000 (2000-11-03) | 313 |
Monster Truck Folly — Dog enters Cat and himself into a monster truck rally, but Cat's competitive side soon gets the best of him. CatDog's Gold — Cat and Lola plot to sell honey made fresh in a beehive, but Dog wants to eat it. | |||||||
56 | 16 | "Silents Please! Gorilla My Dreams" | Mike Svayko (animation) Nelson Recinos (animation) | Steven Banks and Dan Povenmire Jon Ross | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) Steven Owen Scott Wood (director) | May 14, 2001 (2001-05-14) | 306 |
Silents Please! — A double outbreak made up of laryngitis and colorblindness transforms the whole town and the rest of the universe into a scene of a silent film. Gorilla My Dreams — Mervis and Dunglap's pet gorilla ends up at CatDog's house, and later joins the group at the bowling alley. | |||||||
57 | 17 | "Seeing Eye Dog Beware of Cliff" | N/A Eduardo Soriano (animation) | Jon Ross Andrew Gottlieb | Karen Heathwood Kelly Kennedy (director) Glen Lovett and Kay Lovett | May 15, 2001 (2001-05-15) | 316 |
Seeing Eye Dog — Dog is hired to be the seeing eye dog for a rich blind man named Mr. Wolfington. Beware of Cliff — Cliff gets trapped under an enormous pile of weights at the gym. He says that if he ever escapes, he will change his mean ways, and he eventually does so after becoming skinny. | |||||||
58 | 18 | "Rinky Dinks Hypno-Teased" | Russ Mooney (animation) | Jon Ross | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) | May 16, 2001 (2001-05-16) | 312 |
Rinky Dinks — CatDog and friends challenge the Greasers to ice hockey on the frozen Lake Nearburg. Hypno-teased — Winslow uses Dog's new hypnotism kit to trick Cat into thinking he is invincible. | |||||||
59 | 19 | "CatDog Candy Movin' on Up" | Arne Wong (animation) Nelson Recinos (animation) | Steven Banks Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio | Vikki Barrett Dominic Orlando (director) Scott Wood (director) | May 17, 2001 (2001-05-17) | 314 |
CatDog Candy — CatDog accidentally makes the greatest candy ever while feuding about their lunch choice. Movin' on Up — CatDog learn that their uncle HorseDuck has died and willed them his lake, and they pack up everything they own to move there. | |||||||
60 | 20 | "New Cat in Town CatDog's Booty" | Russ Mooney (animation) N/A | Vince Cheung & Ben Montanio Steven Banks | Octavio Rodriguez Dan Povenmire (director) Glen Lovett and Kay Lovett | May 18, 2001 (2001-05-18) | 315 |
New Cat in Town — Eddie is outraged when Cliff will not allow him to sit with the Greasers at the movies. The next day CatDog are introduced to Big Cat, who wants to pound the Greasers. CatDog's Booty — After Cat reads Dog a bedtime story about pirates, they become intrigued by the idea of finding the fabled lost treasure. |
Season 4 (2000; 2003-05)
This season is the shortest, having 8 episodes (6 if counting CatDog and the Great Parent Mystery as one episode). 2 episodes did not make it to air in the United States. The series' cancellation in 2001 may be why the final episodes were delayed for several years from airing.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Animation directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
61 62 63 | 1 2 3 | "CatDog and the Great Parent Mystery" | Nelson Recinos | Steven Banks, Robert Lamoreaux, and Victor Wilson | Vicky Barrett, Mario D'anna, Dominic Orlando, Jordan Riechek, Octavio Rodriguez, Eric Sanford, and Roy Shoshido | November 25, 2000 (2000-11-25) | 401 402 403 |
The Nearburg parent day festival is happening and CatDog is feeling left out. Dog eventually convinces Cat to go on a parent hunt. Along the way, they run into aliens, a sea monster, fire auts, and hillbillies. Eventually, they find their parents, a frog and Sasquatch, only to be told they do not know where CatDog came from and that they are CatDog's foster parents; it turns out they were separated by a tornado when CatDog was a baby. Since then, they have searched for their true parents. Winslow then shows up confronting them for leaving, but when offered to stay, he rejects the idea and leaves. Suddenly, the Greaser Dogs and the other characters they have met gang up on them for the trouble they've caused. Luckily, they are flown back to Nearburg by another tornado. Everyone else was gobbled up by the sea monster that popped up afterward. Guest Stars: Billy Bob Thornton as Frog and Jane Krakowski as Sasquatch. | |||||||
64 | 4 | "Harasslin' Match Dog the Not-So-Mighty" | Nelson Recinos | John Crane Robert Lamoreaux | Rhoydon Shishido Dominic Orlando (director) Vikki Barrett Paul McEvoy (director) | June 15, 2003 (2003-06-15) | 404 |
Harasslin' Match — Winslow's niece and nephew humiliate their uncle and force him to leave the house, following Winslow's family tradition. | |||||||
65 | 5 | "Mean Bob, We Hardly Knew Ye CatDog in Winslowland" | Nelson Recinos Russ Mooney | Steven Banks | Octavio Rodriguez Kelly Armstrong (director) Octavio Rodriguez and Mario D'Anna Jordan Reichek (director) | Unaired (Unaired) | 405 |
Mean Bob, We Hardly Knew Ye — Dog starts a fight at the Mean Bob theater production and causes the actor who plays Mean Bob to lose his memory. CatDog brings him back to their house only for Dog to make him think he is the real Mean Bob. CatDog in Winslowland — Cat tricks Dog into going into Winslow's house, where they learn of Winslow's secret life. | |||||||
66 | 6 | "Cat Gone Bad The Old CatDog and the Sea" | Nelson Recinos | Robert Lamoreaux John Crane | Rhoydon Shishido Dominic Orlando (director) Erik Sanford Mario D'Anna (director) | May 30, 2004 (2004-05-30) | 406 |
Cat Gone Bad — CatDog's new "cool" cat neighbors keep CatDog awake at night, and soon Cat wants to be just as cool as them. The Old CatDog and the Sea — While appearing on a talk show named "Talkin' with Tallulah", CatDog make up a tale about a catdog who hunts a swordfish named for Saw-Nose. | |||||||
67 | 7 | "Cone Dog The Ballad of Ol' 159" | Mike Svayko Nelson Recinos | Robert Lamoreaux John Crane | Erik Sanford Mario D'Anna (director) Octavio Rodriguez Kelly Armstrong (director) | Unaired (Unaired) | 407 |
Cone Dog — Dog is forced to wear a cone on his head after experiencing an ear injury. The Ballad of Ol' 159 — Pete the Polecat sings a ballad about a garbage truck called Ol' 159. | |||||||
68 | 8 | "Vexed of Kin Meat, Dog's Friends" | Nelson Recinos Mike Svayko | Barry Stringfellow Steven Banks | Rhoydon Shishido Dominic Orlando (director) Vikki Barrett Paul McEvoy (director) | June 15, 2005 (2005-06-15) | 408 |
Vexed of Kin — Cat thinks his parents love Dog more than him. |
VHS tapes
Name | No. of episodes |
Release date | Episodes include | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Together Forever | 6 | March 30, 1999 | 2x04c | Cat-Diggety Dog |
1x01a | Dog Gone | |||
1x02a | Flea or Die! | |||
1x05a | Diamond Fever | |||
1x12a | CatDog's End | |||
1x04b | Work Force | |||
CatDog vs The Greasers | 5 | 1x12b | Siege on Fort CatDog | |
1x09a | Squirrel Dog | |||
1x11a | Full Moon Fever | |||
1x04a | Shriek Loves Dog | |||
1x03b | All You Need is Lube |
References
- "Nick leashes 'CatDog' to 40 episodes". Variety. Penske Media Corporation. August 14, 1997. Retrieved May 29, 2010.
- "CatDog: Dog Gone (1997 pilot version)".