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The Rocky and Bullwinkle show

All Episodes 1959 - 1963
TV-G

  • Ended
  • #<Network:0x00007f6911da71c8>, #<Network:0x00007f6911da7088>
  • 1959-11-19T22:30:00Z
  • 5m
  • 3d 17m (815 episodes)
  • Bill Scott + 1 more, Jay Ward
  • United States
  • English
  • Jay Ward Productions + 1 more, P.A.T.
  • Animation, Comedy, Family
A variety show, with the main feature being the serialized adventures of the two title characters, the anthropomorphic moose Bullwinkle and flying squirrel Rocky. The main adversaries in most of their adventures are the Russian-like spies Boris Badenov and Natasha Fatale. Supporting segments include Dudley Do-Right, Peabody's Improbable History, and Fractured Fairy Tales, among others.

815 episodes

Series Premiere

1959-11-19T22:30:00Z

1x01 Jet Fuel Formula (1) - Jet Fuel Formula

Series Premiere

1x01 Jet Fuel Formula (1) - Jet Fuel Formula

  • 1959-11-19T22:30:00Z30m

Rocky and Bullwinkle accidentally discover a new and amazing rocket fuel while baking Grandma Bullwinkle’s recipe for mooseberry-flavored fudge cake—an explosive discovery which propels them on a round-trip adventure to the Moon. Bullwinkle is immediately appointed "Director of Guided Moosles.”

The long-haired heroine lets her hair down.

Bullwinkle recites Robert Louis Stevenson's poem "The Swing".

The origins of Mr. Peabody and the WABAC machine: Mr. Peabody finds Sherman in the street being beaten up by some bigger boys. At first, he doesn't think that he's the right sort of boy- but when he sees how he is treated in the orphanage, Peabody decides to adopt him. At first, there's a problem when they won't let a dog adopt a boy- but he goes to court, and the judge decides that if a boy can have a dog, then a dog can have a boy! Sherman comes to live with Mr. Peabody, who builds him the Wayback Machine in order to keep him busy. They go back in time to Rome, and then to see Ben Franklin.

Because the rocket fuel recipe had been torn apart in the explosion, Bullwinkle knows how much but not what of, so he and Rocky set to work in their government laboratory, while at universities all over the country, cake baking is being added to the scientific curriculum. Meanwhile, after failing in an attempt to time-bomb the Moose, Boris and Natasha do what any intelligent, self-sufficient spy with real initiative would do: They wait for instructions!

Those little green men holding extremely ominous-looking weapons aren't congressmen, as Bullwinkle first surmises--they're Gidney and Cloyd, reluctant visitors from the moon, here to keep an invasion of earth tourists from cluttering up their homeland. Indeed, just to prepare for their visit, the two have had to practice dodging traffic, listening to jukeboxes, filling out forms, and breathing smog! Meanwhile, Boris and Natasha, twelve stories up, with a heavy safe as our heroes stroll by below, finally receive orders from headquarters: KILL MOOSE!

A Jay Ward send-up of this classic tale, with a whole new twist on the story you expect.

Bullwinkle reads and acts out the nursery rhyme, "Little Miss Muffett" while Rocky takes the role of the spider.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman travel to 1810 where they meet Napoleon who is missing his royal suspenders. So, Peabody and Sherman must get them back from some pirates. But when they get them back, they're shocked to see everyone is glad with Napoleon occupied.

Whoops. The actual orders said, “*DON'T* KILL MOOSE," so Boris races the safe to keep Bullwinkle safe, and it's safe to say that he *almost* makes it. It's back to the laboratory for our heroes, where they turn out acres of cinnamon pizzas and hot fudge strudels, but none of it’s explosive. Just as Rocky's thinking hypnotism might be something to try, Swami Ben Boris and his assistant appear, putting Bullwinkle into a trance and, forthwith, the moose tells *everything* he knows—all about his early years in the Minnesota woods, his days at the Philpott School for Exceptional Children (he was the only student with antlers), his experiences in the army, where for three years, he served as a hat rack in the Officers’ Club—going on for a full twelve hours and boring everyone within hearing distance into dreamland, so that when he finally gets to the part about the recipe, the only ones awake to hear it are the two moon men. Forthwith, Cloyd raises his weapon and scrooches the big moose!

The scrooch gun has frozen Bullwinkle solid, and Cloyd and Gidney start off with their moosesicle as a trophy of their visit to a small planet, but Boris comes to in time to con them into leaving Moose for him, while they get Squirrel, the brains of the operation. While the moon men are telling Rocky they can't remember if they've scrooched Bullwinkle for eight hours or eight years...WHISK! Eight hours later, Bullwinkle thaws out in Boris's laboratory, where every word he says is monitored in another country by a faraway band of ominous spies.

A little fisherman goes out to fish and nets a mermaid. After the man gives in to her pleas to be let go, the mermaid is willing to grant him wishes for his kindness. After she mends his net, he tells his wife about it all. The fisherman's wife asks him to ask the mermaid for a new apron. This then snowballs into grander wishes till his wife attains Queen-like status. Overcome with power, she demands that her husband wish her to be a goddess. Upon meeting the mermaid again, she asks if he himself has any wish of his own. His one wish is that his wife be happy. His last wish spent, he returns to his ordinary little home and lives happily ever after.

Bullwinkle tells the poem about the little boy who blew his horn.

Lord Nelson is unable to go into battle against the Spanish fleet as his crew has left port minus one important commodity. Now it's up to Peabody to help him get into battle.

Every move the moose makes is duplicated in the faraway spy lab. Bullwinkle cooks up some tasty chocolate pan dowdy that blows up when the spies try it, and when Rocky smells the delicious aroma, it leads him right to Bullwinkle, but Boris is ready with a helpful trapdoor that sends the plucky squirrel falling into another stew!

Rocky's blown away all right, out to sea in a leaky hot air balloon courtesy of Boris Badenov. Meanwhile, an anxious nation and two anxious moon men are searching for the missing moose, who's still baking away in Boris's secret laboratory. By going door-to-door to every house in the country, Gidney and Cloyd eventually turn up there, so Boris and Natasha quickly throw them a surprise party complete with knockout punch, while back out over the stormy seas, lightning strikes Rocky's balloon, sending it plunging.

Goldilocks learns a lesson about the downside of misusing other people's property.

Bullwinkle tells the story about riding on a boat.

Dodge City's famed sheriff is unable to face "Aces Wilde" in a gun showdown, due to some bad luck and a leg injury, sending Peabody to do "a man's job."

Fortunately, Bullwinkle offers the wrong toast—"To crime!"—and Boris and Natasha, official bad guys that they are, are obliged to drink up, gulping down their own knockout punch; meanwhile, the flying squirrel is being used for target practice by the U. S. Navy, until quick-witted Rocky uses the smoke from the aircraft fire to spell out the phrase "U. S. Taxpayer" and, of course, the Navy needs every one of those that it can get. Soon Rocky finds Bullwinkle, and just as our heroes are about to leave with the moon men, a grateful U. S. government responds by arresting them!

Yes, the government agents who've arrested our heroes are waiting for two spies. If it's not Rocky and Bullwinkle, it must be those two funny-looking green guys, reasons Special Agent Iris T. Upthecreek, but when he tries to take the moon men into custody, he's scrooched...for a full fifty years, which creates a tiny problem until Rocket J. hits upon the idea of putting the scrooched agent on a pedestal, right in front of the National Security Building, while he slowly thaws. Meanwhile, the moon men have become media darlings, with pointed heads all the rage, and they're even given the keys to the city (they're delicious). Cloyd and Gidney respond to all this flattering attention by heading back to their spaceship for a little peace and quiet, but ensuring that same peace and quiet on the moon means keeping Grandma Moose's recipe out of earthling hands, so it looks as if our heroes are going to be forced to go lunar themselves.

A forgetful Giant enables Jack to escape by not remembering his famous saying.

Bullwinkle tells a poem about his shadow until comes to life and picks a fight with him.

Everything is out of hand in King Arthur's kingdom, a dragon is terrorizing the kingdom and all the knights are too weak and pathetic to fight the dragon and Mr. Peabody decides to use a new strategy. He uses Sherman's bubble gum.

Up and up they go, and then down and down: Cloyd and Gidney are out of fuel, or is that fudge cake? Because Boris and Natasha have absconded with their last fuel tank, the moon men have no choice but to tell Rocky the recipe, and they're just one ingredient short: mooseberry juice, which grows in only one place in the entire nation, and that hard-to-find spot just happens to be Rocky and Bullwinkle's hometown, *Frostbite Falls, Minnesota* (population twenty-three). Meanwhile, Boris and Natasha, those two creeps in the deep, board a midget submarine.

Boris has plenty of medals—for burning down orphanages, for kicking small dogs, for taking candy from babies—so why isn't he happier? He's forgotten something, he's certain, but can't remember what it is until he gets his orders: KILL MOOSE! So, of course, he and Natasha put the sub on autopilot, slip into breathing apparatus, and swim straight back to the U. S. of A. Meanwhile, our heroes are finding it tough to get to Frostbite Falls, so they head off to the nearest airfield to rent a cut-rate private plane, where they immediately find Ace Ricken-Boris, whose motto is *Fly Now, Pray Later.* Rocky wants to do some square business, but all Ace Ricken-Boris is offering are round trips for eighty-five cents per, which just happens to be all the money Rocky and Bullwinkle have. Is Ace really wild about flying them to Frostbite Falls, dollink, or is that vaguely familiar, vampy stewardess strapping our heroes into a flying casket?

A spell has been cast on the Beast and the only way out is to be kissed by a beauty.

Bullwinkle's version of this classic poem. Except the cat is a tiger!

Peabody and Sherman go back to the year 1824 and meet Franz Schubert. They decide to help him compose his latest musical masterpiece. But his piano is stolen by his next-door neighbor and he won't give it back.

The auto-controlled spy sub goes slightly out of control, blowing up an entire foreign port. Meanwhile, after fastening Rocky and Bullwinkle into one-way seatbelts, stewardess Natasha bails out, while Boris gleefully smashes instruments in the pilot's compartment. It looks like a smash landing ahead.

A last-second reconsideration of orders from headquarters (the message didn't say KILL MOOSE; it actually read DON'T KILL MOOSE) means Boris has to save Rocky and Bullwinkle, whose brilliant idea to retrieve the last mooseberry bush on Mooseberry Island (SWIM THE RIVER!) has one tiny flaw (Bullwinkle doesn't know how to swim!).

The Little Tailor kills seven flies with one blow! However, the townspeople mistake the flies for giants and The Little Tailor is given a task.

Bullwinkle recites the poem "Taffy." However, in the telling of the story, Boris (in the role of Taffy) begins to "bend and ad-lib" his parts. For example, instead of stealing "a piece of beef," Taffy steals a whole cow. Bullwinkle gets upset as the poem is changed, and he thinks that he's got Boris with the last line of the poem. ("I went to Taffy's house, Taffy was in bed. I took a marrow bone and hit him on the head.") However, upon arriving, Boris takes the marrow bone and hits Bullwinkle in the head, giving the story an unhappy ending, much to Boris' delight.

Lucretia Borgia, the world's best poison artist has just gotten a 12th husband who is snacking on furniture. Peabody and Sherman try to get the husband to leave Lucretia but he loves her too much to bail out on her. So, Peabody creates a special potion for him that will make the man impervious to poison so he will live and not leave his wife.

Despite going over Thundering Falls, Bullwinkle, by remaining cuke as a coolcumber, manages to snatch the last available mooseberry bush in the entire country, but a federal plant inspector with a familiar accent turns up, spraying the precious bush for blight, and forthwith, he and the bush disappear behind the huge cloud.

Those laughing Indians going by in a canoe aren't part of the Minnie-Ho-Ho tribe, but really Boris and Natasha with the purloined plant, so the big canoe race is on, with our heroes transforming their crashed plane into a water-worthy craft.

Rumpelstiltskin uses the magic of publicity to convince everyone that his client can spin gold out of straw.

Wee Willie Winkie runs afoul of Bullwinkle's Corner.

Sir Walter has a "Dead" line with the Queen to raise his waterlogged cargo or it will be off with his head! Now it's up to Peabody and Sherman to help him.

From Frostbite Falls, it's across a couple of the Great Lakes and portage through downtown Chicago, as the Great Canoe and Leaky Retrofitted Airplane Race is on! It's stroke-stroke-stroke and bail-bail-bail as the pursuit continues down ever more tiny waterways! And finally on one foggy evening, as they approach Washington, D.C., the two competing vessels are so close that—stroke-bail, bail-stroke—their echoes are even writing their own dialogue! But our heroes, prompted by some dastardly sign rewriting, take the wrong turn, heading toward the hideously whirling blade of a sawmill just ahead. Will it be Two for the Ripsaw, or, is it Good-bye, Mister Chips?

It's getting choppy out there all right, but even though the whirling blade cuts their little vessel in two, our heroes escape unscathed because...they're sitting on opposite sides of the craft! Rocky and Bullwinkle return to their laboratory in something less than triumph, booed by the fickle citizenry just because they've lost the mooseberry bush, while Boris and Natasha get ready to set sail for their homeland.

Peabody visits with Fulton, the famed inventor of the steamboat, and helps prove steamboats can outrun the fastest sailboats. But when the workers quit, Peabody must find a way to win the race without new workers. So he paints the boiler room to look like the North Pole.

If only they knew the whereabouts of another mooseberry bush! Perhaps the moon men will tell them, but when our heroes go to New York to call on Gidney and Cloyd, all they find is a theatrical newspaper with the headline: MOON MEN SOCKO IN LOS WAGES! BOFFO B.O.! Sure enough, Bullwinkle baby, the moon men have gone Hollywood, but they take time out from taking bows to take a long-distance call backstage and clue the moose in: There's a mooseberry bush to be found in Pottsylvania, a menacing little land that just happens to be where Boris and Natasha are from!

Rocky and Bullwinkle are up to their necks in trouble...and in water, too, for Boris Badenov has dumped them into the harbor and a huge ocean liner is bearing down on them, about to squeeze them against the dock!

The court jester tries to fool the King by providing him with fake princesses.

The Queen of Hearts (Rocky) bakes heart-shaped cookies. The Knave of Hearts is Boris.

Forest Primeval attempts to cheat Annie Oakley at a shooting match, until a certain genius dog and his boy intervene.

Picked up by the mighty *S.S. Andalusia,* plowing her way through the seas to Pottsylvania, Bullwinkle sits basking on the deck next to a taciturn old gentleman, Sir Thomas Lipen-Boris—Uncle Chumley, actually—the purloined mooseberry bush in disguise! Meanwhile, Boris is boring...holes in a lifeboat, that is.

Tricked by a fake lifeboat drill called by Boris Badenov, that dastardly USC graduate (that is, the Ukrainian Safecracking College, dollink), into a leaky lifeboat—Moose overboard!—our heroes are all at sea and lost in a fog. But little does Boris know that Moose and Squirrel have courteously taken along that old and taciturn (and red and green and spotted) gentleman, Uncle Chumley, who bears an uncanny resemblance to a certain mooseberry bush.

Sweet Little Beet is a poor orphan girl forced into a life of drudgery and ill-treated by her wicked (and UGLY!) stepsisters. A mysterious (and invisible) Prince promises to wed the pure-in-heart maiden who can see him. Sweet Little Beet's wicked (and UGLY!) stepsisters make fools of themselves trying-but Little Beet succeeds! Will she marry the Prince? Well, not exactly... there's a problem.

Snidely Whiplash smuggles furs across the border with the aid of his musical band "The Disloyal Canadians."

Bullwinkle has a sinking feeling that their boat is leaking, but when Rocky has Bullwinkle stand on his head, the points of his antlers fit exactly the holes in the boat! Unfortunately, the *S.S. Andalusia*—commanded by none other than Captain Peter "Wrong Way" Peachfuzz, recipient of a plethora of medals, all of them bestowed by the enemy—bears directly down on our heroes! Will it be the Deep Six, or, is it The Old Moose and the Sea?

There's nothing but splinters left of the little lifeboat, but mighty Bullwinkle has managed to grab ahold of the passing anchor, and Rocky has ahold of him, and when Boris looks out of his porthole and sees that they have ahold of Uncle Chumley, he has no choice but to grab ahold of our heroes and haul them in. At that moment Captain Peachfuzz veers off again, traveling more miles and getting to fewer places than any other vessel on Earth. The Captain's outrageous all right, and what's more, the food's almost gone.

A fisherman and his wife are very poor, and he is happy. The wife, however, is unhappy, and wishes that he would catch more fish in order to make a better living. While fishing, he catches a talking fish and takes it home to prove to his wife what he had found. The fish does not want to leave and gives the couple three wishes if they let him stay. They fumble around and get mad at the fish, telling him that they wish he would shut up- thus destroying all their hopes of getting rich. Eventually, they end up poor and back to square one.

Jesse James robs Mr. Peabody and Sherman, and Sherman is kidnapped while trying to get his things back from the outlaw. Now, it's up to Peabody to get Sherman back from Jesse James.

Our heroes are so hungry, they're eating *pictures* of food; meanwhile, Boris and Natasha go picking mooseberries. But when Captain Peachfuzz suddenly veers, Bullwinkle accidentally chomps down a few mooseberries, turning into a living, hiccuping bomb. Then, hearing the false story that his little friend Rocky has fallen overboard, the big-hearted moose dashes through the door, trips, and hurtles directly toward the deck thirty feet below! It looks like Bullwinkle Makes a Hit, or, Will I Get a Bang Out of You?

Bullwinkle reads a poem about Barbara Frietchie, who ends up being a sewing lady for the Union Army in the Civil War and tries to sew a flag for the Union. Boris plays a Confederate soldier trying to stop Barbara...

Kitty Hawk, a troublesome bird, nests in the Wright brothers' plane and prevents them from making their historic flight. So Peabody disguises a rock as an egg to distract the bird without hurting it.

A traveling cat manages to win a rich bride for his friend, Dick Whittington.

Peabody and Sherman go to 1875 where they find that General Custer inadvertently leads his troops into a dangerous situation. Now it's up to Mr. Peabody to get them out of this mess before it's too late.

Cinderella wants to marry a rich prince, but this Cinderella story has one twist: the Fairy Godmother makes Cinderella sell a load of merchandise to get her wish. She must first sell a certain number of pots and pans by midnight.

Bullwinkle shows us how to cook a turkey in a 6,000-degree oven.

Alfred Nobel has trouble testing his explosives because he does not have a good place to test them. Now, Peabody and Sherman must help him find a safe place to test the TNT.

We find that the shoemaker has to do many unlikely things to learn his trade.

Stokey the Bear has been hypnotized by Snidely Whiplash to start fires!

Mr. Peabody, Marco Polo, and Sherman end up as prisoners of Kubla Khan and discover the origin of the Great Wall of China.

Tom Thumb is only as high as his father's thumb. Luckily Merlin the magician is there to help.

Mr. Peabody teaches King Richard how to become truly lion-hearted and win his special noble quest. But none of Peabody's strategies work, so he tricks Richard into using a sword that the King is convinced is magic.

Retired clown Galahad has a son. However, upon registering his son in town, he answers the first question "Yes, Sir!" The registrar then writes the baby's name as "Sir Galahad" (a wrench in Mr. Galahad's plans-his son was originally to be named Underdunk). Galahad wishes Sir to be a clown just like him, but Sir would rather be a gallant knight. One night, he has a dream of being a knight and saving a beautiful princess from an evil dragon. However, once that's over, there aren't enough dragons left, and so Sir grows old, his wife grows larger, and his brood of children also grows. With not much to do, Sir spends much of his waning years doing menial household tasks. Near the end of his life, a new threat emerges, and Sir, now an old man, heeds the call. However, he doesn't survive, and is killed. The young Sir wakes from his dream, and decides that he will follow in his father's footsteps.

Don Juan has lost his mojo when he finds out that his love for onions has given him bad breath and he is losing all the ladies. Only Peabody and Sherman can help him recover his reputation. They try to make him give up onions, but that doesn't work. Can Mr. Peabody find a remedy?

The dwarves are hiding Snow White from the evil Queen.

A Confederate spy has set up a trap for General Sherman and his troops while crossing a bridge, and now it's up to Peabody to save the day and prevent them from falling into certain death.

Colonel Beauregard's horse has been put under a sleeping sickness and the Kentucky Derby is about to start, so Peabody must find a new horse before it's too late.

A Wicked Fairy casts a beautiful Princess into a never-ending sleep. The Prince who comes to awaken her changes his mind when he sees a chance for commercial exploitation-and turns her castle into a theme park and charges admission for the public to view her. (It is surely mere coincidence that the Prince is a dead ringer for Walt Disney!) When the Wicked Fairy shows up and wants her cut of the action, the Prince must dispose of her if he is to retain control of "Sleepingbeautyland." But is the Princess REALLY asleep? Who's exploiting whom?

Kindly Old Geppetto runs a local toy shop, fashioning toys of all kind. One night, a fairy hears Geppetto wishing that the puppet he is crafting were real. The fairy makes the puppet come to life. At this realization, Geppetto is happy: now, he won't be poor any more. In no time, he's made a deal with a local TV station to put Pinocchio on TV. But the little puppet only wants to do a brave deed and be a real boy. It seems that his dream will be lost until he proclaims the bravest deed of all: he'll do the show without cue cards. However, this turns him into a real boy, and the show now has no "hook."

Mr. Peabody and Sherman travel to meet P. T. Barnum and see his circus. But some trapeze saboteurs are up to no good and want to ruin the show for everyone.

Little Red Riding Hood opens a "Riding Hood Shop" and is surprised when a customer wants an impossible order.

Mr. Peabody misses the famed meeting of Stanley and Livingstone and now, it's up to him to rescue them.

Dudley Do-Right captures what he believes to be a Centaur and makes it his new mount.

Androcles finds it is often helpful to befriend a lion, especially when you are thrown into a lion pit yourself.

Louis Pasteur's cow thinks she is a chicken after a case of amnesia, so Mr. Peabody decides to find a remedy.

King Midas, the most miserly man alive, embarks on an advertising campaign to make people 'like' him, but places a mean tax on the people of his kingdom.

Bullwinkle tells us how to get rid of the unwanted house guest dog, Spot, by using a can of spot remover.

Bullwinkle is sent out by his editor to cover stories all over the city, which Boris sets up, and which eventually backfire on him.

Robin Hood has amnesia and is competing in a fixed archery competition against Prince John.

Red owns a fur shop and finds she needs a wolf pelt. Meanwhile, the wolf is going to bring goodies to Grandma's house, and so Red does the riding hood bit in reverse. But there's quite a twist at the end as the wolf goes into the fur business for himself...

Robinson Crusoe is planning to attack Friday's island which he is trying to attack it. However, both of their islands are now in mortal danger of being blown up. It's up to Mr. Peabody to save the islands and solve the feud.

In a pond in the Middle West, an ugly duckling wants to be a star, so he has a face lift that makes him good-looking, and missing the opportunity to play an ugly role.

Ponce de Leon's men have overdosed on water from the fountain of youth and changed into babies – just before an enemy attack.

The wicked witch turns Hansel into an aardvark and it takes plenty of "brooming" from Gretel to get him back.

Bullwinkle shows us how to run the four-minute mile in 10 seconds, but he ends up in an auto race and wins because he knows the judge.

Cinderella forgets to return the shoes her fairy Godmother gave her by midnight and breaks her royal contract.

John Sullivan has a large mustache that is preventing him from competing in the boxing match.

Mona Lisa has a toothache so she can't smile for Da Vinci's painting.

Bullwinkle barricades himself against some very bratty kids bent on committing mayhem.

King Newton discovers the sad truth that golden eggs are not always what they are cracked up to be.

Paul Revere sets out to warn the colonists, but he's sitting on a statue of a horse.

The Wolf, seeking a life of ease, attempts to marry one of the three pigs.

This is a short poem about a bear.

Snidely Whiplash sends a fake newspaper claiming to be Dudley Do-Right's younger brother.

Confucius is being held prisoner on a junk and now it's up to Mr. Peabody and Sherman to rescue him before it's too late.

This is the story of the Pied Piper who plays a flatt, not a flute, and who drives out all the mice in the town. The strange little man has the ability to create pies from his pipe! The King loves his tobacco pie! The only problem is that when the Queen takes a bite of the pie, she disappears!

A bear takes a liking to the Mountie uniforms and insists on joining the force.

The old witch in this Sleeping Beauty story has trouble casting a sleep spell, so Beauty pretends to sleep when the Prince comes around, but after they exchange pleasantries, the witch reappears and casts the right spell on both of them by accident.

Nero is performing a concert, but fires have been going on a lot lately and Nero has been framed for it. It's up to Peabody to prevent any more fires from happening and to clear Nero's name.

Snow White runs an exclusive dwarfs shop, which almost goes bankrupt when the Queen gives her an apple.

Bullwinkle stops Boris from cutting down his beloved trees.

Peabody and Sherman teach Captain Matthew Clift how to swim the English Chanel. But he is too nervous to jump inside.

Bullwinkle shows us how to own a high-fidelity stereo system on a small budget.

Vasco Núñez de Balboa's wisdom teeth are gone; he has lost his wisdom and can't find the Pacific Ocean. Peabody decides to help him, but they cannot leave town.

Rumpelstiltskin makes the poor miller's daughter sin by challenging her to contest after contest.

Bullwinkle climbs a mountain and yells "Excelsior!" because he works for Smith, Jones & Jakes- which is a lumber company- and excelsior is a product that it sells.

Snidely Whiplash disguises himself as Inspector Fenwick.

Beauty is tricked by the wicked witch and is not put to sleep but is forced to put other people to sleep... even the prince.

Bullwinkle shows us how to be a human fly by jumping off a tall building.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman travel to visit Peter Cooper and join him to compete in a race with his locomotive, the Tom Thumb. However, Cooper is extremely ignorant and the race is being fixed. Can Mr. Peabody win this race and make Cooper's train win?

Puss gives his master three wishes but accidentally winds up giving him four.

Dudley Do-Right is forced into an all-out recruiting campaign for the RCMP.

The American Army is ordered not to fire on their British enemies until they “can see the whites of their eyes.” Unfortunately, the British are wearing sunglasses.

Jack joins a losing team, the "Boston Beans," and carries them into a championship battle against the "New York Giants," where he uses the beanstalk to catch fly balls.

The Pony Express is failing its business, so Peabody helps save the Pony Express by figuring out how to mail an entire boulder in pieces and reassemble it.

Decatur must destroy a ship that has been captured by pirates and needs Mr. Peabody's help. They must think up a plan of attack.

Little Tom Thumb may only be as big as his father's thumb, but he's got a heart as big as all of Texas.

Alexander Graham Bell’s initial attempts at creating the telephone are doomed to the dustbin. So, Mr. Peabody and Sherman take him to a football game at Boston University to regain his confidence.

Aladdin's magic lamp produces many "genies" and causes all kinds of fights between the King and the evil Wizier.

Snidely hatches a brilliant plan and steals Dudley's uniform.

Goldilocks opens a wonderful new winter resort but has trouble with the three bears who are busy trying to hibernate.

Bullwinkle explains the many talents of a beatnik. He puts on an old Beatnik costume, gets on stage, and tells what the Beatnik lifestyle is like.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman travel to 1909 to meet Commander Pearry and see that he is highly underdressed for it. They decide to help him find the North Pole but discover that he's been kidnapped by Eskimos.

Pancho Villa and his men are feasting on jumping beans and he decides to rob the nearby town. Unfortunately, the town is bankrupt and has no money. If Pancho doesn't have his money by three, he will destroy the town! It's up to Mr. Peabody to raise money and save the town.

The enchanted frog manages to overcome a tremendous obstacle to reach the Princess. But he has to decide... Is it worth it?

Bullwinkle tells us how to get over your fear of heights.

Dudley teams up with Snidely Whiplash so he can go into show business.

This Pied Piper can blow the most amazing things from his pipe and everyone in the kingdom rushes to see.

Bullwinkle shows us how to fix a flat tire.

Peabody and Sherman aid Lord Douglas and his mountain climbers in reaching the peak of the Alps.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman visit Sitting Bull who is in a hotel in the middle of the desert. The hotel hasn't had a customer in a week because of Sitting Bull, and the manager is planning to get rid of him.

Beauty and her mule marry the Prince and his white charger and have an awesome double wedding.

Snidely Whiplash tricks Nell Fenwick into knitting him a bulletproof suit.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman help Christopher Columbus discover that the earth is round. TRIVIA: It is a popular misconception that Columbus discovered America or that the Earth was round. The Earth’s shape had been common knowledge for centuries and Columbus was actually a terrible person who nearly drove the Caribbean natives to extinction. Also, Columbus was the first European contact with the Caribbean, Central America, and South America - not North America as this episode suggests.

A poor fisherman finds that riches are not always the way to happiness and is granted one final wish.

Dudley seeks a miracle drug to cure an epidemic that has befallen the RCMP.

A good king's last wish is for a fairy godmother to make something out of his obnoxious, nasty son.

Bullwinkle shows what to look for when purchasing a used car.

The fort of the French Foreign Legion is saved from disaster by Peabody’s linguistic skills after he sees that they are unprepared.

Marconi's radio is wired underwater in the Venice Canal and Mr. Peabody must drain the canals to help him.

Tired of living in the shadows of his famous father, Prince Fletcher (the son of Beauty and the Beast) decides to become famous. He hires writer Sordid J. Scrivener to write a book about him, but he has led such a boring life that there is nothing to write about! The writer talks Prince Fletcher into going to a witch so that he can be turned into a beast like his famous father.

Bullwinkle Moose shows us how to bake a cake, a chocolate cream cake.

Dudley Do-Right goes undercover at Elevenworth Prison.

A frog is very happy to be a frog. A wacky witch convinces him that he would be better off as a handsome prince. The prince marries a "witch" of a princess!

The Crown Jewels have been stolen and Mr. Peabody and Sherman must investigate and survive the fog to find the culprit.

Bullwinkle shows us how to move safely through Indian territory with an arrowproof wagon, and a few other improvements.

John Holland's submarine has a problem: it can only go up water. Now it's up to Peabody to solve the problem.

An old man who has three sons plans to give one of them a golden goose, but he first must find out which one deserves it. A rather dimwitted guy trades his stale sandwich to a goblin for a golden goose. Several people try to take the goose, but when they touch it, they are forever stuck to it!

Snidely Whiplash kidnaps Nell on her wedding day and holds her hostage in the sawmill.

The son of Rumpelstiltskin is cast out into the world and is forced to make a name for himself. This is a twist on the story, as Rumpelstiltskin can't remember his own name, so he changes it in embarrassment.

King Louis is missing and Mr. Peabody and Sherman have to find him.

When Mr. Peabody and Sherman slip that Francisco Pizzaro is gonna attack, the Incans plan to attack him right away, and now it's up to Peabody to warn Francisco before it's too late.

Elves help a little old Shoemaker turn his business around.

Daniel Boone has been captured thanks to the stench on his hat and now it's up to Peabody to save him.

Once upon a time, there was an evil ugly witch who cast a spell on anything beautiful. In the country one day, she came upon a beautiful Princess and turned her into a horse, figuring that a Prince would not kiss a horse. After six months, a Prince finally passed by and commented that she is a real runner, and entered her into the big race. At the race, Beauty would destroy the field but stopped five feet from the finish line, so he took her to Merlin the Wizard. Several days later, he came back, saying that she has a kiss complex, so at the next race, he kissed her and she turned back into a beautiful woman and they lived UNHAPPILY ever after, because she was still an old nag.

Dudley Do-Right needs gold to win the heart of Nell Fenwick.

Bullwinkle shows us how to clean windows on a city high-rise, and he uses his suspenders as a safety tool.

Shakespeare's play, Romeo and Juliet is opening tomorrow night and he isn't fully prepared for the play, now Peabody and Sherman have to help him finalize the play.

The King taxes all people under 4'6" (the little people), which happens to affect only the Goblin family... So they decide to kidnap the King's daughter and marry her off to the king of the goblins.

Snidely impersonates the Colonel and tells all of the Mounties that they must replace their horses with rocking horses.

The Prince must make like a bird and daringly rescue Rapunzel.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman visit the Rocky Mountains to see General Pike discover Pike's Peak, only to find out he is afraid of heights.

Mr. Peabody competes against Mick Snide in the very first golf match and Mick Snide cheats to win.

A King and a town loved their little Princess until one day she grew too big, so the King made everything big to accommodate her, but he ran out of money. To raise money, he enforced a tax law on everything, and the town became rebellious, so the King asks his board what to do, and they suggested to marry her off, suiters arrived but when they say her they ran, and she cried and started to flood the crops, so the King sent her on daily walks. On a walk, she meet a funny little man and kissed him hoping he'd become a prince, but instead she shrunk back down to her normal size, and all was well in the kingdom, except that tax law was still in order.

Dudley joins the Mounties and his first assignment is to blow up Snidely's log jam factory.

Willaim Tell is set to use his son to shoot an apple with an arrow, but he has lost his glasses and can't see a thing.

The mud maker asks a fairy for a son, unfortunately, his wish is granted.

Peabody and Sherman visit James McNeil Whistler, who can't paint his mother because her mind is only on cowboys and she won't stand still.

The miller had two unusual daughters: Slow White and Nose Red. Their love for nature drives their father mad and he sends them off to be wed.

A priceless art masterpiece is stolen in Toronto and Dudley Do-Right is called to the scene.

King Dom the 73rd is miserable because he's in love with a princess who is under a spell. To break the spell, he is told to step on a cat's tail. With the spell broken, a genie pops out and tells him that he will marry her and have a son that has a nose like a casaba melon. The Queen makes everyone wear a big fake nose to make him feel normal, but when he wants a girlfriend, the truth is revealed. He says the magic phrase, "I have a nose like a casaba melon," and his own nose curse is lifted. The end.

Bullwinkle shows us how to be a successful baseball umpire by making calls quickly so that the players can't complain.

Magellan has more than a few impediments to sailing around the world. He must sail around the world or else he'll surrender his hat to the king and pay off his butcher bill by 4:00 o'clock or he'll go to jail. Now, Mr. Peabody and Sherman must help him.

The kingdom of "Tootsie-Lavendre" is having a rough season until "The Popper" comes to save the day.

The Little Tinker is on his own for the first time and finds himself face to face with the Giant Troll.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman must help make Geronimo sign a peace treaty. But he proves to be a hard bargain.

Mr. Peabody must stop the barbaric Fungus Khan from crossing the border into China. He meets a guy named Chop Suey Louie, who decides to build a wall to prevent the barbarians from getting into his country.

Julius the Frog wants to become a person and needs the help of his fairy frog mother.

Snidely discovers that Dudley is allergic to marigolds so he makes a suit out of them, making it impossible for Dudley to capture him.

"He who wears these dentures is the rightful ruler of Bagdad." The history of Iraq and Baghdad - complete with their celebration of "Spanky MacFarland Day." (The name of the "Our Gang" actor actually was Spanky McFarland, but "Spanky MacFarland" is the one used for the street banner in this story!)

Mr. Peabody and Sherman visit the Marquis of Queensbury who is trying to put up a fight in his boxing class. But no matter how hard they try, the Marquis keeps getting thanked for what he does.

Jim Bowie is trying to cut a steak, but it is indestructible. Mr. Peabody and Sherman decide to go to an auction and buy him a better knife before a steak lovers' club comes to his restaurant. However, others are trying to outbid them.

Edgar Allen Poe can't think of any horror stories, so Mr. Peabody and Sherman decide to help him by taking him to some scary places, but none of them scare him at all.

The only way Delicia can solve his mother-in-law problems is to earn some money. Unfortunately, he only manages to scrape together 98 cents.

When Dudley and Nell switch places, Nell captures every criminal in Canada.

Cutie and the Beast search for a way to make him a Prince as well as find him the perfect mate.

Bullwinkle drops a needle pin to quote a poem but can't find it, so he goes to a bowling alley to easily pick up those pins to finish the poem.

Peabody and Sherman travel to Toronto, Canada in 1869. They meet up with Constable Archibald Willy, who tries to capture Ottowa O'Toole, a woman who's on a wanted poster. Sherman and Peabody pose as Ottowa's two sisters, "Hermoine" and "Gingold," in hopes that the ruse will trap Ottowa. Instead, they are kidnapped by O'Toole but quickly rescued by Constable Willy.

A rug salesman tries to sell the Prince a flying carpet that does not actually fly.

Sherman and Mr. Peabody travel to Cadiz, Spain in 1833 to watch a bullfight. Instead, they are treated to a bull...dog...fetching a stick. With the help of brave matador Porfirio, Sherman and Peabody overcome many obstacles in order to catch a real bull so that they may enjoy an authentic bullfight.

The Count becomes rich when he discovers a bird who can lay eggs filled with gold coins.

Dudley keeps a Top Secret project safe from Snidely Whiplash, who is actually in charge of it.

The time travelers arrive in the palace of Cheops, the Second King of the Fourth Dynasty in 3,000 BC in Giza, on the border of the Libyan Desert. Cheops attempts different building feats in an attempt to outdo his rival--his five-year-old nephew, Prince Ahmed. Sherman and Peabody advise Cheops to build The Great Pyramid in order to show up Ahmed.

The King decides to find a husband for his daughter, but becomes frustrated in his choice.

New York City - 1824. Audubon cannot finish painting portraits for his book on birds because of a bird thief. Sherman and Peabody play detective in order to discover and capture the chicken-napper.

In 1914 England, Mata Hari has stolen the plans to Britain's greatest secret. Peabody and Sherman must capture her before she turns those plans over to the Germans.

Mr. Peabody is sick, so Sherman will be taking us into the past instead. Today, he'll be helping Galileo drop the ball on the Leaning Tower of Pisa. But he'll also need Mr. Peabody's advice, so he decides to come back to the present for some assistance.

Esmerelda Fump is the ugly maid at the palace- but she finds that if she gets to sleep, she gets prettier and prettier. Seeing her in her "pretty" state, the prince wants to marry her, but she keeps having to go take a nap to avoid looking ugly. Finally, the prince calls the court wizard and asks him to make her into a "night owl"- which he does... literally!

In 1815, Peabody and Sherman get the Duke of Wellington to the Battle of Waterloo so he can defeat Napoleon.

Booby is awarded a red wishing hat, which transforms things at will.

Wee Willie Winkie runs afoul of Bullwinkle's Corner.

Nell gives both Snidely and Dudley a locket with her picture inside.

Joe White, son of well-known Snow White, goes out to earn his fortune. However, it turns out his mother's fame does him more harm than good.

One of Snidely's lackeys is mistaken for Inspector Fenwick's nephew.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman must take over the nursing duties of an injured Florence Nightingale during the Crimean War, and also infiltrate Russian lines.

Jack enters into the magic fountain business with an old trick up his sleeve. The tale is about a fountain of youth in a town called Escro. The moral at the end: "If anyone ever tells you to put your house in Escro, tell them no!"

Sherman and Peabody help Henry VIII's cook overcome many obstacles to find some jelly for the King's breakfast.

Potter's temper brings him bad luck when he becomes the victim of a group of witches trying to reach their quota.

A Hollywood talent scout picks Snidely as his new matinee idol.

A boy asks his father's permission to get married but must meet three requirements first.

Bullwinkle tells his story of Old Mother Hubbard, with a Jay Ward twist.

Traveling back to 1910, Sherman and Peabody help Barnaby Victor become the first-ever winner of the Indianapolis 500.

A King known for keeping his word is tricked into marrying an ugly witch.

Inspector Fenwick invents a machine to capture Snidely Whiplash, but Nell takes up his defense.

Bullwinkle is a waiter who sings to get his food.

Peabody and Sherman journey to the High Seas off the coast of Madagascar in 1697 to thwart the greedy machinations of the infamous and colorful pirate Captain Kidd.

A young Prince takes refuge in a palace where the King's six daughters have been turned into chickens.

Rocketing back through time and space to Texas in 1879. Mr. Peabody and Sherman help rustle up the Texas Rangers.

Bullwinkle tells us the story of Jack B. Nimble, played by Boris, whose business card is "High Jumps Inc., Candlewicks a Specialty." He gets $40 a week.

Cleopatra's evil brother is plotting to do away with her and become the pharaoh of Egypt. Mr. Peabody and Sherman must keep her safe so she can take her rightful place as Queen of the Nile.

We find that the shoemaker has to do many unlikely things to learn his trade.

Dudley disguises himself as Nell to capture Snidely Whiplash.

A fisherman and his wife are very poor, and he is happy. The wife, however, is unhappy, and wishes that he would catch more fish in order to make a better living. While fishing, he catches a talking fish and takes it home to prove to his wife what he had found. The fish does not want to leave and gives the couple three wishes if they let him stay. They fumble around and get mad at the fish, telling him that they wish he would shut up- thus destroying all their hopes of getting rich. Eventually, they end up poor and back to square one.

Bullwinkle recites the poem "Taffy." However, in the telling of the story, Boris (in the role of Taffy) begins to "bend and ad-lib" his parts. For example, instead of stealing "a piece of beef," Taffy steals a whole cow. Bullwinkle gets upset as the poem is changed, and he thinks that he's got Boris with the last line of the poem. ("I went to Taffy's house, Taffy was in bed. I took a marrow bone and hit him on the head.") However, upon arriving, Boris takes the marrow bone and hits Bullwinkle in the head, giving the story an unhappy ending, much to Boris' delight.

John Sullivan has a large mustache that is preventing him from competing in the boxing match.

Mr. Peabody teaches King Richard how to become the truly lion-hearted and win his special noble quest. But, none of Peabody's strategies work, so he tricks him into using a sword which he convinces Richard into thinking is magic.

Little Red Riding Hood is SO contrite after her booby-trapped basket explodes in the Wolf's face- especially as she's just discovered that he's a member of Riding Hoods Anonymous, a program designed to help him kick "the Riding Hood habit." And this is just the beginning of the story! A wicked, wicked satire that takes on 12-step programs, the DAR and the NRA in only four minutes!

Lord Nelson is unable to go into battle against the Spanish fleet as his crew has left port minus one important commodity. Now it's up to Peabody to help him get into battle.

The court jester tries to fool the King by providing him with fake princesses.

Bullwinkle reads a poem about Barbara Frietchie, who ends up being a sewing lady for the Union Army in the Civil War and tries to sew a flag for the Union. Boris plays a Confederate soldier trying to stop Barbara...

Dudley joins the Mounties and his first assignment is to blow up Snidely's log jam factory.

Alfred Nobel has trouble testing his explosives because he does not have a good place to test them. Now, Peabody and Sherman must help him find a safe place to test the TNT.

Androcles finds it is often helpful to befriend a lion, especially when you are thrown into a lion pit yourself.

The Queen of Hearts (Rocky) bakes heart-shaped cookies. The Knave of Hearts is Boris.

Snidely impersonates the Colonel and tells all of the Mounties that they must replace their horses with rocking horses.

A Wicked Fairy casts a beautiful Princess into a never-ending sleep. The Prince who comes to awaken her changes his mind when he sees a chance for commercial exploitation-and turns her castle into a theme park and charges admission for the public to view her. (It is surely mere coincidence that the Prince is a dead ringer for Walt Disney!) When the Wicked Fairy shows up and wants her cut of the action, the Prince must dispose of her if he is to retain control of "Sleepingbeautyland." But is the Princess REALLY asleep? Who's exploiting whom?

Calamity Jane tries everything to have a calamity to live up to her name, but she keeps failing with her good luck. Can Mr. Peabody think of something to help her become the desperado she was written to be?

The dwarfs are hiding Snow White from the evil Queen.

Bullwinkle barricades himself against some very bratty kids bent on committing mayhem.

Kitty Hawk, a troublesome bird, nests in the Wright brothers' plane and prevents them from making their historic flight. So Peabody disguises a rock as an egg to distract the bird without hurting it.

In 1914 England, Mata Hari has stolen the plans to Britain's greatest secret. Peabody and Sherman must capture her before she turns those plans over to the Germans.

This is the story of the Pied Piper who plays a flatt, not a flute, and who drives out all the mice in the town. The strange little man has the ability to create pies from his pipe! The King loves his tobacco pie! The only problem is that when the Queen takes a bite of the pie, she disappears!

Alden Farquhar has good looks and a sense of humor, but no money. While strolling along one day, he runs into a witch who turns him into a big, beastly ogre. People are now scared of him and shower him with money. Now rich, he must find a maiden to turn him back.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman travel to 1810 where they meet Napoleon who is missing his royal suspenders. So, Peabody and Sherman must get them back from some pirates. But when they get them back, they're shocked to see everyone is glad with Napoleon occupied.

Rumpelstiltskin uses the magic of publicity to convince everyone that his client can spin gold out of straw.

Dudley Do-Right captures what he believes to be a Centaur and makes it his new mount.

Lucretia Borgia, the worlds best poison artist has just gotten a 12th husband who is snacking on furniture. Peabody and Sherman try to get the husband to leave Lucretia but he loves her too much to bail out on her. So, Peabody creates a special potion for him that will make the man impervious to poison so he will live and not leave his wife.

Sweet Little Beet is a poor orphan girl forced into a life of drudgery and ill-treated by her wicked (and UGLY!) stepsisters. A mysterious (and invisible) Prince promises to wed the pure-in-heart maiden who can see him. Sweet Little Beet's wicked (and UGLY!) stepsisters make fools of themselves trying-but Little Beet succeeds! Will she marry the Prince? Well, not exactly... there's a problem.

Bullwinkle stops Boris from cutting down his beloved trees.

Louis Pasteur's cow thinks she is a chicken after a case of amnesia, so Mr. Peabody decides to find a remedy.

Forest Primeval attempts to cheat Annie Oakley at a shooting match until a certain genius dog and his boy intervene.

In a pond in the Middle West, an ugly duckling wants to be a star, so he has a face lift that makes him good-looking, and missing the opportunity to play an ugly role.

Bullwinkle tells us the story of Jack B. Nimble, played by Boris, whose business card is "High Jumps Inc., Candlewicks a Specialty." He gets $40 a week.

Don Juan has lost his mojo when he finds out that his love for onions has given him bad breath and he is losing all the ladies. Only Peabody and Sherman can help him recover his reputation. They try to make him give up onions, but that doesn't work. Can Mr. Peabody find a remedy?

An old man who has three sons plans to give one of them a golden goose, but he first must find out which one deserves it. A rather dimwitted guy trades his stale sandwich to a goblin for a golden goose. Several people try to take the goose, but when they touch it, they are forever stuck to it!

Snidely Whiplash opens his own mounted police force.

King Midas, the most miserly man alive, embarks on an advertising campaign to make people 'like' him, but places a mean tax on the people of his kingdom.

Ponce de Leon's men have overdosed on water from the fountain of youth and changed into babies – just before an enemy attack.

Bullwinkle changes this story to "Maury Had a Little Lamb" because Rocky is a boy.

The American Army is ordered not to fire on their British enemies until they “can see the whites of their eyes.” Unfortunately, the British are wearing sunglasses.

Red owns a fur shop and finds she needs a wolf pelt. Meanwhile, the wolf is going to bring goodies to Grandma's house, and so Red does the riding hood bit in reverse. But there's quite a twist at the end as the wolf goes into the fur business for himself...

Nell gives both Snidely and Dudley a locket with her picture inside.

The Wolf, seeking a life of ease, attempts to marry one of the three pigs.

Willaim Tell is set to use his son to shoot an apple with an arrow, but he has lost his glasses and can't see a thing.

Marconi's radio is wired underwater in the Venice Canal and Mr. Peabody must drain the canals to help him.

Beauty is tricked by the wicked witch and is not put to sleep but is forced to put other people to sleep... even the prince.

Dudley Do-Right pays a visit to Snidely's Vic Whiplash gym where he loses all of his strength.

Peabody and Sherman aid Lord Douglas and his mountain climbers in reaching the peak of the Alps.

The Prince must make like a bird and daringly rescue Rapunzel.

Inspector Fenwick uses Nell's coming out party to steal Snidely's hat, making him a laughing stock.

A young Prince takes refuge in a palace where the King's six daughters have been turned into chickens.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman help Christopher Columbus discover that the earth is round. TRIVIA: It is a popular misconception that Columbus discovered America or that the Earth was round. The Earth’s shape had been common knowledge for centuries and Columbus was actually a terrible person who nearly drove the Caribbean natives to extinction. Also, Columbus was the first European contact with the Caribbean, Central America, and South America - not North America as this episode suggests.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman help Lawrence of Arabia with his mission of stopping Turkey's plans to overthrow Arabia. However, Lawrence needs all the help he can get.

Julius the Frog wants to become a person and needs the help of his fairy frog mother.

Snidely replaces Dudley with a robot in an effort to infiltrate the Mounties.

Both the Duke and the fair maiden have the reddest hair in the nation. Lucky for them, red hair is the magic word.

Bullwinkle climbs a cherry tree.

Gutenberg needs to find paper to meet his five o clock deadline, and he must rewrite the stories when he accidentally prints the paper with invisible ink.

Sir Issac Newton can't prove his law of gravity, so Mr. Peabody and Sherman travel to 1686, to make sure that Isaac Newton will have the iconic encounter with an apple that leads him to develop the Theory of Gravity.

Grizelda wins the Witch of the Year Award for being so nasty, but then falls in love with a handsome prince - so she decides to enchant herself and make herself a princess. It works, but her broom keeps following her, so she gets it a dustpan (called a "gride"), and they have a double wedding - Bride and Groom, and Gride and Broom...

Snidely Whiplash kidnaps Nell on her wedding day and holds her hostage in the sawmill.

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