

They start fighting sloppy and suddenly turns into a real fight where there's blood and stuff.

It then showed Beavis looking in his wallet to get his money to buy something I guess, but he realizes there's no money so he gets mad and asks Butthead if he took his money and Butthead repliesīeavis says angrily, "Dammit Butthead, give me back my money."īutthead says, "Too late, I wasted it on nachos dumbass."īeavis gets angrier and punches Butthead. I was confused, but just thinking it was a fake death of Beavis, I continued watching. It just came to the name of the episode it was named "Beavis and Butthead in the Amazing Death of Beavis". It didn't show the intro of Beavis and Butthead laughing and facing at each other. I decided to download it because I was bored. An ad popped up saying free download of an unaired Beavis and Butthead episode. I was 16 when I first saw "Frog Baseball." I was on the computer late at night and was on a Beavis and Butthead website of episodes to download. It was a two and a half minute episode about Beavis and Butthead using a frog to be the ball and the bat to hit it and at the end of the episode they managed to hit the dog, but part two was never shown. While the character of Daria originated on Beavis & Butt-Head, with the show’s pilot revolving around her family leaving the boys’ hometown of Highland, Texas for a new city - when Daria’s mom mentions to Daria that she might try not to judge people until she gets to know them, because “you don’t want it to be Highland all over again,” Daria replies with “Not much chance of that happening… unless there’s uranium in the drinking water here, too.I've been a huge fan of Beavis and Butthead since the first episode A.K.A pilot came out in 1992 which was named "Frog Baseball".

I was aware of their existence in the ’90s, of course, but largely because I was a fervent fan of Daria, the MTV spinoff featuring the quiet, brainy, bitter girl who had nothing positive to say about her weirdo classmates - or anything at all, really.

When it launched last year, though, I was watching the revival with fresh, adult eyes - since I never engaged with Beavis and Butt-Head in their heyday. The question, when it came to the first season of Paramount+’s revived Beavis and Butt-Head last year, was simple: Would the antics of two teenage nitwits translate from the 1990s to today? And to creator/star Mike Judge‘s credit, they actually did: The boys might be watching Lil Nas X and viral videos these days instead of Milli Vanilli and Red Hot Chili Peppers, but their idiocy endures. It only took a couple of decades, but I think I finally understand Beavis & Butt-Head.
