From weird facts to creepy storylines, listed below are the entire reasons you must rewatch The Powerpuff Girls once more.

Ready to really feel old? The Powerpuff Girls celebrates its 20th anniversary this month. When collection author Craig McCracken first created the display, he had no concept it might be successful and assumed handiest "hipster college kids" would watch it. Instead, the show went directly to be one of the greatest cartoons of the '90s, spurring a film and numerous spin-offs, including a 2016 reboot (that I love to pretend doesn't exist). 

Although the caricature's a vintage, and you almost certainly still have a Blossom, Bubbles, and Buttercup T-shirt to your closet, there may be nonetheless so much in regards to the display you don't know. From weird facts to storylines that had been manner creepier than you take into account, here are all of the causes you should skip the crappy reboot and watch the original everywhere again.

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1. They were at the beginning known as "Whoopass Stew."

Before changing into The Powerpuff Girls, the display was once firstly referred to as Whoopass Stew, and instead of their magical powers coming from the mysterious Chemical X, they came from opening "a can of whoopass." Needless to say, however Cartoon Network made the creators alternate the title since, you know, it wasn't exactly kid suitable. 

2. The display used to be never meant to be a kids' display.

Although we all loved the display as youngsters, animators didn't at the start envision it that way. "I don't write for 6-year-olds," Craig told The Washington Post in 2000. "I write for myself." In fact, when the display's pilot was performed for children in a focal point team, the children hated it, with one 11-year-old hard that Craig "should be fired." The youngsters discovered the show "gross" and had been disturbed via the Powerpuff girls' loss of hands. Fortunately, the network stuck through the display and produced it anyway hoping it might gain a cult following. The truth the show went on to be liked through people of all ages used to be a surprise for both the studio and the community.

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3. Everything about Ms. Bellum was once inappropriate.

Even as kids, it was glaring that the mayor's assistant, Ms. Bellum, was once supposed to be somewhat of a sex object. After all, you never noticed her face, and the animation took generous liberty with ogling at her breasts. “Whether this joked labored or now not, the speculation was once that she’s the typical, classic scorching assistant that you would expect each politician or executive would have," Craig said in a behind-the-scenes documentary. "So you don’t display her perfect feature; her perfect characteristic is her thoughts.”

Cartoon Network originally advised the animators they had to tone down the cleavage, however after storyboards have been approved by means of the network, the animators left a couple of buttons off her shirt and sneakily passed it to production. And if the innuendos about Ms. Bellum weren't obtrusive enough, her home address is 69 Yodelinda Valley Lane. "Yodel in the Valley" is slang for, ahem, cunnilingus.

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4. There had been numerous grimy easter eggs lurking in the background, like this one.

Like the entire grimy jokes involving Ms. Bellum, there have been are also a lot of others hiding inconspicuously within the background. In the episode "Paste Makes Waste," there is a fast shot of a child's drawing of "daddy," who's it appears an indignant alcoholic.

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5. And this one.

In the episode "Superfriends," Princess Morbucks rides a roller coaster named after her. The signal within the background says, "Thank you for riding the princess." Considering Princess is a literal child, the implication is slightly creepy.

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6. The Rowdyruff boys had been technically the Powerpuff girls' brothers.

The Rowdyruff boys are basically the male version of the Powerpuff girls. They made their debut in season one as villains, and the girls defeated them by tapping into the lads' weak point: girl kisses. Of route, this plot level were given creepier in later episodes when it was once revealed that villainous monkey Mojo Jojo used to be chargeable for creating each the Rowdyruff boys and the Powerpuff girls, making them technically siblings. Ew. 

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7. There was once an episode that was once banned from TV.

The final episode of the unique series was mysteriously now not aired within the U.S. The episode used to be a couple of magical gnome who turns Townsville into a peaceful utopia in alternate for the girls giving up their powers. Although the townspeople worship the gnome like a cult, his overwhelming power leaves the city robbed of unfastened will. It's been rumored the community disapproved of the political and spiritual undertones in the show, but Craig denied it. 

"They banned it because they claimed that the metal beams in the destroyed buildings looked too much like crosses and one of the hippies looked like Jesus," he wrote on his Tumblr. "That was never our intention at all, we were really surprised that they banned it." 

Although the writer maintains the episode was banned for harmless reasons, that also hasn't stopped lovers from discovering it to be one of the creepiest episodes.

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8. There was intentional innuendo.

There are numerous movies and listicles about the show's numerous dirty insinuations, from Fuzzy Lumpkins having sex with a mountain of mud to an extremely phallic-looking pencil. I truthfully wouldn't have the time to record them right here, however TV Tropes has a long list of naughty jokes to waste your time browsing through.

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9. Mojo Jojo was once voiced through the same guy who did Ghostface in "Scream."

They had been each played by means of Roger Jackson. Interesting, huh? "When I go to conventions, people are fascinated by Ghostface, but they love Mojo Jojo," he informed The AV Club. "That’s an entirely different relationship I’m very appreciative of."

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10. Buttercup's authentic identify was....in reality?

Judging via the entire Buttercup pics on this listicle, it's clear that she's my favorite. That's why it was once somewhat sudden to find that Buttercup wasn't her unique title. In the unique short, her title was Bud, a reputation so terrible I'm now not certain why any person thought that used to be ok. Fortunately, the animators brainstormed and came up with a reputation that had a better flow. But still, Bud? Really?

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11. For a youngsters' show, there was once a whole lot of loss of life.

A big rule in cartoons is that characters by no means die, and in the event that they do, they never die completely. The Powerpuff Girls had a handful of everlasting deaths, from the fourth Powerpuff woman, Bunny, to Professor Utonium’s school roommate, Dick Hardly. And the way they died weren't delightful easier. Dick was blown up in a manufacturing unit and deficient Bunny, in one of the crucial saddest episodes, killed herself to save lots of the opposite Powerpuffs. Dark.

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12. Him in reality used to be meant to be Satan.

Although it used to be closely implied, the scary demon used to be simplest known as "Him." However, Craig later admitted that he handiest did this because the community would not let him say "devil." 

"He's actually supposed to be the Devil but we're not allowed to have any religious references in our shows, so we had to make him a little more vague and refer to him as 'Him,' the ultimate evil," Craig said back in 2002.

Knowing this may occasionally make those rewatches even better.

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