Davey and Goliath: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Black Best Friend]]: Jonathan Reed is one of the earliest examples.
* [[Black Best Friend]]: Jonathan Reed is one of the earliest examples.
* [[Claymation]]
* [[Claymation]]
* [[Four Fingered Hands]]
* [[Four-Fingered Hands]]
* [[Jesus Saves]]
* [[Jesus Saves]]
* [[Missing Episode]]: Several episodes have been embargoed from syndication by the ELCA, a "mainline" denomination, mostly due to [[Values Dissonance]] and/or [[Political Correctness]] issues. They have been released on DVD.
* [[Missing Episode]]: Several episodes have been embargoed from syndication by the ELCA, a "mainline" denomination, mostly due to [[Values Dissonance]] and/or [[Political Correctness]] issues. They have been released on DVD.

Revision as of 03:15, 9 January 2014

The sight of a kids who looks like Orel having a happy family? Mind boggling.

Art Clokey, the creator of Gumby, produced this syndicated religious series in the early 1960s for one of the predecessors of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. It centered on a young boy named Davey Hansen and his talking dog, Goliath. When Goliath speaks, only Davey can hear him. More information: http://www.daveyandgoliath.org/

Some episodes of The Simpsons include mocking references to Davey and Goliath. Adult Swim's Moral Orel started as a direct parody (minus the dog and plus some Dead Baby Comedy), but eventually blossomed into something more, at least until it was Screwed By the Network.


This series provides examples of: