Tumgik
#ghostbusters franchise
fandomnerd9602 · 1 day
Text
Y/N walks up to Phoebe…
Y/N: hey Pheebs, just wanted to check in on-
Phoebe runs up and hugs Y/N tightly…
Y/N: wow. I never took you for the touchy feelings type
Phoebe: different variables bring out different reactions.
Y/N: I love you too, my favorite nerd
Phoebe actually blushes as she holds right to Y/N…
Tumblr media
48 notes · View notes
Tumblr media
SUMMARY: Following a ghost invasion of Manhattan, paranormal enthusiasts Erin Gilbert and Abby Yates, nuclear engineer Jillian Holtzmann, and subway worker Patty Tolan band together to stop the otherworldly threat.
Mod Sus: Saw this in theater when it came out. Many people say it's bad and trash and blahblahblah. I think it's not perfect but it's good and fun when it gets to action. I remember being so hyped after seeing it, loving it. (also if I were into women Holtzmann would be my awakening)
85 notes · View notes
tomdestry · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
GHOSTBUSTERS II Release date: June 16, 1989 directed by Ivan Reitman
1K notes · View notes
Text
There were reports of paranormal activity once again in Gotham, and it was getting more annoying than usual. Thankfully, the approval for establishing a franchise in Gotham had gone well, and it was usually went off after something had gone wrong. It did.
Just not in the way the Ghostbusters expected it to go, but as a citizen of Gotham, you could’ve seen this coming a mile away.
——————————————————————————————————————————————-
Daniel “Danny” Fenton (Phantom) decided to transfer over to Gotham, after Phantom had been unexpectedly banned by superficial “moralistic” people who were full on crazy. Once he transferred, he, along with his friends, transferred to Gotham, hearing that it had a lot of paranormal activity in the area. They were warned that the “average” criminal element was usually handled by either the Gotham City Police Dept., or by the elusive “Bat-Man”.
Only two days into working as a Ghostbuster in Gotham, and their first fight with the cult, dubbed the “League of Shadows”, and they believed that Ra's al Ghul is somehow immortal. While it sounds far-fetched and insane, it’s later revealed that the science behind it is pretty sound. The nasty side-effects as they find out, outweigh the help to restore vitality like it does to Ra’s. So when they summoned up ghosts, they handled it pretty well. That was when the Bat Family decided to drop in.
Batman (Bruce Wayne) at the time, thought that the Ghostbusters were a bunch of con artists, mainly due to the fact that he did do deep digging into the product that was Ghostbusters. That changed the night the League of Shadows tried to summon a deity. It didn’t go so well, and instead an army of ghosts were causing a ruckus, thus causing the Ghostbusters to arrive on the scene. They tried talking the LoS down, and when that didn’t happen and they stuck their ghost on them, the GBs handled it like pros, capturing the spirits and trapping them easily, including a few experimental products that they decided to field test right then and there (the tripod dual trap worked like as easy as a store bought pie). It surprised Batman that these Ghostbusters were legit and not some kind of hoax.
Meanwhile, the Bat Family was trying to figure out the four new Ghostbusters while handling Ra’s al Ghul’s plan.
97 notes · View notes
stuckasmain · 13 days
Text
When I saw afterlife it sparked or more “resparked” my ghostbusters obession like crazy. I regret deleting my sideblog (there is no blog only zuul)
Just saw Frozen empire. Is it gonna happen again? Who’s to say lmao
13 notes · View notes
tomeandflickcorner · 1 year
Text
Episode Review: The Real Ghostbusters- It’s a Jungle Out There
Tumblr media
This was quite an interesting episode, despite a few plotholes here and there.
Over at a shipyard, some people are unloading a crate from a ship during a storm.  A woman that the Ghostbusters Wiki refers to as Professor Joanna Barnes is overseeing things, instructing the workmen to be careful, as the crate contains a 3000 year old statue.  Of course, seconds after she says this, a bolt of lightning just happens to sever the crane cable holding the crate up, resulting in the crate falling and breaking open.  Professor Barns and the foreman both rush over and are relieved to find that the stature appears to be undamaged.  But none of them notice the smoke pouring out from the statue, with the smoke solidifying into an animal-like demon.  This demon is apparently called Ral, though there’s never a scene where we’re informed about that.  At least, not really.  I’ll explain that a little later.
Anyway, it then cuts to the Firehouse, where the Ghostbusters and Janine are watching a movie that’s apparently supposed to be a Lassie film.  As the movie comes to a close, they all start talking about how there’s nothing more wholesome than the bond between a boy and his dog.  The conversation then shifts to Peter talking about how nice it would be if they had a dog around the Firehouse.  Slimer, who was trying to eat a large sandwich nearby, doesn’t seem pleased by this, and I can’t blame him.  After all, isn’t Slimer basically the Ghostbuster’s pet ‘dog?’ While this conversation is going on, a random dog just happens to be passing by the Firehouse, ducking down in the archway over the main door to seek shelter from the rain.  As the dog huddles down, a cloud of smoke that was obviously meant to be Ral passed by and engulfed the dog.  As the smoke clears, the dog begins scratching at the door. Janine instructs Slimer to see who is at the door, as she has to answer the phone.  And the Ghostbusters who were sitting on the couch briefly disappear with no explanation.  When Slimer pokes his head outside, he sees the dog and quickly lets him in.  Slimer calls Janine (who must have forgotten all about the phone call) and the Ghostbusters (who have reappeared as quickly as they’d disappeared) downstairs.  They immediately fall in love with the dog and, noticing that the dog doesn’t have a collar, decide to keep him on the spot, calling him Barkley.
For some reason, the Ghostbusters give Slimer the task of feeding Barkley.  No offense to Slimer, but that doesn’t strike me as the best idea as I don’t think Slimer knows the first thing about what foods were safe for dog consumption.  And this is kinda proven when Slimer mixes up a bowl of random stuff.  But then, much to Slimer’s shock, Barkley stands up on his hind legs, picking up the dog bowl in his front paws.  He then walks over to the nearby trash can in a humanlike manner to throw out the dinner Slimer gave him.  To top it all off, Barkley even starts yelling at Slimer in clear English as he helps himself to Slimer’s sandwich.  Understandably, this freaks Slimer out, and he hides under the covers of Peter’s bed.  Upon realizing that Slimer is scared of Barkely, Peter tries to assure Slimer that the dog isn’t something to be scared of, and suggests that Slimer go with him to see for himself.  Slimer agrees to this, apparently not thinking to mention that he heard Barkley speaking.  Though it doesn’t matter really, because Barkley starts talking to Peter as well, reacting angrily when Peter tried to get him to perform typical dog tricks like ‘beg’ and ‘fetch my slippers.’  Like with Slimer, this sends Peter running into the sleeping quarters to hide under the covers.  Egon, Ray and Winston all are skeptical when Peter tries to tell them what Barkley did. Until Barkly appears in the doorway, with a Proton Pack strapped to his back.  Barkley proceeds to threaten the Ghostbusters before making a break for it, commandeering the Ecto-1 and driving off, ignoring Janine’s yells for him to stop.
As you might imagine, everyone is understandably confused by what just happened.  To further mystify things, Janine shows them her pet goldfish, which she must have just gotten for this episode.  Like with Barkley, they are acting aggressively towards them, with one of the goldfish brandishing a miniature harpoon at them.  (Don’t ask me where the goldfish got a miniature harpoon, or a fish-sized pair of swimming goggles.)  Shortly afterwards, the Ghostbusters get a call about some sort of disturbance at the city zoo.  Since the Ecto-1 is still missing, the Ghostbusters decide to hail a cab.  Only for them to discover the cab is being driven by a gorilla. They quickly realize all the cars and other motorized vehicles around them are also being driven by animals. There’s even a rhino directing traffic. Obviously, something really strange is going on.  Fortunately, that’s when Winston spots the Ecto-1 parked nearby, where Barkley must have abandoned it.  They do their best to sneak out of the cab and make it over to the Ecto-1 without being seen by the anthropomorphized animals, but they’re quickly spotted.  Still, they manage to make it into the Ecto-1 just in time and speed off.
Upon reaching the zoo, the Ghostbusters feel it’s much too quiet.  Upon checking his PKE Meter, Egon realizes there’s a particularly high reading, enough to power a small city.  At that moment, the Ghostbusters are all ambushed by a large group of animals, who manages to strip them of their gear before locking them up inside an empty animal enclosure.  That’s when Ral makes his grand entrance.  He goes off on this whole spiel about how humans tricked and imprisoned him within the stone statue thousands of years ago, and he’s been awaiting his chance to seek vengeance on mankind for that insult.  To achieve that, he’s created an army of anthropomorphized animals to take over the city.  With that, Ral leads his animal army off to do just that.  Yeah, this is Ral’s ultimate plan.  Not the most probable evil plot, but whatever.
Fortunately, Slimer had managed to slip away when the Ghostbusters got captured and fetched Janine, who pulls up to the zoo just as Ral and the animals are marching out to lay siege on the city.  (Which explains why the Ghostbusters took a cab and didn’t borrow her car.)  After evading being spotted, Janine and Slimer quickly locate the Ghostbusters, and Janie unlocks the cage door upon finding the keys (somehow).  Upon being freed, Peter states he has a plan to stop Ral.  His plan seems to involve tricking the animals into following in the Ecto-1 (by having Slimer wear Winston’s uniform and Janine wearing Egon’s uniform while having dummies posing as Ray and Peter in the backseat).  When the animal army chases after the Ecto-1 and the ‘imposters,’ the actual Ghostbusters come out of hiding, with Ray and Winston in the Ecto-2 and Peter and Egon now wearing what appear to be some rocket-powered roller skates that Egon had just invented.  They do their best to shoot Ral with their Proton Streams, but Ral proves to be too fast and agile for them because of his animal reflexes. Just when things are looking dire (with the animal army catching up to Janine and Slimer and getting ready to attack them), Egon gets the brilliant idea to use Ral’s animal senses against him, by instructing Ray to tune the Ecto-2’s loudspeaker to a high frequency, thereby turning it into an improvised dog whistle.  The high-pitched sound ends up incapacitating Ral long enough for the Ghostbusters to trap him.  With Ral trapped in a Ghost Trap, his control on the animals is broken, and they all wander off before laying a hand on Janine and Slimer.  And Janine happily cries out that the guys must have stopped Ral. Which, to my knowledge, is the first time they referred to the demon by name within the episode.  So there’s no explanation as to how Janine figured out Ral’s name.  Did Ral tell the Ghostbusters his name during his monologue and I missed it?
As Janine and Slimer breathe a sigh of relief, they spot Barkley across the street.  Slimer happily starts to make his way over to the dog, only for Barkley to run right past him, right into the arms of a little girl who happily embraces him.  It turns out that the dog actually belongs to the little girl, and that his real name is Sydney.  The little girl thanks Janine and Slimer for finding her lost dog.
As the episode ends, the Ghostbusters talk about how they’ll miss having a dog around, though they are glad Sydney was reunited with his owner.  That’s when Janine comes in, saying that she got them a new puppy. She then calls in the puppy, who announces that his name is Buster.  Upon hearing the puppy speak, the Ghostbusters all freak out and run out of the room.  And Janine starts to laugh, calling after them that Buster was just a battery-operated toy.  Gotta say, Janine.  That was bordering on mean.
Yeah, I got some questions about this episode.  First of all, what exactly was Ral trying to do?  I know he said he was going to lead the animals under his control to take over the city, but was that really it?  And why exactly was he imprisoned in the statue in the first place?  Also, may I ask where all the people in the city got to when the anthropomorphized animals were roaming around?  Were they all hiding inside?  I just have so many unanswered questions.
(Click here for more Ghostbusters reviews)
3 notes · View notes
crazydiscostu · 1 year
Text
Ghostbusters (1984) Film Locations
#ghostbusters VR film tourism!
Apps like Wander have given VR users the opportunity to access Google Street view in a whole new way. We take a look at some of the iconic filming locations from the film Ghostbusters and where to find them. Join us in the first of a series of virtual film location tours! Wander VR The best way to experience these locations is via apps like Wander. Wander VR is a virtual reality platform that…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
inga-don-studio · 1 month
Text
I learned tonight that some of my coworkers DON’T pretend to be ghostbusters when using the backpack vacuum and I’ve never been more disappointed in my peers. Like look at this (stock image) and tell me what self respecting adult wouldn’t have the dang theme song playing in their head on loop ]:<
Tumblr media
75 notes · View notes
Text
Sometimes I love ghostbusters and can watch and engage without actually thinking and then sometimes my brain actually works and starts screaming because why the actual fuck did Venkman take what was apparently a pretty strong sedative on his date with Dana?!?! Why did he just have that loaded and ready to go?!?! Why was everyone just okay with this?!?! Egon doesn't even question it when Peter tells him he's got Dana zonked out (okay so I guess having a possessed person sniffing round your jars and such is a bit of a distraction but still)!!!!
Peter....what the fuck dude!?!
40 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
SUMMARY: Three parapsychologists forced out of their university funding set up shop as a unique ghost removal service in New York City, attracting frightened yet skeptical customers.
43 notes · View notes
jamiemegad3thnot · 6 months
Text
Gender? More like, give me EXACTLY what Harold Ramis and Sigourney Weaver have (*in a totally non-threatening way*)
52 notes · View notes
theoniprince · 28 days
Text
I am just two minutes into the game and I am already tearing up. All the love and appreciation for Harold Ramis ❤❤❤
13 notes · View notes
silver-embersss · 2 months
Text
I. did not realise that the ghostbusters fandom was still so active on tumblr... anyone who posts ghostbusters stuff reblog or like this post please i need more ghostbusters mutuals i beg
12 notes · View notes
tomeandflickcorner · 1 year
Text
Episode Review- The Real Ghostbusters: The Boogeyman is Back
Tumblr media
Well, this is quite the landmark episode.  Not only do we have the return of an old advisory, but it’s also the first appearance of new recurring characters.  Although, that second part is probably not something to be pleased about.
We open with the Ghostbusters battling a ghost atop the Twin Towers.  (Because, in case you’ve forgotten, this show aired long before 9/11.) I do give the episode some credit because the ghost they’re fighting does have an interesting design.  Anyway, this particular ghost ends up putting up a pretty good fight, countering the Ghostbusters’ attempts to trap them by firing off laser beams from their eye.  In a shocking turn of events, one of the ghost’s attacks knocks Egon off the side of the building, and for a brief moment, the episode actually makes us think that Egon seemingly fell to his death.  Of course, the show isn’t about to go THAT dark.  Conveniently, Winston happened to be piloting the Ecto-2 and managed to catch Egon as he fell.  Before much longer, the Ghostbusters are able to successfully trap the ghost they’re fighting.  With the job done, Winston, Peter and Ray (as well as Slimer, who tagged along on this case), all express their relief that Egon is okay.  Egon, on the other hand, insists he wasn’t the least bit shaken by his near-death experience.  Though I can’t help but notice that his voice seemed a bit more wooden than usual.
Later on, the Ghostbusters are back at the Firehouse, getting ready to go to bed.  Once again, the Ghostbusters start bringing up the fact that Egon nearly died that evening, and remarking how brave he was about the whole ordeal.  Which seemed a bit insensitive to me.  Did they consider the possibility that Egon might not want to be reminded about what nearly happened?  Either way, Egon once again insists that he wasn’t the least bit shaken after his almost fatal fall.  However, as the others fall asleep, we get our first real indication that Egon isn’t as stoic about things as he was pretending to be.  In fact, he’s having difficulty falling asleep, with his mind constantly going back to what nearly happened to him.  To try and calm his nerves, Egon decides to head downstairs to make himself a mug of hot chocolate and watch a movie.  Unfortunately, the movie he selects ends up being a particularly grim movie about vampires, which obviously doesn’t help matters. (Incidentally, I found myself relating to Egon here.  I remember this one time I woke up from a nightmare.  I turned on the TV to try and calm down and was immediately greeted by the image of the Blue Man Group.  Not exactly the sort of image you want to see when you’re trying to get back to sleep after a bad dream.)  
Still, Egon manages to make it to the end of the movie.  Though he’s seemingly even more shaken up than before.  Regardless, he forces himself to go back to bed, telling himself he’s not scared and that he’s brave, like the others said.  (Someone should really tell him that bravery isn’t the absence of fear.)  Despite Egon’s attempts at giving himself a pep talk, it’s clear that he actually is scared.  It then cuts to that other dimension, where the Boogieman has been trapped since Egon’s Ghost Bomb sealed him away, way back in The Boogieman Cometh.  But it seems that the intensity of Egon’s fear is enough to break through the seal that’s kept the Boogieman trapped.  Which grants the Boogieman the chance to escape once again, emerging through the closet portal that opened up within the Firehouse.
Yeah, I have questions about this.  You’re telling me that nobody else has felt intense fear during that span of time since we last saw the Boogieman?  We’re really supposed to believe that the fear Egon is feeling right now is more intense and potent than anybody else on Earth has experienced?  Seems a bit much to swallow, but for the sake of the plot, we just have to accept it.
Anyway, when the Ghostbusters see that the Boogieman is roaming free again, they’re quick to grab their Proton Packs and open fire.  The Boogieman jumps out of the window, and the Ghostbusters all run outside to pursue him.  But despite their best efforts, the Boogieman manages to elude them by taking advantage of the lingering fear Egon is still feeling.  The Ghostbusters announce that they have to find the Boogieman quickly, because as long as he’s loose in the city, the children are all in danger. Especially, as Winston states, the Junior Ghostbusters.
Oh, who are the Junior Ghostbusters?  That’s a good question, because this is the very first time they’re referenced in the show, despite the Ghostbusters acting like they’ve known them for a while. From what I can gather from this episode, the Junior Ghostbusters are three kids, Donald, Jason and Catherine, who are the sole members of some Ghostbusters fanclub.  Only they’re in close enough contact with the actual Ghostbusters to have their phone number, and Jason was even given his own PKE Meter from Egon.
At the current time, the three kids are apparently having a sleepover at Jason’s house, with Donald in the middle of telling the other two a scary story involving a monster going after a boy.  Donald’s thrilling story is cut off when Catherine and Jason beg him to stop. They insist they’re not scared, but that it’s getting late, and Jason’s mother had said that she wouldn’t allow them to have any more sleepovers if they didn’t get a full night’s sleep.  At that moment, the bedside table lamp starts to flicker and dies, and the PKE Meter that Jason got from Egon activates.   This is because the Boogieman is coming closer.  Which is driven home when we see the Boogieman frightening a little puppy that was sitting atop the roof of a high-rise somewhere.  Which begs the question as to what horrible pet owner put that puppy out onto the roof in the first place.  And no, I refuse to accept the explanation that it’s the same as putting the dog outside in the backyard for the night.  What if the puppy got too close to the edge?  Please explain to me how this doesn’t count as animal neglect.
Anyway, Jason determines that the PKE Meter is displaying negative readings, and he decides to call up Egon to ask him about it.  Jason’s phone call comes right as Egon was admitting to his teammates how it was his fault the Boogieman was loose, and reminding them that the Boogieman wasn’t actually a ghost, so their equipment will not have much effect on him. When Jason tells Egon that his PKE Meter was showing a valance reading of minus nine, Egon realizes that it means the Boogieman is very close to them.  He instructs the kids to get out of the house and wait outside for them to arrive.  Of course, the Junior Ghostbusters don’t get the chance to do anything, because the Boogieman bursts through the bedroom door like the Kool-Aid Man, blocking their escape.  (And I’m wondering why Jason’s mother didn’t seem to respond to the sound of the door breaking open, because we never see her make an appearance.)
Thankfully, the Ghostbusters arrive at Jason’s apartment before the Boogieman can actually do anything to the kids.  But the Boogieman gets away again by roaring at them before once again jumping out of the window.  After checking up on the kids, the Ghostbusters decide to head back to the Firehouse to come up with a plan.  And then they just leave the Junior Ghostbusters behind, not bothering to think about what might happen if the Boogieman came back after they left. Remember how, in the last episode with the Boogieman, Winston volunteered to stand guard over Megan and Kenny Carter while Peter, Egon and Ray worked on solving the problem?  Yeah, apparently they’re not bothering to do that this time.  Sure, Donald, Jason and Catherine appear to be a bit older then Megan and Kenny were. But the point still stands.
Meanwhile, the Boogieman has found his way to a closed amusement park called the Big Apple Amusement Park, which he magically transforms into a nightmarish amusement park, announcing that it’s the ‘perfect place for fear to grow and thrive.’  Of course, the Big Apple Amusement Park doesn’t actually exist.  Which begs the question as to why the show writers didn’t just have the Boogieman lay claim to Coney Island. Seriously, why go through the trouble of making up a fictional amusement park for your story when there’s a very famous amusement park right there in one of New York City’s neighborhoods?  Were the show writers worried about getting a copyright strike or something?
Back at the Firehouse, Egon has managed to modify one of the Proton Throwers into an Atomic Destabilizer, which can convert solid matter into its ethereal counterpart.  (Strangely, Peter, Winston and Janine seem to be clueless on what this means until Ray comments on the matter, though I didn’t think Egon’s explanation was hard to understand.  Maybe the show writers felt they needed to spell it out for the youngest viewers.)  Armed with the Atomic Destabilizer, the Ghostbusters head back out to track down the Boogieman, with Slimer once again tagging along (after a strange moment where Slimer briefly pretends to box with an unseen opponent until Slimer’s shadow inexplicitly gains sentience and punches Slimer.  Seriously, what was that?)
The Ghostbusters eventually track down the Boogieman to the amusement part he’d laid claim to.  But just when they locate the Boogieman, he uses his powers to transform a nearby rollercoaster train into this flying dragonlike creature, which quickly snatches up the Ghostbusters and drags them through a gateway in the shape of a face, after two clown mannequins strip them of their Proton Packs.  As a result, the Ghostbusters are effectivly captured, with no way to fight back.  This leaves Slimer alone to freak out and essentially run off.  However, it’s here that Slimer’s presence does serve a bit of a purpose, as he’s able to go and get help.  Although, he doesn’t go to Janine, who we have seen is fully capable of coming to the Ghostbusters’ rescue.  (See Janine Melnitz, Ghostbuster.)  Instead, he goes right to the Junior Ghostbusters. Because having the kid characters come to the rescue of the adults doesn’t send a problematic message at all.
Regardless, Slimer leads the Junior Ghostbusters to the Boogieman’s amusement park, where they find the discarded Proton Packs.  Donald, Catherine and Jason are easily able to pick three of them up, with Slimer taking the fourth one, (aren’t the Proton Packs supposed to be heavy?) and manage to carry them through the same face-shaped gateway the Ghostbusters were dragged through. One has to ask why the Boogieman left the gateway open in the first place, but I suppose it could be argued that he didn’t expect the Ghostbusters to have any sort of backup. Either way, they manage to locate the Ghostbusters just as they’re being cornered by the Boogieman and his minions.  (Because the Boogieman has minions now.)  Upon seeing the kids, the Boogieman turns his attention onto them.  But as the Boogieman approaches them menacingly, Egon manages to overcome his fears and breaks out of the ropes that had been wrapped around him, charging forward to come to the aid of the kids.  Jason slides Egon the Proton Pack that had the Atomic Destabilizer attached to it (which was a pretty lucky chance when you think about it, since the Junior Ghostbusters hadn’t been present when Egon was discussing what it did), which enables Egon to effectivly trap the Boogieman and his minions in the Ghost Traps the Junior Ghostbusters tossed out.  With the Boogieman captured, the other Ghostbusters are also freed from their binds.  And the episode ends with Catherine asking Egon if he was scared, and Egon announcing that he was, and that he’s okay with admitting it this time.
Well, I admit the episode had potential with the return of the Boogieman.  And I suppose it was somewhat fitting that Egon was the reason why the Boogieman got loose again, considering their personal history that went back to when Egon was a little boy.  Even though I still raise an eyebrow at the implication that only Egon’s fear was intense enough to break through the seal that was keeping the Boogieman trapped inside his realm.  However, maybe this episode was trying to send a subtle moral about how dangerous it could be to not admit it when you’re scared.  Though if that’s what they were going for, I have to say that the Teen Titans episode Fear Itself managed to present that moral far more effectivly.  (If you haven’t watched that particular episode, you really should.)  As for the introduction of the Junior Ghostbusters? As I’ve already said, I find it questionable how the episode had these kid characters being the ones to come to the Ghostbusters’ rescue, as it does send a potentially problematic message about putting kids into dangerous situations.  It’s also a bit strange how the show introduced Donald, Catherine and Jason in the way they did, with them already knowing and being on such familiar terms with the actual Ghostbusters.  Of course, I am aware that the inclusion of the Junior Ghostbusters was one of the additions that the consultant team Q5 deemed necessary when the network started to interfere with the show.  Because they seemed to think that kids needed to see kid characters in their shows. But even so, one has to ask why they didn’t just bring back some of the kid characters they’d already introduced in past episodes.  For instance, Kenny Fenderman from the episode Masquerade.  If the network and Q5 wanted to introduce a team of Junior Ghostbusters, why didn’t they bring Kenny and his friends back?  After all, that previous episode had Peter humoring Kenny by naming him a member of the Ghostbusters Auxiliary.  Not to mention how it had already been established that Kenny was a huge Ghostbusters fanboy, to the point where he even made his own cosplay jumpsuit.  So not having Kenny included among the Junior Ghostbusters is a huge missed opportunity.  
(Click here for more Ghostbusters reviews)
2 notes · View notes
old-movies-stuff · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
67 notes · View notes
spenglerstwinkie · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Here’s something I did to honor one year of my ghostbusters brainrot‼️
191 notes · View notes