Nov 21, 2023

Cartoon Muscle: Not Just Superheroes in Spandex

When I was a kid, you could occasionally see shirtless boys or men in Saturday morning cartoons, but it was rare, primarily on jungle or prehistoric adventure series like The Herculoids.   Mostly you had to make do with an open shirt or a spandex superhero uniform, and of course Saturday morning live-action series.

Fred from Scooby-Doo seemed to have a nice physique, but not once in 10,000 episodes did he ever take his shirt off.

Times have changed. In Scooby-Doo: Mystery Incorporated (2010-2013), he flexes at poolside.




The Anime Boys with Their Shirts Off blog displays the shirtless boys and men appearing in a huge number of animated tv series, everything from adventure to comedy, and even some toddler tv.  Did you ever want to see Dora the Explorer's brother Diego with his shirt off?  Or Bill from Curious George?













There's a lot of Japanese anime, like The Legend of Korra and The Daily Lives of High School Boys),  but also a lot of Western cartoons, everything from Phineas and Ferb to Johnny Test.




There are even a few oldies, like these golden-haired preppy types (from Beverly Hills Teens and Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, respectively).







Apparently animators are no longer worried about kids being traumatized for life by the sight of a torso or two (like these from Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego).

See also: Saturday Morning Muscle


12 comments:

  1. No I do not,I get the feeling that Bill from curious George may be a shotacon target

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bill from "Curious George" is a teenager. Diego is a kid, but his shirtless scene is so cartoon-stylized that I doubt he would be of interest to the shotacon crowd.

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    2. Besides shotacon is for anime

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    3. Despite my comment below, ア二メ refers to all animation, if you're speaking Japanese at least.

      Either way, shotacon and lolicon were a big reason Miyazaki said anime was a mistake. (His rant names lolicon in particular.)

      Delete
  2. Who didn’t have a crush on Fred?! He was the perfect antidote to the lanky, goofy Shaggy!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Okay, Avatar isn't anime. It's an American show. Sorry, I had to get that off my chest, pardon the pun.

    By the way, a new trope seems to be "gay at the end". Legend of Korra did it. Adventure Time did it, making Bubbline canon in the finale. (Even if they've been in love for over a century. Though I still say Jake is bi, even if it was only for a one-off gag from season 1.)

    Speaking of Adventure Time, it did subvert one heterosexist trope:

    Finn starts with a crush on Princess Bubblegum. Over time, we learn he has plenty of love interests, most of them princesses or similar. He even has a symbolic "lose his virginity" scene with Lumpy Space Princess. Yeah, he's single in the finale. (And I liked him with Huntress Wizard. Oh well...) And two of his love interests are romantically involved with each other and have been for over a century.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can think of two "openly gay in the last episode" scenes in children's tv. Craig and Eric, the obviously-dating nerd duo on "Drake and Josh," hold hands in the last episode. Nergal states that he is in love with Irwin in the last episode of "Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy."

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    2. It's obviously a strategy to depict the characters as gay without getting a backlash from the network or horrified parents.

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  4. Conan the Adventurer. But then they made him a babysitter and it jumped the shark.

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  5. Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, saw the sequel. I'm sure it's some reference to them being of the nightshade family. I think I was high when I realized that.

    The cartoon was relatively unremarkable. The NES game based on the cartoon has one of those "I had trouble with THAT guy?" bosses.

    Part of it was limited animation. Clothing hides accidental anatomical breaks; Hanna-Barbera have their funny animals collars, necklaces, and ties for the same reason. But the 70s gave us Filmation's Tarzan, and the 80s brought the Thud and Blunder fad to media outside of novels and comics. (I know Marvel and Darkhorse had Conan.) Mostly film, but also cartoons.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The neck gear on the old Hanna Barbera characters makes the viewer think that they are clothed, therefore civilized, even if they live in the wilderness (or in zoos or pet stores). Wearing pants would remove their animal nature altogether, making them fully human, like Mickey Mouse.

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  6. Anyone remember Ned Flanders on the Simpsons?

    ReplyDelete

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