Samurai Jack/YMMV


 * And the Fandom Rejoiced: What's that, you say? The movie is in development? Progressing development?
 * Oh and what's that you say? JJ Abrams is producing it?!
 * Big Lipped Alligator Moment: In that episode where a rabbit steals Jack's clothes (Pfft, that episode on it's own was kind of a BLAM Episode), there's a scene where an...elephant...fairy...THING randomly flies by with this ghostly, wailing noise. Never mentioned, never explained. What's worse, at the end of that episode, right before the credits start, it flies past The Stinger AGAIN with that same creepy noise!
 * Crazy Awesome: The Scotsman.
 * Crowning Moment of Awesome: When divine intervention powers up Jack's sword,
 * Crowning Moment of Funny : During the episode in the graveyard, Aku has Jack pinned, and precedes to deliver the finishing blow with Jacks own sword. Only for the blade to bounce off, unable to hurt him. Aku is so shocked, his GREAT FLAMING EYEBROWS go out.
 * Aku trying to get children to prefer him over Jack by twisting every bedtime story he can think of. Probably the top crowner is when he portrays Little Red Riding Hood as an adorable little girl with GREAT FLAMING EYEBROWS, laser beam eyeballs, and deadly karate skills.
 * Crowning Music of Awesome - Rave in the Forest.
 * Crowning Soundtrack of Awesome the rest of the series. Honestly, with all the other sounds telling the story, you won't miss dialogue.
 * The opening for "Jack and the Three Blind Archers" is also pretty cool. Sounds a little like something from Red Alert with the marching/stomping going over into the beat and all.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse - The Scotsman, the fact he's got a gun for a peg leg should show how cool a character he is.
 * Demongo, apparently enough to get him a profile on Cartoon Network's site at one point in their old shows archive.
 * Foe Yay: Jack and Aku, as Ikra.
 * Fridge Horror: You don't really think Aku kept Lulu (sweet thing) around after its usefulness as a bargaining chip had ended, do you?
 * Funny Aneurysm Moment: One episode had Aku having a horrible coughing fit, coughing up a bit of evil that infects Jack and slowly spreads. Mako (Aku's voice actor) died of esophageal cancer.
 * HSQ: Quite high.
 * Ho Yay: Nearly-naked Jack tickling a nearly-naked sumo wrestler.
 * Iron Woobie: Jack goes through hell and back to try to return to his native time, and comes out of almost all of his fights worse for wear. And yet, he trudges on.
 * Magnificent Bastard: Aku has been this on occasion. Especially in one episode
 * Memetic Badass: Jack himself. And AKU!
 * Memetic Mutation: Foolish samurai!
 * "No money for you, crazy round man."
 * "GREAT FLAMING EYEBROWS!"
 * Nightmare Fuel:
 * Oh god, that elephant-fairy thing from Jack is Naked.
 * The Minions of Set for one gave Jack several "Oh Crap" moments, once he realized he wasn't even close to a match for them, despite his many skills.
 * Nothing about the cannibalistic, starving, confused robot family with red internals?
 * Heck, what about the very start of the first episode? Creepy sound effects/music, creepy visuals of a an eclipse and Aku's 'prison' and then the dark, menacing figure where the tree was a second ago. Then it turns around, very very slowly and its huge, unblinking eyes stare into the very depths of your soul.
 * Aku's extermination of the Dinosaurs, mostly the final one, who was slowly swallowed up.
 * No Yay - Oh God, when Aku disguises himself as a beautiful woman, he seems to actually show growing chemistry with Jack. Urgh, how far would he have kept up the ruse?
 * Older Than You Think - The ignorant would think that Jack and the Spartans is a blatant rip-off of the more Memetic Mutation movie 300, even including many of the same sepia tone visuals. But the episode was made years before and was inspired by the 1990s graphic novel of which the infamous film was an adaptation. Never mind that the Spartans and the Battle of Thermopylae is from 480 BC, over 2000 years before Samurai Jack or 300.
 * Periphery Demographic: It's a kid's show on Cartoon Network. It's ostensibly aimed at 6- to 12-year-olds.
 * Squick: The Reveal at the end of The Warrior Woman, even if it was obvious.