Two More Eggs Episode 28 – Dooble: Shark Baby Two More Eggs Episode 27 – Gankroar: Backyard Two More Eggs Episode 26 – Eggpo: Mini-Boss Two More Eggs Episode 25 – CGI Palz: Ry Raw Two More Eggs Episode 24 – Joshow Show: Tape And Staple T-Rex Two More Eggs Episode 23 – Hot Dip: Learn 2 Talk Two More Eggs Episode 22 – Bad Snaxx: After School Two More Eggs Episode 21 – Dooble: Newscarsting Two More Eggs Episode 20 – Trauncles: Not Done Two More Eggs Episode 19 – Hector & Kovitch: Buy This Game Two More Eggs Episode 18 – Dooble: Peas And Corn Two More Eggs Episode 17 – Trauncles: Beans Two More Eggs Episode 16 – Eggpo: Waiting Two More Eggs Episode 15 – Dooble: The Interview Two More Eggs Episode 14 – Trauncles: Sweethearts Two More Eggs Episode 13 – Hot Dip: Sitcom Two More Eggs Episode 12 – CGI Palz: Grossface Two More Eggs Episode 11 – Bad Snaxx: Breakfast Two More Eggs Episode 10 – Dooble: Cake Show ![]() Two More Eggs Episode 9 – Trauncles: Trousers Two More Eggs Episode 8 – Hector & Kovitch: Best Movie Two More Eggs Episode 7 – Dooble: The Driver ![]() Two More Eggs Episode 6 – Trauncles: Sharing Two More Eggs Episode 4 – Dooble: Video Game Two More Eggs Episode 3 – Hot Dip: Not 4 Momz! Two More Eggs Episode 2 – CGI Palz: Theme Song 41 Total Episodes on 5 DVDs: Two More Eggs Episode 1 – Dooble: Dooblie Doo in association with Disney Television Animation, each installment of “Two More Eggs†incorporates a variety of animation techniques, indicative of the brothers' signature style, including flash, computer-generated imagery and animation mixed with live-action. A production of The Brothers Chaps' Citywide Hoop Champs, Inc. They’re bursts of weirdness that somehow fall short of being strange merely for the sake of being strange, tapping into some kind of elemental delight outlandish words, sounds, and colors.Īnyway, go to their YouTube page, watch’em all, and finally somebody might start getting my references.Summary: Two More Eggs Complete. Two More Eggs goes beyond Dooble, delivering askew messages about growing up from the land of Trauncles, or promoting a disgusting teen snack called Hot Dip. It’s what made Homestar great, time and again. This is all nonsense, of course, but there’s a certain, ineffable joy in hearing Dooble deliver non-sequiturs which stay just inside the bounds of coherence: whether it’s calling his getaway car a “very nice motel” or telling eggs that they “will not escape him this time”. Dooble greets a monster as “Señor Magnificent”, opens up a “joybox” and is ultimately thwarted by a hooded figure whose warning that Dooble will “never find all five pieces of the orb” is taken remarkably literally.ĭooble later finds work transporting contraband, and eventually delivers victory on a cake-baking reality show by serving his hat to unexpectedly-pleased judges. He later stepped into a heroic role, picking up his first dialog in a gifted parody of ’80s RPGs like Ghosts and Goblins. Armored with a vest, earflaps, and a scrappy mustache, Dooble began life with his own infectious theme song. The headliner here is Dooble, who appears in five of the eleven cartoons so far released. Echoing the styles and personalities of the Homestar-verse, these shorts introduce new characters and manage to capture that old, weird, magic. Produced by Disney XD, these cartoons begin their lives on YouTube before heading to television. Two More Eggs, which launched on June 23 rd, is the Chaps’ triumphant return to the world of absurdist internet cartooning. The old website,, gathers dust, a monument to those heady days. In a crudely-animated cluster of absurdist humor, sight-gags, and invented words, the Brothers Chaps took over the world, even landing a reference to Strong Bad’s dragon, Trogdor, on the series finale of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.Īlas, all good things must come to an end, and after 2009, little new Homestar content was produced, as the Brothers Chaps moved on to bigger and better things like Yo Gabba Gabba and Gravity Falls. Homestar, joined by an unlikely cohort of friends, enemies, and well-wishers including Strong Bad, the Cheat, Marzipan and the Poopsmith, delivered a decade-plus of the best internet comedy any of us had ever seen. In 1999, they brought a beanie-wearing, star-shirted jock named Homestar Runner from his humble origins in Mario Paint save files to the masses. Our creative types turned to Flash, a much-maligned but once-vital format now doomed to the dustbin of cassette tapes, laserdiscs, and DIVX.īut any medium can be a muse, and Flash smiled upon the Brothers Chaps. In such primitive times, quality video was a pipe dream, at least if you wanted sound and recognizable human forms. ![]() We measured our bandwidth in baud, and nobody knew what it meant. In days of yore, we didn’t have fancy things like high-speed Internet access.
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