Skip to content

The Best Of Beavis And Butthead Portable 💯 Fully Tested

[The Couch Hierarchy of Taste] ├── "Cool" (Fire, Explosions, Heavy Riffs, Hot Tubs) -> GWAR, Metallica, AC/DC └── "Sucks" (Wussies, Wimp Music, Accordions) --------> Winger, Grim Reaper, Vanilla Ice Grim Reaper – "Fear No Evil"

Many 90s properties fail when brought into the modern era, but Beavis and Butt-Head proved entirely timeless. The 2011 Return

Butt-Head considered this. For him, “considering” involved picking his nose and eating it. “You mean… fart fire… to music?”

Across its original run from 1993 to 1997, a 2011 revival, and its 2022 return, Beavis and Butt-Head have starred in over 270 episodes. While subjective, certain episodes have risen above the rest as fan favorites.

Proving that the old dogs still have tricks, this modern episode features the boys trying to grow a marijuana plant. Instead, they accidentally grow an ordinary sprout, nurture it like a child, and experience a bizarrely emotional, short-lived journey into pseudo-fatherhood before eating it. The Best Supporting Characters THE BEST OF BEAVIS AND BUTTHEAD

By making them the ultimate consumers of media, Mike Judge created a brilliant feedback loop. We watch them watch television, laughing at their bad taste, only to realize that the entertainment industry is actively catering to the lowest common denominator they represent. It is a timeless piece of satire packaged in a pair of stained shorts and a heavy metal t-shirt—and that is why, decades later, it still doesn't suck.

This is the 1992 short that started it all. Though cruder in animation style, it established the duo’s penchant for aimless, often destructive behavior. It caught the attention of MTV executives and launched the full series. 3. "No Laughing"

“Huh-huh. Shut up, Beavis.”

This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. [The Couch Hierarchy of Taste] ├── "Cool" (Fire,

In the early 90s, a new kind of humor emerged on MTV, one that was raw, unapologetic, and hilariously juvenile. Created by Mike Judge, became an instant sensation, pushing the boundaries of what was considered acceptable on television. Two decades later, this dim-witted, heavy-metal loving duo continues to captivate audiences with their outrageous antics and biting social commentary.

You cannot have a "best of" list without the alter ego. Beavis, after consuming too much sugar (specifically, the residue in a "Slinky" box of candy), transforms into .

A classic episode where they try to spice up milk.

Beavis stopped. He stared at the banner. Then he stared at Butt-Head. Butt-Head stared at the banner. Then at Beavis. The single neuron they shared began to fire. “You mean… fart fire… to music

Principal McVicker, driven to the brink of insanity by the boys' non-stop snickering, issues an ultimatum: if Beavis and Butt-Head laugh during school hours, they will be expelled. What follows is a masterclass in tension-based comedy. Placed in a sex education class taught by the hopelessly naive Mr. Van Driessen, the boys must endure a barrage of anatomical terms while fighting for physical survival to keep from giggling. 3. "Customers Suck" (Season 3, Episode 17)

The MTV animation landscape changed forever in 1993 when Mike Judge unleashed two couch-potato metalheads upon the world. Beavis and Butt-Head was more than just a cartoon; it was a cultural phenomenon that defined the slacker generation of the 1990s. With their signature snickers, extreme laziness, and unmatched ability to find "cool" or "sucks" in everything, this dynamic duo became the ultimate anti-heroes of television.

collections are the ultimate way to experience the duo’s most "excellent" (and controversial) moments. Originally released by

premiered in 1993, a time when alternative rock and grunge were exploding onto the music scene. The show's timing couldn't have been more perfect, tapping into the disillusionment and angst of Generation X. The duo's disdain for authority, their love of heavy metal, and their general apathy towards life resonated with a generation feeling disconnected from mainstream culture.

They disastrously manage a fundraiser. Music Video Commentary: The Defining Feature

Volume 1.4: Law-Abiding Citizens / There Goes the Neighborhood