Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use American English Template:Infobox television

Lasagna Cat is a web series created by production company Fatal Farm as a parody of the Garfield comic strips created by American cartoonist Jim Davis. The series was uploaded in bulk to YouTube in 2008 and 2017, and consists mainly of humorous live-action recreations of classic Garfield comics.

Format

The majority of Lasagna Cat consists of live-action reenactments of the Garfield comic strips, featuring costumed performers in the roles of Jon Arbuckle, Garfield, and Odie. Each reenactment is followed by an surreal "interlude" segment, related to themes or dialogue found in the original adapted strip. This can either be a music video set to a copyrighted song, or a different form of satirical skit. After which, a smiling mugshot of cartoonist Jim Davis is shown, sometimes edited to fit the scenario.[1][2] Most of the series' videos are only a few minutes long, with the exception of "07/27/1978" and "Sex Survey Results", which are one and five hours long, respectively.[3][4] The series exists mainly to satirize the original Garfield comics' style of humor and as a surreal tribute to Davis.[4]

Episodes

Template:Series overview

Season 1 (2008)

Template:Episode table

Season 2 (2017)

Template:Episode table

Reception

Lasagna Cat was well received, with reviewers praising its insight into Garfield and comedy in general.[5][4] It has been seen as a part of the widespread trend of "weird" Garfield internet memes,[2] with Smithsonian in particular citing it as an example of people who "have taken up the challenge of making Garfield funny."[6]

A popular parody Twitter account was created in response to "07/27/1978", an hour-long episode (set to Philip Glass' score to the 1997 film Kundun) in which actor John Blyth Barrymore philosophically monologues about his adoration and obsession with a Garfield strip published on the titular date.[7] Additionally, the series was cited as an inspiration in the creation of the Adult Swim short Too Many Cooks.[8]

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Spoken Wikipedia

Template:Garfield Template:Portal bar Template:Authority control