Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids "Busted" (found uncensored version of episode of animated series; 1984): Difference between revisions

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{{InfoboxLost
{{InfoboxFound
|title=<center>"Busted" (uncensored version)</center>
|title=<center>"Busted" (uncensored version)</center>
|image=Maxresdefaultsertyu.jpg
|image=Maxresdefaultsertyu.jpg
|imagecaption=A screenshot of the episode.
|imagecaption=A screenshot from the episode.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span>
|datefound=10 Jun 2022
|foundby=[https://archive.org/details/@rich_gangsta RichGangsta]
}}
}}
''Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids'' was an animated series produced by Filmation and authored by Bill Cosby. The show was based on Cosby’s childhood memories and his stand-up comedy acts from the 1960s. It ran from 1972 to 1984.
''Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids'' was an animated series produced by Filmation and authored by Bill Cosby. The show was based on Cosby’s childhood memories and his stand-up comedy acts from the 1960s. It ran from 1972 to 1984.


==Premise==
==Premise==
The episodes consisted of the characters getting into trouble and learning a lesson. Many people looking back do not consider this series to be child-friendly. The series had episodes pertaining to STDs, racism, pornography, and, most infamously, an episode on gang violence in which a child is shot and killed trying to protect his older brother. The series is also accused of handling some topics poorly despite good intentions, such as a special-needs child being referred as "retarded" and a white supremacist painting xenophobic slogans portrayed as a wacky comedic situation.
The episodes consisted of the characters getting into trouble and learning a lesson. Many people looking back do not consider this series to be child-friendly. The series had episodes pertaining to STDs, racism, pornography, and, most infamously, an episode on gang violence in which a child is shot and killed trying to protect his older brother. The series is also accused of handling some topics poorly despite good intentions, such as a special-needs child being referred to as "retarded" and a white supremacist painting xenophobic slogans portrayed as a wacky comedic situation.


==Censored Episode==
==Censored Episode==
The episode "Busted" was used to teach children about the consequences of breaking the law: the characters visit a real prison and learn about the hardships of being an inmate. '''The original airing of the episode contained uncensored swearing from the prisoners''', but later airings were censored.
The episode "Busted" was used to teach children about the consequences of breaking the law: the characters visit a real prison and learn about the hardships of being an inmate. '''The original airing of the episode contained uncensored swearing from one of the prisoners''', but later airings were censored. In the live-action introduction, Bill Cosby even mentions the usage of swearing as a form of content warning for kids watching, which was kept intact even in the censored version.


Since then, no recordings or clips of the original airing have surfaced online. Even the DVD releases do not have the uncensored version. One possibility is that the original studio may have it, but it’s a slim chance if the censoring was still on the original tape. However, since the episode aired in 1984, there is also a possibility that a VHS recording may exist somewhere.<ref>[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WesternAnimation/FatAlbertAndTheCosbyKids TVTropes Western Animation page on ''Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids''.] Retrieved 02 Dec '17</ref> <ref>[http://www.theknightshift.com/2013/05/hey-hey-hey-its-profanity-strewn-prison.html?m=1 The Knight Shift article on the episode.] Retrieved 16 Mar '19</ref>
Until 2022, no recordings or clips of the original airing had surfaced online. Even the DVD releases do not have the uncensored version. One possibility was that the original studio may have it, but there’s a slim chance that the censoring was still on the original tape. However, since the episode aired in 1984, there was also a possibility that a VHS recording may exist somewhere.<ref>[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WesternAnimation/FatAlbertAndTheCosbyKids TVTropes Western Animation page on ''Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids''.] Retrieved 02 Dec '17</ref> <ref>[http://theknightshift.com/2013/05/hey-hey-hey-its-profanity-strewn-prison.html?m=1 The Knight Shift article on the episode.] Retrieved 16 Mar '19</ref>
 
That possibility would become a reality when on June 10th, 2022, a VHS copy of the original airing that contained the uncensored version was uploaded by Internet Archive user "RichGansta." According to the description, their uncle had recorded the episode back when it first aired. Although, it's now believed that "RichGansta's" tape is actually a bootlegged copy of the episode's original master, rather than a TV recording. This would explain why the tape is uncensored and doesn't contain a channel indent or any commercials.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
{{Video|perrow  =1
{{Video|perrow  =2
   |service1    =youtube
   |service1    =youtube
   |id1          =U_eO98ynJTU
   |id1          =DeEGSaN-x5w
   |description1 =A clip of the censored version of the episode that can be found on YouTube.
   |description1 =The censored version of ''Busted''.
  |service2    =archiveorg
  |id2          =2022-06-10-00-20-07-enhanced
  |description2 =The original uncensored version of ''Busted''.
}}
}}
==External Link==
==External Link==
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Fat_Albert_and_the_Cosby_Kids_episodes Wikipedia page on ''Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids''.] Retrieved 02 Dec '17
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Fat_Albert_and_the_Cosby_Kids_episodes Wikipedia page on ''Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids''.] Retrieved 02 Dec '17
==See Also==
*[[Fraidy Cat (partially lost ABC animated comedy series; 1975)]]
*[[ToonHeads (partially lost Cartoon Network animation anthology series; 1992-2003)]]
*[[The Archie Comedy Hour (partially found song segments of CBS animated series based on comic book series; 1969-1970)]]
*[[Bugzburg (lost cartoon spin-off of Pinochio pseudosequel; 1989)]]
*[[Will The Real Jerry Lewis Please Sit Down? (partially found animated series; 1970-1972)]]
*[[Uncle Croc's Block (partially found ABC comedy series; 1975)]]
*[[T'as l'Bonjour d'Albert (partially found Carlos segments from French dub of "Fat Albert & The Cosby Kids" animated series; 1985)]]
*[[Filmation's New Classics Collection (Lost Filmation's franchise of pseudosequels from disney movies;1985-1989)]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Lost animation]]
[[Category:Found audio]]
[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Found media]]
[[Category:Lost audio]]
[[Category:Found TV]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]

Latest revision as of 01:12, 29 March 2024

Maxresdefaultsertyu.jpg

A screenshot from the episode.

Status: Found

Date found: 10 Jun 2022

Found by: RichGangsta

Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids was an animated series produced by Filmation and authored by Bill Cosby. The show was based on Cosby’s childhood memories and his stand-up comedy acts from the 1960s. It ran from 1972 to 1984.

Premise

The episodes consisted of the characters getting into trouble and learning a lesson. Many people looking back do not consider this series to be child-friendly. The series had episodes pertaining to STDs, racism, pornography, and, most infamously, an episode on gang violence in which a child is shot and killed trying to protect his older brother. The series is also accused of handling some topics poorly despite good intentions, such as a special-needs child being referred to as "retarded" and a white supremacist painting xenophobic slogans portrayed as a wacky comedic situation.

Censored Episode

The episode "Busted" was used to teach children about the consequences of breaking the law: the characters visit a real prison and learn about the hardships of being an inmate. The original airing of the episode contained uncensored swearing from one of the prisoners, but later airings were censored. In the live-action introduction, Bill Cosby even mentions the usage of swearing as a form of content warning for kids watching, which was kept intact even in the censored version.

Until 2022, no recordings or clips of the original airing had surfaced online. Even the DVD releases do not have the uncensored version. One possibility was that the original studio may have it, but there’s a slim chance that the censoring was still on the original tape. However, since the episode aired in 1984, there was also a possibility that a VHS recording may exist somewhere.[1] [2]

That possibility would become a reality when on June 10th, 2022, a VHS copy of the original airing that contained the uncensored version was uploaded by Internet Archive user "RichGansta." According to the description, their uncle had recorded the episode back when it first aired. Although, it's now believed that "RichGansta's" tape is actually a bootlegged copy of the episode's original master, rather than a TV recording. This would explain why the tape is uncensored and doesn't contain a channel indent or any commercials.

Gallery

The censored version of Busted.

The original uncensored version of Busted.

External Link


See Also


References