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Potter Puppet Pals

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Potter Puppet Pals (Web Video)
Alas, a cornucopia of awesome.
L-R: Ron, Hermione, Snape, Dumbledore, Harry, Voldemort.

Neil Cicierega, of Animutation fame, and his sister Emmy created two Flash cartoons in 2003 featuring hand-puppet versions of the main characters from Harry Potter. The humorous cartoons quickly gained popularity (even with J. K. Rowling and Daniel Radcliffe), and the Potter Puppet Pals series was born.

Eventually starting in 2006, Neil, Emmy and their friends moved on from animated shorts to live-action shorts featuring real puppets, and they've even done a couple of live shows with the puppets. The series is most famous for the number of memes it has spawned. Also, Neville is a butternut squash and Cedric is a foot.

Shorts include:

  • "Bothering Snape": Ron and Harry bother Snape.
  • "Trouble at Hogwarts": Voldemort invades Hogwarts, and it's up to Harry, Ron, and Hermione to stop him.
    • "Follow the Butterflies": A hidden video from "Trouble at Hogwarts".
  • "Potions Class": Snape describes Potions Class to Harry and friends in a very disturbing way. Not to mention Dumbledore wanting expired gorilla milk for his bowels.
  • "Wizard Angst": Harry's feeling cranky and pubescent today, and he doesn't know why!
  • "The Mysterious Ticking Noise": The entire cast sings along to a mysterious ticking noise. Possibly the most recognized episode ever.
  • "Wizard Swears": Harry, Ron, and Hermione learn magical profanity.
  • "School is for Losers": Harry Potter says school is for losers!
  • "The Awakening of the Incorruptible" (later renamed "Albus Dumbledore Lists Your Good Qualities"): The most epic Potter Puppet Pals short ever.
  • "The Vortex": A strange vortex appears, and Ron finally goes through puberty.
  • "Ron's Disease": Ron gets Wizard Lice, and only Hagrid can cure it.
  • "Snape's Diary": Harry steals Snape's diary, and he reads it aloud to Ron and Hermione.
  • "Mustache Buddies": Voldemort decides to grow a mustache and has Snape do it too.
  • "Ron's Parents": Ron has parents, Harry doesn't.
  • "Harry's Nightmares": Harry recalls a series of horrible nightmares.
  • "Draco Puppet": Harry introduces us to the puppet's puppet version of Draco Malfoy.
  • "Ginny": Harry flirts with Ron's hot younger sister.
  • "Neville's Birthday": Harry, Ron and Hermione attend Neville's birthday party on threat of expulsion.
    • "(good morning Snape)": A hidden video from "Neville's Birthday".
  • "Apparate!": Harry learns to apparate and uses it towards his advantage.
  • "Dapper Ron": Hermione saves Ron from a dashing curse.
  • "Martial Arts": Harry interrupts Defense Against the Dark Arts class to show what he learned in Defense in Martial Arts.
  • "Magic Can Solve Any Problem": Harry decides life would be easier if people were more like him.
  • "Harryween": Harry refuses to get into the Halloween spirit.
  • "The Mysterious Ticking Noise 10-YEAR ANNIVERSARY in 4K": A 2017 remake of "The Mysterious Ticking Noise".
  • "Harry and the Potters - Where’s Ron?": Harry and Hermione sing a heartfelt song wondering where the hell is Ron. It features a guest appearance from the singer Kimya Dawson.

Some of the fans of this series made Fanvids of these Fanvids, using the same or similar programs and posted them on YouTube.


This series provides examples of:

  • Adaptational Jerkass: Harry, who constantly belittles his friends (especially Ron) and likes to bully and humiliate Snape. That said, on very rare occasions, he shows a softer side.
  • Alternative Character Interpretation: invoked All the characters are exaggerated or twisted versions of the original Harry Potter characters, all in the name of Rule of Funny.
  • Asshole Victim: Malfoy is a smug, racist Jerkass, so it's rather difficult to feel any sympathy for him when he's burned alive.
  • Assimilation Plot: Harry, in "Magic Can Solve Any Problem".
  • Audience Participation Song: Before the "Avada Kedavra" song in the live show, Voldemort asks the audience to scream like they're dying every time he says "Avada Kedavra!"
  • Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: Among Harry's grievances in "Wizard Angst" are that his parents are dead, his life sucks, he can't hold down a girlfriend and that he's surrounded by magical creatures all the time.
  • Bad Mood as an Excuse: In "Wizard Angst", Harry wakes up in a bad mood and insults Ron.
  • Blah, Blah, Blah: When Snape tries to sternly reprimand Harry for skipping potion class for several weeks, all Harry hears from said reprimand is Snape saying his name, otherwise it is just Snape mumbling incoherently.
  • Boring Grown-Up Wheat Flakes: In "Snape's Diary," Harry, Ron and Hermione decide to steal Snape's diary and read it. The first entry reads, "Dear Diary, today I ate some oatmeal for my breakfast. It was flavorless and watery. I thought of my mother. I cried."
  • Buffy Speak: "I believe in ticks-- I'm Batman! Now get out of my way, non-Batman!"
  • Burden Rant: In "Wizard Angst," Harry is in a bad mood and his friends ask him why he's being rude.
    Harry: My parents are dead, my life sucks, I can't hold down a girlfriend, and I'm surrounded by (bleep)ing goblins and (bleep) all the time. I mean, what the (bleep)!?
  • Butt-Monkey: Ron, Neville, Draco, and Snape are all victims of Harry's bullying.
  • Call-Back: In "Snape's Diary," we learn just how much "Bothering Snape" really did bother Snape.
    Harry Potter: I remember that, Ron! Gimme five!
  • Canis Latinicus: As per canon, the characters use made up words when casting their magic.
  • Celebrity Paradox: The Elder Swear includes a reference to Daniel Radcliffe.
  • Characterization Marches On: In the earlier shorts, Harry was more cheerful and compassionate, and Snape was more of a short-tempered Jerkass even to the point of murdering Harry and Ron for invading his personal space and repeating the word "bother" over and over again. Now, Harry is a self-centered bully, and Snape is the Only Sane Man of the cast.
  • Christmas Episode: The Yule Ball 2010 live performance.
  • Cluster *Bleep*-Bomb: Dumbledore's recitation of The Elder Swear in "Wizard Swears", also invoking Noodle Implements to a degree:
    Your mother is a (censored)-ing (censored) lorem ipsum (censored) ad minim veniam (censored) tragula (censored) hippopotamus (censored) republican (censored) and Daniel Radcliffe (censored) with a bucket of (censored) in a castle far away where no one can hear you (censored) soup (censored) with a bucket of (censored) Mickey Mouse (censored) and a stick of dynamite (censored) magical (censored) alakazam!
    • Note that it takes him no less than forty-three seconds to say this.
  • Comedic Sociopathy: Poor, poor Neville, constantly being the butt of Harry's jokes.
  • Comically Missing the Point: In "Snape's Diary".
    Snape's Diary: I was at the Yule Ball with Lily Evans. I asked her to dance. She asked me to die. Would that I could Lily... would that I could...
    Harry: My mum was awesome!
  • Continuity Nod: In "Snape's Diary", one of the diary entries is about "Bothering Snape."
  • Cuckoo Nest: In "Harry's Nightmares," in Harry's worst nightmare ever, he is told by Dumbledore that he's being held in a psychiatric hospital, and the wizarding world and Hogwarts are actually a fantasy he retreated into as a coping mechanism to deal with the trauma of seeing his wife's death, as a reference to Shutter Island.
    Harry: That sure was a spooky dream!
  • Curse Cut Short:
    Ron: Maybe he's in loooove!
    Hermione: Who'd fall in love with such an a—
    Ron: Maybe he needs a hug!
    • Harry says "What the f—" just as Neville is exploding in "Neville's Birthday".
  • Curse of The Ancients: In "Wizard Swears", Harry asks Dumbledore if he knows any archaic, old-timey wizard swears. Dumbledore teaches Harry and his friends the "Elder Swear", which starts with "Your mother is a..." and involves a lot of flailing about, long bleeps, and random words and phrases like "a bucket of", "Daniel Radcliffe", "in a castle far away where no one can hear you", "lorem ipsum", "a stick of dynamite", and "soup".
  • Death Is Cheap: Some of the characters die from time to time, but it doesn't have any real significance in the story.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: In "Bothering Snape", upon being bothered by Harry and Ron, Snape responds with a spell, but not a stunning spell like Expelliarmus, Stupefy or Locomotor Mortis but with "Avada Kedavra!!!"
  • The Ditz: Ron and Dumbledore are a lot dumber than their canon counterparts.
  • Driven to Suicide: Played for Laughs of course.
  • Easter Egg:
    • "Follow the butterflies, follow the butterflies, WEE~!" "Ronnicus Explodicus!"
    • "Neville's Birthday" had a hidden video if you clicked on Snape around the 5:20 mark. This no longer works, since YouTube disabled all annotations on January 15, 2019, but you can watch it here.
  • Elmuh Fudd Syndwome: Neville talks this way.
  • Even Nerds Have Standards: In "Neville's Birthday", after Harry and Hermione inform Neville that nobody likes him:
    Ron: Even I look down on you! ME!
  • "Everybody Laughs" Ending: Done with a beautifully nonsensical twist in "Wizard Angst".
  • Evil Sounds Deep: Voldemort is depicted with a deep, reverberating voice.
  • Examine the Live Grenade: In "The Mysterious Ticking Noise", a mysterious ticking noise inspires the cast to sing ACappella in tune to the ticking. Ron discovers at the end of the short that the source of the ticking is actually a pipe bomb (implied to be Voldemort's), which immediately blows them to bits (of felt, that is).
  • Fantastic Racism: Lampshaded when the Draco Malfoy puppet says "I'm really proud that I'm pure-blooded white — I mean, wizard."
  • Flanderization: Played for Laughs as Neville is reduced to a Butt-Monkey, Ron's a dumbass, and Dumbledore is kooky.
  • Follow the Bouncing Ball: Used for Dumbledore's birthday song in "Neville's Birthday," with an image of Dumbledore's head as the ball.
  • The Generic Guy: Hermione is intentionally devoid of any interesting characteristics, only ever saying lines to advance the plot or about how she likes books. Lampshaded when Harry refers to her as "Female Ron".
  • The Ghost: Some characters are referred to, but have yet to actually be seen.
    • Snape's diary entries mention Lucius Malfoy, McGonagall, and Filch, among others.
    • During the Yule Ball live show, Voldemort yells, "Hit it, Pete!" before the "Avada Kedavra" song.
    • Dobby is mentioned a couple of times. In "Wizard Angst," Harry claims he has "nightmares about Dobby eating his skin clean off every night", and in "Wizard Swears," Ron uses "Dobby's sock!" as a swear.
  • Gilligan Cut: "Wizard Swears" ends in the middle of Harry, Ron, and Hermione reciting the Elder Swear to Neville..
  • Group Hug:
    • The end of "Trouble at Hogwarts". It's a pretty weird version, though, considering one of the members of the group is a naked old man...
    • And in "The Vortex": "Lose some weight before you hug me, Ron."
  • Halloween Episode:
    • The Youmacon 2010 live performance.
    • 2015's Harryween.
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: Harry. At one point he leads a half-awake Hagrid all over the school grounds to club everyone in sight. Except Voldemort.
  • Hollywood Pudgy: Invoked by Harry, who constantly makes snide remarks about Ron's eating habits and weight, despite Ron obviously being built from the same puppet template as him. Which is hilarious, considering that Ron in the books is extremely tall and thin.
  • Homoerotic Subtext: Ron has an obvious one-sided crush on Harry. Apparently, Harry returns Ron's feelings on a subconscious level through his attraction to Ginny, who is basically just Ron with Tertiary Sexual Characteristics.
  • Incredibly Lame Fun: Neville's favorite birthday party game is "Walk In Circles," where all the guests walk in a circle around him. Harry doesn't want to play the game but Neville guilt trips him into it by talking about how his now-insane parents used to play it with him.
  • Jumping Out of a Cake: Dumbledore jumps naked out of the cake in "Neville's Birthday."
  • Kick the Dog: Harry mercilessly picks on Neville, Ron and Snape.
  • Kill It with Fire: The final fate of the Draco puppet.
  • Large Ham: "I mean everything I ever say, ever, because I'm Harry Potter." (thunderclap)
  • Literal-Minded: Draco Malfoy.
    Harry: No, say hello to the audience.
    Draco: Hello to the audience.
  • Mister Seahorse: Parodied in "Harry's Nightmares". Nestled in among the bizarre and occasionally juvenile ("In one dream, I was middle aged! Yuck!") traumas that haunt his noggin, was the dream he had where he gave birth to Ron, and raised him from infancy, but one day, he misplaced him, and that terrified him, because it meant he had failed as a parent.
  • Musical Number Fumbler: In "The Mysterious Ticking Noise", a strange ticking causes the cast to start singing their names in time to the beat. When Harry comes in, however, he's off-rhythm and intrusive, causing him and Snape to fight until broken up by a naked Dumbledore.
  • Music from the Mundane: "The Mysterious Ticking Noise" begins with Snape noticing the titular rhythmic ticking, finding it "catchy", and beginning to sing along to it. Soon, several other characters begin to sing along with him, creating a full a capella performance backed by the ticking noise. Then the source of the ticking is revealed to be a pipe bomb, which explodes and kills them all.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Harry's reaction when Neville explodes. Until he tastes the chunks.
  • Naked People Are Funny
    Dumbledore: NAKED TIME!
  • Narcissist: Harry is convinced he is the most amazing person in the world. Most notable is when he is given a reprimand from Snape for skipping potions class for several weeks in a row, the only thing he hears from it is his own name.
  • Never Learned to Read: In "Snape's Diary," Ron is implied to be very nearly illiterate. He's impressed with Hermione for recognizing Harry's name in the book, and when Ron tries to do his own entry, he struggles to write down, "I am S." However, Ron seems to have no trouble writing a letter in "Ron's Parents," so the series is not consistent about this.
  • New Ability Addiction: In "Apparate!" Harry learns how to Apparate and declares that he'll never walk again because of it. He sings a little song about all the places he can go.
    Harry Potter in France! Sacré bleu!
    Harry Potter in Japan! So kawaii!
    Something on the top shelf? Who can reach?
    Harry Potter probably can! I'm your guy!
    Harry Potter on a farm! Yeah, why not?
    Harry Potter in space! Feeling great!
    'Cause there ain't no place Harry Potter can't race
    When I a-a-a-a-apparate!
  • Non-Standard Character Design:
    • Neville is a butternut squash on a stick.
    • Cedric Diggory is a foot.
  • Noodle Implements: Harry and Ron's potential punishment in "Wizard Angst" has some of these. Though if you think about it, assuming that the cactus in question is a potted one, it will be picked up and placed over their heads or bare bums and hammered down with the croquet mallet by the drunken Filch. Or Filch will smash one of them with the mallet and then just shove the cactus in/on the other one. Alternatively, the mallet could also be used to shove the cactus in... places.
  • No-Sell: In "Ron's Disease", Hagrid hitting Dumbledore with a club doesn't hurt him because he's an android. A gay android.
    Dumbledore: Ooh! Trying to take a whack at the old headmaster, are you?
  • Not His Sled: In the 2017 version of "The Mysterious Ticking Noise", the source of the ticking is the 2007 version of the short, which Ron calls, "a 10 year old YouTube video".
  • Oh, Crap!: Snape and Dumbledore seem to react this way when Ron discovers Voldemort's pipe bomb in "Mysterious Ticking Noise".
  • Orcus on His Throne: Parodied in "Wizard Angst", where Harry yells at Ron to go stop Voldemort in his place, and Ron finds him in seconds. Not only is Voldemort just standing around and not doing anything, that Ron was able to find him so quickly implies he was just waiting around Hogwarts for someone to try and defeat him.
  • Pet the Dog:
    • Subverted hilariously in "Neville's Birthday". At first Harry appears to feel guilt for making Neville so upset that he self-destructs... then he starts eating chunks of what's left of Neville.
    • Played straight in "Harryween," where Harry becomes very upset about Ron's apparent death, calls him "a prince," and goes alone into the Forbidden Forest to rescue him.
  • Porn Stache: Voldemort and Snape in Mustache Buddies.
  • The Power of Love: In the Yule Ball 2006 show, Dumbledore performs a musical number about love being the most powerful force in the world. However, it's immediately ruined when he strips naked in the middle of the song.
    Harry: Why do all your lessons end in nudity?!?
    Dumbledore: Apparently you've learned nothing!
  • Precision F-Strike: In "Apparate!", Hermione finds Harry lying in the ground. Harry tells her in a dramatic tone, that something has happened to him and he will never walk again... A horrified Hermione asks him to explain, and Harry reveals that he has mastered the Apparate spell. Hermione doesn't take kindly to him toying with her sympathy.
    Hermione: H— Harry! That's not [bleep]ing funny!
  • Pun:
    Angel Neville: It's what's on the inside that counts.
  • Puppet Permutation: All the Harry Potter characters are made into puppets.
  • Relative Ridicule: In "Wizard Swears", when Neville says that his grandmother forbids him from using foul language, Harry calls her a "blast ended skank" .
  • "Revival Time-Skip" Awareness: The ten-year anniversary video of "The Mysterious Ticking Noise" has Ron discovering that the source of the ticking this time around is the original video, which, at the time of the former's release, was ten years old. Harry remarks that if it's been ten years then he, Ron and Hermione should have left school by now. A naked Dumbledore remarks to Snape that ten years makes him feel old.
  • Rhyming with Itself: Harry's song in "The Vortex" is nothing but this.
  • Ridiculously Human Robot: In "Ron's Disease", Dumbledore is revealed to be a gay android.
  • Sarcasm Mode: Harry's opinion of the fan-favorite suggestion to introduce a Puppet Pal Draco, and execution of same.
  • Saying Too Much: "I just happened to find this book in Snape's bedroom in a locked trunk under his bed."
  • Secret Diary: As you might expect, "Snape's Diary" is about Harry finding and reading Snape's diary.
  • Series Continuity Error: In "Wizard Swears," Harry is furious with Neville for using "Hagrid's buttcrack" as a swear ("Hagrid is ten times the man you'll ever be, Neville!"), but in "Ron's Disease," Harry acts like he's never met Hagrid before. Then again, this itself doesn't really make any sense, since Hagrid is literally the person who introduced Harry to the wizarding world, as shown in the Yule special.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Hermione does this several times.
  • Serendipitous Symphony: "What is that mysterious ticking noise?... it's kind of catchy..."
  • Shout-Out:
  • Small Name, Big Ego: Harry is super self-centered and thinks he can get away with anything.
  • The Smurfette Principle: Hermione is the only regular female character. In fact, Ginny's one-off appearance is the only instance of another female character appearing onscreen.
  • Snub by Omission: Dumbledore either forgets or ignores the Slytherins while singing Neville's birthday song.
    Dumbledore: Gryffindor!
    Everyone: Party more!
    Dumbledore: Hufflepuff!
    Everyone: Wizard stuff!
    Dumbledore: Ravenclaw!
    Everyone: Hell naw!
    Dumbledore: Pretty sure that's everybody!
  • Space "X": The tendency of the original series to do this with "wizard" is comically exaggerated here. Harry doesn't just get angst but "wizard angst." Ron doesn't just get lice but "wizard lice."
  • Straw Loser: Ron is a frequent victim of Harry's bullying. In "The Vortex", he gets sucked into a vortex and comes out of it more confident, but Harry casts a spell to revert him back.
  • Take That, Audience!: The short Albus Dumbledore Lists Your Good Qualities.
  • Take That!:
    • "Awakening of the Incorruptible" has been declared to be a stab at fans who were whining about the sporadic updating. Not that they have a lot to complain about, "The Vortex" was uploaded shortly after.
    • Also:
      Ron: Is it a young adult vampire romance novel? (cut to later with Ron standing in the corner)
    • Several things Hermione states she likes are Take Thats simply because this version of her only likes the most painfully boring things in existence. For example, she once says she's going to a Richard Dawkins book signing.
  • Talk to the Fist: Snape's droning about Harry missing class is interrupted by Harry punching him with a human fist.
  • Teens Are Angsty: In an episode called "Wizard Angst", Harry goes through a wangsty period.
    I'm feeling cranky and pubescent today and I don't know why!
  • Teleportation Sickness: Harry throws up once while Apparating.
  • Teleporter Accident: Ron trying to Apparate with Harry turns the two of them into basically a puppet version of The Human Centipede. An attempt to separate themselves by Apparating again only results in Snape also fusing with them.
  • Terrible Ticking: Double subverted in "The Mysterious Ticking Noise". Snape is weirded out by the sound at first, but soon him (and everyone else) turns it into a funky beat. Then Ron finds out it's coming from a pipe bomb, which immediately kills everyone.
  • They Killed Kenny: Harry casts Avada Kedavra on himself at the end of "Ginny", Snape casts Avada Kedavra on Harry and Ron in "Bothering Snape", and Voldemort blows everyone up at the end of "The Mysterious Ticking Noise". They're all back to normal by next episode.
  • Toilet Humour: "Pantaloonius Poopicus!"
  • Uncanny Family Resemblance: Ginny resembles Ron with longer hair and a bow.
  • The Unintelligible: Hagrid can't string a full sentence.
  • Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist: Harry has moments where he takes things too far.
  • Unusual Euphemism: "Wizard Swears" has plenty of them, including the Elder Swear.
  • Villain Song: The "Avada Kedavra" song is this for Voldemort.
  • Voice of the Legion: Voldemort has a comical variant where he speaks in this comedically low voice.
  • Vomit Indiscretion Shot: Except since they're puppets, it's made out of yarn.
  • What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?: In the live show.
    Dumbledore: ...The spell we know as love.
    Ron: Love?!
    Harry: Lame!
    Hermione: That's not magic!
  • Wimp Fight: Since the characters are puppets any fight will just be them scrambling against each other.

 
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When Voldemort attacks Hogwarts directly, all hope seems lost until Ron declares he has a plan. The plan in question? Gunning the Dark Lord down, of course!

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