TVTropes Now available in the app store!
Open

Follow TV Tropes

Horrible Histories

Go To

Horrible Histories (Western Animation)

The trouble with being a kid today is that you grow up too quickly. There's just not enough time - well for some kids that is...

Horrible Histories is an animated series based off the book series of the same name, running from 2000 to 2002. it was devised by Scholastic, Telegael and Mike Young for the American market. British viewers more familiar with the 2008 live-action series have expressed bafflement as to why everyone in the cartoon version has an American accent.note 


The Animated Series shows examples of following tropes:

  • Added Alliterative Appeal: Every episode has this title with the exceptions of Royal Pain and Awesome Egyptians, respectively.
  • Accidental Good Outcome: In "The Savage Stone Age", Mo and Stitch find a dead animal and throw it away in disgust. However, a cavewoman catches it, and she likes the taste.
  • Bait-and-Switch: In the Wild West episode, we're led to believe that Stitch ate the horse that was traveling them to California. However, towards the end of the episode, it's revealed that he just ran off.
  • Bizarre Beverage Use: In the Cowboy Episode, Mo uses a shaken-up bottle of sarsaparilla as a weapon in a fight with some cowboys.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: From the Lewis and Clark's Expedition episode:
    Random Character: You guys must be the new CIT's, right?
    Mo: What's that, Cartoon's in Time?
  • Curse Cut Short: Happens with Mo in Royal Pain.
    Mo: "That King Louis is a Royal Pain in the....."
  • Elmuh Fudd Syndwome: Mo and the Narrator in the UK dub.
  • "End Is Nigh" Ending: In the episode "The Savage Stone Age", the episode ends with Mo and Stitch going back to their real time after it begins to snow. It's never outright proven, but everyone believes it to be the start of the Ice Age, which makes Neanderthals almost die out.
  • Fake Facial Hair: In one episode, when Jim boasts about his beard, Stitch boasts that he has one mustache hair and some underarm hair. Mo (a girl) tries to join in by making a fake beard out of moss.
  • Field Trip to the Past: The entire premise of the series. In each episode, Stitch and Mo would be transported to a different historical era, which would help them learn a lesson or solve a problem in their everyday lives.
  • Girlish Pigtails: Mo has a short set.
  • I Need to Go Iron My Dog: Chickening-out version: "Groovy Greeks" has Darren attempting to get out of Grecian-style wrestling by claiming to have sprained his oesophagus.
  • Interactive Narrator: The narrator constantly talks to the characters, and appears to be responsible for the time travelling.
  • Limited Animation: One of the most severe cases of this. Characters move very non-linear and choppily. (Think of this as a kid-friendly South Park.) The digital ink and paint method is the only thing that has you convinced that this show was actually produced from 2000 to 2002.
  • Meadow Run: Starts when Mo and Stitch are reunited in the American Revolution episode. They decide against it at the last second.
  • Opening Narration: Used to justify Mo and Stitch's constant history lessons.
  • Red Shirt: One random bystander dies in every episode.
  • Rule of Funny: Stitch spends the episode "Royal Pain" in a donut costume, with various historical outfits on top of it. It Makes Sense in Context, but what doesn't is the fact that the donut suit has a hole through the middle.
  • Same Language Dub: When the show made it to the UK, new voice actors replaced Billy West and Cree Summer as the narrator and Mo.
  • Unconventional Food Usage: Discussed in an episode where Mo jokes about using some very hard biscuits as hockey pucks.
  • Wheel o' Feet: Used in the animated series.
  • Who Names Their Kid Stitch?

Stitch: Well, Mo, what do ya think about all this cool... stuff?
Mo: We're history!

Top