THE POWERPUFF GIRLS
The American animated television series Powerpuff Girls features three young girls with abilities.
The PowerPuff Girls: Bloosm, Bubbles, and Buttercup
The Powerpuff Girls, guardians of the made-up city of Townville, are made up of the calm, level-headed leader, Blossom, with red hair; the sweet, blonde, and frequently overlooked Bubbles; and the irritable, black-haired Buttercup.
Meet the Powerpuff Girls
Blossom is the leader of the Powerpuff Girls . She is the most mature and acts as if she were the oldest. She is best known for her intelligence and determination.
Bubbles is the cutest and most emotional of the Powerpuff Girls . She is often the shy, paranoid and easily scared member of the trio. However, when angry she can be more furious and intense than even Buttercup .
Buttercup is the toughest and goofiest of the Powerpuff Girls . She is best known for her aggressive demeanor, rebelliousness and dislike of "girly" things. She acts as the middle child in her sisters' dynamic.
The good-hearted scientist Professor Utonium was working in his lab to create ideal young girls when a mysterious substance named Chemical X was inadvertently added. The outcome was the three superheroines, who had powder puff-like round heads.
When the professor's experience goes wrong, his lab-assistant monkey mutates into an evil genius, Mojo Jojo, who would later become the girls’ greatest foe. The Powerpuff Girls took up the mantle of heroism, fighting a number of nasty villains, including the gangsters the Amoeba Boys, the wily and nefarious Sedusa, the lobster-clawed Him, and a group of juvenile delinquents known as the Gangreen Gang.
Mojo Jojo and The PowerPuff Girls
WOMEN ENPOWERPUFF
The third wave of feminism was raging in America when The Powerpuff Girls made their television debut on November 18, 1998. With a focus on identity politics, intersectionality, sexual liberation, and more aggressive opposition to violence against women, a new generation of young women tried to redefine the movement for women's rights. New kinds of art and media emerged as a result, aiming to meet the expectations of frustrated and self-assured women.
The Powerpuff Girls' Isn't Just For Girls
The Powerpuff Girls Vs The Powerpuff Boys
Unfortunately, many of the widely accepted gender stereotypes—blue are for boys, pink is for girls, males enjoy action figures, girls like dolls—are perpetuated through cartoons and commercials geared toward younger audiences. The idea of feminism in children's animation ran counter to the exact gender divide that product marketers and advertisers utilized to make money, but when animator Craig McCracken developed The Powerpuff Girls, McCracken gave the series a set of attributes that elevated it above and beyond the standard for a "girls show" and ended up crafting a program for girls, boys, women, men, and, well, pretty much everyone.
Reasons The Powerpuff Girls Is One Of The Best Animated Show
- It's Genuinely Hilarious
- ACTION!
- The Show Is Much Smarter Than It Needs To Be
- PPG Has Some Scary Moments
- A Plethora Of Pop-Culture References
- The Powerpuff Girls Rocks, Literally
- The Show Gets Dirty
- They Got Serious About Feminism
- The Powerpuff Girls Act Like Real Girls
- There Is A Talking Dog
SO GO WATCH THE LATEST POWERPUFF GIRL EPISODE
SEASON 5 | Episode 51