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Determined to save their friends from Adopt-a-thought Saturday, Mac and Bloo turn to some drastic measures. Now, anything that keeps her away from Bloo must be removed even if it's his best friend, Mac. But when Frankie tries to take a simple trip to the mall, Bloo and the Gang tag along and are this caregiver's worst nightmare.
We also learn some things about Frankie, like the fact that she went to the prom with Wilt. Additional contentTranscriptGalleryEpisode GuidePreviousNextHouse of Bloos, Part 3The Trouble With Scribbles"Store Wars" is the fourth episode of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends and the first season.
Episode details
The series premiered on August 13, 2004, with the 90-minute pilot episode "House of Bloo's", and concluded on May 3, 2009, with the episode "Goodbye to Bloo". The series ran for 6 seasons consisting of 13 episodes apiece. Get a list of the best movie and TV titles recently added (and coming...
It is on rare occasions that I stumble across impressive children's cartoons. Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is one of them. The entire concept of the show is fresh and fun. The stories (at least two-thirds of the time) have surprisingly strong, positive messages to grow by. There is occasional rude humor found in the series, but besides that, I am very impressed by the quality of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
Episodes (
Eventually, they each wander off in a different direction after being distracted by something. The percentage of approved Tomatometer critics who have given this title a positive review. When individual episodes have scores, they will influence the final season score.
108Bloo and Mac enjoy playing with each other in the mud, but when it starts raining, they get sick. As Mac is taken home by Frankie, Bloo starts feeling worse and misses out on the scary movie that he and the others planned to watch that night. When Wilt, Eduardo, and Coco begin to believe that the ghost in the movie is real, they mistake a pale Bloo to be the ghost. Meanwhile, Frankie gets locked out of the house in the rain after dropping off Mac and, as she tries to get back in by risking her own life, feels she is being stalked by something hiding in the dark. 110bTerrence has an idea to make up a square friend named Red to beat Bloo up with so he can bully Mac to his heart's content, but the friend he creates is friendly instead of being mean and violent. Mr. Herriman sends Frankie to the mall to get streamers for Madame Foster's birthday party, and Mac, Bloo, Eduardo, Wilt, and Coco end up coming along.
Scene 5: Main hall
It's Madame Foster's birthday, and the friends are helping prepare for a surprise party. Mr. Herriman sends Frankie to get streamers, as he believes parties cannot occur without them. Frankie is about to leave for the mall, when Bloo tells her he wants to buy Madame Foster a birthday present.

A definite must-have for the imaginitive person. The day of Madame Foster’s birthday comes around and Frankie has forgotten to buy streamers, so Mr. Herriman orders her to go get some. Mac, Bloo, Eduardo, Wilt, and Coco tag along, but wander off while in the mall and get into various scrapes, slowing Frankie down.
That's why Madame Foster started Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends. This focuses on Madame Foster's house and its inhabitants waiting to be reunited or adopted by kids. This Cartoon Network show hits on the ingenious idea of creating a special place where imaginary friends go once children have outgrown them. Madame Foster runs this special home, and the adventures of its inhabitants circle around Mac and Bloo, two long-since-discarded imaginary friends.
Frankie is reluctant, but she ends up taking Mac, Bloo, Wilt, Eduardo, and Coco to the mall. The gang heads for a furniture store, and Bloo decides that he wants to buy Madame Foster a vibrating chair, but Frankie tells him she can't afford to pay for it if he breaks it. Bloo gets Frankie to sit in it herself, causing her to fall asleep due to the comfortable vibrations.
Foster's home is an original series on cartoon Network and is extremely creative. I bought it for my girlfriends younger sister for Christmas, but secretly wanted it for myself. She's 10, I am 20 and we both enjoy it very much. It's very obviously funny, but it's extremely clever too. The animation is great, and all of the characters are so different and unique. It's so much guilt free fun, and I highly recommend the program for all age groups with a happily open mind.

After watching a scary movie on a dark, stormy night, Wilt and Eduardo are sure there's a ghost in the house. Little do they know that it's just Bloo, who is ghostly white and snot-ridden with a cold. I haven't actually watched the DVDs yet, because they are a Christmas present for my sister. It is extremely funny and one of the most fun and kid appropriate shows out there in my opinion. I bought it because my sister, who is now 19, loves the show.
It is Bloo's birthday, and his cake is being guarded by Mr. Herriman. After being refused to have his cake, Bloo leaves and Frankie comes in and sees Mr. Herriman sleeping on the job. She makes it look like he ate the cake in his sleep and leaves. Feeling guilty, Mr. Herriman confesses that he ate the cake, on which both Frankie and Bloo begin to laugh, saying they pulled a prank on him and that the cake is just fine. When Frankie opens the refrigerator to show that the cake is fine, it actually is gone, having been taken by Madame Foster. Even though season 2 aired from early-mid 2005, the first five episodes finished production in late 2004 .

204bWhen Ivan, a seeing eye friend, loses his blind kid, the friends try to find the boy before harm comes to him. 202bAll Wilt wants to do is watch a basketball game on TV, but the house's ridiculous requests and Wilt's inability to refuse them keep him from seeing the big game. Bloo calling people rip-off artists, kicking them in the shin, and running away.
This episode first premiered on February 28, 2009 in Europe. This episode first premiered on February 22, 2009 in Europe. 213A rich benefactor is considering giving money to a charity, and visits Foster's to see if it is worthy. Mr. Herriman then tries to teach Coco to be sophisticated, while Mac and Frankie teach Bloo sarcasm, since he does not understand that Mr. Herriman was being sarcastic when he and Mac were promised jet cars.

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