Funny Girls Sasquatch Cartoon Girl Giant Cartoon

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Bigfoot Sasquatch And Yeti / Western Animation

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  • Aaahh!!! Real Monsters: Bigfoot appears in one episode where it's revealed that he's a former student of the Gromble. This version is a little different from usual depictions, having large ears, sharp claws, and prominent lips. Also, "Bigfoot" is just what the humans call him; his real name is Elban.
  • American Dragon: Jake Long: In a Christmas episode, Jake and his friends try to get a baby Sasquatch back to his family before various enemies find it first.
  • The Angry Beavers: Daggett tried to learn the art of stealth from a cryptid named "Big Byoo-Tox", so that he could successfully snatch Norbert's new toy. He turned out to not be Big Byoo-Tox, just a really hairy, Canadian naturist hippie named Harrington. Norbert knows this because the real Big Byoo-Tox is so massive that the Earth rests on his even more massive butt cheeks.
  • Aqua Teen Hunger Force has an episode where Master Shake moves in with Dirtfoot, basically Bigfoot with one big eye and one big foot.
  • Arthur: One episode features a Dexter's Laboratory-esque sequence (featuring Alan "the Brain" Powers as Dexter and Arthur Read as Dee Dee) involving Arthur tampering with one of Alan's experiments, resulting in him turning into a sasquatch. He is then later seen running away into a nearby forest where he then sees the actual sasquatch.
  • Babar: A legendary surviving mammoth has a similar role to a Yeti in one episode, taking the usual ape-man's role in a show about anthropomorphic elephants.
  • Back at the Barnyard: Bigfoot is a friend of the farm animals. He can also fly and has super strength, making him seem like a superhero. He was also mayor of a town.
  • The Backyardigans had two Yetis in different episodes: Pablo in the appropriately-named episode "The Yeti" (Although he looked more like himself wearing white winter gear) and Tyrone in "Fly Girl" (Which looks more like a Yeti than Pablo did).
  • The Beatles: George and Ringo find themselves accidentally entered in a ski race, much to the irritation of a hulking brute. When the brute crashes into a tree, he has a mound of snow fall on him, and Ringo calls him an "abdominal snowman!"
  • Ben 10:
    • One of Ben's alien forms is Shocksquatch, a Bigfoot-esque alien with electricity powers and a hilarious Canadian accent.
    • One episode of Ben 10: Ultimate Alien had a cold open where Ben was fighting a yeti under the mind control of Dr. Animo. His plan was to use a device to turn all humans into yeti, which was considered so stupid everyone, even the yeti he was controlling all took a moment to give him an incredulous look. A pop up special from another episode states that the yeti is also from Another Dimension.
    • Ben 10 (2016) has a recurring bigfoot like cryptid called "Forgeti" that only the usually skeptical Gwen believes in, quite fervently in fact. It's capable of emitting knockout gas that causes short term memory loss, convenient for keeping its existence a secret, who gets enraged from a docile state at any major disruptions to his forest habitats. Either it's the same one they keep running across all over the country or the species has a wide distribution with a solitary lifestyle.
  • Graham Roumieu's BIGFOOT follows a Bigfoot who is down on his luck and is trying to figure out his place in the world.
  • Big Hero 6: The Series: There are urban legends of a Hibagon dwelling in the Muirahara woods near San Fransokyo. It's actually the mad hermit Ned Ludd, whose long hair and beard is mistaken for the monster's fur. Then in Season 2, the hibagon becomes real as Ned Ludd gets turned into an actual monster by the Big Bad.
  • Biker Mice from Mars: In the 2006 revival episode "A Hairy A-Bomb", the Biker Mice and Charley encounter a yeti that Charley nicknames "A-Bomb".
  • In an episode of Brickleberry, Steve tries to cure his baldness only to end up covered in hair and mistaken for Bigfoot, the real Bigfoot shows up at the end to save Steve from a group of hunters only to be shot by Ethel.
  • Bunsen is a Beast: The Abominable Snowman is featured in the Christmas Episode "Bunsen Saves Christmas", where he turns out to be Bunsen's cousin Bob.
  • Camp Candy: A baby bigfoot gets separated from his mother and kidnapped by DeForest to be used as a tourist attraction.
  • Camp Lakebottom: One of the camp counsellors is a Sasquatch named Armand. Despite his appearance, he's actually a sensitive and sophisticated figure whose true passion lies in stage theatre.
  • Camp Lazlo: In "Radio Free Edward", two yetis raid the radio station, sending poor Edward cowering in a corner. However, they're portrayed with brown fur rather than white fur (which is more in line with real-life sightings), and both are calm intellectuals who love rock 'n roll music. Another episode had one yeti fearfully asking another if campers were real.
  • Captain Planet and the Planeteers: A yeti is the judge putting Humanity on Trial in one episode.
  • Class of 3000: In the Christmas special, Kam is revealed to believe in Bigfoot but not Santa Claus. After Santa gives Kam a card offering him "membership to the Bigfoot fanclub", which Kam gets excited about, Mrs. Claus comments "Silly boy, he still believes in Bigfoot".
  • Courage the Cowardly Dog: Courage meets Bigfoot, who turns out to be a Gentle Giant. In the end, he's revealed to be a lost child looking for his mother.
  • Danger Mouse has to collect forty hairs from a yeti as part of his quest to save Penfold in "The Four Tasks Of Danger Mouse." A yeti appears briefly near the start of "The Strange Case Of The Ghost Bus," and in series 9, he and Penfold have to stop Bigfoot's rampage in Canada in "Bigfoot Falls."
  • In Danny Phantom, a realm in the Ghost Zone called the Far Frozen is inhabited by yeti-like ghosts with ice powers who worship Danny for saving the Ghost Zone from Pariah Dark.
  • Dexter's Laboratory: One episode episode features Dexter looking for the sasquatch, only for Dee Dee to find her first (and name her "Sassy").
  • Donkey Kong Country: In the Snowcap mountains lives Eddie, the Mean Old Yeti, also a hermit and even much stupider than DK.
  • The Fairly OddParents:
    • In the Oh Yeah! Cartoons short "Scout's Honor", Timmy goes looking for Bigfoot in order to get a merit badge. When he finds him, he turns out to be an extremely hairy New-Age Retro Hippie whose real name is Victor Bigfootowskowitz.
    • Bigfoot is briefly shown during the reprise of the Pixie Rap that plays during the song "Ten and in Charge" in School's Out! The Musical.
  • Family Guy: In one episode, when Peter drives into the TV satellite dish, he tells the angry mob Look Behind You because he saw Bigfoot. Bigfoot then explains this is about Peter, not himself.
  • Futurama:
    • Bigfoot appears in "Spanish Fry" (the "frolic in out-of-focus areas" bit from the trope description comes from it); the episode ends with a parody/homage to the Patterson film mentioned above. This was made all the funnier by the fact that in the Futuramaverse, Bigfoot is considered a silly superstition. It's surreal when you see robots, mutants, and aliens scoff at the idea of a bigfoot. The Omicron Persei VIII aliens Lrrr and Ndnd later get off on said beast's existence and have mad, passionate sex right in front of him, to which Bigfoot nods approvingly before walking off.
    • Yetis are also real within the universe of Futurama, with at least three varieties: Himalayan, Neptunian, and Tritonian. Neptunian and Tritonian yetis have been seen onscreen; Himalayan yetis are mentioned by Zoidberg in "The Tip of the Zoidberg".
  • Garfield and Friends: Bigfoot appears in one episode as an essentially normal man (albeit a very hairy one), who wears pants and has very big feet, called by the title of the episode "Bigfeetz". Apparently he used to have a job as a park ranger stamping out fires, but quit due to constant harassment for pictures of his feet. His face is never shown. He is very friendly and Garfield, Odie and Jon take pictures with him after saving him from hikers trying to capture him for money.
  • Godzilla: The Series: One episode features a gigantic Robo-Yeti built by a Japanese scientist who fights against Godzilla.
  • Goof Troop: One episode has Goofy and Pete encountering an unusual depiction of Bigfoot which has antlers. Made more unusual by the fact that it's female.
  • The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy:
    • Both Billy and Hoss Delgado are mistaken for one when they get covered with super-hair-growth potion, and Billy's mother implies that she's had an affair with one.
    • The yeti appeared in the episode "Yeti Or Not, Here I Come", which sees Grim setting out to reap it.
  • Hot Wheels: Battle Force 5: One episode has the five enter a Arctic Zone. They encounter a giant Abominable Snowman similar to a white King Kong.
  • I Am Weasel: One episode has I.M. Weasel and I.R. Baboon searching for the alleged "Big Butt", who turns out to be none other than the Red Guy. Along the way, they not encounter Bigfoot (who has one gigantic foot and turns out to be the long-lost father to Red) but Bigeye ("This is getting stupid."). At the end of the episode, a Yeti makes a cameo appearance along with the Loch Ness monster, a UFO, Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and the Tooth Fairy.
  • Invader Zim: Dib has allegedly seen Bigfoot in his garage, but none of his classmates believe him.

    Dib: He was using the belt-sander...

  • Ivick Von Salza: The Little Lumberjack: A yeti lives in the town Ivick does.
  • Jonny Quest TOS episode "Monster in the Monastery". A group of Yeti threatening a small village turn out to be enemy agents in costumes. At the end of the episode all of the agents are found dead, killed by a real Yeti.
    • Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures had Yeti who turned out to be Neanderthals in a monastery (a knowing throwback to the original). It also featured Bigfoot which were revealed to be aliens in disguise (they couldn't survive in Earth's polluted atmosphere otherwise).
    • There's a yeti who turns out to be a scientist dressed as yeti to scare away snow leopard poachers. The head monk on the other hand...
    • The 80s revamp of the series had a twenty-or-so feet tall viking warrior yeti preserved alive in a glacier.
  • KaBlam! has Mr. B. Foot, a stagehand who just happens to be a sasquatch. He spends most of his time lounging around on the job and beating up Henry. Although he'll never hurt June.
  • The Legend Of Sasquatch: A 2006 computer-animated film featuring humans meeting friendly Bigfoot, and protecting them from a dam that will cause their valley home to flood.
  • In Legend of the Three Caballeros yetis work at Shangri-la, which is a spa resort. They're also a Hive Mind who imprison their guests until they've solved all their problems, but at least they're nice and helpful about it.
  • The Life and Times of Juniper Lee: Lila is a Cute Sasquatch Girl that joins Juniper as a schoolmate and a fellow fighter. Curiously, Sasquatchs in Juniper's world are not magical creatures like the other non-human beings and thus aren't affected by the Glamour that hides the magical world from ordinary humans; this allows Lila to attend school after a body hair-removing spell reveals she is indistinguishable from a human girl except for her larger hands and (of course) feet. Also, she's a lot smarter than the rest of her (presumably) all-male tribe.
  • Looney Tunes: Classic shorts would sometimes star the Abominable Snowman, a hulking furry giant who would "adopt" fuzzy animals like Bugs Bunny and literally smother them with adoration. He would always call his new pet "George." (This is a Shout-Out to the origin of the character: Lon Chaney Jr.'s portrayal of Lennie in Of Mice and Men.)
  • Men in Black: The Series: Yetis are a race of white-furred Ursine Aliens shown in the episode "The Black Christmas Syndrome", where they work as minions of recurrent villain Drekk.
  • Monster Farm: "Bigfoot, Sweetie Baby" had a bunch of sasquatches attempt to eat Goatasarus Rex, Frankenswine, Count Cluckula, Zombeef, and Cowapatra by having one of their kind pretend to be a director wanting to make the monster animals stars.
  • Monster High: Abbey Bominable is a Yeti Russian exchange student. As other characters of the toyline she looks basically like a Barbie doll, but with blue skin and white hair. In some of the movies, other less humanoid members of her family made cameos.
  • Mr. Pickles: Bigfoot exists. It is the secret identity adopted by a Mafia informant while in Witness Protection.
  • ¡Mucha Lucha!: In "I Was A Pre-teenage Chupacabra", a Kaiju version of Bigfoot was one of the monsters captured by Salty and used in a traveling freak show, along with the Loch Ness Monster, and Bad Kitty the leprechaun.
  • My Little Pony:
    • My Little Pony 'n Friends: In "Baby, It's Cold Outside", when crossing the ice maze around King Charlatan's palace, Megan and the ponies are attacked by a white-furred yeti with pronounced, duckbill-like lips and blue skin around its eyes.
    • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: In "Party Pooped", Pinkie Pie gets attacked by a Yeti while on her way to Yakyakistan. The strange thing about it is that it's quadrupedal, with paws for feet. Likewise, its head and overall body plan are more baboon-like rather than the usual gorilla-like depictions.
  • Nightmare Ned: Sasquatch shows up in an episode where he convinces the Tooth Fairy to let Ned try Chess with Death for his teeth.
  • Phineas and Ferb:
    • One episode has a bored Candace and her grandparents (and her grandmother's crazy twin sister who lives in a closet) pretending to be Bigfoot to scare her brothers. It works. And then the monster is revealed to be Grandpa and all is good. Or is it?
    • In another episode, Doofenshmirtz uses an -inator to turn himself into a Yeti.
  • The Powerpuff Girls (1998): In one episode, the girls take a taffy eating sasquatch home thinking it's their uncle. Even the professor thinks he's his brother and can't tell the difference.
  • The Proud Family: When Oscar and Felix go on a Horrible Camping Trip with their friends and families, they're forced to hike up a mountain after losing at Drawing Straws and get chased by a yeti.
  • The Raccoons: One episode deals with a yeti-like legendary creature named The Grimm living in the Evergreen Forest's tallest mountain. It turns out it is actually a statue of Cyril Sneer's uncle that gave Cyril shame as it was done in recognition of his philanthropy, but he promised on his uncle's death bed not to destroy it, so he had to keep hiding it, and that inspired the myth.
  • The Random! Cartoons short "SamSquatch" is about a Sasquatch child who befriends an old woman running a diner and outsmarts a cryptid hunter trying to capture him.
  • The Real Ghostbusters: The Ghostbusters discover Bigfoot in the episode "Camping it Up". Bigfoot turns out to be a friendly creature from Another Dimension.
  • Regular Show: Skips is a Yeti, and one of the few sensible characters on the show. He is also hundreds of years old.
  • Rocky and Bullwinkle: The duo (along with Boris and Natasha, disguised as a mountain guide and his Indian scout) is menaced by an "abominab-b-b-ble snowman" towards the tail end of the "Jet Formula" story arc. It is unmasked to be moon men Gidney and Cloyd, who did it for a laugh.
  • Roswell Conspiracies: Aliens, Myths and Legends is a show which posits that most of the monsters of human myth are actually different species of aliens living in the hidden corners of the Earth. The Yeti are portrayed as one of the more benevolent groups. Their leader is named Tiyet. A later episode introduces the Sasquatch who are a subspecies of yeti with brown fur and no horns; they were all but wiped out when their guardian Su-Ak betrayed Ti-Yet in a fit of jealousy which then backfired and left Su-Ak the Last of His Kind. He later kills himself out of grief and leaves his species presumably extinct.
  • In Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, there was the Abominable Snow Monster, also known as Bumble, who was mean, nasty, hated everything to do with Christmas, was a notorious sinker, and capable of bouncing. Initially, it was an antagonistic creature, but after getting his teeth removed by Hermy the elf, he was reformed by Yukon Cornelius.
  • Scooby-Doo: Shows up quite often, naturally, both real versions and people disguised as Bigfoot or Yeti.
    • Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!: The episode "That's Snow Ghost" features the ghost of a Yeti. According to the man who tells the gang about it, it used to be a real animal in Tibet, but fell to its death while trying to leap over a gorge in pursuit of him, and its ghost later came back for revenge. Spoofed in the special Scooby-Doo, Where Are You Now! where a live action person in a Snow Ghost suit prowls the Warner Bros. Lot to sabotage the gang's interview.
    • The New Scooby-Doo Movies: The episode "The Ghost of Bigfoot", guest-starring Laurel and Hardy, features... well, Exactly What It Says on the Tin. Rather than a true Bigfoot, it was supposedly the spirit of a mountain man who froze in a snowstorm years ago.
    • Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1980-1982): Tenderbigfoot featured a real Bigfoot. "Snow Job Too Small" featured a real Abominable Snowman.
    • A Pup Named Scooby-Doo: Tabloid newspaper "The National Exaggerator" keeps Bigfoot, and his cousin Bighands, on staff!
    • Chill Out, Scooby-Doo!: Animated film featuring both a fake Yeti and a brief appearance by a real one.
  • The Secret Saturdays:
    • Fiskerton is described as a "cat-gorilla", but he looks like pure Bigfoot. He's actually based on a "real" cryptid known as the Fiskerton Phantom, which is a "phantom cat" (big cats sighted in areas they aren't naturally found) from England.
    • V.V. Argost, the series primary antagonist, is secretly a Yeti.
    • The series also features more obscure cryptids similar to Bigfoot and Yeti, such as the Hibagon and the Orang-pedak.
  • The Simpsons: In one episode, Homer is mistaken for Bigfoot after stumbling around a forest covered in mud and ranting incoherently. To add insult to injury, after he's captured, scientists are unable to determine whether he is "a below-average human or a brilliant beast."
  • The Smurfs (1981): A yeti called the Snowbeast appears in a few episodes.
  • Sparkle Friends: One episode has the characters trying to get a photo of Bigfoot. Who turns to literally be a big foot.
  • Superfriends: "Big Foot" has Apache Chief and the Dynamic Duo facing a group of hairy humanoids near Apache Chief's tribal homeland. They turned out to be aliens who were trying to repair their ship.
  • The Thing: Benjy and friends encounter Bigfoot in "The Thing Meets Bigfoot", both Stretch disguised as the hairy cryptid and the genuine article.
  • ThunderCats (1985): The Thundercats' ally Snow Man is a yeti-like being.
  • Tom and Jerry: In Hanna-Barbera's 1975 reboot, an episode deals with the duo helping a lumberjack whose men have run off because of Bigfoot. When he's finally captured, Bigfoot turns out to be a shrimpy fellow with really big feet.
  • Total Drama features "Sasquatchanakwa", who is a purple sasquatch that roams the island. He is sometimes referred to as a yeti Depending on the Writer.
  • Transformers: Rescue Bots: In one episode, Cody and the Bots embark on a mission to prove the existence of the Maine Ridge Monster, a sasquatch-like creature said to haunt their home of Griffin Rock. They find the monster, only to later discover it's actually the Mayor who became addicted to some deadly synthetic food that caused its consumers to transform into hulking yeti-like werebeasts when exposed to moonlight. Cody's brother Graham is also revealed to be under the effects of the synthetic food as shown in a somewhat hard to watch transformation sequence.
  • The T.U.F.F. Puppy episode "Bagel and the Beast" has Snaptrap commit robberies while disguised as Bigfoot, with Dudley desperate to prove Bigfoot's innocence due to being friends with him.
  • In The Venture Bros., the Bionic Man has fled into the forest and falls in love with Sasquatch. He and Brock shave Sasquatch to get past an Army roadblock (with the Bionic Man disguising himself by wearing the shaved Sasquatch fur), passing him off as a landmine victim. Another soldier arrives too late to accurately identify him as a shaved Sasquatch. In a later episode, Brock stays for a while at their house.
  • In We Bare Bears, a friendly but socially-awkward sasquatch named Charlie is a recurring character. The episode "Ralph" introduces a yeti named Ralph, who's bigger and a lot meaner than Charlie and has a twisted sense of humor. A case of Shown Their Work, since Yetis are typically described in folklore as being bigger and meaner than North American sasquatches.
  • The Wild Thornberrys: One episode revolves around the legend of the Yeti. Eliza encounters her father's old mentor who had been pretending to be a Yeti to scare away a construction crew who has been threatening the survival of a snow leopard family. Eliza tries to pretend to be a Yeti herself when he considers retiring, but ends up nearly getting captured by the construction workers only to be saved by a real Yeti who chases them off.
  • Wishfart has a recurring yeti character named Samuel, who is permanently smothered in ice cream due to a wish he made from Dez for infinite ice cream that he soon ended up regretting. Additionally, a Bigfoot named Saskie shows up from time to time.
  • X-Men: Evolution:
    • The show implies that Sabretooth impersonates Bigfoot from time to time. Hey, you're a seven-foot-tall shaggy guy with teeth and claws, what else could you be?
    • In one episode, Beast is mistaken for Bigfoot by hunters and scientists when he takes a class on a nature retreat.

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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/BigfootSasquatchAndYeti/WesternAnimation

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