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- Tripping the Rift is a CGI science fiction comedy television series. The universe is modeled largely after the Star Trek universe, with references to "warp drive" and "transporter beam" technology, occasional time travel, the Federation and the Vulcans. The series also includes elements borrowed from other sources such as Star Wars, 2001: A Space Odyssey and Battlestar Galactica. The general setting is that known space is politically divided between two superpowers: the Confederation (led by Humans, and a parody of the Federation from Star Trek) and the Dark Clown Empire (a parody of the Galactic Empire from Star Wars). The Dark Clown Empire is a totalitarian, tyrannical police state, led by the evil Darph Bobo. In contrast, the Confederation is technically a democratic and free society, but in practice, is dominated by mega-corporations and bloated bureaucracies. Ultimately, both superpowers end up exploiting and restricting their inhabitants, albeit in different ways. For example, the value placed on life is so commercialized in the Confederation that clearly sentient robots and androids are reduced to essentially slave-status. The Dark Clown Empire practices actual slavery, and while the Confederation does not, most of its inhabitants (including the Human ones) are openly described as living in wage slavery. The only place that anyone can truly be free is in the border region between the two superpowers, which is directly controlled by neither. This borderland is known as "the Rift", hence those outlaws on the fringes of society who cling to their freedom by moving back and forth around the Confederation/Dark Clown Empire border to evade detection are said to be "Tripping the Rift." The series follows one such group of outlaws led by Chode aboard the Spaceship Bob, taking odd-jobs and usually pursuing various get-rich-quick schemes.
- A barbarian woman with a miraculous healing staff gains the help of a group of to-be heroes as an army of dragons invades the land.
- An inquisitive 12-year-old girl accidentally awakens the mummy of a young Egyptian pharaoh, who finds it difficult to accept that no one worships him in the 21st century.
- A foreign exchange student interacts with the inhabitants of a deserted island.
- Twelve-year-old Andy Larkin, the greatest prankster on Earth, unleashes a flurry of practical jokes on the residents of East Gackle.
- A 21 year old virgin wakes up pregnant with a demonic fetus that possesses her and commands her to go on a murderous rampage.
- itty bitty HeartBeats is a series of animated musical advertures for girls and boys ages 2-6. Through humor, friendship and original songs, the itty bitty HeartBeats help children on Earth solve problems. "we do things from the heart." Episode 1. HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS Episode 2. YOU'RE SPECIAL TOO
- The King of Curtains/Margery the Duck.
- When two Alien Greys try to scam Chode into paying for an accident they caused, he escapes through a time warp. This leads both ships to travel back in time and crash land on Earth near the lackluster town of Roswell.
- Todays theme is Prank Days of Summer.
- The crew takes a holiday at Gillabus IV and find the entire planet celebrating the holiday of Clownza. Realizing the festivities are part of one of Darph Bobo's schemes, Chode invents his own rival holiday, 'Peacester'.
- The Jupiter 42 is out of fuel and has to pass through the Bermuda Quadrant in order to get to a fueling station. On the way they run into the ghost ship USS El Dorado.
- The crew walks out on Chode and find new jobs on a Cruiseship in space. Meanwhile, Chode hires a group of illegal alien aliens to run the Jupiter 42.
- Commander Adam 1 has crashed on Vitalius IV, a planet inhabited by just about every SciFi monster ever created. His wife Nancy forces Chode to go rescue him by injecting an earwig that will consume his brain within 24 hours.
- Tut is worried that Cleo might die from Bronchitis. Because of this, he decides to get his own doctor to preserve her, the way he'd been preserved. (Tut doesn't get the concept of the cold.) This could have gone better.
- A new alarm system in the museum wakes Tut up, but after he breaks it, he lets two thieves get away. They steal the Crown of Geb because that artifact's alarm was annoying, thus switched off.
- Tut has a crush on Cleo's best friend, Natasha, so he summons Bes, the protector of children to put a love spell on her. The spell goes wrong and Tut must choose whether he really loves her or if it's just a small crush.
- Tut uses a scroll which accidentally switches Cleo's and Luxor's body.
- Tut is caught cheating a game with an Egyptian god named Isis, so she summons a ghost to punish him. The ghost was a past friend of Tut's.
- Tut doesn't like the modern world. He finds it very uncomfortable. So Tut changes modern world back into ancient Egypt. As usual, nothing goes as planned and everything gets out of control. Tut finds out that this Egypt doesn't work for him, either.
- The shadows run free when Tut accidentally uses a scroll, this allows a shadow demon from the underworld to come to the overworld to eat the shadows, and Tut, Cleo, and Luxor have to get them back before the sun sets.