Pokemon Black And White Season 15 Episode 26
Professor Kukui and Rotom Dex are big fans of the TV show Alolan Detective Laki, and Rotom even has a blond wig so it can pretend to be the star. When Ash's Electrium Z goes missing, Rotom excitedly takes the case! Through video replay, Rotom tracks the Z-Crystal's last known whereabouts to the schoolyard, where Ash and Kiawe were training. Rotom suspects Kiawe ended up with the crystal, but Lillie has another explanation: the video shows Ash putting it in his pocket.
Ash remembers that he put the crystal on his nightstand before going to bed-and Pikachu triumphantly. Ash and friends are visiting Mallow's family restaurant to try her legendary Alolan stew! But the key ingredient is missing, and substituting Pikachu's Thunderbolt for the rare Yamabuki nectar doesn't work out so well. Ash and Mallow go out in search of the nectar. After learning that Oricorio love to eat it, Bounsweet lures one in with its Sweet Scent, and it leads them to a hidden meadow. But Team Rocket is waiting to scoop everyone up in a net-everyone except Bounsweet, who evolves into Steenee and sends them blasting off again. The new recipe is a big hit, and.
Ash and Kiawe are training with Litten on the beach as Pikachu and Rockruff play with a mysterious shovel that seems to be moving around on its own-until it rises out of the sand to reveal a dangerous Sandygast! When Rockruff attacks it, the shovel is launched into the sea, and the furious Sandygast evolves into Palossand and traps Ash and Litten inside! Everyone works together to stop the rampaging Palossand-with a star performance from Snowy-as Popplio and Pikachu venture into the sea to find the shovel. After its shovel is returned, Palossand expresses its thanks.
Jun 10, 2015Pokemon: Black & White Episode 26 released! You are now watching Pokemon: Black. The Banned Episode trope as used in popular culture. Every once in a while, a series will have an episode that eventually draws in some kind of controversy.
Ash and friends are attending a concert by the wildly popular group Dug-Leo, made up of DJ Leo and his partner, a talented Alolan Dugtrio. Everyone wears blonde wigs in Dugtrio's honor, including Rotom Dex-until its wig is carried off after the show by another fan of the band, an Alolan Diglett! As the band rehearses for their next concert, Dugtrio's three heads start fighting over who gets to be lead singer-and Team Rocket swoops in, posing as a talent agency to lure Dugtrio away!
Diglett joins our heroes to track them down, and soon the band is back together-and. When Lillie's big brother Gladion arrives on Melemele Island, everyone is excited about the powerful new Trainer in town-particularly Ash, who really wants to battle him! After hearing about Ash's Z-Ring and his battles against Tapu Koko, Gladion agrees to meet up the next morning. The battle is just getting started, with Ash's Rockruff against Gladion's impressive Lycanroc, when Team Rocket swoops in. Gladion and Lycanroc unleash a new Z-Move to send them blasting off again, and Ash is immediately interested in continuing the island challenge so he can get a. After having little success using the Z-Move Hydro Vortex, Lana and Popplio meet Ida and her Brionne, who use the Z-Move as part of their show and agree to take Lana on as an apprentice! Lana and Popplio train hard-and when Ida's sweetheart Kanoa returns with reports of sunken treasure, they join the expedition.
The treasure is guarded by a Dhelmise, who's already annoyed after a run-in with Team Rocket and traps Kanoa's boat in a powerful Whirlpool. Brionne goes up against it and loses, but after all that training, Popplio is ready. Classpad Manager V3 Professional Install Keyless Door. It uses Hydro Vortex to counter.
• issue #141, 'Shoot', was based on a school shooting. It was about to be printed when the Columbine massacre happened. The issue was eventually published as a special in 2010. • was intended to have a Cobweb 'story' which consisted of Cobweb narrating a comic biography of the real-world rocket scientist and occultist Jack Parsons.
DC refused to print it because it described the alleged involvement of in ritual magic and questionable financial dealings in the years before he founded the Church of Scientology, which they feared would get them in trouble with the Scientologists. The item was eventually printed in a Top Shelf anthology called Top Shelf Asks The Big Questions, with the Cobweb as La Toile, a French translation that had already been used in the main series as the alias of an earlier Cobweb who lived in France. However, the incident heavily contributed to 's second break with DC.
•: several episodes withheld from all syndication rerun packages since 1971, mostly for heavy black stereotyping. The banned list includes the following shorts: • 'Lazy Days' (1929) - Depicts young African-American Farina as stereotypically—and exaggeratedly—lazy. • 'Moan & Groan, Inc.' (1929) - Features comedian Max Davidson, well known for playing an exaggerated Jewish American stereotype.
• 'A Tough Winter' (1930) - Features comedian Stepin Fetchit, well known for playing an exaggerated African-American stereotype. • 'Little Daddy' (1931) - Supposedly banned because the story involves African-American kids Farina and Stymie living on their own while their father is in jail. • 'Big Ears' (1931) - Wheezer's parents threaten to get a divorce. • 'A Lad an' a Lamp' (1932) - The kids believe that Stymie's younger brother has turned into a monkey. • 'The Kid from Borneo' (1933) - The kids mistake a black 'wild man' for their uncle. • The first Little Rascals sound short, 'Small Talk', was removed from the package sometime in the 1980's, supposedly due to concerns about its length and sound quality. The second sound short, 'Railroadin,' has never been shown on television, as its soundtrack was lost when the TV package was initially sold.
Some stations reportedly didn't run 'The First Seven Years,' supposedly because it featured a violent sword fight sequence. • For some time, the MGM 'Little Rascals' package removed all of the episodes featuring the character Butch due to a lawsuit filed by actor Tommy Bond for using his likeness without his permission. • The trilogy includes an in-universe example. The Fiftieth Hunger Games (won by District 12's Haymitch Abernathy) were never televised again after their initial run, though Katniss wonders if they might have been repeated before she was old enough to remember. However, when she and Peeta finally get to watch Haymitch's Games (the tapes of all the other living victors were sent to them as part of their preparations for the third Quarter Quell) they learn that he won by using the force-field around the arena to deflect an axe back at his final opponent.
Since tributes are not supposed to know about the force-field, much less use it as a weapon, this was seen as an act of rebellion which not only led to the Fiftieth Games being pulled from the schedules, but also led to serious repercussions for Haymitch. •: A rare game show example; purportedly, on the demands of longtime host Bob Barker, episodes in which furs were awarded as prizes. Some say the ban also encompasses episodes that feature model Holly Hallstrom (roughly, those episodes airing from 1977-1995) due to various disputes in which she sided with the opposing side. •: For a period of time in the 1960s, networks stopped airing the final season episode 'The Ricardos Visit Cuba', due to the then-strained relationship between the U.S. And Cuban governments.
• The episode 'Marie's Sculpture' is banned in the United Kingdom because the episode involves Ray's mother, Marie Barone, making a large sculpture of a vagina, much to the rest of the family's disgust (displays of female genitalia in any form are a no-no on British television). • The episode No Roll!, dealing with Ray and Debra's sex life, is also omitted from the eternal re-run loop on Channel Four UK. As ELR is run every morning on C4 before 9:00AM, presumably so people too busy to watch at the time can record it for later, you wonder if issues are at work here. •: One of the last episodes of the series, 'The Puerto Rican Day', was initially pulled after its original broadcast, mainly because felt the episode was too offensive with its depictions of Puerto Ricans, as well as a scene involving Kramer (accidentally) burning a Puerto Rico flag, causing an angry mob of Puerto Ricans trashing the streets, and vandalizing Jerry's car (to which, Kramer remarks, 'It's like this every day in Puerto Rico.' As of 2010, certain local markets across the country had placed the episode back into their packages; but as of 2012, the episode is now back permanently in the syndication package (Kramer's line, 'It's like this every day in Puerto Rico' is absent, though it could be a case of being ).
• The season three episode 'I'll See You in Court' was banned from in the light of complaining about the show's raunchy content (the missing episode was about the Bundys and the Rhoades having sex in a hotel room where they're being videotaped). It finally premiered on FX in June 2002 and has been airing on cable syndication ever since (TBS has aired it), though the episode did air overseas and was released on two DVDs: a compilation of Married With Children's most outrageous episodes, and the complete third season set. • The original version (not the 2010 remake) of: The season 2 episode 'Bored, She Hung Herself' was banned by CBS in 1970 after a viewer reportedly died from imitating a deadly yoga technique that greatly resembled, which appeared on the show. This episode was barred from ever being seen again, not even on network syndication or home video/DVD release. • The Disney Channel pulled the episode 'Party It Up' from rotation after Demi Lovato complained on Twitter that one of the jokes on that episode (and an episode of So Random) made light of anorexia (Lovato herself had overcome the eating disorder). 'Party It Up' later aired without the anorexia joke while the So Random episode that also had jokes about eating disorders seems to have been indefinitely shelved, showing that for these jokes.
•, of all shows, even has its share of some of these: • From the show's 33rd season, one episode dealt with Telly receiving a visit from his bully cousin, who essentially swipes all of his triangles away from him; Telly, naturally, wants his triangles back, but fears that it will cause a fight between him and his cousin Izzy – we are even treated to an where Telly and Izzy do get into a physical scuffle, and we even see both of them lying in hospital beds, all bandaged up and in casts. Kids watching were apparently more entertained by the humorous fight between Telly and Izzy, rather than responding to the episodes actual anti-bullying message, that Sesame Workshop removed the episode, and as such, it didn't appear again on PBS during that year's summer repeats. • One episode was banned before it even made it to air: Sometime in the early 1990s, an episode was taped where the subject of divorce was tackled, in a plot where Snuffy and his baby sister Alice now live in a 'broken home', since their parents had gotten divorced. Sesame Street often pre-screens episodes with focus groups of children, to make sure they grasp a message or educational concept before the episode is approved for airing. However, the kids in the test audiences were so emotionally distraught over this episode that it never saw the light of day on PBS, and to this day, remains unaired. • Another 1970s episode had Margaret Hamilton reprising her role as, which only aired once and was banned for being too scary.
• When the BBC first aired, it refused to air ', ', and ' for several years note the series began its British run in 1969, and those episodes weren't shown on the BBC until the 1990s! (and also refused to repeat ' after its initial UK broadcast) on the grounds of those episodes being 'unsuitable for children'. Never mind the fact that the series as a whole was never supposed to be 'for children' (at least in America). • In Germany, the episode ' was banned due to. (The episode features an alien culture who are in-universe explicitly imitating the Third Reich, rather than the usual.) • Later, the episode ' was banned by because of a line about Ireland being reunited following 'a successful terrorist campaign' (in the context of an episode on a conflict-ridden alien planet where the ethnic conflict was a blatant version of ).
•: had iRue The Day temporarily banned from Nickelodeon and Teenick when Sony was hacked in 2014. The reason for the temporary ban was because a hacking heist was depicted. As of now, the episode is re running again. Considering the network's (The Plain White T's perform on the titular web show near the end of the episode), this fate may catch up to it again in a few years. •: A sizeable chunk (mainly episodes that aired between 1964 and 1984) of the run of this weekly countdown series will likely never air again due to, one of the show's hosts (and arguably the face of its early days), posthumously being outed as a sexual predator whose victims were primarily (albeit not exclusively) teenagers – if it does air, it's only in short clips with the audience blurred out to protect the identities of possible victims. However, clips of Savile that were uploaded to various video sharing sites before his death and the revelation of his criminal activities remain, and TV specials have aired performance footage from the Savile era that do not feature him on camera. • Also banned (at least from BBC Four repeats) are episodes featuring rocker and convicted pedophile Gary Glitter (who, in addition to making several appearances as an artist, mostly in the first half of the 1970s, was a guest host in the 1990s), as well as episodes hosted by Savile's co-worker Dave Lee Travis.
Both were arrested and convicted for sexual offences in the wake of the Savile scandal, though, since Glitter's criminal activities first came to light around the turn of the Millennium, it's likely that the episodes he hosted would have been banned anyway. An episode from 1977 which features a performance by Glitter was repeated, but this was before news of the scandal broke. However, the ban only applies to episodes in which least one of the three appears.
Episodes where they are mentioned in passing (including those where Glitter is part of the chart countdown for that week) are unaffected, as are episodes featuring cover versions of Glitter's songs. Babul Supriyo All Mp3 Download. • Jim'll Fix It, a show whose premise was having the wishes of kids granted via Savile, was banned outright following the revelations. Interviews with the man before his death suggest – in hindsight – that he only did the show so he could be close to his targets. This includes the skit/ crossover ' once offered on DVDs containing '.
When the DVD was re-released in 2014, the skit was pulled. • It can be assumed that the episode starring Rolf Harris as host will no longer air due to him being found guilty of indecent assault via the Operation Yewtree investigations that the Savile revelations spurred.
• Related to the above, once had an episode, 'Favourite Song', where Max impersonated as part of the 'Tweenie Chart Countdown', which featured the titular characters singing, well,. The episode first aired in 2001 – well before the allegations gained nationwide attention. The BBC actually missed this episode when initially pulling Jimmy Savile related material from programming – it aired in January 2013, mere days after the Metropolitan Police put out a report effectively confirming the worst about Savile. The BBC, already doing damage control after allegations emerged that the BBC under-acted in regards to initial complaints against Savile, promptly apologised and locked the episode away. • 's Series 3 episode 'Sex and Violence' was never aired due to its unflattering caricatures of such as Mary Whitehouse.
Ironically, it became one of the few episodes the BBC didn't erase, although it was not legally made available until the 2016 DVD release of all surviving episodes. • Apart from the aforementioned 'A Fix With Sontarans', the BBC never intended to distribute the Season 2 story ' to Islamic countries, for fear of causing offense. 'The Feast of Steven', the episode of the Season 3 serial ', was never broadcast anywhere or at any time except in Britain on Christmas Day. It would not have made sense to air except in the context of Christmas.
The Season 14 story ', which features stereotypical depictions of Chinese and a white actor in, was banned from airing in Canada. • The two-part season eight episode 'Edith's 50th Birthday' was banned in Australia due to the attempted rape scene in which a man who, while posing as a police detective, attempts to assault Edith and leaves her traumatized, after the episode's airing in Australia, people begin complaining about the rape scene that the episode showed that it would never air this episode again in that country. • The entire run of The Black And White Minstrel Show (the George Mitchell Minstrels in blackface doing a traditional minstrel show, and the first-ever BBC1 show to be screened in colour) is never again likely to be screened, or released on video, for obvious reasons. • Similarly, a parody of this show closing one episode of, named 'The Short And Fat Minstrel Show'.
• The from the eighth series of 'Roots' has a final number based on where many members of the cast are in. This was considered as in extremely poor taste even at the time of broadcast (1981) and any contemporary repeats either omit this episode or cut this section.
• Possibly the second episode of season four, 'Top Hat and Tails'. This is most commonly described as a lost episode that was misplaced and rediscovered, but at least one PBS airing in the US described it as a banned episode, possibly because of a dance contest scene depicting two men dancing. • The episode 'Quitting Cold Koala' was banned from airing on tv by The Disney Channel due to a controversy with Stuart's gluten restrictions, where it originally showed Bertram and the Ross Kids making jokes on Stuart allergies to gluten. In address to this issue, Disney Channel posted on their Facebook page 'We are removing this particular episode from our regular programming schedule and will re-evaluate its references to gluten restrictions in the character's diet.' The episode eventually aired on July 5, 2013 as part of a 2 episode spectacular.
The episode had been edited and revised removing any mentioning or scenes on Stuart's gluten allergies. • had the infamous twelfth episode, 'From Another Planet With Love' (also known as 'Crystallized Corpuscles' in US) banned in Japan due to the (Vampiric aliens from the planet Spell) bearing a resemblance to survivors of, especially after a survivor's group complained about it. This episode was also omitted from the DVD release. • The 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster also meant that episode 26, or 'Super Weapon R-1' (also known as 'The 8,000 Megaton Mistake'), is banned from the Japanese airwaves due to a scene where the destroys a nuclear power plant through a tsunami caused by it landing in the ocean. This episode was included on ShoutFactory's DVD release, but the scene of controversy was cut out. • The episode 'The Glory That Was' has been excluded from the Season 8 DVD set and syndication for 'content' reasons.
Presumably, this is because of the lesbian scene that appears in the opener. •, one of the most popular German detective series ever and a hit in most of Europe, was banned completely when in 2012 it turned out that actor Horst Tappert (who died in 2008) had been a member of the SS during his youth. This had never been reported before and as a result all episodes were pulled from syndication and DVD availability. • The 2011 revival of had one stunt that forced the contestants to drink a blend of Unsurprisingly, NBC outright refused to air the episode that included this stunt (the revival was recanceled at the end of its episode order anyway). •: Currently, on major cable networks including TVLand, due to the controversy surrounding its creator and star,, and allegations of drugging women and raping them while unconscious. May become permanent depending on how Cosby's situation plays out.
It was not immediately known whether the current TVLand ban also includes local stations that air the legendary situation comedy, or if other programs starring Cosby are or will be included. However, at least on the Viacom-owned TVLand (and its related networks), mere references to The Cosby Show have been removed from the website altogether note (often, even shows that formerly aired on the network and not currently accessible from the main page can be accessed if one knows how to search the site), and while the complete series is available on DVD, it may be a very long time - possibly never – before the 1984-1992 sitcom is aired on TV again. • has a notorious Banned Episode (never shown on terrestrial TV in the UK, although broadcast overseas and later on UK satellite channels) called 'Klansmen', which has apparent members acting as muscle for a violent landlord against his black tenants. The episode was banned because one of the two protagonists, Bodie, repeatedly expressed extremely racist views himself (which were not endorsed by the plot), and also perhaps because, in a final shock twist, the evil landlord behind the Klansmen, and some of the hooded Klansmen themselves, turned out to be black. • was pulled from TV Land due to the response to the Charleston SC church shooting on June 17 and the controversy surrounding the modern display of the Confederate flag (which is displayed on the hood of the 1969 Dodge Charger known as the 'General Lee' in the show) after shooter Dylann Roof was seen displaying the flag in online profiles and used it as a symbol for his desire to start a race war.
The flag had been a divisive symbol for years, and Roof's use of it was pretty much the final nail in its coffin. • got hit with this once, with the Season 2 episode 'Quiet Riot', written by Peter Berg(who played Dr. Billy Kronk).
The episode is extremely strange, and tries to undo the strangeness with an moment. Apparently, then-president of CBS Les Moonves personally hated it, and gave orders that it never air again. • had an episode which contained a joke about a man exploding on stage in one sketch and a house being crushed by a meteor in another sketch. This episode was banned following the 9/11 terror attacks. • episode 'Chip's a Goy!' Only tried twice in the summer of 2001 before being banned after the 9/11 attacks, due to the fact that the episode involved an called Osama bin Layden. The episode can still be found on DVD (where it's stated to be 'Never Before Seen').
• The episode 'Justice', which has Sam leaping into a member, is consistently skipped over in syndication, no doubt because of the subject matter and frequent use of the 'N-word'. • A strip from drew in plenty of controversy, because of supposed implications that Boston TV and radio sportscaster Bob Lobel is an alcoholic. While some newspapers had a 'censored' version published by replacing Lobel's name with a simple 'him', the strip is excluded entirely in subsequent Get Fuzzy collection and treasury books. • King Features refused to run a series of strips drawn by Bobby London (the strip's artist at the time) in that it entailed Olive trying to return a 'Cabbage Patch Bluto.' It was construed as a metaphor for abortion.
• Following the Chris Benoit double murder suicide, the WWE went about deleting any mention of Benoit from any of its past archives, regardless of the importance of the involvement to the particular story line that episode that it was deleted from had during that time. It led to the WWE not showing certain matches that involved Benoit in any sort of way. When the WWE had its Classics On Demand service, for example, the War Games 1997 match was not on the list of viewable War Games matches when they featured them because of Benoit's involvement. It got to the point where many fans were willing to at least let WWE acknowledge his existence. The Benoit footage was reinstated when the WWE launched the WWE Network, but with the same warning that they usually show before a program that might contain any aspect of its 'Attitude Era'.