About: Froggo   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Froggo's short height and calm demeanor also gives the impression that he is a meek person. This especially seems evident in the episode "The Russian Revolution", in which he befriends Joseph Stalin, who bonds with him and arrests anyone who upsets Froggo, including Loud and Toast for picking on him at school, and World's Oldest Woman for giving Froggo a bad grade on a history report.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Froggo
rdfs:comment
  • Froggo's short height and calm demeanor also gives the impression that he is a meek person. This especially seems evident in the episode "The Russian Revolution", in which he befriends Joseph Stalin, who bonds with him and arrests anyone who upsets Froggo, including Loud and Toast for picking on him at school, and World's Oldest Woman for giving Froggo a bad grade on a history report.
dcterms:subject
Voice
Name
  • Froggo
dbkwik:kidswb/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
Show
  • Histeria!
abstract
  • Froggo's short height and calm demeanor also gives the impression that he is a meek person. This especially seems evident in the episode "The Russian Revolution", in which he befriends Joseph Stalin, who bonds with him and arrests anyone who upsets Froggo, including Loud and Toast for picking on him at school, and World's Oldest Woman for giving Froggo a bad grade on a history report. But on the inside, Froggo has the mind of a real genius. Apparently aspiring to be an inventor when he grows up, Froggo often runs up to historical celebrities to ask for two different, seemingly useless items that he then makes into a remarkable invention of his own design (as he puts it to Thomas Edison, "you have your inventions, and I have mine"). He doesn't always get the items he requests for, though, and whenever this happens, he has been known to either go into a frenzied panic (as shown when the Wright Brothers won't give him a bag of marshmallows and a crate of leeches in "The History of Flight") or otherwise tell the person in question not to come crying to him later (in "Super Amazing Constitutions", where Andrew Jackson doesn't give him a bucket of worms and a keg of gunpowder, both of which Froggo later gathers on his own). Froggo also has written and published a series of how-to books about the uses of the things he's made his inventions out of, the latest of which is titled "Froggo's 101 Uses for Glue and Tadpoles". Perhaps because of this talent, Froggo sometimes portrayed historical writers on the show, including Herman Melville, Samuel Johnson, and William Blake. Besides singing alongside his friends Aka Pella (whom he is believed by many to have a crush on), Loud, and Charity Bazaar, Froggo has been shown to have a large appetite (this is shown in "Great Heroes of France", where he manages to eat a loaf of French bread larger than himself.), but greatly dislikes turnips (as shown in "Better Living Through Science") and broccoli (as do the rest of the kids, as mentioned in "Presidential People"). And from time to time, when he asks for items, they are sometimes food related items such as marshmallows or a Bunsen burner for "roasting a weenies". He is also a big fan of Batman (as shown by a glimpse of his room in "Americana").
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