Gosh, Mr. Peabody, if Edgar Allan Poe doesn't marry his 13 year old cousin, he'll never be sent into depression from her death which will mean he'll never get the inspiration he needed for his stories!!!
2:23 "In the dim light, we saw that we were NOW in a chamber of horrors! " Sherman: "Mr. Peabody! Do you see what I see?" Mr. Peabody: "Implements of torture Sherman! An Iron lady, the rack, a spiked boot and.... A TELEVISION SET! The most fiendish form of torture known to man!"
Even if the IRS existed at that time I don't think Poe ever in his life made nearly enough money to be scared by those extortionists trying to threaten him with an audit etc.
The Wayback Machine must have taken Peabody into an alternate universe. In our universe, there was no personal income tax till 60 years after Poe had died.
I loved this cartoon when I was growing up.
Bill Scott (who voices Peabody) actually wrote an adaptation of "The Tell Tale Heart" in 1953 at U.P.A..
Gosh, Mr. Peabody, if Edgar Allan Poe doesn't marry his 13 year old cousin, he'll never be sent into depression from her death which will mean he'll never get the inspiration he needed for his stories!!!
They kinda did,, "Drunk History" on Comedy Central
2:23 "In the dim light, we saw that we were NOW in a chamber of horrors! "
Sherman: "Mr. Peabody! Do you see what I see?"
Mr. Peabody: "Implements of torture Sherman! An Iron lady, the rack, a spiked boot and.... A TELEVISION SET! The most fiendish form of torture known to man!"
"Fins!" "And not on a Cadillac!"
i remmber this its like being in school but your at home on saturdays
The opening is THE opening of the for many of us!
Just realized something: Sherman, Charlie Brown and lilo have one thing in common: they have unusual dogs!😅
Jorge Sainz Lilo? Stitch isn't a fucking dog.
A television (in 1832, of all things)! Enough to scare anybody!
2:36
You're darn right that's torture!
"Winnie the Pooh?!" Poe: "Yes, and tomorrow I shall write 'Little Women'." Cracks me up everytime!
Best line - totally .
"My teacher, Mr Peabody?" 😂😂😂
Pore Richard's almanac=Poor Richard's Almanac, written by Benjamin Franklin.
I love a good "Winnie the Pooh" reference!
Even if the IRS existed at that time I don't think Poe ever in his life made nearly enough money to be scared by those extortionists trying to threaten him with an audit etc.
The Wayback Machine must have taken Peabody into an alternate universe. In our universe, there was no personal income tax till 60 years after Poe had died.
***** It's called "improbable" history for a reason.
As an English and History major, I can't tell whether I should be amused or horrified. Probably some combination of the two.
It's Edgar ALLAN Poe. Thank you.
this is the 2nd time referencing Pooh in a Jay Ward cartoon, the first was Dudley Do-Right
Jon Meyer the episode "Mother Love" where Snidely fools Dudley into thinking Snidely is his little brother
What scares Poe? April 15th.
mr.peabody and the good samaritan some how i remember that one the most' how strange..................
1:16 the itle of the book is called Winnie the Pooh
Happy Halloween 2016.
exactly
Does anyone know what happens when Sherman takes off his glasses?!?
he dies
They should have traveled to Richmond.
Wait! TV did not exist in 1832!!
+trainguy111 And that's why you can't learn history from these cartoons.
+trainguy111 thats what you think.
shame that this brilliant cartoon has so few views while total CRAP like minaj has millions....
Edgar Allan Poe. "Allan", not "Allen".
Let’s take Mr. Poe to the 2017 post presidential election, now let us see what ghoulish things come about in the writings.
Winnie the Pooh?? Woht
Edger Allan POE OOOOOHHHHHHHHH Zelda
Who is PS32?
Public School 32. In some cities like New York the schools were numbered.
Pretty funny
Only thing wrong with this is that Poe never made enough money for his taxes to have amounted to very much. Definitely not enough to scare him so.
N thatz even b4 spungbop!
LOL
the humor is lost on you....
The most famous horror stories? Some one hasn't read Stephen King.
Poe did write the most famous horror stories of all time. Go to English class.
Jon Meyer The Winnie the Pooh reference was a joke. If you really want to be literal, there was no IRS back in 1832.
Or Lovecraft.