Every morning from about 4th to 6th grade (which is 2004-2006), I'd wake up at about 7 o' clock, eat breakfast and plop down in front of the TV for an hour before I had to leave for school. And every morning, I was sent off to school with the same shows.
While the block showed some classics like Spider-Man, and some pretty cool anime like Shinzo, the block really revolved around two shows that I'm sure impacted the lives of other kids my age as well; Digimon and Power Rangers.
While the original Digimon aired on FoxKids, as did the second season, it was the third season and fourth seasons that really hit me. Digimon Frontiers was one of the first cartoons that made me cry. I don't remember the scene exactly or exactly why it made me cry, but I'll try and recreate the emotional attachment.
Digimon Frontier revolved around five kids who went into the 'digital world' and could turn into Digimon themselves. Takuya was the leader and became a fire Digimon, Koji was the silent, tough guy of the group, turning into a light powered wolf. Zoe was the girl of the group, who had the power of the air Digimon, while JP was the fat comedic relief who had the power of the thunder beetle. Tommy was the small kid who used ice. It was a stale 'kids have to save the world from an evil monster' plot, but with a video game esque twist. The kids had to defeat five 'bosses' essentially. One was a goblin kinda guy, while the second was a Karakuri puppet. The third was a mermaid girl (who, by the way, was a complete bitch. Not gonna lie), and the final was this real scary guy made out of mirrors.
At this point in the season, you've grown attached to the characters as they try and find the fifth major bad guy. Koji, the dark and brooding wolf Digimon fighter, was a particular fan favorite. Upon meeting the fifth and final villain, Koji finds out that it's really his twin brother he never knew about, Koichi. Koji's parents had gotten divorced while the two boys were young, and the two boys had been split as well. The scene in particular that made me cry was a flashback, where Koichi was told by his dying grandmother that he had a brother. Koichi, in shock, ran out of his grandmother's hospital room and, as he's running, trips down a flight of stairs.
The show went into slow motion and played a heart breaking song as you watched Koichi fall and lie motionless at the bottom of the stairs. Apparently he went into a coma, which, at the moment, I'm finally realizing is completely irrational (if I recall, it was a pretty short set of stairs. How the hell do you fall into a coma from falling down a diminutive set of stairs?!?!). However, at the age of about 10, this hit me pretty hard and writing this about five years later made me try and find this scene online. This was all I could find, but it did a pretty good job of reminding me of a lot of aspects of the show I had forgotten about. Looking back, it was one hell of a set of stairs, which again makes no fucking sense. Why, in a hospital, would you have stairs that looked like 20 feet?!?!
Meanwhile, Power Rangers was a huge impact on my life as well. Anyone familiar with Power Rangers knows the show, while being around for nearly 20 years, has never really been connected from year to year. Outside of the first three or four seasons, every year started fresh with a new team of Power Rangers, often completely unrelated to prior season's. The mastermind behind the show was Saban Entertainment, who sold the rights to the show right before Power Rangers: Wild Force, which not coincidentally, was one of my least favorite seasons.


The show eventually moved to Toon Disney along with the entire Jetix block, and without a digital cable package in our household, I stopped watching the shows I grew up watching. However, with Nickelodeon announcing that they will be broadcasting the next season (Power Rangers Samurai, made by Saban Entertainment, who created the first seasons that were genuine classics), I'll have to give it a shot again. Maybe I'll get that shot of nostalgia that I so dearly miss.
Next Up: Cartoons I Used To Love Part 2: Miguzi
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