Skip to main content

Definitions by Snapper2001

Melodramedy 

Not just a cross between Melodrama and Comedy, It's also the darker and moodier equivalent of Dramedy. A lot of Telenovelas nowadays are full of this, and some crank this Up to Eleven.
Edith Gonzalez was playing the snooty Rich bitch Monica on a melodramedy called Corazon Salvaje in 1993.
Melodramedy by Snapper2001 July 17, 2020

George of the Jungle (2016)

The rather very ugly transitional version of George of the Jungle from the second season of the eponymously Canadian television remake.
George of the Jungle (2016) is an ugly transition between the naïve 2007 version and the possible 3D Movie finale version.

Jungle girl 

A jungle girl (so-called, but usually adult woman) is an archetype or stock character, often used in popular fiction, of a female adventurer, superhero or even a damsel in distress living in a jungle or rainforest setting.
Sheena Queen of the Jungle is the most famous snobbish Jungle Girl of all time.
Jungle girl by Snapper2001 July 17, 2020
Mangani is the name of a fictional species of great apes in the Tarzan novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs, and of the invented language used by these apes.
In the invented language, Mangani (meaning "great-ape") is the apes' word for their own kind, although the term is also applied (with modifications) to humans. The Mangani are represented as the apes who foster and raise Tarzan.
Mangani by Snapper2001 October 1, 2018

Edgar Rice Burroughs 

Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 – March 19, 1950) was an American fiction writer best known for his celebrated and prolific output in the adventure and science-fiction genres.
Edgar Rice Burroughs popularised the pulp fiction genre, thanks to Tarzan.
Edgar Rice Burroughs by Snapper2001 September 30, 2018

Kreegah Bundolo 

Kreegah Bundolo is a phrase that Tarzan—and the tribe of apes that raised him—cry out to warn of danger, for example, "Kreegah bundolo! White men come with hunt sticks. Kill!" According to the fictional ape language worked out by Tarzan creator Edgar Rice Burroughs, the literal translation of the phrase would be "Beware, (I) kill!"
"Kreegah Bundolo" is one of a few names for the Frank Zappa song whose most popular title seems to be "Let's Move to Cleveland". It is also utilized in Bruce Coville's "Allbright" series as Grakker's "violence" module boot-up sound byte. It was uttered by a hunger-crazed Fat Freddy in an episode of The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers.
Kreegah Bundolo by Snapper2001 September 30, 2018

Queen La (Tarzan) 

Queen La (Tarzan) is a character in Edgar Rice Burroughs's series of Tarzan novels, the queen and high priestess of Opar, a lost city located deep in the jungles of Africa.
Queen La (Tarzan) first appeared in the second Tarzan novel, The Return of Tarzan (1913), and reappeared in the fifth, Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar (1916), the ninth, Tarzan and the Golden Lion (1923), and the fourteenth, Tarzan the Invincible (1930). She is also mentioned in the juvenile Tarzan story Tarzan and the Tarzan Twins, with Jad-Bal-Ja, the Golden Lion (1936), the events of which occur between Tarzan and the Golden Lion and Tarzan the Invincible.
Queen La (Tarzan) by Snapper2001 September 30, 2018