
Once children outgrow them, friends are relocated to the titular orphanage, where they stay until other children adopt them.
FRANKIE FOSTER FUSIONFALL SERIES
It has since been named by Entertainment Weekly as one of the best Cartoon Network shows and by IGN in their list of best animated series at number 85.įoster's Home for Imaginary Friends is set in a universe in which childhood imaginary friends take physical form and become real as soon as children imagine them. McCracken left Cartoon Network shortly after the series ended.įoster's Home for Imaginary Friends became one of Cartoon Network's most successful original series and received critical acclaim and industry accolades, including 5 Annie Awards and 7 Emmy Awards, winning a total of 12 awards out of 35 nominations. The series ended its run on May 3, 2009, with a total of 6 seasons and 79 episodes.

On August 20, it began its normal run of 20-30-minute episodes on Fridays, at 7:00 PM. The series first premiered on Cartoon Network on August 13, 2004, as a 1 1/2 hour television film. McCracken conceived the series after adopting two dogs from an animal shelter and applying the concept to imaginary friends.
FRANKIE FOSTER FUSIONFALL MAC
The episodes revolve around Mac and Bloo as they interact with other imaginary friends and house staff and live out their day-to-day adventures, often getting caught up in various predicaments. After the duo discover an orphanage dedicated to housing abandoned imaginary friends, Bloo moves into the home and is kept from adoption as long as Mac visits him daily at exactly 3:00 PM. Set in a world in which imaginary friends coexist with humans, it centers on a boy named Mac who is pressured by his mother to abandon his imaginary friend Bloo. It was produced by Cartoon Network Studios as the network's first show animated primarily with Adobe Flash, which was done in Ireland by Boulder Media. This would make sense, as both shows were created by Craig McCracken.Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends (also known as Foster's Home, or simply Foster's for short) is an American animated television series created by Craig McCracken for Cartoon Network.The design on Frankie's T-shirt is actually the PowerPuff Girls upon closer inspection, they are actually sihloettes of the girls, each one in their respective color.This implies that she might have fallen along with the Imaginary Friends and the Home or that she had managed to escape Foster's and fallen on her way to Sector V.

In the Future, Frankie is nowhere to be found. She gave her hair clip to the KND and Urban Ranger's scientists for nano development. Eddy secretly has a crush on her, and only mentions it in one of the Imaginary Reinforcements mission parts. Frankie has gotten into arguments with him about the designs. Nearby the house, Mandark, has started a construction of an Imaginasium so he can better study Imaginary Friends. At the end of the episode, Frankie yells, "Who left the door open!? Who knows what would happen to Coco if she got out?!") and Mac going to find her, but she expects them to be at the KND Jungle Outpost. She is worried about Coco running off (a refrence to the episode "Mondo Coco," when Coco goes through various misadventures and comes in contact with various obstacles when somebody leaves the door to Foster's open. In FusionFall, she's found standing outside the Foster's Gate. Herriman - she is friends with most of the imaginary friends at Foster's (particularly Wilt, Eduardo, Coco, Bloo and the eight-year-old boy Mac, and also Goo) and can be described as a protective big sister to them. A spunky and compassionate girl - albeit sometimes overwhelmed by her job and certain troublemaking residents and the uptightness of Mr. She cooks, cleans, buys groceries, drives the transport bus and is basically in charge of tending to the physical and emotional needs of the house's many imaginary friends. Frances "Frankie" Foster is Madame Foster's 22-year-old granddaughter and the all-purpose caretaker at Foster's.
