Tardy is asked to deliver a letter.
Greg & Warren must find Count Blah so they can sell their reunion special to the Independent Film Channel.
Greg the Bunny plays with his collection of Star Wars action figures!
Greg goes in for an assistant's job at Sweetknuckle Junction, and walks out with a starring role.
When the show bombs with a children's focus group, Alison plans changes -- and Jimmy's ideas just might be the trick.
Greg is jealous when Jimmy gets a new love interest -- whose dog is quite aggressive. Meanwhile, the gals revolt when Gil doesn't invite them to a paintball weekend.
The head of a puppets rights organization orders Greg to familiarize himself with puppish culture -- to the detriment of the show.
Dottie is blackmailed by a guy who has a dirty tape of her -- and plans to post it on the internet if she can't get him a role on the show.
Greg feels guilty for stealing Rochester's job, and wants to patch things up. Meanwhile, Jimmy wants to score with Alison.
Alison tries to fool a TV Guide reporter into believing that the cast is a happy, functional family, in hopes of getting on the cover.
Father/son relations between Jimmy and Gil are damaged when father doesn't tell son that his parents' marriage is over.
Believing that Alison won't let him do Shakespeare on the show, an angry Warren takes a leak in her open convertible.
Warren can't get over his ex-wife, Maggie, and Count Blah can't get over his dead wife, Maldora... until he meets Maggie.
Dottie is crushed when Greg lies to the gang, and tells them that he did the nasty with her.
Alison forces the staff to undergo puppet sensitivity training after somebody writes the "S" word in the men's room.
Warren plots to get even with his bad neighbor, Corey Feldman. Meanwhile, Jimmy feels unloved when Gil yells at him.
Greg falls for a beautiful (live) lobster. An extended reference to Woody Allen's Annie Hall.
Warren tells the show's creators that he is going to Martha's Vineyard with his wife Maggie. But he actually goes to a lonely room at the Carter Hotel. There, Warren obsesses over calling his wife, with whom he is in a trial separation. An homage to the Coen Brothers' Barton Fink.
Greg, Warren and crew are tired of working for 'the man' and hit the road in search of real America. An homage to Easy Rider.
A behind-the-scenes look as crew struggle to shoot Warren, Count and Greg applying their lauded acting talents to perform their favorite Pulp Fiction scenes.
Greg runs into his idol, puppet actor Frederick "Count" Blah. He befriends the washed-up vampire and gives him a part on the show.
Homage to all Coen Brothers films (particularly Fargo) as Greg and Warren attempt to defraud IFC by staging an inept kidnapping plot.
After watching vampire movie The Addiction Greg becomes convinced he's been bitten by a vampire.
This black-and-white prison movie, inspired by the Jim Jarmusch film, Down by Law, features Greg and Warren as prison inmates who learn that show biz is the worst prison of all.
This ambitious homage to Stanley Kubrick and 2001: A Space Odyssey features Greg and Warren as astronauts on a mission to Jupiter.
While Greg the Bunny and Seth Green are shooting a public service announcement (PSA), a creepy technician played by Warren the Ape tries to get the two actors involved in pornography.
Along the lines of Ed Wood, young, enthusiastic Greg seeks to make a short film about his idol, the great Count Blah.
Warren snaps, pulling Greg with him, as he launches into a maniacal Natural Born Killers-esque spree.
This loving tribute to David Lynch's Eraserhead features Greg the Bunny as a lonely father to a baby potato.
Violent and gripping, this homage to The Godfather features Count Blah as the Don, Warren the Ape as Tom Hagen, Gary the Bunny as Sonny, Marc Grass as Solazzo and Greg the Bunny as Michael.
This parody of "Monster" explores what it means to be a monster puppet. When Greg befriends the Wumpus out of pity, he gets more than he bargained for.
After being knocked unconscious, Greg dreams of visiting the town of Dogville, a town defined by chalk outlines in a black void.
Greg suspects Warren of Wumpus' murder and decides to use his boy detective skills to investigate in a spoof of David Lynch films namely Blue Velvet, as well as his Twin Peaks series.
A rockumentary on Greg and Warren's band Plush, one of the few all puppet pop groups.
In this parody of "Being John Malkovich," Greg buys a magical Aztec dog skull from a curio shop in Chinatown.
Hoping to ride on Mr. Gibson's coattails, Greg decides to direct and star in a biblical epic motion picture.