How I Came To Be

An article explaining my life and childhood.

This article is a history of my childhood and how it molded me into what I am today.

HUMBLE BEGINNINGS

When I was a little girl growing up in the 90s, I loved nothing more than watching cartoons. We had video taped various episodes of Ren and Stimpy and I would watch a few episodes over and over again until my eyes bled. Well, not exactly, since my eyes never bled.



I LOVED watching The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, and we had VHS tapes of the show. And there were 3 movies I enjoyed watching- Beauty & The Beast, The Brave Little Toaster, and Oliver & Company. One time, I re-enacted the waterfall scene in The Brave Little Toaster by hanging a toaster, a lamp, a clock radio, and a heating pad out of the second story window of our house. The vacuum wasn't included because it was too heavy. I bet we all re-enacted a scene in a movie we watched at age 4, haven't we?



GAME ON

At the age of 6, my entrance into the world of gaming opened when my mom bought me a Super NES that came with a copy of Donkey Kong Country. It was fun, but I used to lack the patience to go through Barrel Cannon Canyon, so I had to get my mom to help me clear it every time I came to that stage. As I got older, my patience became stronger.



TURNING ANIME, I REALLY THINK SO

The following year, I discovered Pokemon. The first episode of the anime series I saw was Pokemon Shipwreck, where Ash, his friends, and Team Rocket were stranded on the sunken St. Anne ship and the utterly useless Magikarp James was tricked into buying in the previous episode evolved into a vicious Gyarados. I also got the Red Version for Christmas in the same year.



MY HORIZONS BROADEN

At age 7, it opened my entrance into the world of anime. For the next few years, and once the 20th century ended, I continued watching cartoons and anime such as Ed Edd n Eddy and Tenchi, as well as playing video games such as Paper Mario. And then, at age 10 and a half, I started watching Yu-Gi-Oh! and I loved it.



TIME TO GROW UP

2 years later, the stress of middle school became too much for me, so my mom pulled me out and I was from then on home-schooled. At that point, I started watching more mature cartoons like The Simpsons and South Park. I was surprised that they ran long. The latter show didn't seem like it'd last long since it started out being made with construction paper. I also started watching some live action shows and movies, in praticular, just sitcoms and sketch comedies, as well as funny movies like UHF and Spaceballs. I didn't like TV dramas at all, and I didn't bother watching any soap operas.



WHERE I GOT TO BE TODAY

And then, at age 17, I fully acquired a hero worship for Rick Moranis after my first time seeing Little Shop of Horrors on a cable movie channel. For a comic actor, he's actually pretty good. To this day, I would watch movies featuring Rick as often as I want on cable, including ones I re-discovered such as Ghostbusters and Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.

EPILOGUE

And that explains why I joined RetroJunk and have the username of MoranisFan1991.





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Comments
    starfox81 Posted 2 years 9 months ago
    people retro by definition is something from a persons childhood soo everything in this article is retro
    mightybfan Posted 2 years 9 months ago
    I love South Park!
    SuperDave80s Posted 2 years 9 months ago
    Shouldn't that beYu i Oh sucks? It's still around isn't it? Well it isn't all that bad, it's lasted all this time, something good about it..
    Shepard of Suburbia Posted 2 years 9 months ago
    Thumbs up, I enjoyed this simple yet well detailed history of your life!
    ERICT71 Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    Yu-Gi-Oh sucked
    SuperDave80s Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    Thumbs up, it was a nice read. I am not as strict as some in defining Retro as this many years back if it pertains to your personal experiences. For some who grew up in 70s hearing about 90s cartoons as Retro they can snicker but it's fine for people who write about it and it's retro for them. You're just getting to it before the 10 year wait! haha
    MrNostalgia Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    stick*
    MrNostalgia Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    Your articles will get better results if you improve the length of the article and trick to one era.
    MoranisFan1991 Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    @Hoju
    No. I just wanted to expand my tastes.
    Hoju Koolander Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    I have a hard time understanding how you went from actual retro entertainment like The New Adventures of Winnie The Pooh and Super NES to "New-tro" stuff like Pokemon and Yu-Gi-Oh and then back to Retro-goodness like Honey, I Shrunk the Kids and UHF.

    Are your parents time travelers that home schooled you at different points of history over the passed 20 years? Are you currently submitting articles to Retro Junk from the year 1989?
    KIT2000 Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    your articles are getting better and better keep it up :)
    RetroJerk Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    @clockwork engine
    There needs to be a certain period of time between the present and past for something to be considered retro.
    MrNostalgia Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    Considering your last article was pretty much plagiarized, this piece was actually quite good. A little short in my opinion but other than that good work, thumbs up.
    clockworkengine Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    @malbosia
    Anything that isn't happening right now can technically be considered retro.
    It's just a matter of what's important to each individual.
    Malbosia Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    reading this makes me feel old. I wouldn't consider pokemon and yu gi oh to be retro at all.Spaceballs and UHF maybe.
    BlueFiberOptics Posted 2 years 10 months ago
    Your Mom had to help you beat a Donkey Kong level? That's pretty neat, because my parents were never good at games.
    Score:
    13
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