You do realize that's exactly like saying that the Marvel and cartoon versions of the G1 characters should be separate pages just because the comics and cartoon are separate continuities from each other, too, right? You're confusing "continuity" with "continuity family".
And even then, ROTB...
I personally also find it hilarious since a bunch of folks have been whining about the wiki continuing to keep DOTM Que and Bumblebee movie Wheeljack on the same "Wheeljack (Movie)" article instead of moving it to "Que" and splitting out Bee movie Wheeljack either into his own article or merging...
I have a request for a digibash. Beast Machines Blast Punch Optimus Primal in more cartoon-accurate colors.
It is baffling that Hasbro released that toy in mostly bright orange and yellow compared to his more primarily black cartoon model, and even more baffling that Takara kept that same deco...
Back when I was a teenager, I knew a kid (the son of one of my dad's friends) whose mom allowed him to play games like Grand Theft Auto, but forbade him from watching SpongeBob SquarePants because, to her, it was "too stupid."
That is one of the most backwards cases of overprotective parenting...
Episode 4: "The Kindhearted Hydrophant".
We get three new Energy Beast characters: the titular Hydrophant, a Spinosaurus with Earth-element Ground Energy, and a fire-element lion named Ignite Leo. The Spinosaurus's name is a bit tricky to determine at this point, but it's something like...
I think my mom was okay with us watching BTAS because she grew up with Adam West Batman and probably felt "Batman is Batman. No matter the medium, he's just a silly guy in a goofy-looking suit." So, Batman wasn't considered a negative influence.
Oh, not the same for my mom. She's still set in the old "live action is for adults, animation is childish" mindset, despite accepting that there are exceptions, but only a few and they aren't the norm for her.
The irony in my case was that watching BTAS was perfectly fine, but MMPR or X-Men were not, despite being way more fantastical (and in MMPR's case, as campy as Adam West Batman) than the more grounded-in-reality BTAS with its gun violence, gang violence, and more realistic darker storytelling.
And Kevin Lima and the two directors of the documentary did this interview about said documentary, talking about the making of it and lot of additional things that didn't make it into it:
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