

This is because of the tendency of their plans to fail every time, as discussed above. While the boys are obsessed with getting girls, they never have and likely never will. A recent example of this is the episode "Spring Break." Every one of their plans fails due to their lack of ambition and misunderstanding whatever idea they have. The boys discover some way to get rich, be cool, or attract girls. Sure, there may be references to modern culture, but the crux of the stories are the same as in the original. Related: Beavis and Butt-Head Are Dads in Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head Clipīeavis and Butt-Head don't go this route.

Need proof? Read any of the dozens of listicles about Seinfeld/Friends moments that aged terribly. After all, the humor of today is vastly different from the humor of the '90s. Given that Beavis and Butt-Head originally aired in the '90s, it would be understandable if they decided to update their plots for modern audiences. This is especially true if the original show aired in a different entertainment landscape decades earlier. While the entirety of the second season didn't drop on 4/20, expect new episodes to arrive on a weekly basis moving forward.When a show returns to the air after a lengthy hiatus, it will often try to update its stories to remain more relevant with the times. Showing us the dynamic duo as adults and also introducing us to the "smartest" version of the pair from an alternate reality, the new television series hasn't been shy about exploring new territory. With the arrival of Beavis And Butthead Do The Universe, the series took the opportunity to introduce new iterations of the crude teenagers. Beavis And Butthead Do America was the first film that was released focusing on the animated duo, though Paramount did recently give them a second in Beavis And Butthead Do The Universe. Butthead and Beavis were able to gain notoriety not just thanks to sharing their commentary while watching some of the biggest music videos of the day, but thanks to their crude and sometimes dangerous exploits which surrounded them with humor and controversy. Instead, the dynamic duo arrived on MTV's Liquid Television, an anthology series that would premiere several animated shorts including Aeon Flux. Beavis And Butthead first premiered on MTV in 1993, but ironically enough, didn't get their start on their own television series.
