Owen wants his favorite treat, 'Jiggle Giggle', so bad that he's willing to use a time machine to get to snack time quicker. But when he ends up stuck in the past, Owen must decide between getting home and getting fed.
Plot[]
TBA
Credits[]
Duncan, Owen, and Courtney prepare to eat lunch, only to discover their lunchboxes are all empty! However, under the basement, Gwen has a whole lunch of their food and she feeds it to her monster friend.
Cast[]
Voice actor | Role(s) |
---|---|
Deven Mack | Chef Hatchet |
Kristin Fairlie | Bridgette |
Drew Nelson | Duncan |
Lilly Bartlam | Gwen |
Darren Frost | Harold |
Katie Crown | Izzy |
Christian Potenza | Jude |
Tristan Mammitzsch | Max |
Scott McCord | Owen |
- Bridgette and Jude's ancestors appear, but have no lines, though Bridgette's ancestor can be heard gasping.
- Courtney appears in the ending credits, but has no lines.
Trivia[]
General[]
- The plot of this episode is similar to The Upside of Hunger:
- Both episodes involve Owen craving for a certain dessert that ended up messing with the time-space continuum. As a result, he must find a way to return to his original world/time.
- In both episodes, he meets dopplegangers of his friends.
- Gwen breaks the fourth wall when she complains about who wrote the plot and filled it with common cliches and coincidences. Harold attempts to answer her question with a flashback only to be hushed by Owen.
- At the end of the episode Duncan, Bridgette, and Jude are seen using a catapult. This may be a slight reference to the Hurl of Shame from Total Drama: Revenge of the Island.
Continuity[]
References[]
- The episode's title is a reference to the Back to the Future film series. In addition, much of the plot resembles to that of the first Back to the Future movie.
- Jiggle Giggle is a reference to Jell-O.
- Additionally, if Jiggle Giggle was invented at the same time, coupled with the fact that, according to Harold, it won't be invented for another 73 years, the kids must've travelled to the early 1820's.
- The book Chef reads to the kids is a parallel to "The Three Little Pigs", except here, they're replaced with guinea pigs.