Weirdmageddon Part 1 Full Episode

06/10
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Weirdmageddon Part 1 Full Episode

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Gravity Falls Season 2 full episodes Episode List: Gravity Falls S2 Ep20 – Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back the Falls; Gravity Falls S2 Ep19 – Weirdmageddon 2: Escape. Episode Recap Gravity Falls on TV.com. Watch Gravity Falls episodes, get episode information, recaps and more. Watch Cartoons Online Free – Cartoons is not just for the kids. The "Gravity Falls Main Title Theme," composed by Brad Breeck, is the opening theme song played. Jason Ritter, Actor: Freddy vs. Co-creator of "Morning Knight, Inc." with actress/writer/director Marianna Palka. His theater credits include Wendy Wasserstein.

Alex Hirsch says goodbye to Gravity Falls. Club(This interview reveals major plot points from Gravity Falls, specifically relating to the series finale, “Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back The Falls.”) After three- plus years, two seasons, and 4. Gravity Falls came to an end this week.

Gravity Falls returning for season 3? Alex Hirsch hints at the possibility of 'comic or a special' episode Hints of new episodes of the Emmy winning series will make.

The series finale of Gravity Falls aired just last week. Recently, series creator Alex Hirsch spoke with TVInsider about the end of the popular Disney XD animated show.

Weirdmageddon Part 1 Full Episode Dailymotion

Dipper and Mabel Pines concluded their one crazy summer in the Oregon by defeating the inter- dimensional demon Bill Cipher once and for all, defeating his reality- rending reign of terror just in time to celebrate their 1. Following the episode, The A. V. Club called up creator Alex Hirsch for one last Gravity Falls chat, discussing tearful Pines family farewells, the finale’s surprise guest star, and how the path to Weirdmageddon was paved in part by Jon Stewart.

The A. V. Club: Does it feel like it’s really over? Alex Hirsch: I wrote the last episode a year ago. Animation is such a slow process, so I was emotionally dealing with this conclusion a year before our audience was—and even before that, I knew that the series wasn’t going to go on another season.

I’ve had a lot of time to prepare for this, so I feel quite good right now. AVC: Was there a moment in that process where you felt like there was closure?

AH: Gravity Falls is a very hard show to produce. I was not permitted for the longest time to let the world know that it was only going to be only two seasons. Season one was such a difficult thing. I’d never made a television show before, and just the type of show this is—the amount of callbacks and continuity, the level of artistry, the complicatedness of it—was very taxing.

And in the middle of season one—I remember I was on my fourth all- nighter in a row—I promised myself, “This is it. Watch Why Stop Now? Online Hollywoodreporter on this page. You’re not making another season. You’re done.” Because I was wiped out. We had written every episode of season one before the first episode aired, so I had no idea if people would even like the show.

I didn’t know if this experiment had succeeded at all, and I made multiple promises to myself: “Alex, this is too hard, don’t make any more.” Even though I ended on a cliffhanger, even though my original intent had been to make more seasons. I came very close to not making another season. People think, “Oh, Alex, was it a choice between three seasons and ten seasons?” And it was briefly a choice of no more seasons. Honestly, it was the response from the fans—people loved it so much—so I said, “Shoot, I think I need to finish what I started here.”It was a couple of people who I respect a lot—Pat Mc. Hale, who created Over The Garden Walland is a friend of mine, and, !

Geez, you ended on a cliffhanger!” So I said, “All right, even though I promised myself I won’t make more, I got maybe 1. And Disney said, “We only take episodes in batches of 2. So when I started season two, I was already like “I have run a marathon, I am wiped out, but here we go again.” So when I finished the last script of the season the feeling, to me was, I get to sleep now for the first time in four years. That trumps most feelings of wistfulness and nostlagia. Now that the show is finished and it’s gotten such a great response, my main feeling is I feel happy. I feel proud that so many people liked what we did, and I’m also amazed that I survived the thing.

For the most part, it’s just a blur. But there is one part that always gets to me still: When Grunkle Stan says goodbye to Dipper and Mabel. I am Grunkle Stan: I am the voice of Grunkle Stan; my profession, much like Stan’s, is to be this carnival barker delighting and confusing kids and taking them for a strange ride. So when Grunkle Stan says goodbye to Dipper and Mabel, that’s me saying goodbye to Dipper and Mabel—saying goodbye to working with Jason Ritter and Kristen Schaal, saying goodbye to working with my crew, and saying goodbye to an amazing experience. I do get a little misty when I watch that scene even after seeing it 1. I genuinely love the team I got to work with. I’m proud of what we did.

And I do love the fans. Of course it means so much to me, and I can’t help but feeling it when I see that scene. AVC: Given that growing up and learning how to let go of things are two of the major themes of the show, was there a meta element to making this episode, where everybody was working through their own feelings of letting go of Gravity Falls?

AH: . Gravity Falls’ ending, in many ways, is about endings. In “Dipper And Mabel Vs. The Future,” this is where we first introduce this idea. Mabel says the words, “I don’t want to say goodbye to Gravity Falls” to Grunkle Stan. She is going through what any fan is going through: This feeling of “There’s some special, magic thing that I love that’s temporary.” In her case, that’s the summer—but in a larger sense, childhood itself. And the show is definitely metaphorically meant to take you through that experience of growing up. It was always meant to be a show about childhood and transitions and, indeed, about the fact that it’s not infinite.

To me, it’s a more powerful statement about that transition to make something finite than to let something limp on and on indiscriminately just because it’s popular. AVC: Was there ever any point in the production of “Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back The Falls” where you considered keeping Grunkle Stan’s memory wiped? AH: You can look at a finale as chance to make an impact or a statement, to shock people or shoot a big cannon and make a loud noise.

To me, it’s more about a chance to give the characters that I love what I want for them personally. Some people could say, “I’d like something that’s super dramatic and miserable and made me cry and made me sad forever” . The most important thing that I wanted to see in this finale was the family getting a proper goodbye. I wanted to see Grunkle Stan as himself—fully intact, not a damaged version of himself, not a lost version of himself.

I wanted a Stan who knows these kids to look them in the eye, and them to look him in the eye, and say goodbye. If I had a longer .

The important thing to me was to reach that ending at the bus stop where all the characters are there with each other. That to me is more important than being shocking for the sake of being shocking. AVC: How did you get Kyle Mac. Lachlan to play the bus driver?

AH: . But there was something—when Dipper and Mabel get on that bus, they’re not just leaving the town, they’re leaving the show. They’re going somewhere, and we don’t know where they’re going. They’re going on to a future that’s a mystery for us, and I wanted to feel like they were in good hands. At first they didn’t get back to us, so I wrote Kyle a personal letter, saying how much Twin Peaks had meant to me and the significance it would have to our fans if he did the voice. As soon as he read that letter, he called us up immediately and said, “Yes, I’d be happy to do it.”AVC: Did you have anyone in mind as a back- up if he didn’t have the time to do it? AH: We were so down to the wire finishing this episode that if he didn’t have the time to do it, I don’t think we would’ve had a second choice.

I probably would’ve ended up doing it myself. That’s one of the reasons I . Guest stars take so long to get back to us, and then it’s too late, and I have to run into the booth to record it the day before we finish the episode. AVC: In a neat bit of synchronicity, the Gravity Falls finale aired on the same night as a new episode of another of your big influences: The X- Files. Did that have any significance to you? AH: It’s weird because we live in this age of reboots.

Everything is getting rebooted: The X- Files, Twin Peaks. We have shows like Gravity Falls that were inspired by these shows, that are now ending and being followed up by reboots . It is cool to be living in this time. It makes me wonder if a thousand years after my death, we’ll probably be seeing Gravity Falls 9. People whose grandkids’ grandkids’ grandkids love the show are remaking it. There was a role that I really wanted to get David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson to do on the show.