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(Title card)
== Intro ==
'''Arthur:''' "My Sister Is A Sissy" by Jack Prelutsky.


I'M A POET
My sister is a sissy<br />
She's afraid of dogs and cats<br />
A toad can give her tantrums,<br />
And she's terrified of rats


Writer: [[Joe Fallon]]
She screams at things with stingers,<br />
Things that buzz and things that crawl.<br />
Just the shadow of a spider<br />
Sends my sister up the wall


Storyboard Artist: [[Kevin Currie]]
A lizard makes her shiver,<br />
And a turtle makes her squirm.<br />
She positively cringes<br />
At the prospect of a worm.


(Bird singing, thunder crashing)
She's afraid of things with feathers.<br />
She's afraid of things with fur.<br />
She's scared of almost everything.<br />
How come ''I'm'' scared of '''her'''?


[[Binky Barnes]]: (voice-over) I'm a Poet!
== Title Card: Arthur with Umbrella ==
''Mr. Ratburn holds up a list in class.''


(Back to the story)
'''Mr. Ratburn:''' Only two days until the library poetry contest and only one student has signed up: Fern.


[[Nigel Ratburn]]: Only two days until the library poetry contest, and only one student has signed up! [[Fern Walters|Fern]]!
'''Francine:''' Fern never said she wrote poetry.


[[Francine Frensky]]: Fern never said she wrote poetry!
'''Binky:''' Fern never says ''anything''.
 
'''Mr. Ratburn:''' The judge is famous poet Jack Prelutsky. It's not too late to enter.
 
'''Francine:''' Listen, I'm a poet. Moon, June, spoon, a loon...
 
''Fern sits in the cafeteria reading a book. Binky and Rattles walk past her.''
 
'''Binky:''' Just thinking of poetry, oh, it makes me sleepy.
 
''He fakes falling asleep.''
 
'''Rattles:''' Binky, know what’s twice as boring as a poem?
 
'''Binky:''' What?
 
'''Rattles:''' Two poems.
 
'''Kids:''' (laugh)
 
''Fern looks annoyed, then stands up.''
 
'''Fern:''' You only make fun because you couldn’t write a poem if you tried.
 
''She leaves.''
 
'''Kids:''' (gasp)
 
'''Francine:''' That’s the most she’s said all year.
 
'''Buster:''' You tell ‘em, Fern! (whistles)
 
''Binky gives him a death glare. He shuts up.''
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''After school the kids run after Fern.''
 
'''Binky:''' Maybe I couldn’t write a poem, but neither could they.
 
'''Francine:''' I could if I wanted to.
 
'''Arthur:''' Me too. No problem.
 
'''Binky:''' I can write a better poem than you with my brain tied behind my back, Arthur.
 
'''Arthur:''' Ha! Oh yeah? I’d like to see that.
 
''Fern stops so abruptly that the others bang into one another.''
 
'''Kids:''' Ouch!
 
'''Fern:''' I bet none of you could even write a poem.
 
'''Francine:''' I could too.
 
'''Arthur:''' Maybe Binky can’t, but I can.
 
'''Binky:''' There’s nothing Arthur can do that I can’t.
 
'''Muffy:''' You are so rude, Fern.
 
''Everyone argues with each other''
 
'''Binky:''' Someone hold me back or I’ll write a poem right now.
 
'''Fern:''' Quiet! ''Car alarm goes off.'' I bet that none of you can write a poem and finish it in time to submit it to the poetry contest.
 
'''Francine:''' I bet I can!
 
'''Arthur:''' I’ll not only finish one, it will be better than Binky’s.
 
'''Buster:''' Is anyone else hungry?
 
'''Fern:''' Anyone who doesn’t has to join the poetry club for a year. Bet, or are you bunch of chickens? 
 
''She holds out her little finger. The others hook their little fingers in.''
 
'''Arthur:''' ''(to Buster):'' How do you write a poem?
 
'''Buster:''' I thought you knew.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Arthur and Buster look through books in the library.''
 
'''Arthur:''' I don’t want to go to poetry club for a whole year.
 
'''Buster:''' It’ll be a cinch. We just find a good poem and write one like it. (reads:) “The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things / of shoes and ships and sealing-wax, of cabbages and kings / and why the sea is boiling hot, and whether pigs have wings.” No, I don’t think I can write like that.
 
'''Arthur:''' Let’s find one that makes sense.
 
'''Buster:''' What does this mean? “Something better than his dog, a little dearer than his horse”.
 
'''Arthur:''' Maybe it’s a riddle. What’s better than his dog, a little dearer than his horse?
 
'''Buster:''' A gerbil that can do your homework.
 
'''Arthur:''' Nothing’s better than my dog. Skip this guy, he doesn’t like dogs.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Arthur and Buster check poetry books in the treehouse.''
 
'''Buster:''' Whoa, listen to these titles: “The Haunted Palace”, “The Conqueror Worm”…
 
'''Arthur:''' That must be about a giant worm.
 
'''Buster:''' Listen to this: "It was the dead who groaned within."
 
'''Arthur+Buster:''' Cool!
 
'''Arthur:''' I got one that makes sense. (reads:) "Listen, my children and you shall hear / of the midnight ride of Paul Revere..."
 
'''Buster:''' All right. We're ready.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Binky, Fern, Brain, Buster, Arthur and Muffy sit at a table in the cafeteria.''
 
'''Buster:''' How long did you work on your poem last night?
 
'''Arthur:''' I... sort of watched TV.
 
'''Fern:''' Brain has finished his poem.
 
''Arthur spits out milk.''
 
'''Arthur:''' Already?
 
'''Brain:''' Can I read it to you? Any comments will help me perfect it for the contest. “I, The Brain will explain what makes rain. / Water droplets are what clouds contain. / They reach saturation / become precipitation / hit the ground and go right down the drain.“
 
'''Binky:''' (yawns)
 
''Fern claps.''
 
'''Muffy:''' I'm done too. "My favorite thing to do is shop / for shoes, shirts, coats, rings..." You can never have enough jewellery. “...and games until I drop. / I love to shop.”
 
'''Buster:''' That's not a poem, it's a list.
 
'''Muffy:''' “Shop” rhymes with “drop”. Duh.
 
'''Fern:''' Everyone else, remember to have your poems done by tomorrow.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Arthur writes something in his room, then reads it out loud.''
 
'''Arthur:''' "Listen, my children as I tell you / of a duck and a chicken on a bus to Oklaho-moo..." Yeuch!
 
''He crosses out the whole page.''
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Arthur is on the phone.''
 
'''Arthur:''' Buster. When you're done with your poem, can you help me?
 
'''Buster:''' I'm done. But I'm watching a video. Sorry!
 
'''D.W.:''' I know a great poem: “Roses are red / violets are blue / my nose smells / and your feet do too”. (laughs) That's so funny! Doesn't that crack you up, Arthur? ''Arthur walks up the stairs looking depressed.'' Arthur?
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''The next morning Arthur drinks his milk, picks up his books and goes to the door.''
 
'''Mr. Read:''' Why the big rush to get to school?
 
'''Arthur:''' I have to stop at Fern's house.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Arthur walks up to Fern's house. He is about to ring when he hears voices from inside.''
 
'''Fern:''' Can I hear that again?
 
'''Buster:''' “Once upon a midnight cloudy / a big old bat said 'Howdy! Howdy!'" ''Arthur looks inside. Buster and Fern are sitting on the couch.'' (gasps)
 
'''Arthur:''' You said you were done!
 
''Buster comes to the window.''
 
'''Buster:''' I-I didn't want you to think I couldn't do it.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Arthur and Buster walk to school with Fern.''
 
'''Fern:''' Instead of copying other people’s poems, why not just write about what you like?
 
'''Buster:''' Who’d want to hear what I like?
 
'''Fern:''' Who wouldn’t?
 
''Arthur and Buster smile.''
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Jack Prelutsky is reciting a poem in the library in front of Miss Turner and an audience of kids.''
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' Today is very boring,<br>
it’s a very boring day.<br>
There’s nothing much to look at,<br>
there’s nothing much to say.
 
There’s a peacock on my sneakers,<br>
there’s a penguin on my head,<br>
there’s a dormouse on my doorstep,<br>
I am going back to bed.
 
Today is very boring,<br>
it’s boring through and through.<br>
There is absolutely nothing<br>
that I think I want to do.
 
I see giants riding rhinos, ''Francine has a thought bubble of a giant on a rhino.''<br>
and an ogre with a sword, ''Buster sees a one-eyed giant swinging a sword.''<br>
there’s a dragon blowing smoke rings, ''A dragon who looks like Mr. Ratburn, breathes fire.''<br>
I am positively bored. ''The dragon breathes smoke rings on Muffy.''
 
'''Muffy:''' (coughs)
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' Today is very boring,<br>
I can hardly (yawns) help but yawn,<br>
there’s a flying saucer landing<br>
in the middle of my lawn,
 
a volcano just erupted<br>
less than half a mile away, ''Binky sees a volcano erupting right behind the school.''<br>
and I think I felt an earthquake, ''Sue Ellen sees Binky dancing, which shakes the ground.''<br>
it’s a very boring day.
 
''Everybody claps.''
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' Thank you. Thank you.
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
''Fern finishes her poem.''
 
'''Fern: '''“...and the ghosts of all the fallen trees weep for a world that can't live without them.“ ''Mr. Prelutsky and the kids clap.'' Thank you, Mr. Prelutsky. I have all of your poetry books.
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' You are obviously a little girl with impeccable taste. Our next poet is Francine Frensky.
 
''While reciting her poem, Francine holds up signs with illustrations. Meanwhile Muffy plays the bongos.''
 
'''Francine:''' "My dad took me to a hockey game. / I got hit in the head by a puck. / I yelled out 'Ow, my head! Ow! Call an ambulance! Ouch! Ow! Oh brother! This hurts! / Put ice on it. It's gonna swell.' / I got a big old purple lump on my head / and used it for Show And Tell."
 
''Everybody claps.''
 
'''Fern:''' Where's Arthur?
 
''Arthur is sitting under a tree, writing and looking at his watch.''
 
<nowiki>***</nowiki>
 
'''Binky:''' “People think I can't write a poem / but they are so wrong, I can write a poem. / I wrote this one, I wrote this poem, / and I gave it the title 'Binky's Poem'. / So shut up!” The end.
 
''Fern claps.''
 
'''Muffy:''' That’s not a poem. He rhymed “poem” with “poem” four times.
 
'''Fern:''' It was great. Yeah, Binky!
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' Our final poet is Buster Baxter.
 
''While Buster reads his poem, Arthur is racing through the city on his bike. He has to wait for a group of preschool children and a circus parade.''
 
'''Buster:''' “These are the things that make me nauseous: / gloppy green gloop that drips from faucets, / blue hair that grows on slices of bread, / when your big old dog drools in your bed, / when a dirty sock drops on your face, pee yew, / when your friend's baby sister starts to spew, / half a worm in the apple you bit, / finding a human bone in your jello, / flowing nose slime green and yellow, / and people who eat creamed corn with their mouths open so you can see it.” The end.
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' I probably shouldn't mention the free butterscotch pudding being served at the reception.
 
'''Kids:''' (Bleugh!)
 
''Arthur bursts in.''
 
'''Arthur:''' Am I too late? I couldn't help it. The street was full of elephants!
 
''He whispers to Jack Prelutsky.''
 
'''Jack Prelutsky: '''Our final ''final'' poem is “Jimmy Goes to the City” by Arthur Read.
 
'''Arthur:''' "Jimmy was a happy ape until some hunters caught him. / He liked the jungle better than the city where they brought him. / The city was louder, the city was meaner. / Even the dirt in the jungle was cleaner./ So Jimmy made a daring escape. / The hunters were suddenly minus one ape. / He climbed the tallest building because from there he'd see / how far away the jungle was from the middle of the city. / Jimmy jumped into a passing plane / but the pilot didn't wait for him to explain. / Jimmy went back to the jungle and told his ape friends in their lair / 'The city's okay for a visit, but you couldn't make me live there.'"
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' And the winner of the contest is... I hate contests. You all win.
 
'''Fern:''' And nobody has to join the poetry club because they won the bet.
 
'''Arthur:''' But this was fun!
 
'''Buster:''' Yeah! I know lots of other disgusting things.
 
'''Muffy:''' I want to play my bongos.
 
'''Binky:''' You can't stop us if we want to join.
 
''Francine comes with a clipboard.''
 
'''Francine:''' Hey, here's a sign-up list.
 
''Fern shakes hands with Mr. Prelutsky.''
 
'''Fern:''' Mr. Prelutsky, could you read us another poem?
 
'''Kids: '''(Yeah! Please!)
 
'''Jack Prelutsky:''' All right. Well, Buster's poem put me in mind of one of my own called “Jellyfish Stew”. “Jellyfish stew / I'm loony for you. / I dearly adore you, / oh truly I do...”
[[Category:Transcripts]]
[[Category:Transcripts]]
[[Category:Unfinished Transcripts]]
[[Category:Season 1 transcripts]]
[[Category:Season 1 transcripts]]
[[Category:A to Z]]
[[Category:1996]]

Latest revision as of 20:18, 23 December 2021

Intro[edit]

Arthur: "My Sister Is A Sissy" by Jack Prelutsky.

My sister is a sissy
She's afraid of dogs and cats
A toad can give her tantrums,
And she's terrified of rats

She screams at things with stingers,
Things that buzz and things that crawl.
Just the shadow of a spider
Sends my sister up the wall

A lizard makes her shiver,
And a turtle makes her squirm.
She positively cringes
At the prospect of a worm.

She's afraid of things with feathers.
She's afraid of things with fur.
She's scared of almost everything.
How come I'm scared of her?

Title Card: Arthur with Umbrella[edit]

Mr. Ratburn holds up a list in class.

Mr. Ratburn: Only two days until the library poetry contest and only one student has signed up: Fern.

Francine: Fern never said she wrote poetry.

Binky: Fern never says anything.

Mr. Ratburn: The judge is famous poet Jack Prelutsky. It's not too late to enter.

Francine: Listen, I'm a poet. Moon, June, spoon, a loon...

Fern sits in the cafeteria reading a book. Binky and Rattles walk past her.

Binky: Just thinking of poetry, oh, it makes me sleepy.

He fakes falling asleep.

Rattles: Binky, know what’s twice as boring as a poem?

Binky: What?

Rattles: Two poems.

Kids: (laugh)

Fern looks annoyed, then stands up.

Fern: You only make fun because you couldn’t write a poem if you tried.

She leaves.

Kids: (gasp)

Francine: That’s the most she’s said all year.

Buster: You tell ‘em, Fern! (whistles)

Binky gives him a death glare. He shuts up.

***

After school the kids run after Fern.

Binky: Maybe I couldn’t write a poem, but neither could they.

Francine: I could if I wanted to.

Arthur: Me too. No problem.

Binky: I can write a better poem than you with my brain tied behind my back, Arthur.

Arthur: Ha! Oh yeah? I’d like to see that.

Fern stops so abruptly that the others bang into one another.

Kids: Ouch!

Fern: I bet none of you could even write a poem.

Francine: I could too.

Arthur: Maybe Binky can’t, but I can.

Binky: There’s nothing Arthur can do that I can’t.

Muffy: You are so rude, Fern.

Everyone argues with each other

Binky: Someone hold me back or I’ll write a poem right now.

Fern: Quiet! Car alarm goes off. I bet that none of you can write a poem and finish it in time to submit it to the poetry contest.

Francine: I bet I can!

Arthur: I’ll not only finish one, it will be better than Binky’s.

Buster: Is anyone else hungry?

Fern: Anyone who doesn’t has to join the poetry club for a year. Bet, or are you bunch of chickens? 

She holds out her little finger. The others hook their little fingers in.

Arthur: (to Buster): How do you write a poem?

Buster: I thought you knew.

***

Arthur and Buster look through books in the library.

Arthur: I don’t want to go to poetry club for a whole year.

Buster: It’ll be a cinch. We just find a good poem and write one like it. (reads:) “The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things / of shoes and ships and sealing-wax, of cabbages and kings / and why the sea is boiling hot, and whether pigs have wings.” No, I don’t think I can write like that.

Arthur: Let’s find one that makes sense.

Buster: What does this mean? “Something better than his dog, a little dearer than his horse”.

Arthur: Maybe it’s a riddle. What’s better than his dog, a little dearer than his horse?

Buster: A gerbil that can do your homework.

Arthur: Nothing’s better than my dog. Skip this guy, he doesn’t like dogs.

***

Arthur and Buster check poetry books in the treehouse.

Buster: Whoa, listen to these titles: “The Haunted Palace”, “The Conqueror Worm”…

Arthur: That must be about a giant worm.

Buster: Listen to this: "It was the dead who groaned within."

Arthur+Buster: Cool!

Arthur: I got one that makes sense. (reads:) "Listen, my children and you shall hear / of the midnight ride of Paul Revere..."

Buster: All right. We're ready.

***

Binky, Fern, Brain, Buster, Arthur and Muffy sit at a table in the cafeteria.

Buster: How long did you work on your poem last night?

Arthur: I... sort of watched TV.

Fern: Brain has finished his poem.

Arthur spits out milk.

Arthur: Already?

Brain: Can I read it to you? Any comments will help me perfect it for the contest. “I, The Brain will explain what makes rain. / Water droplets are what clouds contain. / They reach saturation / become precipitation / hit the ground and go right down the drain.“

Binky: (yawns)

Fern claps.

Muffy: I'm done too. "My favorite thing to do is shop / for shoes, shirts, coats, rings..." You can never have enough jewellery. “...and games until I drop. / I love to shop.”

Buster: That's not a poem, it's a list.

Muffy: “Shop” rhymes with “drop”. Duh.

Fern: Everyone else, remember to have your poems done by tomorrow.

***

Arthur writes something in his room, then reads it out loud.

Arthur: "Listen, my children as I tell you / of a duck and a chicken on a bus to Oklaho-moo..." Yeuch!

He crosses out the whole page.

***

Arthur is on the phone.

Arthur: Buster. When you're done with your poem, can you help me?

Buster: I'm done. But I'm watching a video. Sorry!

D.W.: I know a great poem: “Roses are red / violets are blue / my nose smells / and your feet do too”. (laughs) That's so funny! Doesn't that crack you up, Arthur? Arthur walks up the stairs looking depressed. Arthur?

***

The next morning Arthur drinks his milk, picks up his books and goes to the door.

Mr. Read: Why the big rush to get to school?

Arthur: I have to stop at Fern's house.

***

Arthur walks up to Fern's house. He is about to ring when he hears voices from inside.

Fern: Can I hear that again?

Buster: “Once upon a midnight cloudy / a big old bat said 'Howdy! Howdy!'" Arthur looks inside. Buster and Fern are sitting on the couch. (gasps)

Arthur: You said you were done!

Buster comes to the window.

Buster: I-I didn't want you to think I couldn't do it.

***

Arthur and Buster walk to school with Fern.

Fern: Instead of copying other people’s poems, why not just write about what you like?

Buster: Who’d want to hear what I like?

Fern: Who wouldn’t?

Arthur and Buster smile.

***

Jack Prelutsky is reciting a poem in the library in front of Miss Turner and an audience of kids.

Jack Prelutsky: Today is very boring,
it’s a very boring day.
There’s nothing much to look at,
there’s nothing much to say.

There’s a peacock on my sneakers,
there’s a penguin on my head,
there’s a dormouse on my doorstep,
I am going back to bed.

Today is very boring,
it’s boring through and through.
There is absolutely nothing
that I think I want to do.

I see giants riding rhinos, Francine has a thought bubble of a giant on a rhino.
and an ogre with a sword, Buster sees a one-eyed giant swinging a sword.
there’s a dragon blowing smoke rings, A dragon who looks like Mr. Ratburn, breathes fire.
I am positively bored. The dragon breathes smoke rings on Muffy.

Muffy: (coughs)

Jack Prelutsky: Today is very boring,
I can hardly (yawns) help but yawn,
there’s a flying saucer landing
in the middle of my lawn,

a volcano just erupted
less than half a mile away, Binky sees a volcano erupting right behind the school.
and I think I felt an earthquake, Sue Ellen sees Binky dancing, which shakes the ground.
it’s a very boring day.

Everybody claps.

Jack Prelutsky: Thank you. Thank you.

***

Fern finishes her poem.

Fern: “...and the ghosts of all the fallen trees weep for a world that can't live without them.“ Mr. Prelutsky and the kids clap. Thank you, Mr. Prelutsky. I have all of your poetry books.

Jack Prelutsky: You are obviously a little girl with impeccable taste. Our next poet is Francine Frensky.

While reciting her poem, Francine holds up signs with illustrations. Meanwhile Muffy plays the bongos.

Francine: "My dad took me to a hockey game. / I got hit in the head by a puck. / I yelled out 'Ow, my head! Ow! Call an ambulance! Ouch! Ow! Oh brother! This hurts! / Put ice on it. It's gonna swell.' / I got a big old purple lump on my head / and used it for Show And Tell."

Everybody claps.

Fern: Where's Arthur?

Arthur is sitting under a tree, writing and looking at his watch.

***

Binky: “People think I can't write a poem / but they are so wrong, I can write a poem. / I wrote this one, I wrote this poem, / and I gave it the title 'Binky's Poem'. / So shut up!” The end.

Fern claps.

Muffy: That’s not a poem. He rhymed “poem” with “poem” four times.

Fern: It was great. Yeah, Binky!

Jack Prelutsky: Our final poet is Buster Baxter.

While Buster reads his poem, Arthur is racing through the city on his bike. He has to wait for a group of preschool children and a circus parade.

Buster: “These are the things that make me nauseous: / gloppy green gloop that drips from faucets, / blue hair that grows on slices of bread, / when your big old dog drools in your bed, / when a dirty sock drops on your face, pee yew, / when your friend's baby sister starts to spew, / half a worm in the apple you bit, / finding a human bone in your jello, / flowing nose slime green and yellow, / and people who eat creamed corn with their mouths open so you can see it.” The end.

Jack Prelutsky: I probably shouldn't mention the free butterscotch pudding being served at the reception.

Kids: (Bleugh!)

Arthur bursts in.

Arthur: Am I too late? I couldn't help it. The street was full of elephants!

He whispers to Jack Prelutsky.

Jack Prelutsky: Our final final poem is “Jimmy Goes to the City” by Arthur Read.

Arthur: "Jimmy was a happy ape until some hunters caught him. / He liked the jungle better than the city where they brought him. / The city was louder, the city was meaner. / Even the dirt in the jungle was cleaner./ So Jimmy made a daring escape. / The hunters were suddenly minus one ape. / He climbed the tallest building because from there he'd see / how far away the jungle was from the middle of the city. / Jimmy jumped into a passing plane / but the pilot didn't wait for him to explain. / Jimmy went back to the jungle and told his ape friends in their lair / 'The city's okay for a visit, but you couldn't make me live there.'"

Jack Prelutsky: And the winner of the contest is... I hate contests. You all win.

Fern: And nobody has to join the poetry club because they won the bet.

Arthur: But this was fun!

Buster: Yeah! I know lots of other disgusting things.

Muffy: I want to play my bongos.

Binky: You can't stop us if we want to join.

Francine comes with a clipboard.

Francine: Hey, here's a sign-up list.

Fern shakes hands with Mr. Prelutsky.

Fern: Mr. Prelutsky, could you read us another poem?

Kids: (Yeah! Please!)

Jack Prelutsky: All right. Well, Buster's poem put me in mind of one of my own called “Jellyfish Stew”. “Jellyfish stew / I'm loony for you. / I dearly adore you, / oh truly I do...”