
Here's the complete list of all 40 shorts included in this third volume:

Either way, there's just no other series like it. Incidentally, what's made the final cut is generally entertaining stuff: sure, it was a bit funnier 10 years ago, but it's still pretty amusing stuff in its own right. Fair enough, regarding the former problem: it's Judge's baby, and at least we're getting most of the cartoons. Additionally, roughly one-third of the total run of Beavis and Butt-Head shorts will never be a part of this collection, as series creator Judge doesn't feel they're good enough to include (and only a fraction of the videos will ever see the light of day, thanks to expensive rights issues). Presented on DVD in a three-volume series dubbed "The Mike Judge Collection", the original format of Beavis and Butt-Head has since been put under the knife that is, the shorts and videos have been separated as stand-alone segments. The blend between the two halves was rarely seamless, but the formula often worked extremely well. The original broadcast episodes merged short animated adventures with Mystery Science Theater 3000-style critiques of music videos, both old and new.

It's debatable whether the antics of our two heroes include clever observations of society or crude slices of slacker life-but most fans agree that the series represents a bit of both. One of the defining landmarks of 1990s lowbrow animation, Mike Judge's extremely popular Beavis and Butt-Head (1993-1997) caught on fast and burrowed itself deep in American pop culture shortly thereafter.
