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Madame Foster
Madame Foster is such a great character, and very "alive" for a woman of her age. And she's actually very spunky! Madame Foster rocks!! Frankie in many ways reminds me of Madame Foster aswell apart from her being her grandmother. Frankie sorta has the same attitude towards life etc as Madame Foster :D
Go Madame Foster!! 8D |
Aww, this is sad no one like Madame Foster? Without her there is no home for imaginary friends. She is a vital character and a live wire.
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It's not that I dislike her (I do not), I just haven't spent enough time to really think about what I want to say. ;) Without a doubt, Madame Foster is a very important character in this series. You never know what to expect from this woman, because she isn't always a sweet old lady. :macwor:
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Se's great. Her character is really funny, and you can see that she's not old inside.
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I think that she's the only old person I like. Though she's more of a kid than most.
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Seriously, how can you not adore Madame Foster? She has devoted her life to Imaginary Friends, stuck with her own through thick and thin and is still with him now in her old age, and went right over Mac's mother's head and allowed Mac to keep his Imaginary Friend...by letting him live in her own house!
You can't beat that. She might have a crazy streak but that woman is an angel. (Well, most of the time. lol) |
I think it's her crazy streak that makes her so adorable! That, and how she never, ever seems to age mentally. I mean who can't adore midget-y old lady who opens her heart to everyone, calls her best friend "Funny Bunny", and still has the spunk to nearly go streaking? 8D
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Madame Foster = How I'd like to be if I were to ever get that old. ;)
She's beyond cool. She's also my sister's favorite character. ^^ |
Madame Foster is da bomb! She shelters all these abandoned imaginary friends, still has her IF, and she's crazy cool!
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She rules.
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Madame Foster is one of the few wild cards in this show.
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She's definatly a wonderful old ladie. She's the kind that could be anyone's gramma. I like Madam Foster because she reminds me of my own nan. I would to be able to sit down for tea with her, Harriman and Frankie and share stories and whatnot.:D
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She definitely is quite a spunky and funny old lady... though, I'm not going to lie, some of her actions are a little upsetting.
I'll avoid talking about what she obviously did in "Foster's Goes To Europe". However, I did NOT AT ALL like it when she untied those defenseless imaginary balloons and literally sent them to their deaths for absolutely no reason. I found it to be cruel instead of funny, and completely out-of-character for her. |
Madame Foster is just like my Nana except my Nana sees a commie behind every kitten stuck in a tree. lol
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The commies hide under your bed and come out at night, too. ; )
SHe's kindof like m own grandma, too, now that I htik of it... |
Madame Foster's a great person, but I have to agree with Voxxyn. Stealing the tickets in "Foster's Goes to Europe" was a bit cruel and selfish. I haven't seen the balloon thing yet, but it sounds rather shocking. But I guess we all fail at being good and doing what's right sometimes, and besides, Madame Foster did open her home up to abandoned imaginary friends.
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I think Madame Foster's original intentions for Foster's home were good, but I think old age and alot of bowling just made her lose her freaking mind and become the wacked out little old lady that she has become now. She's old so she gets away with alot of stuff.
And actually, I'm not surprised by her actions at the Europe tickets thing. She did the same thing when she shot Bloo down about the vibrating chair thing. Madame Foster is crazy and as such, she does things without thinking or any rational form of common sense. I don't think she tries to be mean, I think she's just so batty she either doesn't know any better or is "rebelling" against the fact she's an old lady and she wants to do things to keep herself alive or something. She's hard to figure out, that's for sure. |
I'm willing to forgive her stealing the tickets at the end of "Foster's Goes To Europe", because while it was indeed a very meanspirited act, at least Mac didn't go through excessive physical or psychological misery throughout the entire episode. And I think she kinda redeemed herself in "A Lost Claus" with how grandmotherly warm she was there.
But I don't think I'll ever forgive her for sending those helpless balloons to their death. Ever. I don't care how humorously that gag was set up, it was just plain cruel and vicious. In fact, I think it's a little unfair how Madame Foster got away with her actions in "FGTE", while Frankie had to suffer such a terrible day in "Imposter's". It's even more hurtful that Madame Foster wasn't there for her granddaughter at all in that episode. |
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I tell you what, you really don't want to see what happens to the Pizza Friend in 'Seeing Red' |
I do agree about the balloons - that creeps me out. :P
She is, however, very heroic and cool in Bloo's the Boss. :mfoster: |
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I think it was just cause she wasn't needed in the scene, and not that she didn't care about her grand daughter. Then again, Madame Foster is unpredictable so you can never be sure when she'll show up and what she;'ll do. |
Being elderly or "unpredictable" is NO EXCUSE WHATSOEVER for how Madame Foster was absent in that episode. I'm certainly not asking for Frankie to go and whine to her every single time Mr. Herriman orders her around, that's one thing. But it's another for Madame Foster to just do nothing about her flesh-and-blood granddaughter enduring such an undeservedly malicious day.
But that alone isn't what bothers me. It's how she got away with untying helpless imaginary balloons and stealing from a child, just a couple of episodes after the events of "Imposter's"--and repeatedly smacking Frankie with the wooden spoon in "Crime After Crime", itself an episode that aired just weeks after FGTE, doesn't help at all. I like Madame Foster; but it simply upsets me how she can get away with what she did because "she's old", while her granddaughter's hard work and dedication is "rewarded" by being forced to miss the Fake-Outz concert and having to clean up all day thanks to a mooching jerk. |
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Thirded. If she's that handy with a pole vault now, imagine her in her prime!
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After watching "Bloo's the Boss", I take back my previous remarks and apologize sincerely for them.
Not only was she awesome in rescuing the one-eyed friend, the hand embrace between her and Frankie was just wonderful. I'm glad to see some affection shown between the two of them. :frankiesmile: :mfoster: |
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I take all this as being a problem with having different writers who have different ideas of what the characters should be like. I too get upset when they do things completely OUT of character, such as Madame Foster being anything but kind to Imaginaries and possibly causing their death. (Though perhaps that seems a bit extreme....) I DO like when the characters show their faults but at the same time do thinkgs that make them lovable. I'm sure "Bloo's the Boss" is emphasizing that from what I've heard about it, so I know it's an episode I will probably love. EDIT: Okay what I meant to explain in more depth, as I tend to be too vague at times, is that when the writers are writing "OOC", that refers to the way they change the character from the initial representation. M. Foster was supposed to be this very sweet lady who loves Imaginaries and cares for them (hence her huge house dedicated to them)who can have a wild, partying side. Okay,so great. But then a writer decides to have her do those two things alot of us are clearly and obviously not liking, releasing the balloon friends (when ballloons go up into the atmosphere, my friends, they POP. So you can surmise they did indeed expire) and then stealing Mac's tickets. You can't be a very good person after all if you'd do those things, and especially steal from a child. I can't see the humor in those scenes and I never will. That kind of shock-value is the only thing I DON'T like about Foster's, but clearly Craig & Co. are getting the idea, because lately you see a lot less of it! I'm adoring the team, in fact, for their efforts to please the fans, because it seems to me they really are listening. Less crap, shock-value, and OOC nonsense, and more fun-loving, chaos-causing (you know who I speak of), friendship-emphasizing and all around Foster's magic. That's what we want. :) |
I hope that they HAVE learned their lesson and will stop using hurtful premises and ideas. "Bloo's the Boss" proves how great they can be without such.
After what Madame Foster did in that episode, I consider cutting the balloons in FGTE to be non-canon(Along with all of "Driving Miss Crazy", which has the absolute WORST portrayal of Frankie in the entire series so far). |
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I am not a canon snob. These are the ONLY events that are non-canon from my PERSONAL point-of-view. My criteria for disliking them to that extent is because I believe they're completely untrue to the spirit of the show and characters.
Madame Foster untying those balloons was, like I said, simply cruel and OOC. And I hated how Frankie was being angry and sour for literally all of "Driving Miss Crazy"--it made her seem like a completely different person. The diversity and wide emotional range is part of what makes her so great, which was nowhere to be seen in that short. |
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LOL Everyone, stop calling yourselves or others a snob!! When did that get into the conversation? J/k, I found that a little funny, can't help myself. 8D Actually I have heard the term "cannon" before like when I was reading Naruto discussions in the various forums I visit, but.....eh, this is getting too off-topic. >.< So back to Madame Foster, I have one question. How DOES such a short, tiny lady run and pole-vault to the top of a tree like she did? I mean is she super-woman or what? LOL She cracks me up, I love her. ^_^ |
Is "Driving Miss Crazy" in the episodes on the computer section, along with the other shorts besides the Eduardo with the Eds one?
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I myself recently uploaded Driving Miss Crazy and posted it in the Eps on Computer section. I don't recall if any of the other shorts have been shared there though.
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Thanks! I'm about to go check.
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Some of the things like whacking frankie with a spoon are okay in onf themselves. I think that he fact that madame foster didn't appear in IHFMEUP was just that: she didn't appear. not a "i hate frankie" just she does not and did not fit in with hte storyline teh authors were using.
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I think Madame Foster is a whack job, but in a funny and cool way. I loved it in "Cookie Dough" when she was riding the Segway and giving Bloo the raspberry. I thought she was funny in "World Wide Wabbit" when she stripped down to her slip and was prancing aound on the stairs. This character is a scream; reminds me of my 92 year old grandmother (who was a broadcaster during the golden age of radio).:frankiesmile:
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Madam Foster is on my top ten list of favorite characters for the series, if for the fact that she's one of the few (if not the only) parental figure in the series portrayed in a totally positive light. She's a woman who's very easy to like, which is obviously part of her charm, as well as her free-spirited attitude. Considering some of what we've learned about her in "Bloo's the Boss" and "Emancipation Complication", I'm somewhat surprised that there hasn't been a larger increase in discussion about her. I think that those two episodes brought to light quite a few points about her and her personality and character. For example, we can almost certainly assume that the home she set up for Imaginary Friends is the ONLY one there is, at least in the United States. She's obviously won a lot of positive public attention and publicity, including having received a honor from the President for Humanitarianism. While I have to admit that Foster's may not be the only Home for Imaginary Friends, it certainly does seem that way to me and, at the very least, we can probably all agree that she was the very first to set one up. However, to me, the episode focusing the most on her character was "Emancipation Complication". While it may seem slightly out of character that she stated that she was uncertain if her setting up and running a Foster's Home was even worth it, I found it a fairly deep and easy to understand insight about her. From what we can tell, the majority of the outside world, including apparently most of the children, objectify IFs instead of viewing them as actual living beings. There have, so far, seemingly been only three real exceptions to this rule: Madam Foster, Frankie, and Mac (Goo has been starting to get there, but hasn't quite gotten it completely through her own sporadic mind yet). It's easy to see, then, why Madam Foster would question the point of what she was doing: how'd she have any real confirmation that what she was doing would last after she was gone, which is quite obviously what she would like to happen? She's gained recognition for her efforts, sure, but the rest of the population doesn't seem to actually understand the purpose of what she's doing. Which brings up an interesting question: what happens to the house after Madam Foster passes away? By rights of kin and lineage, the property would technically fall to Frankie, but if Frankie and Madam Foster had discussed it before she (Madam Foster) passes away and Frankie wants to go into another business for her life's work, what then? Logically, I suppose it could be given to Herriman, being the eldest of the Imaginary Friends and one of the technical heads of the household already, but we have no idea what the law states on IFs holding property. Eh, now I'm going down a morbid train of thought and overanalyzing. I'll just end by saying my general thoughts on the character: Madam Foster is A-W-E-S-O-M-E! |
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