Beavis and Butt‑Head arrived on MTV in 1993 as two loud, dimwitted teenagers with a singular mission: laugh at everything, make everything worse, and somehow become cultural icons in the process. Created by Mike Judge, the show’s crude humor, satirical edge, and uncanny knack for capturing a certain 1990s malaise made it far more than a cartoon of two slackers — it became a mirror for youth culture, television tropes, and the commercialized angst of an era.
2. The Cornholio Saga
No list is complete without “The Great Cornholio.” When Beavis consumes too much sugar, he transforms into a manic, shirt-pulled-over-his-head prophet demanding TP for his bunghole. The best episode, “Burrito,” sees him wander the streets of Highland, terrorizing convenience stores and baffling adults. It’s surreal, quotable, and pure chaos—the show at its most inspired. THE BEST OF BEAVIS AND BUTTHEAD
“Yeah,” Butt-Head said, flicking a booger at the window. “We’re definitely gonna score now.” THE BEST OF BEAVIS AND BUTT‑HEAD Beavis and
As McVicker dragged them off stage by their collars, Beavis looked back at the audience. His face was pure defeat. But then—just as the curtain closed—his stomach gurgled. The Cornholio Saga No list is complete without
A brilliant parody of Citizen Kane, this episode reveals the mystery of Butt-Head's origins. Flashbacks show a young, slightly less cynical Butt-Head running for class president. It proves that even at a young age, Butt-Head possessed the tactical cunning of a used car salesman. The best moment? His campaign slogan: "A hole in the wall for you."