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  1. S6 E1 - Beau Tie/Remember Me/Overlabbing. November 21, 2002. 22min. TV-G. "Beau tie" (7 minutes) Dee Dee brings home a boy who's not only cute-he's smart. Soon Dexter and Dee Dee are fighting for his attention. Store Filled. Available to buy. Buy SD $1.99.

    • 22 min
  2. Product Description. Meet Dexter, half-Einstein and half third grader. This boy genius creates awesome inventions in the secret space-age laboratory attached to his room, but no genius is without trouble. Dexter's space-brained sister, Dee Dee is always messing up his work, and his dorky rival, Mandark is constantly trying to one-up him.

    • DVD
  3. Dexter's Laboratory. Season 1. Dexter, a child genius, whips up dazzling, world-saving inventions in his laboratory. Dee Dee wrecks his experiments but his nemesis is Mandark, his brilliant rival at Huber Elementary School. Mom and Dad have no idea what he's up to. IMDb 7.9 1996 13 episodes. TV-G.

  4. May 26, 2018 · Dexter cannot reach anything in his lab, so he makes himself more flexible by combining himself with bubble gum. Subscribe to the official Dexter's Laborato...

    • 5 min
    • 15.4M
    • Dexter's Laboratory
  5. Dexter's Laboratory is an American animated television series created by Genndy Tartakovsky for Cartoon Network. Initially debuting on February 26, 1995 as a seven-minute World Premiere Toons pilot, it was expanded into a full series after gaining network approval. The first season, which consists of 13 episodes divided into three segments each ...

  6. Dexter’s Laboratory Season 3 Episode 5 If Memory Serves / A Mandark Cartoon / Tele Trauma; Dexter’s Laboratory Season 3 Episode 4 Poppa Wheely / A Mom Cartoon / The Mock Side of the Moon; Dexter’s Laboratory Season 3 Episode 3 Copping an Aptitude / A Failed Lab Experiment / The Grand-Daddy of All Inventions

  7. May 3, 2021 · How Dexter's Laboratory changed American cartoons by looking to live-action movies and anime. Despite lots of nostalgic highlights, American animation during the '70s and '80s was mostly driven by a desire to sell toys rather than by creativity. That started to change in the '90s when Nickelodeon began making creator-driven shows.

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