As a total animation nerd, I’ve noticed Cartoon Network shows love hiding gems in the credits. 'Just Friends' might have a blink-and-you-miss-it moment—maybe Benson grumbling about paperwork or Pops cheerfully misunderstanding the plot. The show’s humor is so deadpan that even a 2-second clip feels rewarding. I’d check the DVD or a high-quality upload; YouTube cuts sometimes skip these. Also, fellow fans on forums swear they remember a Muscle Man one-liner popping up post-roll!
Rewatching 'Regular Show' with my kid last year, we made a game out of spotting post-credits scenes. 'Just Friends' didn’t stand out to me as having one, but the episode’s ending is so chaotic (that dance-off!) that it kinda feels like it should. Maybe the lack of a stinger is the joke? Like, Mordecai’s love life is unresolved, so why tie it up neatly? Still, I’d love to be wrong—time to dig out my old DVR recordings.
Funny enough, I just debated this with friends! Consensus: no official post-credits scene, but the very last frame of credits sometimes has a silly background detail (like a character moonwalking away). 'Just Friends' is more about the emotional payoff than gags, though. If you find one, let me know—I’ll owe you a high five.
Man, I binged 'Regular Show' so hard back in the day, and 'Just Friends' was one of those episodes that stuck with me. The post-credits scene thing is tricky because it depends on where you watched it. The original airing on Cartoon Network sometimes had little extra bits, but streaming versions cut stuff. For this one, I think there’s a quick gag after the credits—something like Mordecai and Rigby awkwardly high-fiving after the whole romantic chaos. Not major, but those tiny moments are why I love the show’s vibe.
Side note: If you’re deep into 'Regular Show,' the DVD commentaries mention how they often added last-minute jokes to fill time. Makes me wonder if post-credit scenes were just spontaneous studio choices. Either way, it’s worth scrubbing through the end credits once, just in case!
2026-04-29 01:31:21
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High School Love! It all starts with the good girl meeting the bad boy and falling in love with him, fighting the battles together, letting out deepest secrets and at the end of the day, they live happily ever after! But is that really it? What happens AFTER!After getting each other's heart.After fighting for each other.After the whole mushy and cliche love.After all the promises.After high school. Just After!
I am dead.
Only before my death do I realize that I am the sidekick in a tragic coming-of-age story, while my best friend Tinsley Wood is the female lead.
I am destined to be disgraced and meet a miserable end, all to highlight her innocence, kindness, and endless good luck.
When I open my eyes again, I am reborn on the very first day Tinsley asks me to take the blame for her.
In a fit of bravado, I save someone's life, only to sustain a head injury. Jenna Newson, my girlfriend of eight years, comes to visit me at the hospital.
In order to pull a prank on her, I pretend to be amnesiac and ask who she is.
While Jenna is momentarily stunned, she soon answers calmly, "I'm a classmate of yours."
Harmonica Saint is terrified of being unable to make friends. Coupled with her crippling social anxiety, and her fear of moving away from her family to a new place for college, she is afraid she'd have no friends.
But surprisingly on the first day, someone wants to be her friend…. It is just that this person is Rhett Lockhart, littered with tattoos and mysterious beyond compare, Harmony has a bad feeling about this friendship.
After all, friends don't give other friends hickeys on their necks. Or do they?
"So you thought our friendship was over because of that? Funny baby girl, what makes you think I'll let you go….. Just like that?" He said the words so gently as he always spoke, but it was his eyes that gave him away, those pitch-black eyes were raging with all kinds of intense emotion, each promising to swallow her whole.
After taking our graduation photo, I break up with Philip Lutz.
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Having known each other for ten years and dated for four, Philip is certain that I'll never leave him.
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If I'm capable of taking my graduation photos alone, I can walk my future path alone.
Once I've gone abroad, the sky's the limit for me.
I no longer need him to stand behind me either.
Javier Anderson has everything he could wish for; a home, the looks, jet-set lifestyle, lovely parents, girls falling at his feet and a wonderful haircut.
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Regular Show: Just Friends' status as canon is a bit of a gray area, but here's my take. The show itself never directly references the events of the special, and the tone feels more like a fun, standalone adventure. Mordecai and Rigby's dynamic stays true to form, but the romantic subplot with Margaret doesn't really impact the main series continuity. It's more like an extended, slightly alternate universe version of the characters—great for fans who want more content but not essential to understanding the overarching story.
That said, the humor and art style are spot-on, capturing the essence of what makes 'Regular Show' so beloved. If you're a completionist, it's worth watching for the vibes alone, but don't expect it to tie into later episodes. The lack of follow-up in the main series suggests the creators treated it as a bonus rather than a key chapter.
Man, 'Regular Show: Just Friends' is one of those special episodes that really sticks with you. It's not just about the runtime—it's about how packed it is with absurd humor and heart. The episode clocks in at around 11 minutes, which is standard for the series, but it feels like a mini-movie with how much happens. Mordecai and Rigby's antics trying to impress their crushes, the weirdly intense volleyball game, and that classic 'Regular Show' escalation where things go from 0 to 100 real quick. It's a perfect example of why the show was so beloved—tight storytelling, great jokes, and just the right amount of chaos.
What I love about this episode is how it balances silliness with genuine emotion. The runtime might be short, but it doesn’t waste a second. The pacing is so snappy that you’re laughing one moment and then weirdly invested in the characters’ dumb romantic struggles the next. It’s a testament to the show’s writing that even in 11 minutes, they can make you care about a sentient volleyball named Death Kwon Do.
Man, tracking down 'Regular Show: Just Friends' felt like a quest worthy of Mordecai and Rigby themselves! From what I've pieced together, this special episode isn't always available on mainstream platforms—it's one of those gems that pops up unpredictably. I stumbled across it once on Cartoon Network's official app during a nostalgia binge, but it seems to rotate in and out. Your best bet might be digital purchase options like Amazon Prime Video or Apple TV; they often have CN specials lurking in their libraries.
If you're open to less conventional routes, some international streaming services like HBO Max (depending on your region) have deep Cartoon Network archives. Just be prepared to VPN-hop—geo-restrictions love to gatekeep the good stuff. Side note: the physical DVD compilation 'Regular Show: The Best DVD Ever... So Far' includes it, so secondhand shops or eBay could save the day if streaming fails. That surreal, friendship-testing chaos between Mordecai, Rigby, and the rest of the park crew deserves a rewatch—it's pure classic CN energy.
Man, that 'Just Friends' episode hit me right in the nostalgia! Rigby’s whole arc here is such a relatable mess—he gets obsessed with proving he’s 'just friends' with Eileen after Margret teases him about it. The dude panics, overanalyzes every interaction, and even starts avoiding her like she’s cursed. It’s peak Rigby: equal parts hilarious and painfully awkward. The way he scribbles out her face in photos? Classic. But what really gets me is how the episode flips the script. Instead of some grand romantic gesture, Rigby’s big moment is just… admitting he’s being weird. No fireworks, no confession—just growth. And that’s why I love 'Regular Show.' It sneaks genuine maturity into the chaos.
Also, side note: the B-story with Mordecai and the sentient arcade machine is low-key brilliant. The contrast between Rigby’s emotional disaster and Mordecai’s physical one ties everything together perfectly. That show never missed a beat when balancing absurdity with heart.