Crazy Compositions: Wilson's Time Machine

The opening scene where Wilson works on his time machine was recycled from the previous episode.

Speaking of the aforementioned scene, it was animated in Flash.

A lot of the dialogue was ad-libbed, especially Wilson's.

The sound of Chole messing with the VHS was recorded by me, though thankfully, I'm not crazy enough to sacrifice one of my own tapes, so I just fiddled with a bag of Doritos to make the sound.

The 3D animation of Coney was recorded on a real VHS tape. The "play" icon was recorded by complete accident, but I kept it in anyway because I felt like it added to the experience in a way.

Coney was based on an old Microsoft Agent character by James Kenny.

This was the first episode to use FlashKit loops for music, more specifically "Exluna" by Jakub Koter, widely recognized as the menu theme for the "iCade 60-in-1" JAMMA board.

The artstyle of the stickfigure on the 1950s TV was very obviously inspired by old Hanna-Barbera cartoons.

The stickfigure cartoon was originally gonna be in color, but then I remembered that little-to-no 1950s TVs supported color back then, so I changed it to black-and-white.

The sound of Chole messing with the TV dial was also recorded by me. Since I don't have any TVs with dials, I just cranked a kitchen timer I had.

One of the audience members in the 1930s theatre was based on Mr. Bill.

The audio for the 1930s cartoon was taken from the 1930 Looney Tunes cartoon, "The Booze Hangs High."

Two of the Titanic passengers were based on Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head.

Believe it or not, all of the Chole-like mutations of the Clearmounters have names. Their names are Mtat, Candy, Till, Boy, and Silver.

The only one to not have been mutated after the timeline was destroyed was Chloe, because it wouldn't've made sense to have two weird versions of the same character.

Chole's line "Me feel at home again!" is an allusion to where she came from.