If you haven’t seen it, you really should.

And if you have,rediscover one of television’s unique, nightmarish, yet heartwarming series.

ABC and Disney responded to it immediately."

The Sinclair family from ABC’s ‘Dinosaurs’

Image via ABC

To complete the illusion, the puppeteers and actors worked diligently to coordinate their scenes.

The animatronics for theDinosaurspuppets were the same,only even more refined.

As Jacobs recalls in the previously citedEntertainment Weekly, “We were missing a character in the show.

The Sinclair family try to stay warm as they await their fate in “Changing Nature,” the series finale of ABC’s ‘Dinosaurs’

Image via ABC

Hitting his father on the head with a frying pan repeatedly and calling him “Not the mama.”

Yelling, “Again!”

after being thrown against the wall.

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Earl Sinclair, a Megalosaurus, works as a tree pusher for the WESAYSO Corporation, trying to provide for his family while dealing with his boss, B.P. Richfield. His wife, Fran, manages their home and raises their three children: teenage son Robbie, fashion-obsessed daughter Charlene, and the mischievous Baby Sinclair, known for his catchphrases “Not the Mama!” and “I’m the Baby, Gotta Love Me!” The series humorously explores contemporary social issues through the lens of a prehistoric suburban family living in a modern world.

The catchphrase, “I’m the baby, gotta love me.”

The phrase came from the “Ask Mr. Lizard” show-within-a-show onDinosaurs.

It was just another example of how pervasiveDinosaurshad become in such a short time.

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“We went after the oil companies.

And those weren’t the only targets.

Bushand GeneralNorman Schwarzkopfbeing given dinosaur doppelgangers.

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Issues that arestillrelevant today.

So do yourself a favor and check outDinosaurson Disney+.

Maybe just pretend that the last episode went extinct.

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It’s better that way, no dinosaur bones about it.

and “I’m the Baby, Gotta Love Me!”