
Saturday Mourning: Ranking 2000s Cartoons by How Hard They Tried to Raise Us
In a decade defined by dial-up internet, frosted tips, and emotional repression, 2000s Saturday morning cartoons valiantly tried to shape the next generation. Most failed. Here’s our darkly definitive ranking.

Dishonorable Mention: Sonic X – Never has a blue hedgehog inspired so many bad tattoos and existential dread.

5. Lilo & Stitch: The Series — Cute aliens, Hawaiian backdrops, and deep trauma bonding. Lilo was clearly one CPS call away from a very different genre.

4. Yu-Gi-Oh! — Nothing says Saturday joy like gambling your soul over a card game. Yugi’s hair had more structure than most millennials’ lives.

3. Jackie Chan Adventures — Jackie taught us that every ancient relic could lead to moderate property damage. Also, child endangerment was fine if your niece could kung fu.

2. Teen Titans — Depression, abandonment issues, and identity crises—packaged as superhero fun. Robin’s obsessive spiral was more relatable than anything our guidance counselors ever offered.

1. Static Shock — The only cartoon that managed to be cool and teach you about systemic racism before brunch. Virgil fought crime and the American education system—tragically, both still standing.
Together, these cartoons raised a generation of anxious, justice-obsessed adults who still whisper, “Booyah.”
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