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  2. Mar 23, 2024 · Odie has remained a silent character for a large majority of his appearances in Garfield, but the one time he broke his silence held the perfect joke.

    • Physical Appearance
    • History
    • Personality
    • Further Reading
    • Television Appearances
    • Trivia

    Odie generally appears as a yellow beagle who has two huge eyes with white sclera and black pupils, two long brown ears, a yellow muzzle and a big black nose. He has a very thin body with black spots around his hips, as well as short legs and four paws with two toes.

    Odie was based on a car dealership commercial, written by Jim Davis, which featured Odie the Village Idiot. Davis liked the name Odie and decided to use it again. When Garfield was first submitted, Davis named the main dog character "Spot" before finding out that the name was already being used by another character (see the Trivia section below). O...

    Odie is a lovable, seemingly dopey, kind, underweight, yellow-furred, brown-eared beagle, who is Garfield's best friend (and usual victim). Garfield is jealous of Odie. Although Garfield says that he is dumb, Odie can be relatively smart on occasion. He is capable of communicating articulate sentences through barks. Garfield once described him as "...

    Intelligence

    Odie's intelligence varies depending on the strip, film, or episode. Sometimes he is surprisingly brilliant, other times he only has the capacity to stare into space and slobber, and still other times, he is depicted as somewhere inbetween, not quite a genius, yet not quite brainless. Animated versions of Odie tend to be somewhat smarter than his depiction in the comic strip, although still lacking in certain areas. He has shown examples of relatively quick thinking from time to time, such as...

    Speaking

    Odie is the only animal character in the Garfield series without a recurring voice bubble, as he is portrayed as a "normal" house dog. Odie can say, "What?", "Yeah", "Huh?", "Mmm-hmm", "Ta-da!", "Uh-Uh", and "Oh no!". He has occasionally been shown thinking. In The Garfield Show, he says some intelligible sentences, and short phrases. When he talks on Garfield and Friends, he speaks by moving his mouth, although other dogs do not do so. Odie speaks only in mumbles in a similar manner in Garfi...

    Odie and Garfield

    Odie is, to Garfield, a slobbering, smiling house-pet. Due to this view, Garfield sometimes underestimates Odie, allowing Odie to get the upper hand. Garfield acknowledges this by saying short, catchy phrases that sometimes anger Odie. On numerous occasions, Garfield actually does care a great deal for Odie, most notably in Here Comes Garfield, in which Odie is briefly captured by the dogcatcher and Garfield tearfully realizes through flashbacks of him and Odie playing together how sad his li...

    1. Here Comes Garfield(1982) 2. Garfield on the Town(1983) 3. Garfield in the Rough(1984) 4. Garfield's Halloween Adventure(1985) 5. Garfield in Paradise(1986) 6. Garfield Goes Hollywood(1987) 7. A Garfield Christmas(1987) 8. Happy Birthday, Garfield!(1988) 9. Garfield: His 9 Lives(1988) 10. Garfield's Babes and Bullets(1989) 11. Garfield's Thanksgiving(1989) 12. Garfield's Feline Fantasies(1990) 13. Garfield Gets a Life(1991)

    Odie appears in all episodes of The Garfield Show except "It's a Cheese World", "Meet Max Mouse" and "Black Cat Blues".

    Odie was going to be named Spot until Jim Davis found out this name was being used for another character. This was shown in the original Jon comics and referenced in the August 15th 1978 strip, whe...
    In his earliest appearances, Odie had black ears. They were recolored to brown on September 27, 1979, supposedly to avoid confusion with Snoopy from Peanuts("Hint: The pooch works for 'peanuts', bu...
    In animated media, Odie's appearance is usually announced by the sound of the cavalry's bugling.
    Despite being established as a primary character, Odie has been absent for as long as three months in the comic strip. Jim Davis admitted in 30 Years of Laughs and Lasagnathat Odie is very hard to...
  3. The conclusion is clear--Jon was killed during a botched robbery attempt, and so, presumably, was Odie. Only Garfield, asleep and unnoticed in another room, survived. And in the time since, the house has stood abandoned, with no one willing to fix up the murder house, and with Garfield, unknown to the wider world, waiting inside.

  4. Jon doesn't believe Odie broke the vase, but when Odie sneezes, Jon takes him to the vet. Garfield ends up thinking that Jon is getting rid of Odie, especially when Jon tells him that he finally got rid of that insect (referring to a fly).

  5. Oct 12, 2024 · Odie was introduced as Lyman’s dog when he briefly moved in with Jon, but after Lyman’s mysterious disappearance (don’t look in Jon’s basement), Odie became Jon’s dog - much to Garfield’s dismay. Since then, Garfield has consistently bullied Odie, and the seemingly dim-witted dog fell for all of Garfield’s cruel pranks.

  6. The Lasagna Gods decided to punish Odie for his hubris and forever stripped him of his ability to communicate. Odie's mind is forever flooded with thoughts that can't be shared and his soul tortured by emotions that can't be expressed.

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