1-7 Complete | Beavis And Butthead Seasons

The video quality is standard-def, 4:3 aspect ratio. It looks like it did in 1993—grainy, with occasional artifacts. No HD restoration. That’s authentic but might turn off younger viewers used to crisp animation.

The biggest issue: Due to music licensing and MTV’s own 1990s vault chaos, not all original music video segments are present . Some are replaced with generic animations or cut entirely. Purists will notice. Also, the infamous “Fire” episode (where Beavis hallucinates fire and was blamed for a real-life arson) is included but without the original panic-inducing context. Beavis and Butthead Seasons 1-7 complete

Half the show’s genius is watching Beavis and Butt-Head demolish music videos from Nirvana, Pantera, Salt-N-Pepa, and others. Their commentary ranges from hilariously idiotic (“This sucks, change it”) to accidentally profound. This set preserves most of those segments, though some videos are missing. The video quality is standard-def, 4:3 aspect ratio

“Uh… huh huh. This is cool. Heh heh.” Note for buyers: Check the specific release (e.g., 2014 DVD box set vs. later reprints). Some versions have more music videos intact than others. If possible, look for the “Mike Judge’s commentary” tracks—they’re worth the price alone. That’s authentic but might turn off younger viewers