So if you know of or have an imaginary friend that desperately needs a home, then come on down to Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends, where good ideas are not forgotten." We provide food, shelter and a warm heart for imaginary friends looking for a place to call *home*. Man, I tell ya, if it wasn't for this little lady, none of us would even be here, ‘cause you see, she's the one who has the bright idea to open up our own home and give us forgotten imaginary friends a second chance. Big Fat Awesome House Party was an online video game created by Cartoon Network's interactive division and Powerful Robot Games featuring the characters of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, and was similar to the Nintendo's Animal Crossing series. Mr. Herriman's uptight agenda for strict scheduling starts to become a nuisance to the Foster's residence, from showering, to eating, to even adopting friends (he nearly allowed Bloo to be adopted due to Mac running a few minutes late). Herriman. While Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends does serve as a care facility, no other facility has been shown so far. "Let Your Hare Down " is the 13th episode of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends season 5. From the onset, the concept seems sad and a bit daunting, but it’s so close to reality that it works. Fuse's interest in imaginary friends has made this area a prime target for Fusions and Fusion Spawns. It was produced by Cartoon Network Studios and is the first show made by the network to be animated primarily with Adobe Flash and was done in Ireland by Boulder Media. The episode's plot follows Mac, an eight-year-old boy who is pressured by his mother to abandon his imaginary friend Blooregard Q. Kazoo, on the grounds that he is too old for him. When the commercial ended, Eddy thought about all the freedom the imaginary friends at Foster's had. So if you know of or have an imaginary friend that desperately needs a home, then come on down to Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends, where good ideas are not forgotten. List of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends episodes House of Bloo's is the first episode of the animated television series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends . Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is an American animated television series created by Craig McCracken for Cartoon Network. Frances "Frankie" Foster: [narrating] Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends is a wonderful, funderful imagination habitation. [1] The house motto is "Where good ideas are not forgotten". 9 Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends aired for 6 seasons from 2004 to 2009. However, it is often mentioned that the Friends' kids are their "owners," which sound more like they were pets or even slaves (which is definitely not the case). Plot. This location is based on the show Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends. The series focussed around a home for imaginary friends where imaginary friends go after their child has grown up. Show, but Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends turned that love into obsession. What’s not to love about a foster home for forgotten imaginary friends? The game is a "massively-single player online role-playing game." In Foster's Goes to Europe it is shown that the Imaginary Friends need passports and tickets to travel via airplane and are therefore not seen as pets. This is Madame Foster. There are (according to "Setting A President") 1,340 imaginary friends at Foster's Home; however at the end of "Emancipation Complication" Madame Foster states that there are 2,038 imaginary friends currently residing in the house plus Bloo and Mr. Availability was limited to the USA and its territories. Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is an American animated television series created by Craig McCracken for Cartoon Network Studios.The series centers on a boy named Mac, who is pressured by his mother to abandon his imaginary friend Bloo, who moves into an orphanage for imaginary friends, and is kept from adoption so that Mac can visit him daily. Most children had imaginary friends growing up, and eventually outgrow them. Powers Imaginary friends, though normally quite harmless, can be imagined as being powerful beings, the most well known example being World , an imaginary friend with what appeared to be unlimited powers in his toybox.