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    Loathsome Characters Wiki

    Mr. Herriman (Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends)


    Mr. Herriman (Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends)
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    “That is enough of this silly nonsense!”
    Gender: Male
    Type: Overly-Strict Authority Figure
    Species: Imaginary Friend (Rabbit)
    Portrayed by: Tom Kane
    Status: Alive
    Media of origin: Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends


    Mr. Herriman is one of the main characters from the Cartoon Network series Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends, He is the head of the house at Foster's, Frankie Foster's boss and Madame Foster's imaginary friend.

    Why He Should Be Considered A Hot Cross Bunny

    1. He constantly works Frankie, the caretaker of the house, to the bone and hardly ever lets her take a break.
    2. He is way too strict on the residents and hardly lets them do anything. It even gets to a point where even Frankie is annoyed by the rules.
      • His style of keeping the house in order leads to him reaching a higher amount of strictness than Hugh Test and almost reaches the same amount of strictness as Hippolyte/Ignatius.
    3. He refuses to have terrible imaginary friends or kids (such as Duchess and Terrence in the first episode) sent to prison because of the house's motto to take all imaginary friends, showing that he cannot stand the idea of an imaginary friend in prison (even if they belong in there).
    4. He rarely gets punished or called out for his actions such as torturing Frankie and treating the friends like crap, even when he deserves it. That makes him a Karma Houdini.
    5. In "Everyone Knows It's Bendy", he believes Bendy over the friends who have lived in the house longer than he has, which is stupid.
      • And while only thinking Bloo did the bad things wouldn't be better, it would at least make sense, considering how he is practically a troublemaker.
    6. In "I Only Have Surprise For You," he promises to Mac that he won't let Bloo throw him a party, but he agrees to it and shames Mac in an unnecessarily cruel way and mocks him when he dresses as a clown.
    7. In "Imposter's Home For Um... Make Em' Up Pals", he believes Goofball over Frankie, who is one of the most responsible and nicest characters in the series, and acted like a complete hypocrite. He gets mad at Frankie for suggesting take-out for dinner but praises Goofball for ordering pizza for dinner and later on bans Frankie from a concert she wanted to attend.
    8. He yells at and punishes everybody in "Crime After Crime" just because he doesn't want them to find out about his carrot addiction. Why didn't he just ask them to leave the room?
    9. In "Bye Bye Nerdy", he tries to get Bloo adopted by another family, even though he promised Bloo would not be adopted. Not to mention that he flat-out cheers when he's getting adopted.
    10. In "Pranks For Nothing," he accuses Bloo of spilling water without any proof, and locks him in a closet.
      • Though, to be fair, Bloo kinda had it coming due to not listening to his rules.

    Redeeming Qualities

    1. Despite being strict, the house would fall apart without him, as proven in "Let Your Hare Down".
    2. He did at least get his comeuppance in "Busted" and "Crime After Crime".
    3. Tom Kane did a good job voicing him.
    4. He does have some funny quotes:
      • "Rules, Schmules? RULES, SCHMULES?!"
      • "I dislike you with great intensity."
      • "Oh, I'm terribly sorry. I will go alert the fairness police."
      • The "Hippity hippity, hoppity hoppity" scene from World Wide Wabbit.
    5. His design is fitting for his role.
    6. His strictness towards Bloo is somewhat understandable considering that Bloo causes a lot of trouble just for his own amusement.
    7. He might have finally shown respect for Frankie in "Destination Imagination".
    8. Like Bloo, Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends would not be the same without him.
    9. According to a tie-comic, he got blamed for a mess that Madame Foster caused which explains (If not flat out excuses) his fussy nature.

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