Samesies. And I've watched and enjoyed a number of horror movies during the "gorn" era off the success of Saw. I've tried a number of times and understand it's not for me. I also don't like the Itchy & Scratchy show on the Simpsons.
Not really my thing, but this is one of the few shows that you can find released as in .swf format. I wish some of the other stuff by Mondo was (such as Dr. Tran which is 360p/480p etc on YT, though some effects make me think they might've composited it in AE or something).
Would be neat for the broadcast shows were made in Flash, but that's less likely as I'm sure someone would need to leak it.
I have the swf files and one of the amazing things about it being vector drawings is they scale to currently size displays and resolutions so they never look old.
I mean yeah that's why I brought it up (specifically mentioning the non-swf resolution being inadequate). But also they are significantly less data as well, even for short animations vs modern video codecs. I wouldn't doubt that an entire show in swf could be less data than 1 episode in an old format at 240p.
Like Homestar Runner is ~330MiB for 9* years of content as a collection of .SWFs (a quick search on YT gives a 9 hour video for just the "main" animations listing a bunch of exclusions and it was uploaded last year in only 480p, another person uploaded just the Strong Bad emails and that's 10 hours and they also went with 480p). Though it's a bit of a shame the offline archive is so disjointed (especially when the interactive menus were part of the charm), though that is a side-effect of it being a rolling website rather than a singular flash file for each season-like era (maybe someone could smash them together somehow?).
EDIT: Also a large chunk of that ~330MiB is probably audio (possibly improved with better codecs). Not sure how much redundant data there is from it being ~500 files.
*= I guess it's actually still running (including swf files on the wiki), but 2000-2009 is the archive I have. And I notice now the site is actually running ruffle now (choppy audio though, and load times are slower than using Flash standalone).