Two actor performances in the style of a scene out of a movie.
In a bizarre legal case, Enoch's minor infraction activated an undiscovered city law that required his castration. And with elections coming up, the incumbent city attorney sticks to his policy of unquestioned obedience to the law. But when a friendly doctor freezes the tissue and assures he can reattach it, Enoch begins a quest to find a loophole forcing the judicial system to give him back what's rightfully his--his balls.
As punishment for his jaywalking, as prescribed by city law, Enoch has been sent to hospital for mandatory castration. When he wakes up from the general anaesthetic, he meets the doctor who performed the procedure and learns that he may have a slim chance at getting back what's rightfully his.
An aging, failing FGA (Furry Golf Association) golfer wishes to pursue a playboy social life in between his last few tours, but there's one problem. He's married to an overly loving, doting wife. Not to worry - he has a plan! Rewrite his will to make his best friend a beneficiary, and fake his own death with his help. The problem? The golfer is as unlucky at fraud as he is on the front nine. Whatever can go wrong with his plans, do so in the most spectacular way. Guess that's just 'par for the course'!
Philip and Harmon, the albatross' best friend, have procured a 'body' from a nearby cemertery to use as proof of Philip's staged death. Right before they get to the staging area, their argument in the car makes Philip drive through a red light and swerve to avoid a stopped school bus. An officer pulls him over, and Philip believes he can talk his way out of trouble, much to his dismay.
The dams may have given the city its water supply, but it also flooded the farms, turning good fields into worthless swamp. Of course, the city hoofers never did care much for the country, leaving the now out-of-work horses, donkeys and cattle to fend for themselves. While most just made the best of it, one donkey's ambition led him to stealing goods from the city, a major crime that made him a lot of enemies. But also the loyalty of Colette, his mare girlfriend, who hid him in the swamp after his bold escape from jail. Now with the swamp sheriff smelling an opportunity at some fat reward money, it's a fight to hide the longear as long as she can.
Runson did what Colette asked and poisoned the coffee he pours for the sheriff every morning. But when morning rises, the honest mule has a change of heart. But before he can warn the stubborn old bull, he learns that the sheriff has his own problems with the unlucky longear.
It's a whole new world in 1824 Louisiana. France has sold their land to the still-new United States, and now Spain has given Florida up for a strong border West. All of that change proves too exciting for one skinny red fox growing up in deep Cajun country, the first American-born in his family. And so begins an incredible journey across the Southern states, where Barton Rouge will meet both friends and foes alike on his way through the darkest voodoo country in all the land.
Barton's been sneaking along the edge of the bayou, gathering up supplies for his adventure across the Southern states, on his way to the new American holding of Florida. Just before he's about to start his trip, he spots a coyote being chased by a pack of dogs. Not finding it a fair fight, the fox intervenes, grabbing the dogs' attention and leading them away from the coyote, then rounding back and helping him escape into the dark, gloomy bayou. Barton's generosity isn't without benefit. The skinny fox could use a big coyote for protection on his journey. Just has to make sure he doesn't start off on the wrong paw.
An unsuccessful seagull sculptor spends his last dollar on a replacement chisel in a garage sale, and finds it makes the most beautiful sculptures with hardly any effort, but only of people. Despite his new financial success, he feels increasingly scared and nervous that the sculptures are whispering dark thoughts to him, commanding him to kill the sculpture's subjects in cold blood. It's only when his subjects start dying at gruesome and horrific ends that he fears the sculptures are controlling his paw to kill, falling deeper into a break with reality with each chipping of marble! Is it a cursed implement, or insanity gripping his mind? Whichever it is, it must be stopped soon, before his wife meets her doom at the end of a chisel.
When a struggling rat from Long Island gets word that his Puget Sound uncle has passed away, he finds himself inheriting a local coffee house in a wealthy suburb of Seattle. Encouraged by his mob connections to rake in that high tech cash, he tries managing the shop, but finds his New York style doesn’t always fit with Washington coffee culture.