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Wishy-Washy
This article is about the character from the Lilo & Stitch franchise . For the episode, see Wishy-Washy .
- 1.1 Physical appearance
- 1.2 Powers and abilities
- 2.1 Lilo & Stitch: The Series
- 2.2 Leroy & Stitch
- 2.3 Stitch!
Physical appearance
Wishy-Washy is a periwinkle teddy-bear-like experiment similar to a fairy. He has small butterfly-like wings on his back that enable him to fly, a pink gauge-like belly that turns white when all the wishes are used up, and a "wand" on his head that lights up every time a wish is granted. Wishy-Washy also has a tongue that functions similar to a chameleon's tongue.
Powers and abilities
Wishy-Washy can grant any wish he hears, but he is very literal, and the wish will likely not quite turn out as expected. He also has a wish limit meter on his belly, which starts out completely pink, but the gauge slowly diminishes as wishes are granted; when white, all the wishes are depleted, and he loses his wish-granting power. He will respond to requests to undo any wish, though it is unknown if the wish is put back on his gauge or if the reversal counts as a wish.
Appearances
Lilo & stitch: the series.
Experiment 267 was the 267th genetic experiment created by Jumba with Hämsterviel 's funding. He was designed to grant any wish that he hears, but he takes the wishes literally, and thus they rarely turn out quite as expected. Jumba once tried to use 267 to become the supreme ruler of the universe by wishing it, but due to 267's literal nature, when the wish was granted, Jumba turned into a school ruler. How he turned back remains unknown. 267 and the other first 624 experiments were deactivated and smuggled to Earth by Jumba during his mission to capture Experiment 626 .
All of the experiment pods were released and scattered across the island of Kauai.
267's pod eventually made its way into a bag of birdseed, where an elderly woman threw it along with some of the seed into a flock of pigeons. One pigeon flew off with the pod, but an attack from another pigeon caused it to accidentally drop it into the hotel 's swimming pool, activating 267, which caused the children in the pool to flee in terror.
When 267 heard a nearby woman wishing to her friend that she had a husband, the former granted the wish by replacing the woman's friend with a disgusting husband, then fled the scene.
267 later spied on Lilo , Stitch , and David on the beach . When David wished that there were some big waves to surf, 267 granted the wish by causing tsunami-sized waves to appear.
Stitch then spotted 267 and pursued him until both cousins shinnied up a palm tree. When Stitch tried to coax 267 down, the latter used his wand to throw Stitch off the tree. Lilo then wished to herself that they could just skip to the part where they capture the experiment, causing 267 to grant the wish by teleporting into Lilo's arms. 267 hugged Lilo affectionately while Stitch threw a brief tantrum.
Lilo and Stitch then took 267, named Wishy-Washy, back to their home , where Jumba stated Wishy-Washy's past. The former once tried to become the supreme ruler of the universe by wishing it, but since Wishy-Washy was very literal when granting wishes, Jumba turned into a school ruler (although he never revealed how he turned back).
Lilo and Stitch later brought Wishy-Washy to the beach, where he granted Lilo's wish that David was the smartest man in the world. However, David suddenly began talking like a professor, and though Lilo (as well as Nani ) couldn't understand a word he said, Jumba seemed impressed.
Lilo and Stitch eventually made Wishy-Washy Pleakley 's responsibility. However, Pleakley selfishly used up many wishes on Magnificent Man toys and gifts before Gantu arrived at the Pelekai residence and wished to have Wishy-Washy, which the latter granted.
Gantu took the captured Wishy-Washy back to his ship , where he wished for Hämsterviel to turn into a caged pet rat, for the ship to become invisible, and for all the goods in the galaxy. However, in spite of all these wishes, Gantu remained depressed until after getting a sudden jolt of inspiration, he wished for Cinta, his college crush. Regardless, it turned out that Cinta had become rather hideous and spiteful over the years, prompting Gantu to order Wishy-Washy to undo the wish.
Lilo and Stitch shortly after launched a rescue mission on Gantu's invisible ship, during which Gantu wished his blaster was ten times more powerful. Lilo then wished for Gantu's enormous blaster to turn into a giant salami, and Experiment 625 wished for that humongous salami to turn into a colossal Italian salami sandwich, which he ate.
Lilo and Stitch then escaped the ship with Wishy-Washy back to their house, where Jumba discovered that there was only one wish left from all the wishes granted on Gantu's ship. Lilo used this last wish to simply undo all of the wishes that were previously granted, returning everything to normal and rendering Wishy-Washy useless.
Leroy & Stitch
The first 624 experiments, including Wishy-Washy, were rounded up by Leroy and taken to a stadium to be destroyed. However, Lilo , Stitch , Jumba , Pleakley , Reuben , and Gantu arrived before the experiments could be destroyed.
Wishy-Washy participated in the following battle between the experiments and the Leroy clones , but it is unknown what he did. Although the wand on his head was seen flashing throughout the battle, it is presumed that he wouldn't have been able to be very effective, due to the fact that his powers are deemed useless.
The Leroys soon gained the upper hand in the battle but were defeated when Lilo, Stitch, Reuben, and several other experiments performed the song " Aloha ʻOe ", which caused the Leroy army to shut down due to the original Leroy's fail-safe.
Wishy-Washy has appeared multiple times in the Stitch! anime, including one instance where he caused a Christmas wish to go awry. Of course, this would mean that there is a way to replenish Wishy-Washy's powers once all of his wishes are depleted, possibly by dehydrating him then reactivating him, as his gauge was full when he was first activated. In another episode, Wishy-Washy was used by Hämsterviel to wreak havoc at an amusement park that the alien scientist created. In "Shogun", it is shown that Wishy-Washy was dehydrated back into an experiment pod and locked in Jumba 's vault. Eventually, Jumba grabbed his pod to help Stitch in his fight against Dark End , but Wishy-Washy wasn't one of the experiments that was activated.
- Wishy-Washy's name is based on his ability to grant wishes and also the word's meaning which is "lacking strength", referring to his uselessness once his meter has been depleted.
- Wishy-Washy's diet apparently includes books and papers.
- Wishy-Washy, Bugby , Babyfier , Jam , Melty , Snooty , Amnesio , Hunkahunka , Blake , Slugger , Witch , and two unconfirmed experiments are the only known experiments that have wings.
- Jumba refers to Wishy-Washy as a "fulfiller of wishes" and as a failure because his "experiment was too literal" since "programming for wish fulfillment is very difficult", and "they never turned out quite as expected."
- Ironically, given that Jumba stated in the Stitch! anime that Witch is the only magic-using experiment, it is very unlikely that Wishy-Washy uses magic to fulfill wishes.
- Theoretically, Wishy-Washy could act as a watered-down version of Babyfier if someone wished to regain some years of youth; given how literal the wishes are, if not worded properly, it could also reset the wisher's memory to match what it was at the age they wished to be.
- The experiments list seen in the end credits of Leroy & Stitch spells his name as "Wishy Washy" (no hyphen). Interestingly, the Disney+ listing of his episode also spells it the same way.
- Although it is said Wishy-Washy would lose his wish-granting power once his meter was depleted, every time he has appeared, his wishing gauge was replenished, implying that he loses his wish-granting power only temporarily and must wait for the energy to replenish.
- Wishy-Washy's pod color is green.
- The Experiment Pod Container describes Wishy-Washy as: "Experiment 267. Primary function: Granting wishes."
- Wishy-Washy is one of the few experiments to not have his one true place revealed.
- He is also one of the few experiments to not appear in the group photo at the end of Leroy & Stitch .
- Wishy-Washy is one of the few characters to have had more than once voice actor in the English dub of the anime; Derek Stephen Prince voiced Wishy-Washy in the second season episode "We Wishy You a Washy Christmas", while Roger Craig Smith voiced the character in the third season episode "Stitch Goes to Wishlanda".
- 2 Disney Villains
- 3 Lock, Shock, and Barrel
List of experiments
- Edit source
This is a list of fictional experiments from the Disney animated Lilo & Stitch franchise , most of them making their first appearances in Lilo & Stitch: The Series . These experiments are genetically engineered creatures created by Dr. Jumba Jookiba in his lab at "Galaxy Defense Industries", with the assistance of Dr. Jacques von Hämsterviel who funded the projects with "shady" business deals. Prior to the events of Lilo & Stitch , every experiment created was dehydrated into a small orb called an "experiment pod" and stored in a special container for transport. In Stitch! The Movie , the container was accidentally opened and the pods rained down on the island of Kauai. The experiments within the pods are reactivated upon contact in water, a point of concern because many of the experiments are dangerous and Kauai hosts one of the wettest spots on Earth.
Upon encountering each experiment, Stitch's human friend and partner Lilo gives the experiment a name just as she gave Stitch his name. The two then attempt to rehabilitate the experiments and find a purpose for them on Earth that suits their specific abilities, referred to as the "one true place" they belong.
Stitch, inspired by Hawaiian terminology, refers to the other experiments as his "cousins" and considers them all a part of his ohana , or "extended family". All of Jumba's original 626 experiments have their names and numbers listed alongside the credits in Leroy & Stitch .
- 1 Experiment series
- 2.1 0-Series
- 2.2 1-Series
- 2.3 2-Series
- 2.4 3-Series
- 2.5 4-Series
- 2.6 5-Series
- 2.7 6-Series
- 3 Experiments with an unknown number
- 4 Continuity errors
- 5 External links
Experiment series [ ]
The first digit of the experiment numbers reflect what series of experiment they belong to. The official series of experiments, as stated by Jess Winfield, one of the executive producers, are as follows:
- 0-Series: Jumba's test batch, including many household helpers.
- 1-Series: Civic disturbances.
- 2-Series: Technological and scientific.
- 3-Series: Psychological.
- 4-Series: Mysterious series of mostly failed experiments.
- 5-Series: Elemental manipulators.
- 6-Series: Battlefield or doomsday experiments with galactic implications.
For the most part, the colors of the experiment pods correspond to the series numbers, however some of the pods are colored incorrectly.
List of experiments [ ]
0-series [ ], 1-series [ ], 2-series [ ], 3-series [ ], 4-series [ ], 5-series [ ], 6-series [ ], experiments with an unknown number [ ].
|A ghostly, slug-like experiment with black eyes. His function, name, and number are unknown.
| Leroy and Stitch
Continuity errors [ ]
- Several experiments have been given multiple numbers, such as Bonnie and Clyde, who are called 349 and 350 in their episode but called 149 and 150 in the end credits of Leroy & Stitch .
- Many of the experiments that appear in the background during the Aloha Stadium battle in Leroy & Stitch are duplicates or recolors and slight edits of existing experiments. They may not be canon experiments, but were put in as screen fillers to make it appear that all 626 experiments were actually there. Experiment 604, Houdini, appears five times in the frame, while Experiment 520, Cannonball, appears eight times; twice recoloured, twice re-edited and four times copied.
External links [ ]
- Disney Channel
Template:Lilo & Stitch
- 1 625:Reuben
- 2 626:Stitch
- 3 002:DoubleDip
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
•In regards to the creation of these creatures, Tony Craig, who worked on Stitch & Ai and designed all of the experiments in Lilo …
Jumba's Chinese Experiments are characters appearing in Stitch & Ai. Jumba researches and genetically engineers creatures based on Chinese mythological creatures from scrolls given to him by an old monk. They are considered …
Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted. Fantasy. Sci-fi. Images of Jumba's Chinese Experiments.
On August 26, 2003, Disney released a direct-to-video sequel, Stitch! The Movie, which served as the pilot to a television series titled Lilo & Stitch: The Series. This series ran for 65 episodes between September 20, 2003, and July 29, 2006. The series carried on where the film left off and charted Lilo and Stitch's efforts to capture and rehabilitate Jumba's remaining experiments. The series, as well as the original parts of the franchise that focused on Lilo Pelekai and were set in …
Source Wishy-Washy, also known as Experiment 267, is an illegal genetic experiment created by Jumba Jookiba and a character in the Lilo & Stitch franchise. He is designed to grant any wish he hears, but the wishes are …
Stitch, also known as Experiment 626 (pronounced "six two six"), is a fictional character from Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise.A genetically engineered, extraterrestrial life-form resembling a blue koala, he is the more prominent of …
After causing chaos at a beauty salon, Lilo and Stitch meet the hair-eating experiment that made Jumba nearly bald. They called the experiment "Clip". However, the …
This is a list of fictional experiments from the Disney animated Lilo & Stitch franchise, most of them making their first appearances in Lilo & Stitch: The Series. These experiments are genetically engineered creatures created by Dr. …
Plot. Continuing where Stitch! The Movie left off, Lilo and Stitch are given the task of collecting the rest of Jumba's 623 missing experiments, changing them from bad to good, and finding the …