University of Louisville
2323 S. Brook St.
Louisville, KY 40208
Brand Identity & Visual Standards
Guidelines for creating UofL-branded marketing materials and websites
Elara spent the next three weeks in a fever of listing. She cross-referenced airdates, production codes, voice actor credits, even the background noise of VHS static. She found EP107c: “The Ghost of Maiden’s Peak (Director’s Cut)” —a version where the Gastly never reveals itself, and the old woman on the cliff is still waiting. She found EP247a: “Jessie’s First Errand” —a prequel episode showing a young Jessie in a snowstorm, holding a sickly Ekans, with no dialogue and no happy ending.
One night, the list updated itself while she watched. pokémon episode list
Instead, she picked up a pen and did the only thing a true lister could do: she wrote one final entry. Not an episode. A note to herself. Elara spent the next three weeks in a fever of listing
Leo watched the whole thing. At the end, before the screen went white, Ash turned to the camera—not to the side, not in profile, but directly, impossibly, through the fourth wall—and said: “Tell your sister to stop counting. The list is a cage.” She found EP247a: “Jessie’s First Errand” —a prequel
It had started when she was seven. Her older brother, Leo, had taped over the final minute of "Bye Bye Butterfree" with a news broadcast about a mayoral election. For years, Elara believed the episode ended with Ash releasing his Butterfree into a gray, pixelated storm of static and a stern man talking about zoning laws. That fracture—that missing piece—haunted her. She began writing down every episode title she could confirm, then air dates, then writers, then animators, then the precise second a Poké Ball clicked shut.
Leo recorded over the tape the next morning. But he never forgot. And when Elara began her listing obsession at age seven, he didn’t stop her—he watched her build the cage, brick by brick, episode by episode.