Fok and Mung

 was an American animated adventure-comedy television series, being created by TBD. It was produced by Disney Television Animation and it aired on Disney Channel from November 17th, 2005 until April 16th, 2010.

Synopsis
Two cavemen while traveling through their lands, discovers a time traveler who ends up unintentionally recruiting them on time traveling missions to save the timestream from paradoxes

Main

 * Fok (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - a cocky caveman who believes himself to be intelligent and smart although he often screws up, mainly due to his naivety of modern or even semi-modern culture.
 * Mung (voiced by Bill Fagerbakke) - a hulking yet idiotic caveman who is Fok's best friend as he is often tricked into doing dumb things or picks fights against irrational things.
 * Nebula Andorres (voiced by Grey DeLisle) - a normal and stressed time traveler who was sent to pick two insignificant historical figures to help her on her mission to take down paradoxes as she ends up picking Fok and Mung by mistake, initially regretting it before starting to grow on them.

Supporting

 * The Prime (voiced by TBD) - the wise and powerful leader of all time travelers who is Nebula's boss as he trusts her, Fok and Mung to fix the paradoxes that have been causing chaos through the timestream.
 * Georgia Washington (voiced by TBD) - the Paradoxed version of the first president who was born as a woman instead of a man as she disguised herself as a man to win the Revolutionary War yet after winning the war, is not accepted to be the president as she becomes the first Paradox Fok, Mung and Nebula attempt to fix.

Antagonists

 * Chieftain Gurnug (voiced by John DiMaggio) - an aggressive caveman who sees Fok and Mung as pure imbeciles as after learning that they are now time travelers, attempts to capture them to learn the secrets of time travel so he can gain power.

Episodes
See List of episodes.

Tropes
See /Tropes.

Trivia

 * The series confirms that the paradoxes created can't be permanently fixed, being an explanation of why paradoxed versions of historical figures may return at times.