Elige el sistema que desees utilizar
When this sprite clicked broadcast [Interrupt Tom v] start sound [Boing v] // A funny sound effect
The second meaning is the literal one: to scratch a surface, such as a palimpsest—a manuscript where original text has been scraped away to make room for new writing. In this sense, “scratch Tom and Ben News” suggests an archaeology of media. Beneath the current headline (News) lies a previous layer: the biases of the reporter (Tom) and the editorial constraints of the institution (Ben). To scratch is to recover what was erased, to ask: What was here before this story? Whose voice was silenced to make room for this narrative?
The system relies on and Costume Changes to create the illusion of a live, reactive TV studio. scratch tom and ben news
Click or swipe to make them fall off their chairs or tease each other.
Inside the Studio: The Chaos of Talking Tom & Ben News on Scratch When this sprite clicked broadcast [Interrupt Tom v]
Clicking on the characters to make them fall off their chairs or tapping "paw" buttons to trigger specific animations.
When I receive [Interrupt Tom v] // Ben stops working to look at Tom switch costume to [Looking-Up v] wait until <[Tom] is not talking> // Logic to wait for Tom to finish To scratch is to recover what was erased,
Linguistically, the phrase is deliberately ungrammatical. There is no “the” before “news.” No preposition connects “scratch” to “Tom and Ben.” It reads like a command in a forgotten language or a note left behind by a conspiracy theorist. This opacity is its strength. In an era of clickbait headlines and algorithmic predictability, a phrase that resists immediate parsing forces the reader into a state of hermeneutic alertness. We must work to interpret it. That labor mirrors the work of critical media consumption.