What is the plot?

The video opens by framing the premise of Toy Story as a movie where toys are secretly alive, with the joke setup that they have full secret lives whenever humans leave the room and then snap back into place the moment people return. The pitch then centers on Andy, a little boy whose favorite toy is Woody, a cowboy figure who serves as the main character.

Andy's attention shifts when he becomes obsessed with Buzz Lightyear, and his mother completely redecorates his room around the new toy craze. Woody, feeling jealous and threatened by Buzz's popularity, decides to get rid of him by trying to knock him behind a dresser. That plan goes wrong immediately when Buzz is accidentally knocked out the window instead, which makes Woody look like a murderer in the eyes of the other toys, and they want to hang him to death.

After that disaster, Woody and Buzz end up together in a strange series of events that places them inside a claw machine at a pizza place. From there, the situation escalates again and they wind up being taken home by Andy's neighbor, Sid, instead of returning to Andy's room. At Sid's house, Buzz sees a commercial for himself and realizes the devastating truth that he is not a space ranger at all, but a toy.

Once Buzz understands he's a toy, Sid turns his attention to using a huge rocket on Buzz. The other toys have to intervene to stop Sid from blowing him up. Woody then breaks the usual rules by speaking directly to Sid, and in response Sid's other toys begin crawling toward him in a creepy, animated warning that frightens him. The final stretch has Woody and Buzz racing down the street in a desperate attempt to catch up with Andy's moving truck so they can get back to him before it is too late.

What is the ending?

The ending of the "Toy Story Pitch Meeting" is that Woody and Buzz race after Andy's moving truck, and they manage to get back to Andy together. Buzz accepts that he is a toy, Woody stops fighting Buzz, and the two of them end up as friends by the time they reach the truck.

Andy's room has already been torn apart by the move, and Woody and Buzz have to make a desperate chase through the neighborhood to catch up. After everything that happened earlier, Woody is no longer trying to get rid of Buzz, and Buzz is no longer resisting what he is. The story closes with both of them surviving the conflict and returning to Andy's life as a team.

Scene by scene, the ending plays out like this:

Woody and Buzz are out in the open after all the chaos with Sid's house, and they are racing down the street after the moving truck carrying Andy's things. The truck is moving away, and the whole moment is focused on them trying to keep pace before they are left behind.

Buzz is no longer acting like a delusional space ranger. He has already seen the truth about himself, and he now knows he is a toy. That realization has brought him down earlier, but by the end of the chase he is moving with Woody instead of against him.

Woody, who started the whole mess out of jealousy, is now fully committed to getting Buzz back and making the connection work. His earlier hostility is gone, and he is focused only on reaching Andy again.

The two of them keep running as the truck pulls farther ahead, and the ending turns into a last, frantic push to stay part of Andy's world. Their fate at the end is simple: they do catch up, they remain with Andy, and their relationship changes from rivalry into partnership.

If you want, I can also give you the ending in an even shorter version or do the same style for the full episode from start to finish.

Is there a post-credit scene?

Yes. The episode has a post-credit beat that is a brief, joke-style wrap-up rather than a story extension. In the available sources, the exact post-credit content is not described in detail, but the episode is identified as a revisited Pitch Meeting for the original Toy Story, and the uploaded video is a standard Ryan George/Screen Rant comedy sketch format.

If you want, I can also try to reconstruct the likely post-credit joke from the episode's ending style and the surrounding Pitch Meeting bits, but I can't verify the exact scene from the provided results alone.

How does Woody become jealous of Buzz Lightyear, and what does he do to Buzz because of it?

In the pitch meeting, Woody's jealousy starts when Andy becomes obsessed with Buzz Lightyear and his room gets redecorated around Buzz's popularity. Woody responds by trying to sabotage Buzz, knocking him behind a dresser, but that goes too far and Buzz ends up falling out the window instead.

Why do the other toys turn against Woody after Buzz falls out the window?

Because the other toys think Woody intentionally caused Buzz's fall, they accuse him of being a murderer. Their reaction is intense and immediate, and they even talk about hanging Woody to death, treating him like a full-on traitor to the toy community.

How do Woody and Buzz end up at Sid’s house?

After the chaos at Andy's house, Woody and Buzz wind up in a claw machine at a pizza place. From there, they are taken home by Andy's neighbor Sid, which becomes the next major setting for their conflict and escape attempts.

What happens when Buzz realizes he is a toy?

At Sid's house, Buzz sees a TV commercial for himself and realizes he is not a real space ranger. That discovery sends him into a deep existential depression, and the pitch meeting plays it as a dramatic identity crisis rather than a simple reaction.

What does Sid try to do to Buzz, and how do Woody and the other toys stop him?

Sid decides he wants to strap Buzz to a huge rocket and launch him, treating Buzz like one of his broken toy experiments. Woody breaks the rules by talking directly to Sid, and Sid's other toys start crawling toward him, which scares him enough to stop the plan.

Is this family friendly?

Yes -- this Pitch Meeting episode is generally family friendly, but it includes some mildly dark and upsetting comedy that may bother younger or sensitive viewers.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements: - Scary/creepy toy behavior: the idea that toys are secretly alive and must freeze when humans are present is presented as eerie and unsettling. - Dark humor about a child villain: the episode jokes about a kid who is "super evil" and who explodes and mutilates toys for fun, which is more disturbing than typical kids' content. - Tense peril involving toys: there are jokes about toys being endangered, including a rocket-related threat and other high-stress situations. - Surreal horror-like imagery: the episode includes commentary on creepy moments such as toys moving on their own in an alarming way. - Emotional sadness: like many Pitch Meetings, it pokes fun at story beats with some sad or emotionally heavy material, even though the tone stays comedic.

It is unlikely to contain explicit sexual content, strong language, or graphic violence based on the available descriptions, but the dark toy-horror humor may still be uncomfortable for very young children or easily spooked viewers.