The moral of this cartoon: Be content with the job you're given. It may not be the most glamorous, but know that there are some jobs that are even less glamorous.
Pretty much. When I heard about people who go into sewer pipes to unclog them, I was grateful for retail. Sure, idiot customers are a drag, but no pay could ever compensate removing the remains of a White Castle buffet from the drains.
it was the width sizes. The Army in ww2 didnt use the modern Greek/latin phonetics they do today. Back then they used names. Alfred Benny Charlie David, you get the picture
This is a PSA for military only during the world war I think it has so many adult themes as a Bugs Bunny cameo is funny, it’s hearing Mel blanc is awesome too
3:25 How cam I possibly make a Strike Witches comparison? Well, Barkhorne and Hartman's spirit animals are dogs and in the Take Off series they are usually a few feet away from Miyafuji.
@@theduke7539 Not quite-- The Military Phonetic Alphabet goes back to 1913. In WWI, it began Able Boy Cast Dog Easy Fox. By WWII it had evolved to Affirm (or Able) Baker Charlie Dog Easy Fox. During the Korean War ("police action", as the US hasn't declared war officially since WWII), UN forces continued to use the WWII Phonetic Alphabet. The current version, used across NATO, was adopted in 1957, four years after the Korean hostilities ended in the uncomfortable cease fire still in place today.
Shoe widths using a variant of the phonetic alphabet [likely Albert, Benny, Charlie, Dave, Edward..since they are men's shoes). Width is measured at the widest part of the foot, usually the area just behind the toes. Shoe widths vary from 2A to 4E, though you aren't likely to find either extreme on a shoe store
Yup. The current standardized phonetic alphabet (Alfa, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, etc.) wasn't adopted until NATO was created after the war. During WW2 there where several variant systems in use - in fact each allied military tended to come up with it's own. Benny was never, to my knowledge, in OFFICIAL use by the US Army - the proper word would have been "Boy" until 1939 and "Baker" from 1939 to 1956. But there have always been people who either can't memorize the proper words or choose not to (and SNAFU would definitely be one of those types...), so you do hear variations from time to time.
The moral of this cartoon: Be content with the job you're given. It may not be the most glamorous, but know that there are some jobs that are even less glamorous.
The moral of this cartoon: ha`cha-cha-chaaaaa
Pretty much. When I heard about people who go into sewer pipes to unclog them, I was grateful for retail. Sure, idiot customers are a drag, but no pay could ever compensate removing the remains of a White Castle buffet from the drains.
@@solomonreal1977 *wolf whistle*
2:28- That pigeon is cooing the tune of the Air Force theme.
Yup, back when it was the US Army Air Corps. 🛩
Man, this cartoons got a point. Very good. It's how you do your job and nothing else.
Damn Charlie and Benny have a lot of shoes.
Headcanon: Charlie and Benny are the army's specially bred mutant millipedes.
That bugs bunny cameo got me. 😂
Nein and a Hayf Chah-lee
I love these voice actor so much
0:10
Me at 9 at night while putting away shoes in the shoe store
1:01 this was me coming home after working the night shift at Walmart after pushing carts and dodging cars just to get them up there.
What a job , a servant to a gang of feather dusters ! :-))
00:33 He was so happy to see David.
it was the width sizes. The Army in ww2 didnt use the modern Greek/latin phonetics they do today. Back then they used names. Alfred Benny Charlie David, you get the picture
1:01
Benny. Charlie. CHARLIE, BENNY, *CHARLIE, BENNY!!! SHOES, SHOES, SHOES!!!! AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!* (BONK)
He got the silly knocked outta him.
Sounds like this cartoon was made before Tarfu got his own cartoon, where he was in the Navy. Does that mean that Fubar was in the Air Force?
This is a PSA for military only during the world war I think it has so many adult themes as a Bugs Bunny cameo is funny, it’s hearing Mel blanc is awesome too
WW2.
Damn, Charlie and Benny have a lot of shoes.
If I was a conscript during a war, I'd be grateful for any job that kept me out of combat.
0:13
Sounds like Snafu just said “Jolly”
3:25 How cam I possibly make a Strike Witches comparison? Well, Barkhorne and Hartman's spirit animals are dogs and in the Take Off series they are usually a few feet away from Miyafuji.
He’s got mad now. Lots of shoes is driving him nuts. 1:01
Haha bugs cameo
2:57 YOU KIDS ARE TOO DAMN YOUNG FOR THAT
Maybe… that‘s the right job for a guy who made four touchdowns in a highschool football match…
You must have very low expectations for your boys if you named them snafu, tarfu, and fubar
Situation Normal All Fouled Up
Things Are Really Fouled Up
Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition
(Yes, I used “Fouled Up”)
how many boots does Charlie need?
It's a rating of arch size and width.
They didnt adopt the Alfa Bravo Charlie Delta until the Korean War.
@@theduke7539 Not quite-- The Military Phonetic Alphabet goes back to 1913. In WWI, it began Able Boy Cast Dog Easy Fox. By WWII it had evolved to Affirm (or Able) Baker Charlie Dog Easy Fox. During the Korean War ("police action", as the US hasn't declared war officially since WWII), UN forces continued to use the WWII Phonetic Alphabet. The current version, used across NATO, was adopted in 1957, four years after the Korean hostilities ended in the uncomfortable cease fire still in place today.
@@seattleportista4150you are talking about the international phonic alphabet. Except for aviation where delta becomes data.
Our son, I too would go crazy like that from most pairs of shoes. Even I do not have such a quantity!😏
What's Bugs doing here?
Oh the creator of Loony Tunes is one of the producers of SNAFU
@@royalpain9281 And Warner Brothers turned their studios over to the Army Signal Corps to make the Private Snafu films.
@@royalpain9281 There was never one sole creator of Looney Tunes.
September 1944.
Wait a second, wasn't it usually "one boy from one family"? Was USA ever desperate enough to conscript all three brothers?
Aw bugs 🐰
3:27 did they not have bite proof vests back then
Snafu: Situation
Normal
All
Fucked
Up
Tarfu: Things
Are
Really
Fucked
Up (or Totally And Royally)
Fubar: Fucked
Up
Beyond
All
Recognition
2:56 Who could blame them?
Do they have a relative named BOHICA?
Maybe a long-lost sister or cousin or something.
@@aualga just to be sure, you do know what BOHICA means right?
Grandson maybe , or great-grandson
3:56 Bugs Bunny.
okay, I know that maybe no one on youtube knows this, but why was he repeating Charlie and Benny names so many times?
Shoe widths using a variant of the phonetic alphabet [likely Albert, Benny, Charlie, Dave, Edward..since they are men's shoes). Width is measured at the widest part of the foot, usually the area just behind the toes. Shoe widths vary from 2A to 4E, though you aren't likely to find either extreme on a shoe store
Yup. The current standardized phonetic alphabet (Alfa, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, etc.) wasn't adopted until NATO was created after the war. During WW2 there where several variant systems in use - in fact each allied military tended to come up with it's own.
Benny was never, to my knowledge, in OFFICIAL use by the US Army - the proper word would have been "Boy" until 1939 and "Baker" from 1939 to 1956. But there have always been people who either can't memorize the proper words or choose not to (and SNAFU would definitely be one of those types...), so you do hear variations from time to time.
Situation normal all fouled up, but I am not in the military
3:57
Wabbit
Be very very quiet I’m huntin’ wabbits!
HAHAHAHAHAHA
Why low quality?
Video uploaded 9 years ago. Back then, video quality was often like that. Uploads from non-HD sources.
For a cartoon about 80 years old, which is a miracle that we can preserve media from that long ago, I'd say it ain't too bad in terms of quality.
O quadro mental perfeito desses animais . Cada vez mais afundando na merda para quem segue esse tipo de gente
"Esses animais" signica os soldados? Como soldados, não tiveram escolha em seu trabalho.