Check out our featured song: "Surreal Sister" by Cultural Vultures! ua-cam.com/video/VWJJVwZMniM/v-deo.html What's YOUR favorite "Looney Tunes" short? Let us know in the comments!
Nobody complains about speedy gonzales in Mexico. Especially in Mexico City. Speedy is a hero in Mexico. Just like Nadie Fuentes from El Cazador De La Bruja.
I absolutely agree. I mean the actors from Poltergeist dying in real life either on set or shortly after the movie was finished is disturbing, not what's listed here.
Just for your information on Speedy Gonzalez... since the 1960s, my Mexican family LOVED Speedy! What made it funnier is that we had family members who actually sounded like Speedy! My grandpa would make me get up early on Saturday mornings to watch the two hours of Warner bros. cartoons with him because he didn't want to get caught watching cartoons by himself and have to explain to someone why a grown man would watch them.
Cause in a superman comic u don't want to be the random guy that super saves u r inspired by superman himself. Mexican people admire speedy gonzales not the random lazy stereotyped mexican that appears in some episodes.
I think these people feel offended FOR the Mexicans and pretend they're heroes doing so. Or maybe they don't want their kids thinking this is how Mexicans act; maybe they should watch some specials on PBS about Mexico and its fine people in addition? I used to love PBS as a kid.
The deaths on Looney Tunes never bothered me because they were never permanent. No matter how many times Wile E. Coyote falls off a cliff or Daffy Duck blows himself up, they’re always up again a few seconds later.
I grew up right at the end of the "Saturday morning cartoons" era. Coincidentally, this was right before school shootings and other acts of unprovoked violence became common in the US. Our grandparents used phrases like "screamed bloody murder" and " bombed out of their gourd" in a purely metaphorical sense. Even kids knew that they weren't being literal. The "guns" in Looney Tunes were all starter pistols or cap guns to us. A couple of cartoon "deaths", and we had the pattern figured out: the characters were only stunned and would come to presently. I hope kids today can still understand this on some level.
Very true, I watched a bunch of them and never thought they were too violent. Now air something like the new She-ra or thundercats Roar or Teen titans Go back in th eday. let's see which one the public would be offended by. The classic stuff or the "new" one.
Geez why isn’t the censorship this strict with today’s kids cartoons like teen titans go even though they call teen titans go a kids cartoon even though they a lot more adult rated humor than looney Tunes.
Though in this case, the censorship is not putting a juicy steak in front of a baby, because said baby can't chew it. Adults can still find these things, if they do a little looking. But showing them to children, on a children's show, during a family-focused time slot is problematic at best. That is why adult-oriented time slots existed, even on cartoon-focused networks.
How is looney tunes being the reason nimrod became an insult a bad thing? It was a cleaver choice of word for the show & now a fun word to say, when you want to call someone an idiot.
Gee, when I was a kid I was simply taught "Cartoons aren't real" and never had a problem. Never seem them as racist, controversial, or political. I just laughed at them. For learning I turned to "Mr. Wizard" RIP Don Herbert!
Thank you. I grew up with these cartoons and I loved them. The greatest disservice done to the kids of the 80's and 90's was forcing them to view chopped up versions of these classics.
"But once you notice the lack of female characters, you might not look at them the same way again" Noticed, didn't change my look on them. The Looney Tunes will always be the Looney Tunes, regardless of the amount of females within the series itself. You guys are becoming disappointing with the content
@@KemoneArmstrong One he didn't do regularly was Granny. The most famous version of that was done by June Foray (who also did Rocky the Flying Squirrel and Betty Rubble from the Flintstones). However he did indeed do the voice of Granny from 1974 - 1978.
@@TBaker-xu5is It was said that people said that Mel Blanc was the male June Foray. She was that good, but Mel got top and often only billing if he was around. June kept working until her death... was it last year? she was in her 90's.
These kinda things were always cencored by those,who had the least thing to do with it, sometimes killing it altogether,which is a shame. All we ever wanted are laughs and not political correctness. :]
"Disturbing facts about Looney Tunes" Translation: things people these days find offensive. Just because something is "Offensive" by today's standards doesn't mean we should erase it from existence. Everything in this world is part of our history & no matter how good or questionable it may be we shouldn't forget it. Also... Looney Tunes has always been SUPER DARK but Comedy shouldn't have limits! One of the absolute best jokes EVER in the series was when bugs bunny straight up shot a guy just for coughing. There's a simple motto I stand by with offensive or Dark comedy... "you find it offensive, I find it funny"
@@JuanFlores-mq8uv censoring Dr. Seuss isn't because of todays standards? Censoring Pepe Le Pew isn't because of todays standards? Calling anything and everything appropriation/racist/offensive/white supremacy/sexist/homiphobic/transphobic/ "insert word here" phobic isn't today's standards? You don't leave your basement and I feel sorry for you.
Fun fact: Tweety Bird’s catchphrase « I thought I saw a Puddie Tat » was used around my house when my mother caught me wandering around the neighborhood and house, and the word “Puddie” became a childhood nickname that stuck with me. This childhood nickname became a bit of a placeholder nickname for my UA-cam channel that has since stuck like glue.
@@furionmax7824 little native american hunter, the cars from the future, one called "china prisoner" was the name in spanish, the one with BB vs the Japanese during ww2 or hitler Wolf vs three little pigs. We latinos didn't suffer from censorship... We had daytime telenovelas LOL
Some people consider them disturbing because of the constant violence (including suicides) and the racial stereotyping of various minority groups (Indians, AKA Native Americans, black people, Asians, Mexicans, Italians, etc).
It's strange to me that with all this censoring and cutting out of objectionable material, that kids today are much worse behaved than those of us who grew up with these cartoons. Our generation was much more respectful in general than today's kids. All this political correctness hasn't accomplished anything of value at all.
Horseshit. Political Correctness is what's allowing our Nation to stray away from Fascism, Racism, and Bigotry. Republiguns want more school shootings and care about guns more than chiIdren, they try to force Paraphiles, Otherkins, and Gender Dysphoriacs into their Cis-Gender Heteronormativity, they try to indocternate peopIe with the lie that there are only Two Genders, they try to take away Women's Rights to Abortion, they claim CapitaIism is Free and deny the Fact that Socialism does work and is far more Equitable and Beneficial to Society, and the Irony of them claiming Biden is incompetent when they're literally Trump Supporters!!!
Sure, your generation with such violent racism that there are still entire sections of the country were anybody of color who wanders in gets brutalized
# 8 - The reason Tweety's color was changed from pink tp yellow was censors. Their objection was the idea that Tweety looked like he was naked and THAT idea was too shocking!
Although you could of had teeety being a new chick just growing into he's or hers feathers which would of explained it, baby animals don't always have there fur or feathers yet
When I was a kid back in the 50s and 60s we knew the difference between cartoons and reality. We understood the cartoons were entertainment and not to be taken seriously. If something disturbed us, we had adults to talk to explain things to us. Political correctness be damned.
Disagree onnie those cartoons showcased the very real racial divide present at those times and which till this day hasnt been fully rectified btw not an american
Does anyone else remember when the old cartoons would break the 4th wall and tell the viewers, "Don't try this at home" before a character did something dangerous or violent that was for comedic effect? Either a sign would show up somewhere on screen or one of the characters would say it. Anyway, the cartoons were of their time. I even saw the more offensive stuff but it didn't make me enjoy Looney Tunes any less. You just treat them like old Disney movies; watch, cringe at the insensitive stuff, discuss, then move on knowing it won't be repeated and you know better.
The most well drawn, well written, and best acted cartoons in the 20th Century! They were clever, satirical, and brilliant! During the 40's & 50's Warner Brothers made these treasures with as much care as their motion pictures! Disney had the heart of America, but Looney Tunes had the pulse of America!
"We can't show them here" Yes. Yes, you can. There's this thing called "commentary", where you actually show the problematic stuff so people can decide what they think about it. Americans and their cult of hiding everything that could be considered offensive, smh... Do you expect school to stop talking about racism because some kids could find it "offensive" ??
I watched these when I was little with my grandfather and not once did I even notice how dark it was. Children don't think about racism, suicide or drunk driving..we are innocent so it goes over our heads.
One of my favorite moments from Looney Tunes when I was little was near the end of a cartoon where a cat says, "Now I've seen everything," and shoots himself in the head. I thought it was the funniest thing ever. I repeated the joke to my parents and everyone else, complete with finger-gunning myself in the head. Then years later I watched the cartoon again, and it ended before the cat shot himself. I was stunned. It really ticked me off, because I felt condescended to. I don't know if the network really thought moments like that would encourage children to commit suicide, or if they were just bowing to overprotective parents. Either way, I found it insulting, and my interest in Looney Tunes started to dwindle after that. An even better Looney Tunes moment is when Bugs Bunny pretends to be the Easter Bunny, goes to deliver eggs to a criminal gang's house, and finds a toddler using a pistol as a pacifier.
These white PC BSers hobby and fun are "offense". Nobody in showbiz complains about offending Conservatives. The Right or whatever. As a Conservative I believe that content freedom is a good thing. If it offends, turn it off & go on with your life, leave other people alone.
i was raised on these ad grew up normal and appreciated the humor. We are not raising a bunch of snowflakes. We all need to be able to laugh at ourselves
Modern children must be afraid of offending anyone and everyone. They must view themselves as either a victim or as the villain. I hope this didn't offend you.
@@thudthud5423 I blame the 1617 movement as well as the use of critical race theory. Both of which will place you as the villain or the victim of said villain.
@@BBBHuey That was one of the biggest reasons for the gender disparity. No one laughs when a female gets hit in the head with a hammer pulled out of nowhere.
Giving away my age, (64) I remember seeing the "uncensored" cartoons. Many of them made reference to things my parents didn't even remember. A lot of stereotypes of Warner Brothers actors in films, parodies of WWII characters, and catch phrases that no one remembers. There was a meme of a character that I later was supposed to be Peter Lorre who said, "Now I've seen everything" and then shoots himself in the head. Being a film lover I still don't know where that came from.
@@PoohbearPlus The guy shooting himself with large sorrowful eyes appeared in many cartoons. In one of them he was a fish. It must be from a Peter Lorre movie but knowing classic films I don't know where it originated from
A couple I remember well were the the cab and his kid who wanted to be a hot rod, the guy at the bar in a catatonic state being feed beer and pretzels. There was also the one that told the story almost completely in idioms.
@@jamesbrien2298 I believe the cartoons you are referring to were called "One Cab's Family" and "Symphony in Slang" both directed by Tex Avery while at MGM.
I grew up in the 80s and they were my all time favorite Saturday morning cartoons, I never found a single thing "disturbing" makes me shake my head to see how things have come to this, it's a CARTOON
It's disturbing because it implies that some of the characters resort to homosexuality to satisfy their urges, with only two female characters somebody gonna have to give up some booty. Just that simple.
Looney Tunes will always be my favorite toons and wishing there'll be more female characters since Tiny Toons. They always make me laugh even I missed my childhood already. Lola Bunny and Penelope Pussycat are my favorite lady characters even Granny, too. I hope both Pepe Le Pew and Penelope Pussycat will return someday if social media controversial issues disappeared.
The shorts of Lonney Tunes and the shorts of Mickey Mouse are best and iconic shorts ever in all the time and Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck they are the coolest and awesome characters ever
I’ve seen most of the looney tunes cartoons and I don’t care what people think! All the jokes are funny. Did you know that June forey voiced granny and witch hazel.
@@denisejohnson4037 The Pepe le pew ones were pretty great, and it’s not entirely mean Spirited to the characters that he’s targeting, because in most shorts he does get his Comeuppance, though you’re entitled to your opinion.
Most of these issues are "products" of their time: characters smoking & using guns wasn't a bad thing at the time but obviously today isn't something that could be shown in a show aimed towards kids. The episodes, which are banned, are a product of the time given the offensive material in them along with the wartime cartoons which were meant as propaganda & morale for the troops but not so much today.
While all the censorship, racism and dark humour does take a great place in disturbing facts about them I would say one thing is that most disturbing of them are bullies. Everyone’s either trying to kill one another or prank another and some of their mischief against the other becomes very cruel and deadly. Perhaps at the moment they can seem a bit amusing but once I really think about it they don’t really do a lot of good influences most of the time. Maybe Some could say Bugs Bunny could be a good influence because he uses intelligence to win the battle, and sure I can except that but even his shenanigans can get really cruel at times. He doesn’t really think about the well-being of the other when trying to survive their antics. Their cartoon physics and logic may cause them to still be alive at the end but if it they were in our world they would commit a lot of murders.
Looking back now, I still never found these offensive or disturbing...and I'm African American. The mere fact that these were just for laughs keep me coming back for more
This is quite strange because kids from the 60s, 70s and 80s NEVER EVER felt horrified by those spectacular and funny fights, deaths, punches and scares the characters suffered. We all knew that was only fantasy and never real. I never felt discriminated or humilliated when I was an 8-year kid with big teeth and my classmates called me Bugs Bunny. In fact I was honored. I absolutely LOVED the long lost Inky and the Minah Bird cartoon.
This isn't a negative thing but did you know Tom & Jerry used to be shown so that the broadcast would stay on time, so if the News was at 6 & the programme that was showing before ran short by 3 or 4 mins Tom & Jerry would be played to fill that gap.
I remember watching Tiny Toons "One Beer" when it premiered as a kid and just being sardonically amused because I was the child of alcoholics and new better, like so many of us did at the time. They really, really, did not understand '90's kids or what 'dark and disturbing' to us actually was, and nothing has really changed since.
I grew up with these shows in the 60’s. The reason that these cartoons didn’t affect me into shooting guns or beating people with 2x4’s or jumping off a cliff was simple--they were cartoons.
I watched some of the "Censored Eleven" on VHS as a kid, and I never knew what the negative stereotypes were. My mom never raised a fuss over it either, so...
Times change and what is considered appropriate entertainment does as well. These cartoons represented what society deemed acceptable during these eras. I can remember my father explaining to us people who were harmed fatally wouldn’t be back the next week. He loved these programs. But he also realized children might not realize the severity of these violent actions. 🤷♀️ They have outlived their purpose like everything does. The world will be no better nor worse without them.
It's not so much that people are worried that children will be scared or traumatised. They are more afraid that children will mimic the characters and their actions.
The deal with the violence is pretty much spot on! We knew it was all for a laugh, the kind that couldn't possibly be done in live action; not even the Three Stooges could pull off gun antics like cartoon characters could! But even there, the studio producers had their limits. You need look no further than the "director's cut" to Hare Ribbin' (1944), where Bugs has an alternate take on granting a hunting dog's death wish! That's on the LT Golden Collection, Volume 5, if you're looking.
@@cesaralejandro7725 Agreed. But should he stand trial, everyone will have to wear hazmat suits and the courtroom will have to be decontaminated immediately afterwards.
Porky Pig's stuttering was described in your video, but Daffy Duck's slurring of words was an intentional prank making some fun at the founding owner of Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies, Leon Schlesinger. He had a slight lisp and the cartoonists used it with the Daffy character. Some were afraid Leon would fire then on hearing it, but Leon pretended he didn't grasp the prank, and was good natured, saw the humor, wasn't offended and didn't fire them.
"one beer" is hilariously stupid even at that age. They get drunk off of one beer between three people, ( become bums) steal a police car and drive off a cliff to their deaths! floating angel wings and all! They do show that it was all an act to teach, but man that was a ride.
I used to watched these coming home from elementary school back in the 1984-1995s with my family. Having a laugh of my early kid life time. I've never had any thoughts that these were "dark cartoons" at the time during middle/high school years 1997-2002 to my adult age. Seems like internet is a bad thing only to find out what's truth and lies over many decades of entertainment, books, music, culture food to art, etc. They NEVER were a threat to me. I'm still LEARNING HERE! My eyes were my camera to recorded what I've seen as memories and my ears are audio recorder to keep relistening musics and sounds in my brain. I just feel like I wanna be an robot Android that comes alive, learning to feel emotions like Cyberpunk.
Classic cartoons were often built around royalty free classical music, hence the "Tunes". They contribute to American musical literacy and Classical appreciation generally, often Southern European, though Wagner is a star.
I've seen the cartoon called "Show Biz Bugs," where Daffy Duck kills himself while performing a "magic trick." When I saw it as a boy, that segment was always included, but it was censored when it was broadcast on the Cartoon Network. This is probably because Daffy dies in the end, but I think it was also because he was wearing a "devil" costume at the time, or it could be a combination of both reasons. There were a couple of variations of a "suicide" gag. In "Horton Hatches The Egg" (based on the story by Dr. Seuss), Horton The Elephant is captured by hunters while he's still sitting on Maisie the lazy bird's nest in a tree (he's keeping her egg harm while she's on vacation, from which she decides never to return). As Horton sits in the tree on the deck of a ship transporting him to America, a fish comes out of the sea and is so shocked to see an elephant in a tree on a ship, that he says (in a voice like actor Peter Lorre), "Well, now I've seen everything," and then takes out a gun and shoots himself. Similarly, there was another cartoon (the title I don't remember, except that it had the word "itch" in it) where a hobo-style flea decides to live on a dog owned by Elmer Fudd. Of course, this makes the dog itch, which causes him to scratch himself, but Elmer thinks he's scratching too much, and tells his dog, "One more scratch, and I'll give you a bath!" So, the dog, who hates baths, spends the whole cartoon trying not to scratch, but it's no use. As Elmer drags the protesting pooch to his bath, the flea jumps off of the dog, and lands on Elmer, who starts scratching himself. His dog gleefully starts dragging his master to the bath, but he slips on a bar of soap, and the two of them somehow end up on a plate bearing the words "Blue Plate Special," which is now being carried by the troublesome flea. Just then, Elmer's other pet, a cat, sees this unbelievable event, and, like the fish in "Horton Hatches The Egg," he says, "Well, now I've seen everything," and shoots himself. Significantly enough, when these two cartoons are shown on the Cartoon Network, the parts with the fish and the cat saying that they've now "seen everything" is left in, but the parts where they take their own lives is edited out.
As a kid growing up in the late 1950's and early 1960's I truly thought the Looney Tunes, Merry Melodies, and Silly Symphony all alluded to the fact that the score of some cartoons was bits and pieces of classical music. I could easily be wrong, too. After all it was all background music to a kid who watched Lone Ranger (William Tell Overture) and ate Quaker Puffed Rice (1812 Overture).
The most disturbing thing about any cartoons is that society blames them for it's failure to hold children and adults that they are responsible for their own actions and that there are consciences
I was one of the people you referred to in number seven, but I just remembered that the word “cartoon” is a derivative of “car tune” something that was common for people to listen to before television. That’s so strange because I could’ve sworn it was spelled “Loony Toons” until I remembered seeing a video somewhere about the word “cartoon”
The whole "Looney Tunes" and "Merry Melodies" names came about because the very early shorts (we're talking from their origins in 1929 till later in the 1930s) were mocking the typical Disney-ish cutesy, musical-styled cartoons of the time. They would make use of Warner Brother's vast musical library to come up with cartoon concepts that are based on a particular song which the cartoons were named after (like "Shuffle Off To Buffalo", "We're In The Money", and so on). They eventually gave that up and brought us the more memorable characters we know and love today.
Check out our featured song: "Surreal Sister" by Cultural Vultures! ua-cam.com/video/VWJJVwZMniM/v-deo.html
What's YOUR favorite "Looney Tunes" short? Let us know in the comments!
the shorts of Bugs Bunny and the shorts of Daffy Duck
Mostly male. Looney tunes over all is an amazing show
The black guy got the same treatment as Elmer Fudd.
My Favorites ?
The Chicken Hawk
Sly
Penelope
Pepe
Nobody complains about speedy gonzales in Mexico.
Especially in Mexico City. Speedy is a hero in Mexico.
Just like Nadie Fuentes from El Cazador De La Bruja.
You have a weird definition for what you would consider "disturbing".
Click bait
It's definitely click bait
I absolutely agree. I mean the actors from Poltergeist dying in real life either on set or shortly after the movie was finished is disturbing, not what's listed here.
It's WatchMojo. They get offended by anything!
@@kingeatking they're Canadians
Just for your information on Speedy Gonzalez... since the 1960s, my Mexican family LOVED Speedy! What made it funnier is that we had family members who actually sounded like Speedy! My grandpa would make me get up early on Saturday mornings to watch the two hours of Warner bros. cartoons with him because he didn't want to get caught watching cartoons by himself and have to explain to someone why a grown man would watch them.
Funny, White people get Offended By Speedy Gonzales,
Mexican People Love him.
Damn right
Probably Slowpoke Rodriguez too.😜
Cause in a superman comic u don't want to be the random guy that super saves u r inspired by superman himself. Mexican people admire speedy gonzales not the random lazy stereotyped mexican that appears in some episodes.
I think these people feel offended FOR the Mexicans and pretend they're heroes doing so. Or maybe they don't want their kids thinking this is how Mexicans act; maybe they should watch some specials on PBS about Mexico and its fine people in addition? I used to love PBS as a kid.
Thats why tvtropes made made a article named Mexicans loved Speedy Gonzales look it up
The deaths on Looney Tunes never bothered me because they were never permanent. No matter how many times Wile E. Coyote falls off a cliff or Daffy Duck blows himself up, they’re always up again a few seconds later.
Everyone has died on Family Guy and just come back. Funny AF
Ain't that a point they make in space jam, nothing they do hurts them, because they can do anything
@@boomerpc
Mr weed dead
Francis dead
Diane Simmons dead
Muriel Goldman dead
Angela dead (only because Carrie fisher passed away)
yep,just like nothin happened lmao
Too bad it's so unrealistic.
The best thing about Looney Tunes was they were funny.
Yeah, And not the messages and signs comparable but still parallel to our daily lives, Huh..
Yup
Exactly my friend exactly!!!👏🤣
Obie Da Shinobi Agrees
Yo! I’m your 100th like!
I grew up right at the end of the "Saturday morning cartoons" era. Coincidentally, this was right before school shootings and other acts of unprovoked violence became common in the US. Our grandparents used phrases like "screamed bloody murder" and " bombed out of their gourd" in a purely metaphorical sense. Even kids knew that they weren't being literal. The "guns" in Looney Tunes were all starter pistols or cap guns to us. A couple of cartoon "deaths", and we had the pattern figured out: the characters were only stunned and would come to presently. I hope kids today can still understand this on some level.
The only thing disturbing about these cartoons, is how they were censored.
Very true,
I watched a bunch of them and never thought they were too violent.
Now air something like the new She-ra or thundercats Roar or Teen titans Go back in th eday.
let's see which one the public would be offended by. The classic stuff or the "new" one.
Facts
Or that they were censored in the first place. Then again, censorship has always irritated me, even as a kid listening to the radio.
You are so right.
Geez why isn’t the censorship this strict with today’s kids cartoons like teen titans go even though they call teen titans go a kids cartoon even though they a lot more adult rated humor than looney Tunes.
“Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it.”
― Mark Twain
Ironic, his books are some of the most censored.
Though in this case, the censorship is not putting a juicy steak in front of a baby, because said baby can't chew it.
Adults can still find these things, if they do a little looking. But showing them to children, on a children's show, during a family-focused time slot is problematic at best.
That is why adult-oriented time slots existed, even on cartoon-focused networks.
How is looney tunes being the reason nimrod became an insult a bad thing? It was a cleaver choice of word for the show & now a fun word to say, when you want to call someone an idiot.
Yeah, Bugs was using it in a sarcastic way. Clever as you said.
There's even an X-Men villain called Nimrod. A highly advanced Sentinel from the future, designed to hunt down mutants.
@@BBBHuey Which goes back to the Biblical Nimrod, who was a mighty hunter.
Cleaver
In Quaran Nimrod is a Nimrod
Gee, when I was a kid I was simply taught "Cartoons aren't real" and never had a problem. Never seem them as racist, controversial, or political. I just laughed at them. For learning I turned to "Mr. Wizard" RIP Don Herbert!
How are these "disturbing" this is more like interesting Looney Tunes trivia than disturbing facts.
Probably have to be within a certain frame of mind, like "overly sensitive."
Agreed. What's the big problem about Tunes vs Toons? How will that lead to a career as a serial killer?
Fr
Thank you. I grew up with these cartoons and I loved them. The greatest disservice done to the kids of the 80's and 90's was forcing them to view chopped up versions of these classics.
@@slactweak As a 90's kid, all I can say is "A-freaking-men."
"But once you notice the lack of female characters, you might not look at them the same way again"
Noticed, didn't change my look on them. The Looney Tunes will always be the Looney Tunes, regardless of the amount of females within the series itself. You guys are becoming disappointing with the content
Remember when bugs bunny shot someone bcuz they couldn't stop coughing
I stole thine comment that thus are seeing hehe
That's my favorite one 😂
that's funny 😂 I know it's missed up, but that's what I grow up with, so I don't care.
@@Monii778 bro same 😂
Love that moment hehehe
and Duffy shooting the moon :D
Grew up on Looney Tunes. When my kids finally watched them, they never went back to their generations cartoons. Good stuff.
With the fact about most of the characters are male, you do know that Mel Blanc voiced every single loony tunes character.
Almost every character
@@KemoneArmstrong One he didn't do regularly was Granny. The most famous version of that was done by June Foray (who also did Rocky the Flying Squirrel and Betty Rubble from the Flintstones).
However he did indeed do the voice of Granny from 1974 - 1978.
@@TBaker-xu5is no wonder he is the king of Looney Tunes
Some other notable voice actors for Looney Tunes include June Foray, Stan Freberg, and Arthur Q. Bryant who voiced Elmer Fudd (99% of the time).
@@TBaker-xu5is It was said that people said that Mel Blanc was the male June Foray. She was that good, but Mel got top and often only billing if he was around. June kept working until her death... was it last year? she was in her 90's.
“Disturbing facts”
“Some people spell it Looney TOONS”
OH MY GOD MY CHILDHOOD IS DESTROYED I’LL NEVER SLEEP AGAIN WHY GOD WHY
The title is rather misleading.
@ Lord Rumshi
I have my own example of the same effect they where talking about, may I please tell you?... sorry
@@rubyfisher20 You don't have to be sorry about whatever it is you wish to say.
I LOVE THIS COMMENT - Its not ✨Toons✨😳🤯😳
So dramatic.
Saw most of the old uncensored shorts in latin america as a child. They were some of the best laughs I shared with my mother and cousin.
These kinda things were always cencored by those,who had the least thing to do with it, sometimes killing it altogether,which is a shame. All we ever wanted are laughs and not political correctness. :]
Political Correctness is a bunch of BS started by overly sensitive liberals who are trying to change our way of thinking, and they need to cut it out!
@@nicoleknight9412 Nah, calling out racism is always a good thing.
Same
Did you guys know that white people are only allowed to hate other white people?
"Disturbing facts about Looney Tunes"
Translation: things people these days find offensive.
Just because something is "Offensive" by today's standards doesn't mean we should erase it from existence.
Everything in this world is part of our history & no matter how good or questionable it may be we shouldn't forget it.
Also... Looney Tunes has always been SUPER DARK but Comedy shouldn't have limits!
One of the absolute best jokes EVER in the series was when bugs bunny straight up shot a guy just for coughing.
There's a simple motto I stand by with offensive or Dark comedy... "you find it offensive, I find it funny"
Most of these were censored decades ago. Some even when they were first broadcast. So dont tell me it's because of today's standards🙄
yesss 🙏
@@JuanFlores-mq8uv aw sweetie.
@@JuanFlores-mq8uv censoring Dr. Seuss isn't because of todays standards? Censoring Pepe Le Pew isn't because of todays standards? Calling anything and everything appropriation/racist/offensive/white supremacy/sexist/homiphobic/transphobic/ "insert word here" phobic isn't today's standards? You don't leave your basement and I feel sorry for you.
@@GabrielleTollerson comments like these is why i wish youtube had a laugh react. Seriously 🤣🤣
I feel like they really want me to like that song, but I... just don’t.
all that Music they are trying to Peddle is just so Generic and Blah.
@@mmmtsp exactly.
Watchmojo: puts dumb song in their video to promote Soundmojo
Comment section: *so you have chosen death*
@@mmmtsp Facts
Like bland soulless pop elevator music.
Fun fact: Tweety Bird’s catchphrase « I thought I saw a Puddie Tat » was used around my house when my mother caught me wandering around the neighborhood and house, and the word “Puddie” became a childhood nickname that stuck with me. This childhood nickname became a bit of a placeholder nickname for my UA-cam channel that has since stuck like glue.
Dude I watched all of the old shorts in Mexico, were they really didn't bother with censorship so I got to see everything. And it was awesome.
Really? What did you see?
It was censored in US television broadcast.
@@furionmax7824 little native american hunter, the cars from the future, one called "china prisoner" was the name in spanish, the one with BB vs the Japanese during ww2 or hitler Wolf vs three little pigs. We latinos didn't suffer from censorship... We had daytime telenovelas LOL
@@eamoralesl yeah I remember that I miss that time
the only Disturbing facts about this, is that i cant give more than one dislike
Haha.
I was promised disturbing facts, Where you've hidden them doc?
Ikr? Blatant clickbait.
Ikr
Some people consider them disturbing because of the constant violence (including suicides) and the racial stereotyping of various minority groups (Indians, AKA Native Americans, black people, Asians, Mexicans, Italians, etc).
@@michaelpalmieri7335 People need to learn to laugh at them selves more :T
@@CaptainLeunam I agree. People need to learn how to own those jokes.
It's strange to me that with all this censoring and cutting out of objectionable material, that kids today are much worse behaved than those of us who grew up with these cartoons. Our generation was much more respectful in general than today's kids. All this political correctness hasn't accomplished anything of value at all.
That's an opioion amd only cuz I can record u can listen to older folks and here the way they were abused by adults
Horseshit. Political Correctness is what's allowing our Nation to stray away from Fascism, Racism, and Bigotry. Republiguns want more school shootings and care about guns more than chiIdren, they try to force Paraphiles, Otherkins, and Gender Dysphoriacs into their Cis-Gender Heteronormativity, they try to indocternate peopIe with the lie that there are only Two Genders, they try to take away Women's Rights to Abortion, they claim CapitaIism is Free and deny the Fact that Socialism does work and is far more Equitable and Beneficial to Society, and the Irony of them claiming Biden is incompetent when they're literally Trump Supporters!!!
Sure, your generation with such violent racism that there are still entire sections of the country were anybody of color who wanders in gets brutalized
“If you like what you’re hearing”...
No.. not ever...
😂omg I'm dying!
“If you like what you’re hearing” as Peter griffin once said “oh my god who the hell cares”
I literally say out loud every time "I never like what I'm hearing." So glad I'm not the only one!
Thank you. Someone finally said it!
# 8 - The reason Tweety's color was changed from pink tp yellow was censors. Their objection was the idea that Tweety looked like he was naked and THAT idea was too shocking!
Although you could of had teeety being a new chick just growing into he's or hers feathers which would of explained it, baby animals don't always have there fur or feathers yet
Was his cloaca visible?
When I was a kid back in the 50s and 60s we knew the difference between cartoons and reality. We understood the cartoons were entertainment and not to be taken seriously. If something disturbed us, we had adults to talk to explain things to us. Political correctness be damned.
👍👍
I'm 20 and grew up with these cartoons. I was smart enough to understand the difference between cartoons and reality.
Disagree onnie those cartoons showcased the very real racial divide present at those times and which till this day hasnt been fully rectified btw not an american
Aren't you a big boy
@@kostajovanovic3711 im a big boy thanks for recognising
"Disturbing." "It will ruin your childhoo." "Dark facts." Y'all are hilarious and cute.
This one here I don't give a shit I will always love looney tunes
Amen to that
Your childhood will be ruined
Hell yes
Does anyone else remember when the old cartoons would break the 4th wall and tell the viewers, "Don't try this at home" before a character did something dangerous or violent that was for comedic effect? Either a sign would show up somewhere on screen or one of the characters would say it.
Anyway, the cartoons were of their time. I even saw the more offensive stuff but it didn't make me enjoy Looney Tunes any less. You just treat them like old Disney movies; watch, cringe at the insensitive stuff, discuss, then move on knowing it won't be repeated and you know better.
Original tweety, also had no mercy.
And Catstello had an issue with the Hays Code.
The most well drawn, well written, and best acted cartoons in the 20th Century! They were clever, satirical, and brilliant! During the 40's & 50's Warner Brothers made these treasures with as much care as their motion pictures! Disney had the heart of America, but Looney Tunes had the pulse of America!
"We can't show them here"
Yes. Yes, you can. There's this thing called "commentary", where you actually show the problematic stuff so people can decide what they think about it. Americans and their cult of hiding everything that could be considered offensive, smh... Do you expect school to stop talking about racism because some kids could find it "offensive" ??
Lmao! Some schools try to do that. Good ol banned books week is an example
Pretty sure WM is Canadian
Sk they ban slowpoke for being a "mexican stereotype" but they don't outlaw Elmor Fud who is a stereotyped fat anerican..
Double Standard much
some school dumbasses are already thinking about doing that. wouldn't doubt it these days.
@@Wildfan95 Yes, I think they are.
I don’t see how any of this is considered disturbing but ok
I grew up in the 60's with ALL the so-called 'violence' in the Saturday morning cartoons and it never effected me!
It's a different time
Bingo
I'd like to deck the idiot that thinks these cartoons affect people.
Same
Nor me
I remember watching the uncensored shorts just fine as a kid. Yes, some of it was offensive but it was a product of its time.
Finally, someone else who gets it.
@@mr-fh2be Thanks. For the record, I’ve never been a fan of censorship.
Now THAT I agree with. What disturbs me most about most of the comments in these threads is that no one seems to recognize these racial stereotypes
I watched these when I was little with my grandfather and not once did I even notice how dark it was. Children don't think about racism, suicide or drunk driving..we are innocent so it goes over our heads.
And we still love it even we know how dark it is but we not hated it
WatchMojo is part of the PC BS Bunch! Who else has figured that out?
One of my favorite moments from Looney Tunes when I was little was near the end of a cartoon where a cat says, "Now I've seen everything," and shoots himself in the head. I thought it was the funniest thing ever. I repeated the joke to my parents and everyone else, complete with finger-gunning myself in the head. Then years later I watched the cartoon again, and it ended before the cat shot himself. I was stunned. It really ticked me off, because I felt condescended to. I don't know if the network really thought moments like that would encourage children to commit suicide, or if they were just bowing to overprotective parents. Either way, I found it insulting, and my interest in Looney Tunes started to dwindle after that.
An even better Looney Tunes moment is when Bugs Bunny pretends to be the Easter Bunny, goes to deliver eggs to a criminal gang's house, and finds a toddler using a pistol as a pacifier.
The funny thing is Tiny Toons actually brought up the lack of female characters in one episode.
My family LOVED Speedy Gonzalez! WE LOVED THE STEREOTYPES!
So let me get this straight. When it comes to the speedy Gonzalez controversy the people who he was offending wasnt offended. So who was complaining?
The PC BS Bunch!
White people
These white PC BSers hobby and fun are "offense". Nobody in showbiz complains about offending Conservatives. The Right or whatever. As a Conservative I believe that content freedom is a good thing. If it offends, turn it off & go on with your life, leave other people alone.
white upper class rich people who pretend to be the white savior and offended for people that's who
@@tomfrazier1103 facts
I knew I’d regret watching this. I wasn’t “disturbed” in any way, shape or form. I’m 26 and I think these are some of the best cartoons ever made!
i was raised on these ad grew up normal and appreciated the humor. We are not raising a bunch of snowflakes. We all need to be able to laugh at ourselves
Modern children must be afraid of offending anyone and everyone. They must view themselves as either a victim or as the villain.
I hope this didn't offend you.
@@thudthud5423 I blame the 1617 movement as well as the use of critical race theory. Both of which will place you as the villain or the victim of said villain.
There’s nothing disturbing about any of it. Loved these cartoons as a kid
Guess Watchmojo is woke
"After you notice the lack of girls, you might never look at it the same again" said only people worried about genders instead of personality.
all cereal mascots are male as well.
Ever noticed how it was only the males who got hurt in these cartoons?
"After you notice the lack of male protagonists in Charlie's Angles." WatchMojo, who will never say this cuz their prunes.
@@BBBHuey That was one of the biggest reasons for the gender disparity. No one laughs when a female gets hit in the head with a hammer pulled out of nowhere.
Fuck amen couldn't have said it better
*when you realize how violent was Looney tunes*
Are they any more violent than today's cartoons?
The boondocks is still more violent but still great at the same time.
So many of us grew up with the Looney Tunes and never shot anybody.
The basis for "Itchy and Scratchy"
Giving away my age, (64) I remember seeing the "uncensored" cartoons. Many of them made reference to things my parents didn't even remember. A lot of stereotypes of Warner Brothers actors in films, parodies of WWII characters, and catch phrases that no one remembers. There was a meme of a character that I later was supposed to be Peter Lorre who said, "Now I've seen everything" and then shoots himself in the head. Being a film lover I still don't know where that came from.
That came from the cartoon "Horton Hatches The Egg" based on the Dr' Suess story and directed by Bob Clampett
@@PoohbearPlus The guy shooting himself with large sorrowful eyes appeared in many cartoons. In one of them he was a fish. It must be from a Peter Lorre movie but knowing classic films I don't know where it originated from
A couple I remember well were the the cab and his kid who wanted to be a hot rod, the guy at the bar in a catatonic state being feed beer and pretzels. There was also the one that told the story almost completely in idioms.
@@jamesbrien2298 I believe the cartoons you are referring to were called "One Cab's Family" and "Symphony in Slang" both directed by Tex Avery while at MGM.
*WatchMojo is promoting a song named "Surreal Sister" and it sounds like a cartoon that's truly disturbing!*
He calls Granny a Minor Character?
Yeah, Granny is a secondary character. Pete Puma and Beaky Buzzard were minor characters.
Yeah, I think they know for a fact that many years at least a secondary characters if not one of the Main they only did it to push a SJW agenda
I grew up in the 80s and they were my all time favorite Saturday morning cartoons, I never found a single thing "disturbing" makes me shake my head to see how things have come to this, it's a CARTOON
How is the fact that the early cartoons had a lot of male characters and not many female characters 'disturbing'
IKR I'm confused about that-
What is more disturbing is what the internet did to Lola Bunny
Political correctness. Plain and simple.
Lola was great in space jam. They ruined her in the later Looney tunes series as a dim witted blonde haired white girl .
It's disturbing because it implies that some of the characters resort to homosexuality to satisfy their urges, with only two female characters somebody gonna have to give up some booty. Just that simple.
Looney Tunes will always be my favorite toons and wishing there'll be more female characters since Tiny Toons. They always make me laugh even I missed my childhood already. Lola Bunny and Penelope Pussycat are my favorite lady characters even Granny, too. I hope both Pepe Le Pew and Penelope Pussycat will return someday if social media controversial issues disappeared.
The shorts of Lonney Tunes and the shorts of Mickey Mouse are best and iconic shorts ever in all the time and Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck they are the coolest and awesome characters ever
Don't sleep in tom and jerry
I see nothing in this list that I already didn't know (except the eleven thing), and yet, if rule 34 couldn't ruin my childhood, this certainly can't.
@@kostajovanovic3711 - It's those 3 and Popeye, as well as Woody Woodpecker. I call them the Big 5 of the theatrical shorts.
Poor Elmer Fudd isn't allowed to have a gun anymore. But that's like the main part of his character.
They took his pewsonality
I’ve seen most of the looney tunes cartoons and I don’t care what people think! All the jokes are funny. Did you know that June forey voiced granny and witch hazel.
Nell Fenwick and virtually every female character in the Fractured Fairy Tales.
Well pepe is questionable, the rest are hiliarious.
@@denisejohnson4037 The Pepe le pew ones were pretty great, and it’s not entirely mean Spirited to the characters that he’s targeting, because in most shorts he does get his Comeuppance, though you’re entitled to your opinion.
I remember growing up with these cartoons as a child, it always made me laugh, the exploding piano part of Yosemite Sam always made me laugh.
Its stupid to think that they censored things that inspired me to be smart like bugs.
Always loved the Warner Bros. cartoon characters as a kid, particularly Bugs, Daffy and Foghorn Leghorn.
Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny they are the coolest and iconic characters in the universe of Looney Tunes😎👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Don't forget Porky , he's the first star of Looney Toons
@@jamalsistas414 oh yes porky he is very iconic
Porky too: he's basically the FIRST Looney Tunes characters
@@cobalt7248 he's not the first character but the first star
My favorites are Wile E Coyote, Foghorn Leghorn, and Yosemite Sam.
“Mostly male” 😂 my God, the horror
Most of these issues are "products" of their time: characters smoking & using guns wasn't a bad thing at the time but obviously today isn't something that could be shown in a show aimed towards kids. The episodes, which are banned, are a product of the time given the offensive material in them along with the wartime cartoons which were meant as propaganda & morale for the troops but not so much today.
While all the censorship, racism and dark humour does take a great place in disturbing facts about them I would say one thing is that most disturbing of them are bullies. Everyone’s either trying to kill one another or prank another and some of their mischief against the other becomes very cruel and deadly. Perhaps at the moment they can seem a bit amusing but once I really think about it they don’t really do a lot of good influences most of the time. Maybe Some could say Bugs Bunny could be a good influence because he uses intelligence to win the battle, and sure I can except that but even his shenanigans can get really cruel at times. He doesn’t really think about the well-being of the other when trying to survive their antics. Their cartoon physics and logic may cause them to still be alive at the end but if it they were in our world they would commit a lot of murders.
Looking back now, I still never found these offensive or disturbing...and I'm African American. The mere fact that these were just for laughs keep me coming back for more
To be fair to #6, most of the Looney Tunes were voiced by one amazing voice actor, Mel Blanc.
You forgot to mention Witch Hazel as one of the female characters. She was HILARIOUS!
This is quite strange because kids from the 60s, 70s and 80s NEVER EVER felt horrified by those spectacular and funny fights, deaths, punches and scares the characters suffered. We all knew that was only fantasy and never real. I never felt discriminated or humilliated when I was an 8-year kid with big teeth and my classmates called me Bugs Bunny. In fact I was honored. I absolutely LOVED the long lost Inky and the Minah Bird cartoon.
Next do a similar list about Tom and Jerry.
This isn't a negative thing but did you know Tom & Jerry used to be shown so that the broadcast would stay on time, so if the News was at 6 & the programme that was showing before ran short by 3 or 4 mins Tom & Jerry would be played to fill that gap.
@@Ethan-Entah nice fact
@@Ethan-Entah I dont get it
@@Ethan-Entah too lazy to read just sayin :/
:)
@@Ethan-Entah but it was a bit comparison
I remember watching Tiny Toons "One Beer" when it premiered as a kid and just being sardonically amused because I was the child of alcoholics and new better, like so many of us did at the time. They really, really, did not understand '90's kids or what 'dark and disturbing' to us actually was, and nothing has really changed since.
How is the misspelling of "Toons" from "Tunes" disturbing?
How are any of these disturbing? And frankly I've never met anyone who is offended by Speedy Gonzales.
@@molsongrrrl I'm Mexican myself, and I find Speedy very enjoyable and fun.
The fact that the first voice actor for porky pig had a stutter problem is so brilliant. How can u dislike porky pig?
That one time Daffy started "shedding his feathers" for Elmer had me feeling a type of ways from which I've never fully recovered.
I grew up with these shows in the 60’s. The reason that these cartoons didn’t affect me into shooting guns or beating people with 2x4’s or jumping off a cliff was simple--they were cartoons.
Why is Looney Tune's characters being mostly male is a "disturbing fact"
Original Tweety did have feathers, they were just pink ... but people mistook that for him being featherless.
Despite the really dark moments it was nice to have an alternative to the cookie cutter perfect bullshit Disney makes
I watched some of the "Censored Eleven" on VHS as a kid, and I never knew what the negative stereotypes were. My mom never raised a fuss over it either, so...
Me saying goodbye to the innocence of my childhood after this :
That's all folks 👋🏾
bc you stupid...and listen to new woke sjw media
@@ohishipohi614 but you are eleveted and a rational big boy?
@@kostajovanovic3711 yep this cartoons made my childhood awesome :)
Soo you saying that you are in shame of yourselves that you born in the early 90 and 2000 in the Golden Age of Cartoon network?
@@Phantom9587 retarded people bro what can I say see what sjw and woke media are doing...
Times change and what is considered appropriate entertainment does as well. These cartoons represented what society deemed acceptable during these eras. I can remember my father explaining to us people who were harmed fatally wouldn’t be back the next week. He loved these programs. But he also realized children might not realize the severity of these violent actions. 🤷♀️ They have outlived their purpose like everything does. The world will be no better nor worse without them.
Most of these things are too tame to be "disturbing".
It's not so much that people are worried that children will be scared or traumatised. They are more afraid that children will mimic the characters and their actions.
The deal with the violence is pretty much spot on! We knew it was all for a laugh, the kind that couldn't possibly be done in live action; not even the Three Stooges could pull off gun antics like cartoon characters could!
But even there, the studio producers had their limits. You need look no further than the "director's cut" to Hare Ribbin' (1944), where Bugs has an alternate take on granting a hunting dog's death wish! That's on the LT Golden Collection, Volume 5, if you're looking.
Pepe is seriously the most rapiest dudes I have ever seen. He should be locked up.
He doesn’t pass the smell test
You'd think Penelope would press charges.
@@williamcrowe2576 she should.
@@cesaralejandro7725 Agreed. But should he stand trial, everyone will have to wear hazmat suits and the courtroom will have to be decontaminated immediately afterwards.
So.....skunk jail?
Porky Pig's stuttering was described in your video, but Daffy Duck's slurring of words was an intentional prank making some fun at the founding owner of Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies, Leon Schlesinger. He had a slight lisp and the cartoonists used it with the Daffy character. Some were afraid Leon would fire then on hearing it, but Leon pretended he didn't grasp the prank, and was good natured, saw the humor, wasn't offended and didn't fire them.
"one beer" is hilariously stupid even at that age. They get drunk off of one beer between three people, ( become bums) steal a police car and drive off a cliff to their deaths! floating angel wings and all! They do show that it was all an act to teach, but man that was a ride.
It sure taught kids to stay away from beer.
I believe it was Buster Bunny, Plucky Duck and Hampton Pig Were in the Tiny Toons Episode of Elephant Issues Segment One Beer
I used to watched these coming home from elementary school back in the 1984-1995s with my family. Having a laugh of my early kid life time. I've never had any thoughts that these were "dark cartoons" at the time during middle/high school years 1997-2002 to my adult age. Seems like internet is a bad thing only to find out what's truth and lies over many decades of entertainment, books, music, culture food to art, etc. They NEVER were a threat to me. I'm still LEARNING HERE!
My eyes were my camera to recorded what I've seen as memories and my ears are audio recorder to keep relistening musics and sounds in my brain. I just feel like I wanna be an robot Android that comes alive, learning to feel emotions like Cyberpunk.
I see Loney Tunes, I click on the video, I like the video, I enjoy the video
Sad, because this was a lame video
Classic cartoons were often built around royalty free classical music, hence the "Tunes". They contribute to American musical literacy and Classical appreciation generally, often Southern European, though Wagner is a star.
I don't care what anyone says. I still love Pepe Le Pew. ❤️
I've seen the cartoon called "Show Biz Bugs," where Daffy Duck kills himself while performing a "magic trick." When I saw it as a boy, that segment was always included, but it was censored when it was broadcast on the Cartoon Network. This is probably because Daffy dies in the end, but I think it was also because he was wearing a "devil" costume at the time, or it could be a combination of both reasons.
There were a couple of variations of a "suicide" gag. In "Horton Hatches The Egg" (based on the story by Dr. Seuss), Horton The Elephant is captured by hunters while he's still sitting on Maisie the lazy bird's nest in a tree (he's keeping her egg harm while she's on vacation, from which she decides never to return). As Horton sits in the tree on the deck of a ship transporting him to America, a fish comes out of the sea and is so shocked to see an elephant in a tree on a ship, that he says (in a voice like actor Peter Lorre), "Well, now I've seen everything," and then takes out a gun and shoots himself.
Similarly, there was another cartoon (the title I don't remember, except that it had the word "itch" in it) where a hobo-style flea decides to live on a dog owned by Elmer Fudd. Of course, this makes the dog itch, which causes him to scratch himself, but Elmer thinks he's scratching too much, and tells his dog, "One more scratch, and I'll give you a bath!" So, the dog, who hates baths, spends the whole cartoon trying not to scratch, but it's no use. As Elmer drags the protesting pooch to his bath, the flea jumps off of the dog, and lands on Elmer, who starts scratching himself. His dog gleefully starts dragging his master to the bath, but he slips on a bar of soap, and the two of them somehow end up on a plate bearing the words "Blue Plate Special," which is now being carried by the troublesome flea. Just then, Elmer's other pet, a cat, sees this unbelievable event, and, like the fish in "Horton Hatches The Egg," he says, "Well, now I've seen everything," and shoots himself.
Significantly enough, when these two cartoons are shown on the Cartoon Network, the parts with the fish and the cat saying that they've now "seen everything" is left in, but the parts where they take their own lives is edited out.
Cartoons now are no where near as good as looney tunes were. I loved watching them when I was a kid. I'd watch them now if they were still played
As a kid growing up in the late 1950's and early 1960's I truly thought the Looney Tunes, Merry Melodies, and Silly Symphony all alluded to the fact that the score of some cartoons was bits and pieces of classical music. I could easily be wrong, too. After all it was all background music to a kid who watched Lone Ranger (William Tell Overture) and ate Quaker Puffed Rice (1812 Overture).
The most disturbing thing about any cartoons is that society blames them for it's failure to hold children and adults that they are responsible for their own actions and that there are consciences
I was one of the people you referred to in number seven, but I just remembered that the word “cartoon” is a derivative of “car tune” something that was common for people to listen to before television. That’s so strange because I could’ve sworn it was spelled “Loony Toons” until I remembered seeing a video somewhere about the word “cartoon”
I'm not surprised that the Looney Tunes has some dark stuff both in it and behind it, i mean after all what cartoon doesn't right?
So glad I grew up in the era where people were able to differentiate real life from cartoon.
WB's 'Looney Tunes' has been around for over 90 years indeed.
Including movies, and spin-off
Exactly they're iconic cartoons from Warner Brothers
@@robertotorres9922 Mm-hmm, 100 percent.
Cartoon violence like in 9:45 made me laugh uncontrollably till my ribs hurt!
I don't give a shit, dudes: it's Toon Force, it's Childhood, and it's Fun!
@kelvin martinez Yes!
The whole "Looney Tunes" and "Merry Melodies" names came about because the very early shorts (we're talking from their origins in 1929 till later in the 1930s) were mocking the typical Disney-ish cutesy, musical-styled cartoons of the time. They would make use of Warner Brother's vast musical library to come up with cartoon concepts that are based on a particular song which the cartoons were named after (like "Shuffle Off To Buffalo", "We're In The Money", and so on). They eventually gave that up and brought us the more memorable characters we know and love today.
The people who actually believe watchmojo probably can't think for themselves
Well said 👍
It's just a list calm down. Don't take it personally.
"He's got a magnettic personality."