"Porky Pig had a full-fledged career as a star going, and he really only started doing his best work... as a sidekick, and there is no shame in that." -Robin, Cartoon Network Sidekicks
Chicken: But I don't belong here...I'm a co-star! My name is in the title for crying out loud! Record interrupts sound effect: Boo Boo rolls up his eyes.
I worked on Wabbit and i was the guy that pitched the idea to put porky and Bugs together. The first short that we made that i co-wrote with show runner Matt Craig was Pork in the Road. The short opened up the door for use to make more Porky and Bugs shorts that year. I believe made 5 Bugs and Porky shorts. By the end of the first season of Wabbit it was decided to try to make a classic Porky and Daffy style cartoon the result was Porky's Ducklivery Service. Boarded by Mike Ruocco and myself. That short ended up being one of our best to date leading us to create the New Looney Tunes series of shorts that featured Porky and Daffy team ups . Since these shorts never really aired in the order that we created them, that history is a little hard to know. Thought you might be interested.
Thats awesome to hear!! Thanks for the information -- excellent work with the series, thanks for your part in bringing the Tunes back to their former glory!
To me Porkys always come off as the underdog, the honest one, and most understandable of the Looney Tunes. Rarely selfish( except his earlier appearances) he came off as a standard Looney Toon for his comedic antics and reactions to said situations.
I think Porky is at his best in the shorts that Chuck Jones paired him with Daffy Duck. He's the grounded one, casually pointing out Daffy"s ridiculous actions and behavior.. The best examples are Robin Hood Daffy, and Duck Dogers In The 24th 1/2 Century.
@@vincentfranklin17 Those are the ones made in the 1950s, as I've pointed out. They are THE DEFINITIVE Warner Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes(Toons) cartoons.
I like Porky’s design in the Looney Tunes Show because it made him more appealing and modern, but sadly it ended 🐖 (2021: thank you for 700+ likes. Always keep the Looney Tunes Show Porky alive)
I think it's fascinating how Warner Brothers had to "pass the torch" regularly. From Porky to Daffy to Bugs. Hell, I think even Tweety is more popular than Porky.
Even before Porky with Bosko to Buddy then from Buddy to Beans then Beans to Porky. Granted Warner lost the rights to Bosko at the time but still, you might consider it a tradition at Warner until Bugs came in.
Back with a Vengeance. I love all of Porky's designs save for the the _New Looney Tunes_ ones. Honestly I felt him going back to his overweight look didn't mesh well as it did in his shorts back in the day. #ThatsAllFolks
I've always loved Porky as Daffy's right-hand man, however, my favourite Porky short, is actually one in which he stars, and that's Scaredy Cat. I liked the pariing of Porky with Sylvester.
The cartoon "Claws For Alarm" has Porky and Sylvester staying overnight at an abandoned hotel. Sylvester, acting as a scared pet cat, had the better of the action in that cartoon, Porky "slept through" much of the action.
@@vincentfranklin17 It is said that in later years Sylvester became an angry cat! Explanation: A drink of lemon juice made Sylvester a..... wait for it..... sour puss! LOL
Audiences not caring about the inconsistencies of Porky's design is a rare sight considering the various outcries audiences today have whenever a character has a redesign.
I think it's refreshing to let the characters vary depending on artist or situation. The alternative to that is Disney who is so rigid in their design, they always require Mickey Mouse's ears to have the classic silhouette (on modern stuff) even when he turns his head in weird angles, which makes the ears not always align with reality.
In the 1930s: At WB, cartoonists made spins on Porky and various other Looney Tunes characters. Whereas at Disney, cartoonists followed the conventions and still do.
Too many people these days have this obsession with characters always being on model. In the early days of animation however characters were always changing depending on the animators, writers and directors, this was especially the case for Warner Bros.
But he is very recognizable and was pretty popular in the 90s I promise you only poor ass people without a TV would not know the name Marvin the Martian.
@@KingTai64 I like Marvin too. But then again some of my family is from mexico (was not born there but I am Mexican) and over there for some reason Tweety and bugs bunny were the ones popular.
Another piece of information. That image you are using of Porky from Wabbit in your time line was actually a mistake by consumer products. When i created the pitch for our first porky pig wabbit short i submitted a few drawings of porky based on "I haven't got a hat" while storyboarding i used my design. Meanwhile our character designer was exploring design options. When WB Consumer products was creating the style guide for Wabbit, they accidentally grabbed the concept art that was created for Porky rather than the final design that you see featured in the Wabbit/ New Looney Tunes series.
Really enjoy Porky Pigs Evolution from his first appearance up until now, on top of that being the FIRST Looney Tunes superstar before Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny ever appeared.
4th technically. Bosko Buddy and Beans were Looney Tunes stars before Porky. But he is the longest running WB character and the first superstar of the Looney Tunes.
Thank you for getting so in depth into the origins. Most people would have started right with the first Porky short, but you took it several steps further and show that was the result of several cartoons before him. Looking forward to the next video soon. Obviously we've got the Looney Tunes hype going, but I hope we can see the evolution of Tom and Jerry soon to shake things up-just so we don't get locked into a never ending Looney Tunes trip given how many Looney Tunes characters there actually are.
It's interesting that he always had his classic stutter. Usually with these Looney Tunes characters, their special traits are added on but his was added at the start. Nice!
I agree with what Robin said in the old Cartoon Network "Sidekicks" promo. Porky had a full fledged career but he did his best work as a sidekick, and there's nothing wrong with that. Or something to that effect.
Hey! I remember Buddy! He made a pretty big cameo in an episode of Animaniacs! In episode 75 they were celebrating their 75th "anniversary" (their backstory is that they were drawn in the 30's by an insane artist and locked away in the WB water tower along with their cartoons for being insane) and apparently Yakko, Wakko, and Dot enjoyed tormenting him and threw them into his cartoons to make them "less boring." He becomes the episodes "antagonist" and goes out in a typical Animaniacs fashion.
@Old Time Films I thought it was episode 75, but I just looked it up and it was episode 65. Not sure I can link the episode here on youtube, but you can check the Wikipedia page for the episode list. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Animaniacs_episodes
Porky in the New Looney Tunes is my favorite current iteration. It's a great classic throwback design, and the jokes and gags they put him in are incredibly funny, honestly. A lot of the time he ends up giving Bugs a hard time, both intentionally and unintentionally. Also in one episode he's straight-up a TSA agent, which in itself is an amusing setup for gags.
My favorite character. Thank you. Proud to say I knew all of this. You did a fantastic job. To answer your question: “Porky in Wackyland.” To me, it is the epitome of cartoons.
@Jesus Gomez: Sorry, your hope is forlorn. The Leon Schlessinger era was, in its way, as bad as the new stuff is today. The 1950s was the classic era for Warner's Merrie Melodies and Looney Toons(Tunes) cartoon shorts.
@@PickleRicksFATASSCOUSIN Schlessinger's stuff was as soppy and(in its way) as sickly-sweet as Disney's garbage. Once Schlessinger was out of the way, the crew of Chuck Jones, Tex Avery and co., could get on and make some truly memorable and hilariously funny cartoon shorts that still, even today can make you laugh til your sides ache. As for today, the magic has gone. Modern computer-based technology has NOT added to the art of animation, if anything, it has taken far too much away from the art.
For some reason, my favorite Porky short is when he has hot tamales and he accidentally walks into a bull fighting ring and then wins against the bull by feeding him the hot tamales.
It was surprising to see how Porky switched ages in his first appearances. Considering the similarities between Mickey and Porky with both of them being the earlier stars of their studios, innocent and curious personality and giving space to the new characters it's a pity that he didn't become the face of Warner Brothers as happened with Mickey in Disney.
This is why I like porky such a fascinating character and one of my favorites of the looney tunes series besides bugs daffy pepe and Penelope thanks makeing this evaluation of porky's career
For me, the best Porky cartoons are the ones with Daffy in the 1950s (The Ducksters, in my opinion, is one of the more underrated ones). As far as Porky solos, the ones directed by Tex Avery are pretty good, though my favorite is probably Dough for the Do-Do (the color remake of Porky in Wackyland).
I liked the one design that stayed consistent from late 1930's to 2000's and the one from Looney Tunes show. The New Looney Tunes was like the original character but not as good as he kept the coat and did not go with the original Red, Blue or Green suspenders or shorts you saw in most of the much later colorized versions of the early Black & White cartoons with Porky. Now other then that Porky is fine, I do not like the earliest forms of Porky as he was in several fairly different styles but once he got a specific shape of the early round Porky I could live with it.
Dave, these are always very well researched and written and very satisfying to watch. I wanted to point out one project you might not be aware of, or haven't decided to include, 1972's "Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies" which was an episode of the anthology Saturday morning series "The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie." This is perhaps forgotten/buried due to the strange character mashup and different rights holders. Most notably it's another animation studio handling the WB characters (however it sounds as though many of the animators there had handled the characters before). The Groovie Goolies were popular on SatAM, originally featured with Sabrina the Teenage Witch (and in some cartoons with the original Archie characters) until given their own show. With Sabrina these characters were usually given actual stories; in their own show they were given more "blackout humor" sketches similar to the prime time TV show "Laugh-In." So this odd hour-long (with commercials) film moved these characters from the "Archie" universe (although ownership of them does not seem to be packaged with those characters) and even to another network. The original broadcast also mis-handled the Mel Blanc voices for Daffy, Porky and Tweety (which would usually be given an electronic assist) -- though someone has posted a version of the show here on TH-cam with the voices corrected. It's surprising that any recording of it still exists given the pre-VCR airing and likely limited repeat airings or home video issues. The show has some jarring moments, especially a laugh track and background music never associated with the WB characters. It takes a little getting used to, seeing them in this "world" but mostly, it works. Strange pairings/groupings of WB characters themselves (i.e., Yosemite Sam, Wile E. Coyote and Porky Pig form a "posse") and Petunia Pig is a character here, used as a love interest for Daffy Duck's "movie" character King Arthur? (Her voice is also very off, somehow.) Amazing live action sequence with stop motion animation as the Goolie characters hop into "Mad Mirror Land" for a few minutes. The whole thing is bizarre and perhaps a product of someone's fever dream -- and it may take a second viewing after recovering from "What did I just watch?" to actually appreciate it for what it is; something of a brave experiment that may have failed but that someone HAD to try. Interesting there is no appearance of Bugs or Road Runner here (likely due to CBS perhaps still airing a regular show "starring" them). It's one of those "gotta see to believe" things and could even be worth its own episode's discussion!
Re: Laugh-In- by the time that special aired, the NBC show was suffering from the creative tug of war and personal bias of hosts Dan Rowan & Dick Martin, and Producer and staff writer Paul W. Keyes who specifically wanted less comical jabs at his close friend in then President Richard Nixon and more focus on comedy which along w/ousting long time series EP George Schlatter played a major part along with ratings decline in NBC pushing the proverbial trap door lever on the program by 1973
Didn't realize Bosco and Honey and Buddy were real characters. I just thought they were creations of Tiny Tunes and Animaniacs, respectively. Neat to learn.
@@Sara3346 No. I said "real characters" as opposed to "real" or "real people". To say "original" would imply they were creations of Tiny Toons or Animaniacs made specifically for their shows. The use of the word "characters" is key here as it shows that I am referring to a part in a play, tv show, or film. That is why I used "real" to indicate they were pre-existing, not "original" which is what I thought they were when Tiny Toons and Animaniacs used them. I think you misread.
@@icecreamhero2375 Chuck Jones did most but not all Roadrunner cartoons. One in the early 60s (whose title escapes me) was unsigned for a director since Jones had left midway in production for a job at MGM making Tom and Jerry cartoons. And after the Warner Bros. cartoon studio closed in 1964, what Roadrunner cartoons came out after that were directed by Rudy Larriva at Depatie-Freleng on contract for Warner Bros. So I think Dave could certainly make a video about this series.
@@icecreamhero2375 Perhaps but the structure of the cartoons did as budgets were tightened. There is a three year gap between the first Roadrunner cartoon in the 1940s and the second and the first is absolutely gorgeous. After that, budgets were cut for the dramatic backgrounds and vistas that were shot until we get to the Rudy Larriva days which were a shadow of the original cartoons. Also, there was a change in music style with the retirement of Carl Stalling. And finally, there is some trivia for Wile E. Coyote's tangles with Bugs Bunny or seen in Ralph Phillips interstitials on the Bugs Bunny / Road Runner show.
Excellent video. Very interesting and worthwhile overview of Porky Pig animation. Leon Schlesinger had serious budget constraints during the 1930s due to the Great Depression. My father would tell me that it wasn't easy keeping the studio afloat during the Depression. [Leon was my grandfather's first cousin.] After funding the completion of The Jazz Singer, Leon later produced six early John Wayne Westerns during the early 1930s, but didn't like that as much as the animation with its humor and the wacky and fun goings-on at his animation studio. "You Ought to be in Pictures" is a must see for anyone with even a marginal interest in animation or live action. Michael Maltese played a studio cop in that film. Descendants of those early studio years have kept in touch and I've met many at various events such as some at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Academy Awards). Sadly, most all of the old timers have now passed away.
I'm surprised there wasn't an episode of Looney Tunes where Porky joined a group of some short where he was a popular member. Over time Daffy would join and steal his thunder, making him jealous. However Porky gets recognition for saving the supposed team by bringing people in and becomes happy for it. All the characters join the club and have a good time for it. It symbolizes his history in a way.
I always loved Daffy and Porky paired together. My favorite ones with both of them are Duck Dodgers in the 24th and a Half Century and Drip-a-Long Daffy. And I loved the ones where he's paired with Charley the dog.
@@neilforbes416 Are you saying give Betty Boop the boot? Decry the pop eyed Popeye? That the studio's anything but Super, Man? It may have been a short period of activity but they got stuff done in that time. I particularly love the color Popeye two reelers and pre code Betty Boop.
@@tskmaster3837 In Animation there were really only two companies that really mattered, Warners and Hanna/Barbera, with Walter Lanz coming in at a distant third place. The others are insignificant also-rans. Prescott/Scheimer and Rankin/Bass put out over-cutesy "goody-two-shoes" stuff that came across as over-moralising. Prescott/Scheimer were the the ones that produced the Bill Cosby & Cosby Kids cartoons that were the exact example of what I just described. The stories told by Cosby on his many LPs for Warners then MCA were nothing at all like what was depicted in the cartoons. If Cosby had gone to Warners, the cartoons produced there would've far more accurately portrayed the stories of Fat Albert, Old Weird Harold & co., stories of playing Buck-Buck, coming home late across the 9th Street Bridge, scaring other kids with a statue of the Frankenstein Monster, etc., How much funnier they would've been in the hands of Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Ted Clampett, DePatie/Freleng & others instead of that cringe-making shit spewed out by Prescott/Scheimer.
Ngl I've always loved the 2000's Porky, especially anytime he's paired with Daffy. The two of them pair together as well as Daffy and Bugs do imp, just in different ways
I live in Rochester, NY and we have the Eastman Museum (which is also home to the original Wizard of Oz print by Kodak) and there was recently a Warner Bros. Cartoon exhibit (mainly on The Looney Tunes) and there were a ton of stuff to be awed by such as old character reference sheets and actual cel animations and I loved it! If you have a chance to travel to the States to New York, please check out the Eastman Museum (I’m not sure you’ll get a chance to see the WB Cartoons exhibit since it ends in October, hopefully they’ll do another one in the future). It’s a pure treasure of Upstate New York!
Have been to NY many times (one of my favourite cities in the world!!). Sadly have never had a chance to visit the Eastman Museum, however. Next time I'm there I'll certainly make the effort!
Dave Lee Down Under omg I never expected to get a reply that’s awesome that you have this in mind I have enjoyed your cartoon and Disney evolution series you are great keep it up.
Wait... You're telling me... The "Looney Tunes" title is a Parody of Silly Symphony..? .... ... OMG.. that's obvious and Funny the same Time because Looney Tunes still goes on but Silly Symphony stopped.
I'm always amazed by how little WB has capitalized on it's Looney Tune's goldmine. They just stopped making anything new other then semi-bad "Wrap arounds" and basically left them to rot. Even when Disney wasn't making new shorts or series they were making sure their characters were key branding focusing for the company. WB just didn't do anything but milk what was already made outside of brief spurts.
One of WB’a major problems in the last decade or so has been brand management. They don’t know what to do with anything they have, which is so sad, because they have a literal GOLDMINE! Just look at what they did with the DC properties and the DCEU. They’re clueless.
As a kid, my favorite Porky short was 1937's Porky's Railroad both in black and white and technic color. I guess you couldn't get any footages of it for the Video, but that's alright.
"Porky Pig had a full-fledged career as a star going, and he really only started doing his best work... as a sidekick, and there is no shame in that."
-Robin, Cartoon Network Sidekicks
Chicken: But I don't belong here...I'm a co-star! My name is in the title for crying out loud!
Record interrupts sound effect:
Boo Boo rolls up his eyes.
The world needs side kicks.
Porky has had some great cartoons where he's the star, but he's had an equally great career as a sidekick.
Bird boy's got a point
Bop
I worked on Wabbit and i was the guy that pitched the idea to put porky and Bugs together. The first short that we made that i co-wrote with show runner Matt Craig was Pork in the Road. The short opened up the door for use to make more Porky and Bugs shorts that year. I believe made 5 Bugs and Porky shorts. By the end of the first season of Wabbit it was decided to try to make a classic Porky and Daffy style cartoon the result was Porky's Ducklivery Service. Boarded by Mike Ruocco and myself. That short ended up being one of our best to date leading us to create the New Looney Tunes series of shorts that featured Porky and Daffy team ups . Since these shorts never really aired in the order that we created them, that history is a little hard to know. Thought you might be interested.
Thats awesome to hear!! Thanks for the information -- excellent work with the series, thanks for your part in bringing the Tunes back to their former glory!
Did you leave WB?
Really?
That's awesome I mean u rarely see Bugs and Porky together
Thanks for your insight!
To me Porkys always come off as the underdog, the honest one, and most understandable of the Looney Tunes. Rarely selfish( except his earlier appearances) he came off as a standard Looney Toon for his comedic antics and reactions to said situations.
I always thought Porky was always kind of the everyman of the Looney Tunes.
@unkn0wn4041 Oh dear! Who's the "ham" now? LOL
I think Porky is at his best in the shorts that Chuck Jones paired him with Daffy Duck. He's the grounded one, casually pointing out Daffy"s ridiculous actions and behavior..
The best examples are Robin Hood Daffy, and Duck Dogers In The 24th 1/2 Century.
@@vincentfranklin17 Those are the ones made in the 1950s, as I've pointed out. They are THE DEFINITIVE Warner Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes(Toons) cartoons.
@Lowell Lucas Jr.: Shouldn't that be "under-pig"? LOL
I like Porky’s design in the Looney Tunes Show because it made him more appealing and modern, but sadly it ended 🐖
(2021: thank you for 700+ likes. Always keep the Looney Tunes Show Porky alive)
That show was 🔥.
Joseph Romano i didn’t realize it was changed and now I am really sad 😢
Porky was very likable in that series. Daffy treated him terribly, I thought. Bugs treated him.... OK. Could have been better, though.
Judge: Are you not wearing pants
I love that show too
I think it's fascinating how Warner Brothers had to "pass the torch" regularly. From Porky to Daffy to Bugs. Hell, I think even Tweety is more popular than Porky.
Even before Porky with Bosko to Buddy then from Buddy to Beans then Beans to Porky. Granted Warner lost the rights to Bosko at the time but still, you might consider it a tradition at Warner until Bugs came in.
@@electricsoul8624 and Facebook aunt memes
I thought bugs was the most popular
@@imsocringeandidocringestuf7301 he is
@@epicxx7699 oh
That makes sense
Back with a Vengeance. I love all of Porky's designs save for the the _New Looney Tunes_ ones. Honestly I felt him going back to his overweight look didn't mesh well as it did in his shorts back in the day. #ThatsAllFolks
Alpha Jay 3.0 totally agree
Agreed. Him being obese is not funny. Him being portly is funny.
0:53
I like this art style
It's funny.
I've always loved Porky as Daffy's right-hand man, however, my favourite Porky short, is actually one in which he stars, and that's Scaredy Cat. I liked the pariing of Porky with Sylvester.
YOU WERE
RIGHT-
SYLVESTER
The cartoon "Claws For Alarm" has Porky and Sylvester staying overnight at an abandoned hotel. Sylvester, acting as a scared pet cat, had the better of the action in that cartoon, Porky "slept through" much of the action.
Jumpin" Jupiter is great too!
S-s-sylvester... Get off of me... Or I shall KILL you!
Lol!
Well yeah! Porky snored while Sylvester freaked out! Poor widdle puddy tat! LOL
@@vincentfranklin17 It is said that in later years Sylvester became an angry cat! Explanation: A drink of lemon juice made Sylvester a..... wait for it..... sour puss! LOL
Audiences not caring about the inconsistencies of Porky's design is a rare sight considering the various outcries audiences today have whenever a character has a redesign.
I think it's refreshing to let the characters vary depending on artist or situation. The alternative to that is Disney who is so rigid in their design, they always require Mickey Mouse's ears to have the classic silhouette (on modern stuff) even when he turns his head in weird angles, which makes the ears not always align with reality.
In the 1930s: At WB, cartoonists made spins on Porky and various other Looney Tunes characters. Whereas at Disney, cartoonists followed the conventions and still do.
Most redesigns today come well after the characters look had been established while the changing Porky was happening while he was still new
Too many people these days have this obsession with characters always being on model.
In the early days of animation however characters were always changing depending on the animators, writers and directors, this was especially the case for Warner Bros.
R.I.P. Beans
You’ll never get your spotlight
Honestly, itb be cool of they brought beans back in some way in the new show
Beans will never be forgotten, please bring him back Warner Bros.
@@quiet0ne I was thinking the same thing and also bring the other animal sidekicks characters from "I Haven't Got a Hat"
Poor Beans. It's like I never knew him. Well, I didn't. Maybe I'll see him in kitty heaven. (Hey! People believe dumber things 😝)
R.I.P Buddy and Bosko
Porky Pig in Wackyland: CatDog before Nickelodeon's CatDog.
I LUV TAT
0:29
Before Nick in general
@@TheChamp820 loved IT (emphasis on IT)
0:28 IS THAT FRICKING CATDOG?
No DOUBT.... So Nickelodeon stolen Warner Bros ideas 🤔
Lol apparently
That's right CatDog, Porky Pig is ur dad! 🙄
Ohhhhhhhh EXPOOOOSED
@@zerox8413 yeah but the creator named peter hannen stole it lol
I know the process wasn't easy, but you never gave up! Im proud of you, Dave! I really am😁😁
Thank you -- I appreciate that!
@@DaveLeeDownUnder anytime mate
So true
@Brianna Andreacci tbh, idk
🐖 🐷
I love looney tunes marvin the Martian was always my favorite one though he never got much use or love
But he is very recognizable and was pretty popular in the 90s I promise you only poor ass people without a TV would not know the name Marvin the Martian.
@@KingTai64 I like Marvin too. But then again some of my family is from mexico (was not born there but I am Mexican) and over there for some reason Tweety and bugs bunny were the ones popular.
Another piece of information. That image you are using of Porky from Wabbit in your time line was actually a mistake by consumer products. When i created the pitch for our first porky pig wabbit short i submitted a few drawings of porky based on "I haven't got a hat" while storyboarding i used my design. Meanwhile our character designer was exploring design options. When WB Consumer products was creating the style guide for Wabbit, they accidentally grabbed the concept art that was created for Porky rather than the final design that you see featured in the Wabbit/ New Looney Tunes series.
Have you left WB Animation?
@@PowerAnimationsPACStayAnimated I still do some freelance for them but I am currently on another series at a different studio.
@@drawwing what is this studio and what is this new series? SpongeBob? Infinity Train? Teen Titans Go?
@@PowerAnimationsPACStayAnimated Wouldn't TTG be WB as well, though?
Start of vid: "porky is a cute innocent pig"
Also start of the vid: *shows clip of him saying a bad word*
Well this time he didnt jinx it like in the original
Really enjoy Porky Pigs Evolution from his first appearance up until now, on top of that being the FIRST Looney Tunes superstar before Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny ever appeared.
4th technically. Bosko Buddy and Beans were Looney Tunes stars before Porky. But he is the longest running WB character and the first superstar of the Looney Tunes.
Thank you for getting so in depth into the origins. Most people would have started right with the first Porky short, but you took it several steps further and show that was the result of several cartoons before him.
Looking forward to the next video soon. Obviously we've got the Looney Tunes hype going, but I hope we can see the evolution of Tom and Jerry soon to shake things up-just so we don't get locked into a never ending Looney Tunes trip given how many Looney Tunes characters there actually are.
Thanks for watching! Plenty more characters to come, I'll begin delving into other studios soon.
It's interesting that he always had his classic stutter. Usually with these Looney Tunes characters, their special traits are added on but his was added at the start. Nice!
I agree with what Robin said in the old Cartoon Network "Sidekicks" promo. Porky had a full fledged career but he did his best work as a sidekick, and there's nothing wrong with that. Or something to that effect.
🐷🐷The Original Cartoon Pig star. Eat your heart out Peppa.
No one cares about peppa pig
Homeslice Heroes Rude
@@ariannagorbet6674 Like I give a damn.
Peppa Pig: "Oh bollocks."
Finally we have been patient and now we are rewarded
Superior Duck faster than a speeding snail
Patience always pays off!
Hey! I remember Buddy! He made a pretty big cameo in an episode of Animaniacs! In episode 75 they were celebrating their 75th "anniversary" (their backstory is that they were drawn in the 30's by an insane artist and locked away in the WB water tower along with their cartoons for being insane) and apparently Yakko, Wakko, and Dot enjoyed tormenting him and threw them into his cartoons to make them "less boring." He becomes the episodes "antagonist" and goes out in a typical Animaniacs fashion.
@Old Time Films I thought it was episode 75, but I just looked it up and it was episode 65. Not sure I can link the episode here on youtube, but you can check the Wikipedia page for the episode list. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Animaniacs_episodes
I loved the Duck Dodgers series as a kid. The theme song will still randomly pop into my head. And that’s gotta b my favorite Porky
You d-d-did it again D-D-Dave Lee! Brilliantly researched and depicted! BTW at 0:28, its CatDog before CatDog was a show on Nickelodeon!
Thank you!!
You Ought to be in Pictures was also Friz's way of thanking Leon for hiring him back from MGM. Leon even played himself in the short.
Porky Pig looks really good no matter which design he has. Also thanks for this video
Porky in the New Looney Tunes is my favorite current iteration. It's a great classic throwback design, and the jokes and gags they put him in are incredibly funny, honestly. A lot of the time he ends up giving Bugs a hard time, both intentionally and unintentionally. Also in one episode he's straight-up a TSA agent, which in itself is an amusing setup for gags.
My favorite character. Thank you. Proud to say I knew all of this. You did a fantastic job.
To answer your question: “Porky in Wackyland.” To me, it is the epitome of cartoons.
Finally looney tunes 2019 is going back to its roots..... hopefully
@Jesus Gomez: Sorry, your hope is forlorn. The Leon Schlessinger era was, in its way, as bad as the new stuff is today. The 1950s was the classic era for Warner's Merrie Melodies and Looney Toons(Tunes) cartoon shorts.
@@neilforbes416 you're wrong...
@@PickleRicksFATASSCOUSIN Schlessinger's stuff was as soppy and(in its way) as sickly-sweet as Disney's garbage. Once Schlessinger was out of the way, the crew of Chuck Jones, Tex Avery and co., could get on and make some truly memorable and hilariously funny cartoon shorts that still, even today can make you laugh til your sides ache. As for today, the magic has gone. Modern computer-based technology has NOT added to the art of animation, if anything, it has taken far too much away from the art.
@@neilforbes416 Tex is part of the Schlesinger era, he was at Termite Terrace from 1935-1941. Schlesinger sold the studio in 1944
@@therealvolcano Well, then Schlessiger's influence must've been on the decline because from the 1940s onward, Warner's cartoons were getting better.
Was not prepared for the casual black face in the beginning WHEW
For some reason, my favorite Porky short is when he has hot tamales and he accidentally walks into a bull fighting ring and then wins against the bull by feeding him the hot tamales.
It was surprising to see how Porky switched ages in his first appearances.
Considering the similarities between Mickey and Porky with both of them being the earlier stars of their studios, innocent and curious personality and giving space to the new characters it's a pity that he didn't become the face of Warner Brothers as happened with Mickey in Disney.
This is why I like porky such a fascinating character and one of my favorites of the looney tunes series besides bugs daffy pepe and Penelope thanks makeing this evaluation of porky's career
"...you thought I was gonna say Son of a b*tch." lmao!
For me, the best Porky cartoons are the ones with Daffy in the 1950s (The Ducksters, in my opinion, is one of the more underrated ones). As far as Porky solos, the ones directed by Tex Avery are pretty good, though my favorite is probably Dough for the Do-Do (the color remake of Porky in Wackyland).
I liked the one design that stayed consistent from late 1930's to 2000's and the one from Looney Tunes show. The New Looney Tunes was like the original character but not as good as he kept the coat and did not go with the original Red, Blue or Green suspenders or shorts you saw in most of the much later colorized versions of the early Black & White cartoons with Porky. Now other then that Porky is fine, I do not like the earliest forms of Porky as he was in several fairly different styles but once he got a specific shape of the early round Porky I could live with it.
Dave, these are always very well researched and written and very satisfying to watch. I wanted to point out one project you might not be aware of, or haven't decided to include, 1972's "Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies" which was an episode of the anthology Saturday morning series "The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie." This is perhaps forgotten/buried due to the strange character mashup and different rights holders. Most notably it's another animation studio handling the WB characters (however it sounds as though many of the animators there had handled the characters before). The Groovie Goolies were popular on SatAM, originally featured with Sabrina the Teenage Witch (and in some cartoons with the original Archie characters) until given their own show. With Sabrina these characters were usually given actual stories; in their own show they were given more "blackout humor" sketches similar to the prime time TV show "Laugh-In." So this odd hour-long (with commercials) film moved these characters from the "Archie" universe (although ownership of them does not seem to be packaged with those characters) and even to another network. The original broadcast also mis-handled the Mel Blanc voices for Daffy, Porky and Tweety (which would usually be given an electronic assist) -- though someone has posted a version of the show here on TH-cam with the voices corrected. It's surprising that any recording of it still exists given the pre-VCR airing and likely limited repeat airings or home video issues.
The show has some jarring moments, especially a laugh track and background music never associated with the WB characters. It takes a little getting used to, seeing them in this "world" but mostly, it works. Strange pairings/groupings of WB characters themselves (i.e., Yosemite Sam, Wile E. Coyote and Porky Pig form a "posse") and Petunia Pig is a character here, used as a love interest for Daffy Duck's "movie" character King Arthur? (Her voice is also very off, somehow.) Amazing live action sequence with stop motion animation as the Goolie characters hop into "Mad Mirror Land" for a few minutes. The whole thing is bizarre and perhaps a product of someone's fever dream -- and it may take a second viewing after recovering from "What did I just watch?" to actually appreciate it for what it is; something of a brave experiment that may have failed but that someone HAD to try. Interesting there is no appearance of Bugs or Road Runner here (likely due to CBS perhaps still airing a regular show "starring" them). It's one of those "gotta see to believe" things and could even be worth its own episode's discussion!
Re: Laugh-In- by the time that special aired, the NBC show was suffering from the creative tug of war and personal bias of hosts Dan Rowan & Dick Martin, and Producer and staff writer Paul W. Keyes who specifically wanted less comical jabs at his close friend in then President Richard Nixon and more focus on comedy which along w/ousting long time series EP George Schlatter played a major part along with ratings decline in NBC pushing the proverbial trap door lever on the program by 1973
0:29 now we know where they got the idea of CatDog from lmao
I think that Porky's Papa had a farm is the cutest cartoon that there ever was and it's neither mentioned nor seen here.
"Beh'dee, beh'dee, beh'dee -- happy birthday you thing from another world."
Man I miss Duck Dodgers. I watched that religiously.
You do know Duck Dodgers was in the original Looney Tunes shorts
Wow! I can see why you were so excited! This was far more fascinating than I thought it would be! Thank you for the hard work!
Thank you! I appreciate it - thanks for watching!
Didn't realize Bosco and Honey and Buddy were real characters. I just thought they were creations of Tiny Tunes and Animaniacs, respectively. Neat to learn.
I'm guessing you mean original rather than real? Last time I checked none of these characters were based off of real people even.
@@Sara3346 No. I said "real characters" as opposed to "real" or "real people". To say "original" would imply they were creations of Tiny Toons or Animaniacs made specifically for their shows. The use of the word "characters" is key here as it shows that I am referring to a part in a play, tv show, or film. That is why I used "real" to indicate they were pre-existing, not "original" which is what I thought they were when Tiny Toons and Animaniacs used them.
I think you misread.
GET IT
Yeah, that's a nice piece of cartoon history trivia.
They were based off mickey and Minnie mouse
14:37 AHA!! Found the Chungus!
He's a big chunky boi
This man chungused us again.
Some one stop this man.
Change chunga
Shut up
@@aross-hb6jl chungus just rekt you chunga
Basically Looney Tunes have transcended all other golden age characters by a large margin , Porky especially is so iconic and unique
Dave! Would love to see some history behind forgotten stars like Bosko, you do such amazing historical breakdowns!
Thank you, I appreciate it.
Do a history of Will. E coyote and the Roadrunner. Those were my two favorite Looney Tunes characters. Please?
They didn't have many design changes. Chuck Jones made them himself.
@Fernando Yanmar The Coyote loosing and getting beat up is funny. Personality I like Tom and Jerry better because Jerry fights back.
@@icecreamhero2375 Chuck Jones did most but not all Roadrunner cartoons. One in the early 60s (whose title escapes me) was unsigned for a director since Jones had left midway in production for a job at MGM making Tom and Jerry cartoons. And after the Warner Bros. cartoon studio closed in 1964, what Roadrunner cartoons came out after that were directed by Rudy Larriva at Depatie-Freleng on contract for Warner Bros. So I think Dave could certainly make a video about this series.
@@Sevenfeet0 True but the design didn't change much.
@@icecreamhero2375 Perhaps but the structure of the cartoons did as budgets were tightened. There is a three year gap between the first Roadrunner cartoon in the 1940s and the second and the first is absolutely gorgeous. After that, budgets were cut for the dramatic backgrounds and vistas that were shot until we get to the Rudy Larriva days which were a shadow of the original cartoons. Also, there was a change in music style with the retirement of Carl Stalling. And finally, there is some trivia for Wile E. Coyote's tangles with Bugs Bunny or seen in Ralph Phillips interstitials on the Bugs Bunny / Road Runner show.
I loved his cursing scene. Good comedy.
"You thought I was gonna say a-a son of a *bitch* didn't you? Hahaha."
Porky: Son of a bitch!
David: Porky is the cute and innocent pig.
Goodness there are few channels I get as excited to see upload a video as this one
Thank you! That means a lot!
Beans's final cartoon appearance was in "Plane Dippy" (1936), You probably missed his cameo. Great work, BTW!!!! :)
Excellent video. Very interesting and worthwhile overview of Porky Pig animation. Leon Schlesinger had serious budget constraints during the 1930s due to the Great Depression. My father would tell me that it wasn't easy keeping the studio afloat during the Depression. [Leon was my grandfather's first cousin.] After funding the completion of The Jazz Singer, Leon later produced six early John Wayne Westerns during the early 1930s, but didn't like that as much as the animation with its humor and the wacky and fun goings-on at his animation studio. "You Ought to be in Pictures" is a must see for anyone with even a marginal interest in animation or live action. Michael Maltese played a studio cop in that film. Descendants of those early studio years have kept in touch and I've met many at various events such as some at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Academy Awards). Sadly, most all of the old timers have now passed away.
Porky pig: I'am, I'am the, the, the, a the, the very a, a, a likable! ;)
RIP Mel Blanc.
I'm facinated by evolutions, a fan of cartoons and planning to become an animator myself. A good reason for me to watch Cartoon Evolution.
I love Porky Pig!! He is my favorite from the Looney Tunes.
I like bugs bunny
Alice Hodges Agreed
Beep
Please do Betty Boop one day she is so good.
I will soon enough
@@DaveLeeDownUnder Yay I love you.
Indeed she is.
I'm surprised there wasn't an episode of Looney Tunes where Porky joined a group of some short where he was a popular member. Over time Daffy would join and steal his thunder, making him jealous. However Porky gets recognition for saving the supposed team by bringing people in and becomes happy for it. All the characters join the club and have a good time for it. It symbolizes his history in a way.
Great video as always, learned a lot about Porky from this
Great to hear! Thanks!
I always loved Daffy and Porky paired together. My favorite ones with both of them are Duck Dodgers in the 24th and a Half Century and Drip-a-Long Daffy. And I loved the ones where he's paired with Charley the dog.
Can’t wait to see what’s next
You should move on to Fleshier Studios after you finish the Looney Tunes
Amparo Lopez yes!
Definitely will be.
@@DaveLeeDownUnder If we're talking about Fleisher Studios, don't bother! Fleisher, Prescott/Scheimer and Rankin/Bass aren't worth the effort.
@@neilforbes416 Are you saying give Betty Boop the boot? Decry the pop eyed Popeye? That the studio's anything but Super, Man?
It may have been a short period of activity but they got stuff done in that time. I particularly love the color Popeye two reelers and pre code Betty Boop.
@@tskmaster3837 In Animation there were really only two companies that really mattered, Warners and Hanna/Barbera, with Walter Lanz coming in at a distant third place. The others are insignificant also-rans. Prescott/Scheimer and Rankin/Bass put out over-cutesy "goody-two-shoes" stuff that came across as over-moralising. Prescott/Scheimer were the the ones that produced the Bill Cosby & Cosby Kids cartoons that were the exact example of what I just described. The stories told by Cosby on his many LPs for Warners then MCA were nothing at all like what was depicted in the cartoons. If Cosby had gone to Warners, the cartoons produced there would've far more accurately portrayed the stories of Fat Albert, Old Weird Harold & co., stories of playing Buck-Buck, coming home late across the 9th Street Bridge, scaring other kids with a statue of the Frankenstein Monster, etc., How much funnier they would've been in the hands of Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Ted Clampett, DePatie/Freleng & others instead of that cringe-making shit spewed out by Prescott/Scheimer.
I hope you do Foghorn Leghorn at some point. He's often forgotten and under-appreciated, but he's always been my favorite.
Boy, I say boy... I most certainly will
@@DaveLeeDownUnder I like Foghorn too he's funny 😊😄😂
Foghorn Leghorn is a play on Kenny Delmar's radio character, Senator Claghorne.
@@armorybrunotjr.3204 Sanater Clanghome? If you say so I'd better find the video about him to see if your right about it 😁
“It’s evolving just backwards”
Ngl I've always loved the 2000's Porky, especially anytime he's paired with Daffy. The two of them pair together as well as Daffy and Bugs do imp, just in different ways
I live in Rochester, NY and we have the Eastman Museum (which is also home to the original Wizard of Oz print by Kodak) and there was recently a Warner Bros. Cartoon exhibit (mainly on The Looney Tunes) and there were a ton of stuff to be awed by such as old character reference sheets and actual cel animations and I loved it! If you have a chance to travel to the States to New York, please check out the Eastman Museum (I’m not sure you’ll get a chance to see the WB Cartoons exhibit since it ends in October, hopefully they’ll do another one in the future). It’s a pure treasure of Upstate New York!
Have been to NY many times (one of my favourite cities in the world!!). Sadly have never had a chance to visit the Eastman Museum, however. Next time I'm there I'll certainly make the effort!
It sounds a like a cool place to visit, if I am ever in that area.
The best design honestly with porky is him tubby enough for a pig but smaller than what would realistically would be a pigs weight.
Any guy who was a studio 1940s of something:" I need a staff"
Someone: "some guys just left disney"
Guy:"perfect"
Exactly
0:03 he Curses at the end but only if it was the whole clip 😵💫😵💫
I wonder was porkies design the inspiration for the Piggly Wiggly mascot?
That's what I was thinking
But Piggy Wiggly was found in 1916
Been waiting on this one since I found this channel. 👏🏻
Hope it was worth the wait!
10:33 Porky as an adult!
Besides the Looney Tunes Show, my favorite appearance of Porky Pig is the Duck Dodgers Series.
You should do the evolution of Tom and Jerry
In due time
Dave Lee Down Under omg I never expected to get a reply that’s awesome that you have this in mind I have enjoyed your cartoon and Disney evolution series you are great keep it up.
Blackfaces gave me nightmares as a kid
Watch the short 40s film "Pikadon" and you would be even more scared.
0:28 see the Resemblance to another great nicktoon series
Great...
*Now I have an urge to watch Porky*
While not as loud and zany as bugs or daffy, porky is definitely as loveable as them
Another great video as usual!
That Robin Hood one always makes me laugh
Mickey Mouse: I cant't belive that i leted Porky down!
Wait... You're telling me... The "Looney Tunes" title is a Parody of Silly Symphony..? .... ... OMG.. that's obvious and Funny the same Time because Looney Tunes still goes on but Silly Symphony stopped.
0:28 I never knew the cat-dog show was running for that long
Wondering which evolution is next, great job Dave. Worth the wait
Thank you!
@@DaveLeeDownUnder welcome
I hope u continue Disney and Cartoon Evolution
try the kratt brothers
so glad they kept porky around
Wow cartoons we're sure made differently back then.
He started out "fat" got skinny, but got "fat" again.
*Porky really let himself go*
And then got skinny again
16:51 Is it me or does that little brown rabbit looks like the Nesquik rabbit from the early years? 😅🤔
My thoughts exactly.
RAQUEL N HUERTAS-RIVERA it kinda does
i love Porky as the Eager Young Space Cadet and when he was teamed up with Gabby Goat
I'm always amazed by how little WB has capitalized on it's Looney Tune's goldmine. They just stopped making anything new other then semi-bad "Wrap arounds" and basically left them to rot. Even when Disney wasn't making new shorts or series they were making sure their characters were key branding focusing for the company. WB just didn't do anything but milk what was already made outside of brief spurts.
One of WB’a major problems in the last decade or so has been brand management. They don’t know what to do with anything they have, which is so sad, because they have a literal GOLDMINE!
Just look at what they did with the DC properties and the DCEU. They’re clueless.
I’ll be honest, never cared for porky before, but this video gave me a newfound respect for him.
As a kid, my favorite Porky short was 1937's Porky's Railroad both in black and white and technic color. I guess you couldn't get any footages of it for the Video, but that's alright.
I have it, but there's hundreds of shorts and unfortunately I can't use clips from every single one
@@DaveLeeDownUnder That's ok.
I think I saw that hat and Felix and the papers looping. 6:59
Buddy will not be impressed until we have a sacrifice!
ALL HAIL BUDDY
I love you started the video with the son of a Gun clip
I've been looking forward to this!!!
Awww,evolution 1,3,and 4 of porky look cute.
14:38 and so the meme begun....
Plot twist: The reason why Porky changes age drastically in his first years is because he's a time-traveller
I absolutely loved the video game "Porky Pig's Haunted Holiday" as a kid.
5:49 Porky as a kid!