I always loved the exaggerated Italian accents in the Peabody episodes. The female voice, if it was, indeed, June Foray, was a voice characterization I never heard before.
According to Keith Scott's book _The Moose That Roared_ , Lucretia Borgia was originally designed as "a beastly hag" and the final design was drafted by Dun Roman at Val-Mar Studios in Mexico. Said Bill Scott, "The way women are drawn in our business today, one would assume all the artists are ***s."
Silent butler is the pun in this episode. This definitely dates back to when our European ancestors used to boil leather and eat it. This was during the 15th and 16th centuries. 🇪🇺
Yes. It's called mithridatism. Basically you self-administer non-lethal amount of poison every day for a long time. Vaccines work in a similar way: They iniect weakened viruses in your body, so your immunity system can beat them easily, memorize them and react quickly when the true menace comes up.
If you don't drink then go and have some drinks, you will get drunk quickly. But if you sustain a drinking habit, you can build a tolerance to it. Parrots in S. America eat a certain clay that allows them to eat toxic seeds. Clownfish coat themselves with mucous from the coral so they don't get stung. Other toxins have the opposite effect. Heavy elements and compounds like asbestos build up in the system over time and cause health problems with long exposure.
I saw a documentary once of a man who studied and handled venomous snakes. He was bitten so many times, and survived, that he built up an immunity to venom.
@@bertroost1675 Better IMO with original color and film noise...the restored versions are more to the gray scale and they tried to take out the film imperfections.
@@bertroost1675 Yes, they are from my own private home recordings, South Florida early 1990's, on my VHS archive. The Tennessee Tuxedo & his Tales show ran then at 6AM, I set my timer to record every day...so glad I did collect these and was able to share them in the digital age!
@@siresounds Thank you! I just wish someone would put them all together like they were broadcast back in the day. I watched them in the 1970's on WHMB Indianapolis.
@@bertroost1675 Yup, you would hope the original master films still exist for all the Jay Ward classics. That show I recorded was pure gold, probably original film prints on beta tape. They included Tennessee, Tooter, Peabody, Fractured Tales, Aesop & Bullwinkle shorts, all can be found in my separate playlists on my channel...thnx !!!
I always liked this intro ending better with the sound effects.
Great episode. Thanks for posting.
One of my favorites.
Originally seen on "ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS" in 1960.
I always loved the exaggerated Italian accents in the Peabody episodes. The female voice, if it was, indeed, June Foray, was a voice characterization I never heard before.
It was Dorothy Scott.
@@yosefdemby8792wife of Bill Scott ( voice of Bullwinkle, Mr. Peabody, Dudley-Do-Right)
@@kelanjones7281 Yup
Siresounds, can you please more The King and Odie episodes.
According to Keith Scott's book _The Moose That Roared_ , Lucretia Borgia was originally designed as "a beastly hag" and the final design was drafted by Dun Roman at Val-Mar Studios in Mexico. Said Bill Scott, "The way women are drawn in our business today, one would assume all the artists are ***s."
Borgians are a good family
Jay Ward Cartoons from WGN-TV's Bozo's Circus
Silent butler is the pun in this episode. This definitely dates back to when our European ancestors used to boil leather and eat it. This was during the 15th and 16th centuries. 🇪🇺
I wonder though: can building up an immunity to poison really be achievable in real life?
Yes. It's called mithridatism.
Basically you self-administer non-lethal amount of poison every day for a long time.
Vaccines work in a similar way: They iniect weakened viruses in your body, so your immunity system can beat them easily, memorize them and react quickly when the true menace comes up.
The only other time that happened was in the Princess Bride
If you don't drink then go and have some drinks, you will get drunk quickly. But if you sustain a drinking habit, you can build a tolerance to it. Parrots in S. America eat a certain clay that allows them to eat toxic seeds. Clownfish coat themselves with mucous from the coral so they don't get stung. Other toxins have the opposite effect. Heavy elements and compounds like asbestos build up in the system over time and cause health problems with long exposure.
I saw a documentary once of a man who studied and handled venomous snakes. He was bitten so many times, and survived, that he built up an immunity to venom.
I want what they have
Is there anything different about these un-restored versions?
@@bertroost1675 Better IMO with original color and film noise...the restored versions are more to the gray scale and they tried to take out the film imperfections.
@@siresounds So the unrestored version are only available here? The was no early DVD set that had them unrestored?
@@bertroost1675 Yes, they are from my own private home recordings, South Florida early 1990's, on my VHS archive. The Tennessee Tuxedo & his Tales show ran then at 6AM, I set my timer to record every day...so glad I did collect these and was able to share them in the digital age!
@@siresounds Thank you! I just wish someone would put them all together like they were broadcast back in the day. I watched them in the 1970's on WHMB Indianapolis.
@@bertroost1675 Yup, you would hope the original master films still exist for all the Jay Ward classics. That show I recorded was pure gold, probably original film prints on beta tape. They included Tennessee, Tooter, Peabody, Fractured Tales, Aesop & Bullwinkle shorts, all can be found in my separate playlists on my channel...thnx !!!