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Roadrunner a Go-Go is a 1965 Merrie Melodies short cut down from the 1962 pilot Adventures of the Road Runner.

Plot[]

As the desert sunrise occurs, a choir begins to sing "Out on the Desert". Road Runner starts to run down the road, as Wile E. Coyote searches for him. However, Road Runner beeps behind his back, scaring him and prompting him to chase from behind.

Wile E. first tries to ensnare Road Runner into a noose. However, he misses and falls down a cliff and later gets smashed by a boulder. Eventually, the scene freezes and zooms out to reveal Wile E. at his cave home, taking notes on his failures at catching Road Runner in hopes of detecting where exactly he went wrong and avoiding the same pitfalls in the future. Using a projector to perform slow motion photography on his films and hidden cameras around the desert, Wile E.'s "genius" plan allows him to film at any angle.

To demonstrate how Wile E. can find his previous mistake with the noose, he rewinds to when he tugs on the rope and finds that is the first fault of his plan. He finds the most crucial error, a longer cliff surface is needed for enough backing surface to prevent him from falling again. Learning from his mistakes, he tries the noose trap again, however he catches a truck instead and is pulled until he gratefully stops on the road.

What follows includes a grenade plane and bow and arrow, and a seesaw with a boulder that lands on the coyote instead. Wile E. then goes all in with a simple catapult, which also repeatedly backfires. Now bruised and in casts, Wile E. sarcastically says that the catapult is "So simple a child could operate it," then points at the blueprint before the catapult on the blueprint activates and actually manages to hit the coyote. The blueprint was manufactured from Road-Runner Blue-Print Co., and a Road Runner that is printed on its label beeps before running off.

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