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Warner Bros. Entertainment Wiki
Warner Bros. Entertainment Wiki

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner are a duo of cartoon characters from the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animated cartoons, first appearing in 1949 in the theatrical short Fast and Furry-ous. In each film, the cunning, devious and constantly hungry coyote repeatedly attempts to catch and eat the roadrunner, but is humorously unsuccessful.[8] Instead of using animal instinct, the coyote deploys absurdly complex schemes and devices to try to catch his prey. They comically backfire, with the coyote invariably getting injured in slapstick fashion. Many of the items for these contrivances are mail-ordered from the Acme Corporation and other companies. TV Guide included Wile E. Coyote in its 2013 list of "The 60 Nastiest Villains of All Time".[9]

The characters were created for Warner Bros. in 1948 by Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese, with Maltese also setting the template for their adventures. The characters star in a long-running series of theatrical cartoon shorts (the first 16 of which were written by Maltese) and occasional made-for-television cartoons. Originally meant to parody chase-cartoon characters such as Tom and Jerry,[10] they became popular in their own right. By 2014, 49 cartoons had been made featuring the characters (including the four CGI shorts), the majority by Jones.

History[]

Conception[]

Jones based the coyote on Mark Twain's book Roughing It,[11] in which Twain described the coyote as "a long, slim, sick and sorry-looking skeleton" that is "a living, breathing allegory of Want. He is always hungry." Jones said he created the Wile E. Coyote-Road Runner cartoons as a parody of traditional "cat and mouse" cartoons such as MGM's Tom and Jerry.[12] He also cites Frank Tashlin's 1941 adaptation of The Fox and the Grapes as inspiration due to its use of blackout gags.[13] Jones modelled the coyote's appearance on fellow animator Ken Harris.[14]

The coyote's name of Wile E. is a pun of the word "wily". The "E" stands for "Ethelbert" in one issue of a Looney Tunes comic book.[15] The coyote's surname is routinely pronounced with a long "e" (/kˈt/ ky-OH-tee), but in one cartoon short, To Hare Is Human, Wile E. is heard pronouncing it with a diphthong (/kˈt/ ky-OH-tay). Early model sheets for the character prior to his initial appearance (in Fast and Furry-ous) identified him as "Don Coyote", a pun on Don Quixote.[16]

The Road Runner's "beep, beep" sound was inspired by background artist Paul Julian's imitation of a car horn.[17] Julian voiced the various recordings of the phrase used throughout the Road Runner cartoons, although he was not credited for his work on screen. According to animation historian Michael Barrier, Julian's preferred spelling of the sound effect was either "hmeep hmeep"[18] or "mweep, mweep."[19]

In the main series, Wile E. does not speak, instead portrayed as a mute character who communicates with the use of signs. However he does in speak in the 1965 short Zip Zip Hooray!, where he explains his desire to eat the Road Runner.[20]

Scenery[]

File:Zoomandbored.jpg

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner in Zoom and Bored, 1957

The desert scenery in the first three Road Runner cartoons, Fast and Furry-ous (1949), Beep, Beep (1952), and Going! Going! Gosh! (also 1952), was designed by Robert Gribbroek and was quite realistic. In most later cartoons, the scenery was designed by Maurice Noble and was far more abstract. It is based on the deserts of the Southwestern United States.

Acme Corperation[]

Main article: Acme Corporation

Wile E. Coyote often obtains various complex and ludicrous devices from a mail-order company, the fictitious Acme Corporation, which he hopes will help him catch the Road Runner. The devices invariably fail in improbable and spectacular fashion.

In August, September and October 1982, the National Lampoon published a three-part series chronicling the lawsuit Wile E. filed against the Acme Corporation over the faulty items they sold him in his pursuit of the Road Runner. Even though the Road Runner appeared as a witness for the plaintiff, the coyote still lost the suit.[21]

Laws and Rules[]

In his book Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist,[22] Chuck Jones claimed that he and the artists behind the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote cartoons adhered to some simple but strict rules:

  1. "The Road Runner cannot harm the Coyote except by going 'Beep-Beep!'"
  2. "No outside force can harm the Coyote — only his own ineptitude or the failure of the Acme products."
  3. "The Coyote could stop anytime — if he were not a fanatic. (Repeat: 'A fanatic is one who redoubles his effort when he has forgotten his aim.' — George Santayana)."
  4. "No dialogue ever, except 'Beep-Beep!'"
  5. "The Road Runner must stay on the road — otherwise, logically, he would not be called a Road Runner."
  6. "All action must be confined to the natural environment of the two characters — the southwest American desert."
  7. "All materials tools, weapons, or mechanical conveniences must be obtained from the Acme Corporation."
  8. "Whenever possible, make gravity the Coyote's greatest enemy."
  9. "The Coyote is always more humiliated than harmed by his failures."

These rules were not always followed, and in an interview[23] years after the series was made, principal writer of the original 16 episodes Michael Maltese stated he had never heard of these or any "rules" and dismissed them as "post production observation".

Running Gags[]

File:Gogogo.jpg

Wile E. Coyote seen in There They Go-Go-Go!

In many of the shorts, a cartoon typically starts with Wile E. Coyote chasing the Road Runner in a desperate attempt to catch him, only for the Road Runner to zip away in breakneck speed, much to the Coyote's surprise and utter amazement.

One notable running gag involves the Coyote falling from high cliffs; after momentarily being suspended in midair, as if the fall is delayed until he realizes that there is nothing below him. The rest of the scene, shot from a bird's-eye view, shows him falling into a canyon so deep that his figure is eventually lost to sight, with only a small puff of dust indicating his impact.

The coyote is notably a brilliant artist, capable of quickly painting lifelike renderings of such things as tunnels and roadside scenes, in further (and equally futile) attempts to deceive the bird. Additionally, another running gag involves the coyote trying, in vain, to shield himself with a little parasol against a great falling boulder that is about to crush him.

Later Cartoons[]

The original Chuck Jones productions ended in 1963 after Jack L. Warner closed the Warner Bros. animation studio. War and Pieces, the last Wile E. Coyote/Road Runner short directed by Jones, was released on June 6, 1964. By that time, David H. DePatie and director Friz Freleng had formed DePatie–Freleng Enterprises, moved into the facility just emptied by Warner, and signed a license with Warner Bros. to produce cartoons for the big studio to distribute.

The first DePatie–Freleng cartoon to feature the Road Runner was The Wild Chase, directed by Freleng in 1965. The premise was a race between the bird and "the fastest mouse in all México", Speedy Gonzales, with the Coyote and Sylvester the Cat each trying to make a meal out of their respective usual targets. Much of the material was animation rotoscoped from earlier Road Runner and Speedy Gonzales shorts, with the other characters added in. Additionally, DePatie-Freleng produced two cartoons (Zip Zip Hooray! (1965) and Road Runner a Go-Go (1965)) that reuses footage from Chuck Jones' 1962 television pilot Adventures of the Road Runner, with there original audio kept intact. DePatie-Freleng went on to produced 13 more Road Runner cartoons. Two of these shorts were produced in-house and were directed by Robert McKimson (Rushing Roulette (1965) and Sugar and Spies (1966)), while the remaining eleven, directed by Rudy Larriva, were outsourced to Format Films.

Format's Road Runner cartoons, nicknamed the "Larriva Eleven", were characterized for its poorer production quality when compared to DePatie-Freleng, with animation often being reused in nearly every cartoon. The music was also of poorer quality, as the soundtrack (composed by Bill Lava) was relegated to the use of pre-composed music cues rather than a proper score, the only exception of this being Run Run, Sweet Road Runner (1965) as it was produced with a proper soundtrack. In addition, except for the planet Earth scene at the end of Highway Runnery (1965), there was only one clip of the Coyote's fall to the ground, used over and over again. Jones' previously described "laws" for the characters were not followed with any significant fidelity, nor were Latin phrases used when introducing the characters. These 11 shorts have been considered inferior to the other Golden Age shorts, garnering mixed to poor reviews from critics. Leonard Maltin, in his book Of Mice and Magic, calls the series "witless in every sense of the word".[24]

Post-Theatrical Appearences[]

The Road Runner and the Coyote appeared on Saturday mornings as the stars of their own TV series, The Road Runner Show, from September 1966 to September 1968, on CBS. At this time it was merged with The Bugs Bunny Show to become The Bugs Bunny and Road Runner Show, running from 1968 to 1985. The show was later seen on ABC until 2000, and on Global until 2001.

In the 1970s, Chuck Jones directed some Wile E. Coyote/Road Runner short films for the educational children's TV series The Electric Company. These short cartoons used the Coyote and the Road Runner to display words for children to read.

In 1979, Freeze Frame, in which Jones moved the chase from the desert to snow-covered mountains, was seen as part of Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas Tales.

At the end of Bugs Bunny's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny (the initial sequence of Chuck Jones' TV special Bugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All Over), Bugs mentions to the audience that he and Elmer Fudd may have been the first pair of characters to have chase scenes in these cartoons, but then a pint-sized baby Wile E. Coyote (wearing a diaper and holding a small knife and fork) runs right in front of Bugs, chasing a gold-colored, mostly unhatched (except for the tail, which is sticking out) Road Runner egg, which is running rapidly while some high-pitched "Beep, beep" noises can be heard. This was followed by the full-fledged Road Runner/Wile E. Coyote short Soup or Sonic. Earlier in that story, while kid Elmer was falling from a cliff, Wile E. Coyote's adult self tells him to move over and leave falling to people who know how to do it and then he falls, followed by Elmer.

In the 1980s, ABC began showing many Warner Bros. shorts, but in highly edited form. Many scenes integral to the stories were taken out, including scenes in which Wile E. Coyote landed at the bottom of the canyon after falling from a cliff, or had a boulder or anvil actually make contact with him. In almost all WB animated features, scenes where a character's face was burnt and black, some thought resembling blackface, were removed, as were animated characters smoking cigarettes.[citation needed]

Some cigar-smoking scenes were left in. The unedited versions of these shorts (with the exception of ones with blackface) were not seen again until Cartoon Network, and later Boomerang, began showing them again in the 1990s and early 2000s. Since the release of the WB library of cartoons on DVD, the cartoons gradually disappeared from television, presumably to increase sales of the DVDs. However, Cartoon Network began to air them again in 2011, coinciding with the premiere of The Looney Tunes Show (2011), and the shorts were afterward moved to Boomerang, where they have remained to this day.

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner appeared in several episodes of Tiny Toon Adventures. In this series, Wile E. (voiced in the Jim Reardon episode "Piece of Mind" by Joe Alaskey) was the dean of Acme Looniversity and the mentor of Calamity Coyote. The Road Runner's protégé in this series was Little Beeper. In the episode "Piece of Mind", Wile E. narrates the life story of Calamity while Calamity is falling from the top of a tall skyscraper. In the direct-to-video film Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation, the Road Runner finally gets a taste of humiliation by getting run over by a mail truck that "brakes for coyotes".

The two were also seen in cameos in Animaniacs. They were together in two Slappy Squirrel cartoons: "Bumbie's Mom" and "Little Old Slappy from Pasadena". In the latter, the Road Runner gets another taste of humiliation when he is out-run by Slappy's car, and holds up a sign saying "I quit" — immediately afterward, Buttons, who was launched into the air during a previous gag, lands squarely on top of him. Wile E. appears without the bird in a The Wizard of Oz parody, dressed in his batsuit from one short, in a twister (tornado) funnel in "Buttons in Ows" Also, in the beginning of one episode, an artist is seen drawing the Road Runner.

The Road Runner appears in an episode of the 1991 series Taz-Mania, in which Taz grabs him by the leg and gets ready to eat him, until the two gators are ready to capture Taz, so he lets the Road Runner go. In another episode of Taz-Mania, the Road Runner cartoons are parodied, with Taz dressed as the Road Runner and the character Willy Wombat dressed as Wile E. Coyote. Willy tries to catch Taz with Acme Roller Skates but fails, and Taz even says "Beep, beep."

Wile E. and the Road Runner would also make an appearence in the 1996 film Space Jam, where they, along with the read of the Looney Tunes characters, must win against invading aliens through basketball with the help of Michael Jordan. They would also appear in its 2021 sequel Space Jam: A New Legacy.

Wile E. and the Road Runner would return to theatrical shorts in toddler form in the 2000 theatrical short Little Go Beep, and later in Baby Looney Tunes, but only in songs. However, they both had made a cameo in the episode "Are We There Yet?", where the Road Runner was seen out the window of Floyd's car with Wile E. chasing him.

Wile E. Coyote had a cameo as the true identity of an alien hunter (a parody of Predator) in the Duck Dodgers episode "K-9 Quarry", voiced by Dee Bradley Baker. In that episode, he was hunting Martian Commander X-2 and K-9. He is also temporary as a member of Agent Roboto's Legion of Duck Doom from the previous season in another episode.

In Loonatics Unleashed, Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner's 28th century descendants are Tech E. Coyote (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) and Rev Runner (voiced by Rob Paulsen). Tech E. Coyote was the tech expert of the Loonatics (influenced by the past cartoons with many of the machines ordered by Wile E. from Acme), and has magnetic hands and the ability to molecularly regenerate himself (influenced by the many times in which Wile E. painfully failed to capture the Road Runner and then was shown to have miraculously recovered). Tech E. Coyote speaks, but does not have a transatlantic accent as Wile E. Coyote did. Rev Runner is also able to talk, though extremely rapidly, and can fly without the use of jet packs, which are used by other members of the Loonatics. He also has sonic speed, also a take-off of the Road Runner. The pair get on rather well, despite the number of gadgets Tech designs in order to stop Rev from talking, also they have their moments where they do not get along. When friendship is shown it is often only from Rev to Tech, not the other way around, this could, however, be attributed to the fact that Tech has only the barest minimum of social skills. They are both portrayed as smart, but Tech is the better inventor and at times Rev is shown doing stupid things. References to their ancestors' past are seen in the episode "Family Business" where the other Road Runners are wary of Tech and Tech relives the famous falling gags done in the Wile E. Coyote/Road Runner shorts.

The Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote feature in 3D computer-animated cartoons or cartoon animation in the Cartoon Network TV series The Looney Tunes Show. The CGI shorts were only included in Season 1, but Wile E. and the Road Runner still appeared throughout the series in 2D animation.

Wile E. Coyote also appears in the TV series Wabbit, voiced by J. P. Karliak, in a similar vein to his previous pairings with Bugs Bunny. He appears as Bugs' annoying know-it-all neighbor who always uses his inventions to compete with Bugs. The Road Runner began making appearances when the series was renamed New Looney Tunes in 2017.

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner both appear in their own cartoon shorts in the HBO Max streaming series Looney Tunes Cartoons.

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner make occasional appearances in the preschool educational series Bugs Bunny Builders. Wile E. (voiced by Keith Ferguson) has a minor supporting role in the series in which he often helps the Looney Builders out with their plans, often using some of his inventions. In the episode "Looney Science", Wile E. has the Looney Builders build him a science museum to show off his inventions, but the Road Runner keeps constantly distracting him.[25]

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner appear in the Tiny Toon Adventures reboot, Tiny Toons Looniversity, as well as their protégés from the original series Calamity Coyote and Little Beeper. In this series Wile E. is the science professor at Acme Looniversity rather than the dean. In the episode "General Hogspital", Wile E. develops a potion that makes toons lose their looney DNA to try and finally catch the Road Runner, only for it to backfire and pollute the campus water supply.

Wile E. Coyote was also in an episode of Night Court (Season 7, Episode 22: Sill Another Day in the Life) in which Judge Harold T. Stone (Harry Anderson) found him guilty of harassment and told him to leave the poor bird alone.[26]

3-D shorts[]

The characters appeared in seven 3-D shorts attached to Warner Bros. features. Three have been screened with features, while the rest serve as segments in season 1 of The Looney Tunes Show. A short called Flash in the Pain was shown on the web in 2014, but was not shown in theaters until 2016, when the movie Storks premiered.

Coyote vs. Acme[]

Main article: Coyote vs. Acme

In late 2018, it was announced that Warner Bros. Pictures were developing a live-action animated film centered on Wile E. Coyote titled Coyote vs. Acme, produced by Warner Animation Group, with The Lego Batman Movie director Chris McKay on board to produce.[27][28] The film is said to be based on The New Yorker short story "Coyote v. Acme" by author Ian Frazier.[29] Published in 1990, the piece imagined a lawsuit brought about by Wile E. Coyote against the Acme Company who provided him with various devices and tools to aid in his pursuit of the Road Runner. The devices frequently malfunctioned, leading to the humorous failures, injuries, and sight gags for which the Road Runner cartoons are known.[30] Jon and Josh Silberman were originally set to write the screenplay.[27] On December 18, 2019, it was reported that Dave Green would direct the project.[28] It was also reported that the project was looking for a new writer, with Jon and Josh Silberman instead co-producing the film alongside McKay.[28] However, by December 2020, McKay departed the project, while Jon and Josh Silberman left their roles as producers and resumed their screenwriting roles, with Samy Burch, Jeremy Slater, and James Gunn scheduled to write its screenplay. Gunn would have also co-produced the project alongside Chris DeFaria. It was later announced that the film was scheduled to be released on July 21, 2023.[31]

In February 2022, it was announced that professional wrestler John Cena would star in the film.[32] In March 2022, Will Forte and Lana Condor were added to the cast.[33] On April 26, 2022, it was taken off the release schedule with Barbie taking over its original release date.[34] Despite its completion by November 9, 2023, it was announced that its theatrical and public release would be cancelled, with the company taking an approximately US$30 million tax write-off for the film. Consistent with its long-term production issues and delays, Green later expressed his views on the decision:

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I am beyond proud of the final product, and beyond devastated by WB's decision. But in the spirit of Wile E. Coyote, resilience and persistence win the day.[35][36]

However, four days later, the decision was reversed. Later that day, it was reported that Warner Bros. would instead allow the crew behind Coyote vs. Acme to shop out the film to other possible distributors, with Apple TV+, Netflix, and Amazon MGM Studios being among its potential buyers.[37] Due to the company's handling of the matter, U.S. Congressman Joaquin Castro called for a federal investigation regarding the film's initial cancellation and tax-write off plan, stemming from possible violations of antitrust guidelines.[38]

On December 8, it was reported that the film had been screened to Paramount Pictures, Netflix, Apple, Amazon, and Sony Pictures. So far, two of these studios, Netflix and Paramount, have made bids for the rights to the film, with the latter planning to release it theatrically. Amazon is still considering about making a formal bid, while Sony and Apple have declined the offer to bid.[39]

On December 31, Eric Bauza unveiled an official screenshot of the film on social media, depicting Wile E. Coyote and his lawyer seated in the courtroom, all while the film continued to search for a new distributor.

Spin-offs and Other Media[]

The coyote appears separately as an occasional antagonist of Bugs Bunny in five shorts from 1952 to 1963: Operation: Rabbit, To Hare Is Human, Rabbit's Feat, Compressed Hare, and Hare-Breadth Hurry. While he is generally silent in the Wile E. Coyote – Road Runner shorts, he speaks with a refined accent in these solo outings (except for Hare-Breadth Hurry), beginning with 1952's Operation: Rabbit, introducing himself as "Wile E. Coyote, (Super) Genius", voiced by Mel Blanc. Hare-Breadth Hurry in particular stands out as the short uses the framework of a typical Road Runner cartoon, but with Bugs as the substitute since the former had "sprained a giblet cornering a sharp curve the other day."

In another series of Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoons, Chuck Jones used the character design (model sheets and personality) of Wile E. Coyote as "Ralph Wolf". In this series, Ralph continually attempts to steal sheep from a flock being guarded by the eternally vigilant Sam Sheepdog. As with the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote series, Ralph Wolf uses all sorts of wild inventions and schemes to steal the sheep, but he is continually foiled by the sheepdog. In a move seen by many as a self-referential gag, Ralph Wolf continually tries to steal the sheep not because he is a fanatic (as Wile E. Coyote was), but because it is his job. In every cartoon, he and Sam Sheepdog punch a timeclock and exchange pleasantries, go to work, stop what they are doing to take a lunch break, go back to work and pick up right where they left off, and clock out to go home for the day and exchange pleasantries again, all according to a factory-like blowing whistle. The most obvious difference between the coyote and the wolf, aside from their locales, is that Wile E. has a black nose and Ralph has a red nose.

Comic books[]

Wile E. Coyote was called Kelsey Coyote in his comic book debut, a Henery Hawk story in Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies #91 (May 1949). He only made a couple of other appearances at this time and did not have his official name yet, as it was not used until 1952 (in Operation: Rabbit, his second appearance).[40]

The first appearance of the Road Runner in a comic book was in Bugs Bunny Vacation Funnies #8 (August 1958) published by Dell Comics. The feature is titled "Beep Beep the Road Runner" and the story "Desert Dessert". It presents itself as the first meeting between Beep Beep and Wile E. (whose mailbox reads "Wile E. Coyote, Inventor and Genius"), and introduces the Road Runner's wife, Matilda, and their three newly hatched sons (though Matilda soon disappeared from the comics). This story established the convention that the Road Runner family talked in rhyme, a convention that also appeared in early children's book adaptations of the cartoons.

Dell initially published a dedicated "Beep Beep the Road Runner" comic as part of Four Color Comics #918, 1008, and 1046 before launching a separate series for the character numbered #4–14 (1960–1962), with the three try-out issues counted as the first three numbers. After a hiatus, Gold Key Comics took over the character with issues #1–88 (1966–1984). During the 1960s, the artwork was done by Pete Alvarado and Phil DeLara, from 1966 to 1969, the Gold Key issues consisted of Dell reprints. Afterward, new stories began to appear, initially drawn by Alvarado and De Lara before Jack Manning became the main artist for the title. New and reprinted Beep Beep stories also appeared in Golden Comics Digest and Gold Key's revival of Looney Tunes in the 1970s. During this period, Wile E.'s middle name was revealed to be "Ethelbert"[15] in the story "The Greatest of E's" in issue #53 (cover-dated September 1975) of Gold Key Comics' licensed comic book Beep Beep the Road Runner.[41]

The Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote also make appearances in the DC Comics Looney Tunes title. Wile E. was able to speak in some of his appearances in the DC comics.

In 2017, DC Comics featured a Looney Tunes and DC Comics crossovers that reimagined the characters in a darker style. The Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote had a crossover with the intergalactic bounty hunter Lobo in Lobo/Road Runner Special #1. In this version, the Road Runner, Wile E., and other Looney Tunes characters are reimagined as standard animals who were experimented upon with alien DNA at Acme to transform them into their cartoon forms. In the back-up story, done in more traditional cartoon style, Lobo tries to hunt down the Road Runner, but is limited by Bugs to be more kid-friendly in his language and approach.[42][43]

Video Games[]

Many Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner-themed video games have been produced:

  • Road Runner (arcade game by Atari Games)
  • Electronic Road Runner (self-contained LCD game from Tiger Electronics released in 1990)
  • Looney Tunes (Game Boy game by Sunsoft)
  • The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle (NES/Game Boy game by Kemco)
  • The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle 2 (Game Boy game by Kemco)
  • The Bugs Bunny Birthday Blowout (NES game by Kemco)
  • Road Runner's Death Valley Rally (Super NES game by Sunsoft)
  • Wile E. Coyote's Revenge (Super NES game by Sunsoft)
  • Desert Speedtrap (Game Gear and Master System game by Sega/Probe Software)
  • Bugs Bunny: Crazy Castle 3 (Game Boy game by Kemco)
  • Desert Demolition (Mega Drive/Genesis game by Sega/BlueSky Software)
  • Sheep, Dog, 'n' Wolf (for the original PlayStation and published by Infogrames, actually based on the Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog cartoons, but the Road Runner does make two cameo appearances)
  • Looney Tunes B-Ball (Wile E. is a playable character)
  • Space Jam
  • Looney Tunes Racing (Wile E. is a playable character. The Road Runner is also seen in the game as a non-playable character.)
  • Taz Express (Nintendo 64) game published by Infogrames (Wile E. is an antagonist)
  • Taz: Wanted (Wile E. appears)
  • Looney Tunes: Back in Action (published by Electronic Arts)
  • Looney Tunes Double Pack (published by Majesco Entertainment, developed by WayForward Technologies, where "Acme Antics" is the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner half of the double pack)
  • Looney Tunes: Space Race (Wile E. is a playable character)
  • Looney Tunes Acme Arsenal (Wile E. has his own level in the PS2 version)
  • Looney Tunes: Cartoon Conductor
  • Looney Tunes Dash (iOS and Android game)
  • Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem (iOS and Android game)

Filmography[]

Relationships[]

Warner Bros. Entertainment Wiki has an article focusing on the relationships of Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner.

Gallery[]

Warner Bros. Entertainment Wiki has a collection of images and media related to Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner.

Voice actors[]

Wile E. Coyote[]

The Road Runner[]

The voice artist Paul Julian originated the character's voice. Before and after his death, his voice was appearing in various media through archive recordings, for example, in TV series, shorts, and video games, such as 2014's Looney Tunes Dash. In addition, other voice actors have replaced him. These voice actors are:

In popular culture[]

File:Wile E. Coyote's ACME Instant Tunnel at MIT.jpg

A mural of Wile E. Coyote smashed into the wall of the Rotch Library at MIT. Due to differences in floor height in connected buildings, this hallway unexpectedly ends in a wall.

There are two scenes in Stanley Kubrick's 1980 adaptation of The Shining where Danny Torrance and his mother, Wendy Torrance, are watching the cartoons.[64]

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner appeared in the 1988 Touchstone/Amblin film Who Framed Roger Rabbit. They are first seen silhouetted by the elevator doors in Toontown, and then in full in the ACME Factory during the final scene with other characters.

The 1979 Western comedy film The Villain is a tribute to the cartoons, reconstructing several famous gags in live action.[65]

In the Fraidy Cat episode "Choo Choo Fraidy", Fraidy Cat meets a coyote named Smile E. Coyote who prefers to not eat Fraidy and instead goes after an overweight jogging roadrunner, clearly parodying the iconic duo.

In the 1992 film Under Siege, "Road Runner" is the code name of the renegade former CIA operative William Strannix, played by Tommy Lee Jones, in a reference to the fact that the character is never captured.

Wile E. Coyote has appeared twice in Family Guy: his first episode, "I Never Met the Dead Man", depicts him riding in a car with Peter Griffin, when Peter runs over the Road Runner and asks if he hit "that ostrich", Wile E. tells him to keep going.[66] His second appearance was in "PTV", in which Wile E. attempts to get a refund for a giant-sized slingshot at an ACME retailer where Peter works.

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner appeared in Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy in the short "Die, Sweet Roadrunner, Die". In this short, Wile E. crushes the Road Runner with a large boulder and eats him, but then struggles to find purpose in life, having not trained for anything else other than chasing the Road Runner. Ultimately, after a short-lived job as a waiter in a local diner, and a suicide attempt (by way of catapulting himself into a mountain at close range), Wile E. finally realizes what he is to do with his life, and reveals he is now an advocate for Christianity.

The Road Runner appeared in the pilot episode of The Cleveland Show in which Peter Griffin straps a rocket to his back in a similar fashion of Wile E. Coyote and attempts to catch the Road Runner, only to wreck Cleveland Brown's house again, prompting Cleveland to finally decide to leave Quahog.

Both Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner have appeared in Robot Chicken on multiple occasions. One sketch sees Wile E. faking his own suicide and then torching the Road Runner with a flamethrower when he shows up at Wile E.'s "funeral". Another sketch shows Wile E. teaching a college course on how to get away with murder, using the Road Runner's murder as an example, the students trace the mail orders for the ACME products used to commit the murder to Wile E., who is executed by electric chair for the crime. Another sketch sees Wile E. presenting his iconic "fake tunnel" at an art auction, and another reveals why Wile E.'s ACME products always fail - the ACME Corporation is run by multiple Road Runners.[67]

Wile E. Coyote appeared during the couch gag in The Simpsons episode "Smoke on the Daughter" in which he paints a fake couch on the living room wall which the Simpson family run into. Maggie Simpson then zooms in and imitates the Road Runner's "beep, beep" noise. The Road Runner appeared in the episode "Crystal Blue-Haired Persuasion" during a dream sequence in which he is attacked and eaten by the Space Coyote.

Guitarist Mark Knopfler recorded a song called "Coyote" in homage to the cartoon shows of Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner on the 2002 album The Ragpicker's Dream. The Tom Smith song "Operation: Desert Storm", which won a Pegasus award for Best Fool Song in 1999, is about the different ways the coyote's plans fail.[68]

The music videos for Twisted Sister's signature songs "We're Not Gonna Take It" and "I Wanna Rock" were based heavily on the cartoon.[69]

Humorist Ian Frazier created the mock-legal prose piece "Coyote v. Acme",[70] which is included in a book of the same name.[71]

During a scene in The Drawn Together Movie: The Movie!, the Drawn Together cast accidentally run over and kill the Road Runner with Foxxy Love's van. Upon noticing this, Wile E. Coyote runs up to the Road Runner's corpse and declares "Without you, my life really has no meaning", before shooting himself with a "Bang!" flag gun.

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner appear in the Teen Titans Go! episode, "Warner Bros. 100th Anniversary". They are among the Looney Tunes characters as guests for the Warner Bros. centennial celebration.

See also[]

  • Zig & Sharko, a French animated slapstick comedy television series which was inspired by the Coyote and Roadrunner shorts
  • Arizona Coyotes, an NHL team whose AHL affiliate is the Tucson Roadrunners
  • Calamity Coyote
  • Coyote (mythology)
  • Coyotes in popular culture
  • Little Beeper
  • Plymouth Road Runner
  • Road Runner High Speed Online

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Joe Alaskey interview (Tiny Toon Adventures / Looney Tunes / Who Framed Roger Rabbit)". Saturday Morning Rewind. "Since 1981, over the past 30 years, I've been doing Bugs, Daffy, and the other characters. I'm the only guy in the talent pool who has played all of the major characters, including... yes, including Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, but also Porky. You have to hunt for some of these credits, but I have done them all at one point, Hubie and Bertie, and Henery Hawk, all those characters."
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Looney Tunes DVD and Video Guide: VHS: Misc.". The Internet Animation Database.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Voice of Alien Hunter in Duck Dodgers". Behind the Voice Actors.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Voice of Wile E. Coyote in Looney Tunes: Cartoon Conductor". Behind the Voice Actors.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Scooby Doo & Looney Tunes Cartoon Universe: Adventure". Behind The Voice Actors.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Classic Cartoon Greeting Card Records by Buzza-Cardozo" Archived 2020-06-04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  7. 7.0 7.1 ""Bugs Bunny in Storyland": The Good, The Bad & the Bugs" Archived 2020-09-20 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  8. (1999) The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books, page 128–129. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. 
  9. Bretts, Bruce, Roush, Matt, (March 25, 2013). "Baddies to the Bone: The 60 nastiest villains of all time." TV Guide. pp. 14−15.
  10. Schneider, Steve (1988). That's All Folks!: The Art of Warner Bros. Animation. Henry Holt and Company, page 222. 
  11. Collins, Glen (November 7, 1989). "Chuck Jones on Life and Daffy Duck". The New York Times. Archived from the original on April 28, 2023. Retrieved September 18, 2017.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  12. Barrier, Michael (November 6, 2003). Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age. United States: Oxford University Press, page 672. ISBN 978-0-19-516729-0. 
  13. Maltin, Leonard (1980). "Columbia: Charles Mintz and Screen Gems", Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons. New American Library, page 214. ISBN 9780452259935. 
  14. Wroe, Nicholas (April 19, 2013). "Richard Williams: the master animator". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2013-04-26.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  15. 15.0 15.1 "News from Me (column): "The Name Game" (Feb. 20, 2006), by Mark Evanier". Newsfromme.com.
  16. Costello, E.O.. "The Warner Brothers Cartoon Companion: Wile E. Coyote". "The original model sheet for the character bears a label referring to the character as "Don Coyote", in reference to Miguel Ceverantes' Don Quixote."
  17. Michael Barrier. "Beep, Beep (film)" on Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 2 (Region 2 DVD release) (DVD commentary). Event occurs at 0m26s. Actually the title is somewhat of a misnomer, the actual 'beep beep' sound you just heard the Road Runner make was made by a background painter named Paul Julian, who used to make it in the hallways at Warner Brothers when he was carrying a large painting along, so people would get out of his way. Chuck Jones heard him make that - or Treg Brown I guess, actually, the sound effects wizard at Warner Brothers - heard him make that noise and suggested that they record that for the Road Runner, and it's been the standard Road Runner noise ever since.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  18. Michael Barrier. "Fast and Furry-ous" on Looney Tunes All-Stars: Part 1 (Region 2 DVD release) (DVD commentary). Event occurs at 6m10s. Even though the expression was spelled 'beep beep' on the screen, and that the word 'beep' was used in many subsequent Road Runner cartoon titles, Paul Julian insisted that the correct spelling was 'H-M-E-E-P", 'hmeep hmeep', rather than 'beep beep'. But obviously after dozens of Road Runner cartoons, and other appearances of the Road Runner and Coyote in other media, with the word 'beep' attached, it's much too late to make any change in that spelling.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  19. Michael Barrier. "Beep, Beep (film)" on Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 2 (Region 2 DVD release) (DVD commentary). Event occurs at 0m50s. Paul Julian said that the actual spelling of that should be something more like 'M-W-E-E-P', 'mweep mweep' as opposed to 'beep beep'. But 'beep beep' it is on screen here and 'beep beep', as far as 99.9% of the world is concerned, it still is.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  20. Flint, Peter (July 11, 1989). "Mel Blanc, Who Provided Voices For 3,000 Cartoons, Is Dead at 81". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 19, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2007.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  21. "Link of the Day: Wile e. Coyote Sues the ACME Company". IMAO (13 December 2012).
  22. Jones, Chuck (1999). Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times Of An Animated Cartoonist. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-52620-7. 
  23. The interviews included in the DVD commentary were recorded by animation historian Michael Barrier for his book Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age.
  24. Maltin, Leonard (1987-12-01). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons; Revised and Updated (in en). Penguin. ISBN 978-0-452-25993-5. 
  25. "Trailer: 'Bugs Bunny Builders' Breaks Ground on Cartoonito July 25" (14 June 2022).
  26. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Wile E. Coyote on Night Court".
  27. 27.0 27.1 McNary, Dave (August 29, 2018). "Coyote vs. Acme Gives Wile E. Coyote His Own Looney Tunes Movie". ComingSoon.net. Archived from the original on August 29, 2018. Retrieved August 29, 2018.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 Donnelly, Matt (December 17, 2019). "Warner Bros.' Wile E. Coyote Movie Sets Dave Green to Direct (EXCLUSIVE)".
  29. Frazier, Ian (February 26, 1990). "Coyote v. Acme". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on October 16, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2018.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  30. "Looney Tunes Movie Coyote vs. Acme Sets 2023 Release Date". Movies.
  31. "Warner Bros. to Release 'Mad Max: Fury Road' Prequel and 'The Color Purple' Musical in Theaters in 2023". Variety (23 December 2020).
  32. Kroll, Justin (February 16, 2022). "John Cena To Star In Looney Tunes Live-Action/Animated Hybrid Pic 'Coyote Vs. Acme'". Deadline Hollywood.
  33. Kroll, Justin (March 9, 2022). "Will Forte And Lana Condor To Co-Star With John Cena In Looney Tunes Live-Action/Animated Hybrid Pic 'Coyote Vs. Acme'". Deadline Hollywood.
  34. D'Alessandro, Anthony (April 26, 2022). "Barbie Heads To Summer 2023 – CinemaCon". Deadline Hollywood.
  35. "Coyote vs. Acme Director Voices Out Disappointment over Cancelation" (10 November 2023).
  36. D'Alessandro, Anthony (November 9, 2023). "'Coyote Vs. Acme': Finished Live/Action Animated Pic Shelved Completely By Warner Bros As Studio Takes $30M Tax Write-off". Retrieved on November 9, 2023.
  37. D'Alessandro, Anthony (13 November 2023). "'Coyote Vs. Acme': Warner Bros Setting Up Screenings For Streamers Of Axed Looney Tunes Film; Amazon A Prime Candidate – The Dish". Deadline.
  38. "Congressman Slams Warner Bros. for Cancelling Coyote vs. Acme, Calls for Federal Investigation" (November 13, 2023).
  39. D'Alessandro, Anthony (2023-12-08). "Coyote Vs. Acme: Paramount Circling; Amazon Still Possible Contender – The Dish" (in en-US). Deadline Hollywood.
  40. (2020) The 100 Greatest Looney Tunes Cartoons. Insight Editions, page 73. ISBN 978-1-64722-137-9. 
  41. Evanier, News from Me: "Mike Maltese had been occasionally writing the comics in semi-retirement before me, but when he dropped the 'semi' part, I got the job and that was one of the plots I came up with. For the record, the story was drawn by a terrific artist named Jack Manning, and Mr. Maltese complimented me on it. Still, I wouldn't take that as any official endorsement of the Coyote's middle name. If you want to say the Coyote's middle name is Ethelbert, fine. I mean, it's not like someone's going to suddenly whip out Wile E.'s actual birth certificate and yell, 'Aha! Here's incontrovertible proof!' But like I said, I never imagined anyone would take it as part of the official 'canon' of the character. If I had, I'd have said the 'E' stood for Evanier."
  42. Lobo/Road Runner Special #1
  43. "Exclusive Preview: DC Comics' Lobo/Road Runner Special #1". Syfy (June 20, 2017).
  44. "Looney Tunes: Reality Check". Behind The Voice Actors.
  45. 45.0 45.1 45.2 45.3 45.4 45.5 45.6 45.7 "Voice(s) of Wile E. Coyote". Behind the Voice Actors.
  46. "Warner Bros. Movie World Illuminanza". Behind The Voice Actors.
  47. 47.0 47.1 "That Wascally Wabbit".
  48. 48.0 48.1 "The Day I Met Bugs Bunny". Ian Heydon.
  49. 49.0 49.1 "Keith Scott: Down Under's Voice Over Marvel". Animation World Network.
  50. 50.0 50.1 "Keith Scott-"The One-Man Crowd"" Archived 2020-09-16 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  51. "Voice of Wile E. Coyote in Family Guy". Behind The Voice Actors.
  52. "Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy". Behind The Voice Actors.
  53. 53.0 53.1 "The Drawn Together Movie: The Movie!". Behind the Voice Actors.
  54. "Voice of Wile E. Coyote in Robot Chicken". Behind The Voice Actors.
  55. 55.0 55.1 "Looney Tunes World of Mayhem". Behind the Voice Actors.
  56. D'Alessandro, Anthony (2023-11-15). "Coyote Vs. Acme: Lord & Miller, Paul Scheer Catch Early Screening: 'Best Version Of The Looney Tunes On The Big Screen'". Deadline Hollywood.
  57. "1978 - Bugs Bunny's Magic World - Marriott's Great America Chicago - Theatre Royale". YouTube (July 12, 2021).
  58. 58.0 58.1 (November 15, 2012) Mel Blanc: The Man of a Thousand Voices. ISBN 9781593932596. “Mel and WB were/are inseparable. In 1982 he and Noel began a massive recording project at JEL Recording Studios in which Mel recorded the audio for fifty automated stage shows featuring Bugs, Daffy, and the gang, full of dialogue and song. It stemmed from a long-term contract between Warner-Blanc Audio Associates and JEL, under the direction of Noel and Bill Baldwin, Jr. For years, on a weekly basis, these new recordings of Mel's voices were also given to a variety of toys, watches, video games, websites, etc.” 
  59. 59.0 59.1 (November 15, 2012) Mel Blanc: The Man of a Thousand Voices. ISBN 9781593932596. “In 1994, the Blanc estate and Warner Bros. forged a new alliance: the Warner-Blanc Audio Library, which consisted of approximately 550 songs and voices of every character in Mel's repertoire, which he had begun setting down at his multi-track studio in 1958 amid fears of a future when he'd be around no longer to record. 15 hours of new tapes of Mel's material had been discovered in 1996, and Noel expected to find more soon. Of course Mel's death never did diminish his impact on society as a cult icon. New technology has made him fresh for each generation. Around 1998 a line of talking watches featuring Warner characters were released under a joint venture from Warner-Blanc, digitizing some of Mel's vast back catalog to use in new items. The Mel Blanc Voice Watch Collection by Armitron was produced to celebrate what would have been his 90th birthday. Daffy spitting, "You're desthpicable", Tweety chirping, "I tawt I taw a puddy tat", and the ever popular Bugs asking the eternal question, "What's up, doc?" were a few choices emanating for 10 or 15 seconds from a small computer chip and miniature speaker at the press of a button. The price for each: $50.” 
  60. "Keith Scott". Blah Artists.
  61. 61.0 61.1 "Voice(s) of Road Runner". Behind the Voice Actors.
  62. "Voice of Road Runner in Mad" (in en-US). Behind The Voice Actors.
  63. "Voice of Road Runner in Robot Chicken". Behind The Voice Actors.
  64. "Small Details You Missed In The Shining". Looper.
  65. Siskel, Gene (July 25, 1979). "'Villain' is like Road Runner, but it isn't funny". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Media Services. p. 10, s. 3. Archived from the original on October 12, 2019. Retrieved March 13, 2023.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  66. Pierson, Robin (August 7, 2009). "Episode 2: I Never Met The Dead Man".
  67. "Wile E. Piphany - S6 EP1 - Robot Chicken". Adult Swim.
  68. "The FuMP: Operation: Desert Storm by Tom Smith".
  69. "THE STORY BEHIND THE SONG: "We're Not Gonna Take It" by Twisted Sister". Rocking in the Norselands.
  70. Frazier, Ian, "Coyote v. Acme Archived 2018-10-16 at the Wayback Machine", The New Yorker, February 26, 1990, p. 42.
  71. Frazier, Ian (2002). Coyote v. Acme, 1st, New York: Picador USA. ISBN 0312420587. 


External links[]


v - e - d
Media
Franchises:

Shorts:
Television: The Bugs Bunny ShowThe Porky Pig ShowThe Road Runner ShowThe Merrie Melodies ShowSylvester and TweetyThe Daffy Duck ShowThe Daffy/Speedy ShowLooney Tunes on NickelodeonMerrie Melodies Starring Bugs Bunny and FriendsThat's Warner Bros.!Bugs N' Daffy
Feature Films: The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner MovieThe Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny MovieBugs Bunny's 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit TalesDaffy Duck's Fantastic IslandDaffy Duck's QuackbustersSpace JamThe Looney Tunes Hall of FameLooney Tunes: Back in Action
Specials: Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie GhouliesCarnival of the AnimalsBugs Bunny's Easter FunniesBugs Bunny in SpaceBugs Bunny's Howl-o-Ween SpecialA Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's CourtBugs Bunny's ValentineBugs Bunny's Looney Christmas TalesHow Bugs Bunny Won the WestThe Bugs Bunny Mother's Day SpecialBugs Bunny's Thanksgiving DietDaffy Duck's Easter SpecialBugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All OverThe Bugs Bunny Mystery SpecialDaffy Duck's Thanks-For-Giving SpecialBugs Bunny: All American HeroBugs Bunny's Mad World of TelevisionAn Ounce of PreventionBugs vs. Daffy: Battle of the Music Video StarsBugs Bunny's Wild World of SportsHappy Birthday Bugs! 50 Looney YearsBugs Bunny's Overtures to DisasterBugs Bunny's Creature FeaturesBugs Bunny's Lunar Tunes

Characters
Main characters: Barnyard DawgBeaky BuzzardBugs BunnyCecil TurtleCharlie DogClaude CatDaffy DuckElmer FuddFoghorn LeghornGossamerGrannyHector the BulldogHenery HawkHippety HopperHubie and BertieLola BunnyMac and ToshMarc Anthony and PussyfootMarvin the MartianMichigan J. FrogMiss PrissyPenelope PussycatPepé Le PewPete PumaPorky PigRalph WolfRoad RunnerSam SheepdogSpeedy GonzalesSylvesterSylvester Jr.TazThe CrusherTweety BirdWile E. CoyoteWitch HazelYosemite Sam

Minor characters: Blacque Jacque ShellacqueBoskoThe CrusherGiovanni JonesYoyo DodoTasmanian She-DevilMelissa DuckHugo the Abominable SnowmanSpike and ChesterNasty CanastaThe GremlinPrivate SnafuPetunia PigPlayboy PenguinShropshire SlasherCount BloodcountMama BuzzardColonel ShuffleEgghead Jr.Owl JolsonToro the BullRocky and MugsyMinah BirdInkiBeansLittle KittyHam And ExOliver OwlPiggyGabby GoatBuddyHoneySlowpoke RodriguezThe Three BearsFoxyK-9A. FleaSnifflesConstruction WorkerFrisky PuppyRalph MouseHoney BunnyRoxyThe Martin BrothersRalph PhillipsClyde BunnyFauntleroy FlipDr. I.Q. HiGruesome GorillaSloppy MoeHatta MariBusinessmanThe WeaselWiloughbyThe Two Curious PuppiesCool CatBabbit and CatstelloInstant MartiansBobo the ElephantColonel RimfireSmokey The GenieJose and ManuelMerlin the Magic Mouse and Second BananaConrad the CatAngus MacRoryBanty RoosterThree Little PigsTom TurkeyGoopy GeerNelly the GiraffeAla BahmaDr. LorreCottontail SmithBunny and ClaudeClaude HopperThe Hep CatThe Drunk StorkThe CatSinging CatSouthern SheriffOld Woman's CanaryOld Woman's CatBluebeardPorky's Drunken FriendsOld WomanLittle Red Riding Hood's Grandma • Little Red Riding Hood (Little Red Walking Hood/Little Red Riding Rabbit/Goldilocks and the Jivin' Bears) • Goldilocks (The Bear's Tale/Goldilocks and the Jivin' Bears) • The CrowKing ArthurKing Arthur's Knights

Studios
Warner Bros. CartoonsDePatie-Freleng EnterprisesFormat FilmsChuck Jones EnterprisesReel FX
People
Dave BarryWarren BatchelderMel BlancTed BonnicksenArthur Q. BryanBill ButlerBob ClampettRuss DysonMilt FranklynFriz FrelengManny GouldGeorge GrandpreKen HarrisHugh HarmanRochelle HudsonRudolf IsingUb IwerksChuck JonesCarman MaxwellNorman McCabeChuck McKimsonRobert McKimsonTom McKimsonWillian LavaLou LillyMichael MalteseTedd PierceHawley PrattTom RayVirgil RossLeon SchlesingerRob ScribnerEddie SelzerCarl StallingLarry Storch
Music/Songs
A Hot Time in the Old Town TonightWhistle and Blow Your Blues AwayI Think You're DuckyThe Merry-Go-Round Broke DownMerrily We Roll Along
Other


v - e - d
Media
Shows: Tiny Toon AdventuresThe Plucky Duck ShowPinky, Elmyra & the BrainTiny Toons Looniversity

Film and Specials: How I Spent My VacationSpring BreakTiny Toons' Night Ghoulery

Video games: 1991 LCD video game1991 NES video gameCartoon WorkshopBabs' Big BreakTrouble in WackylandMontana's Movie MadnessBuster's Hidden TreasureBuster Busts Loose!Cancelled Atari Jaguar video gameWacky Sports ChallengeACME All-StarsBuster and the BeanstalkThe Great BeanstalkToonensteinPlucky's Big AdventureBuster Saves the DayDizzy's Candy QuestWacky StackersBuster's Bad DreamDefenders of the Universe (cancelled)

Characters
Main characters: Buster BunnyBabs BunnyPlucky DuckHamton J. PigDizzy DevilShirley the LoonFurrballSweetie BirdLittle BeeperCalamity CoyoteLi'l SneezerFifi La FumeElmyra DuffMontana MaxTyrone Turtle

Looney Tunes guest stars: Bugs BunnyDaffy DuckTweetySylvesterTasmanian DevilWile E. Coyote and the Road RunnerMichigan J. Frog

Perfecto Prep alumni: Roderick RatRhubella RatDanforth Drake

Other villains: Duck VaderDr. Gene SplicerSilas WonderGotcha GrabmoreMr. HitcherTupelo ToadSandy Witch

Other notable characters: Ralph the GuardCooper DaVilleMelvin the MonsterMitziRoverMarcia the MartianGrovellySteven SpielbergBanjo the PossumJohnny PewOrson Whales

Episodes
Season 1: "The Looney Beginning" • "A Quack in the Quarks" • "The Wheel o' Comedy" • "Test Stressed" • "The Buster Bunny Bunch" • "Her Wacky Highness" • "Hollywood Plucky" • "Journey to the Center of Acme Acres" • "It's Buster Bunny Time" • "Stuff That Goes Bump in the Night" • "Looking Out for the Little Guy" • "Starting from Scratch" • "Citizen Max" • "Hare Raising Night" • "Furrball Follies" • "The Acme Acres Zone" • "Life in the 90's" • "Rock 'n' Roar" • "Prom-ise Her Anything" • "Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow" • "Cinemaniacs!" • "You Asked for It" • "Gang Busters" • "Wake Up Call of the Wild" • "Buster and the Wolverine" • "You Asked for It, Part II" • "Europe in 30 Minutes" • "The Wacko World of Sports" • "Rainy Daze" • "Fields of Honey" • "Sawdust and Toonsil" • "Spring in Acme Acres" • "Psychic Fun-Omenon Day" • "The Wide World of Elmyra" • "A Ditch in Time" • "Animaniacs!" • "Career Oppor-Toon-ities" • "Strange Tales of Weird Science" • "Inside Plucky Duck" • "The Acme Bowl" • "Dating, Acme Acres Style" • "Looniversity Daze" • "Best 'o Plucky Duck Day" • "Hero Hamton" • "Whale's Tales" • "Ask Mr. Popular" • "Son of Looniversity Daze" • "Mr. Popular's Rules of Cool" • "Fairy Tales for the 90's" • "Who Bopped Bugs Bunny?" • "Tiny Toons Music Television" • "The Return to the Acme Acres Zone" • "The Acme Home Shopping Show" • "Weirdest Stories Ever Told" • "Viewer Mail Day" • "Son of the Wacko World of Sports" • "Pollution Solution" • "You Asked for It, Again" • "Brave Tales of Real Rabbits" • "How Sweetie It Is" • "New Character Day" • "Here's Hamton" • "No Toon is an Island" • "K-ACME TV" • "High Toon"

Season 2: "Pledge Week" • "Going Places" • "Elephant Issues" • "Hog-Wild Hamton" • "Playtime Toons" • "Toon Physics" • "Acme Cable TV" • "Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian" • "Henny Youngman Day" • "Love Disconnection" • "Kon Ducki" • "Sepulveda Boulevard" • "Take Elmyra, Please"

Season 3: "Thirteensomething" • "New Class Day" • "Fox Trot" • "What Makes Toons Tick" • "Flea for Your Life" • "The Return of Batduck" • "Toons Take Over" • "Toons from the Crypt" • "Two-Tone Town" • "Buster's Directorial Debut" • "Washingtoon" • "Toon TV" • "Grandma's Dead" • "Music Day" • "The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain" • "Sports Shorts" • "Weekday Afternoon Live" • "A Cat's Eye View" • "Best of Buster Day" • "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toon Christmas Special"

Songs
Theme song
Objects
Locations
Acme AcresAcme LooniversityWackylandMontana Max's mansion
See also
AnimaniacsPinky and the BrainFreakazoid!Histeria!


v - e - d
Media
Media: Taz-Mania (Episodes)
Characters
Taz's family: TazHughJeanMollyJake

Hotel Tazmania staff: Bushwhacker BobMumConstance KoalaMr. Thickly
Outback characters: Digeri DingoWendal T. WolfFrancis X. Bushlad
Minor characters: Bull and Axl GatorBuddy BoarDaniel and Timothy PlatypusThe KeeweeThe BushratsWillie Wombat

Episodes
Season 1: "The Dog the Turtle Story" • "Like Father, Like Son" / "Frights of Passage" • "War & Pieces" / "Airbourne Airhead" • "It's No Picnic" / "Kee-Wee ala King" • "A Devil of a Job" • "Battling Bushrats" / "Devil in the Deep Blue Sea" • "Woeful Wolf" • "Devil with the Violet Dress On" / "Kidnapped Koala" • "Mishap in the Mist" / "Toothache Taz" • "Here, Kitty, Kitty, Kitty" / "Enter the Devil" • "Bewitched Bob" • "Instant Replay" / "Taz and the Pterodactyl" • "Comic Madness" / "Blunders Never Cease"

Season 2: "Amazing Shrinking Taz & Co." • "Oh, Brother" / "Taz-Babies" • "Jake's Big Date" / "Taz Live" • "A Midsummer Night's Scream" / "Astro Taz" • "Tazmanian Lullaby" / "Deer Taz" / "A Taz-Manian Moment" • "The Outer Taz-Manian Zone" / "Here, Kitty, Kitty, Kitty, Part 2" • "Taz-Mania's Funniest Home Videos" / "Bottle Cap Blues" • "Hypnotazed" / "Mum's n' Taz's" • "Boys Just Wanna Have Fun" / "Unhappy Together" • "Food for Thought" / "Gone to Pieces" • "Kee-Wee Cornered" / "But Is It Taz?" • "Mall Wrecked" / "A Dingo's Guide to Magic" • "The Man from M.A.R.S." / "Friends for Strife"
Season 3: "Wacky Wombat" / "Molly's Folly" • "A Flea for Me" / "A Young Taz's Fancy" • "Never Cry Taz" / "Bully for Bull" • "Of Bushrats and Hugh" • "Merit Badgered" • "Devil Indemnity" • "Willie Wombat's Deja Boo-Boo" / "To Catch a Taz" • "The Thing that Ate the Outback" / "Because It's There" • "Antenna Dilemma" / "Autograph Pound" • "Taz and the Emu Egg" / "Willy Wombat's Last Stand" / "K-Taz Commercial" • "Doubting Dingo" / "Sub Commander Taz" • "Feed a Cold" / "Sidekick for a Day" • "No Time for Christmas"
Season 4: "Road to Tazmania" • "Taz-Manian Theatre" / "The Bushrats Must Be Crazy" • "Return of the Road to Taz-Mania Strikes Back" • "Taz Like Dingo" • "The Pied Piper of Taz-Mania" / "The Treasure of the Burnt Sienna" • "Not a Shadow of a Doubt" / "Nursemaid Taz" • "Home Despair" / "Take All of Me" • "Bird-Brained Beast" / "Ready, Willing, Unable" • "We'll Always Have Taz-Mania" / "Moments You've Missed" • "Sidekicked" / "Gone with the Windbag" • "Driving Mr. Taz" / "Mean Bear" / "Taz Museum" • "Ticket Taker Taz" / "Taz2" • "Mutton for Nothing" / "Dr. Wendal and Mr. Taz" • "Taz-Mania Confidential" / "The Platypi Psonic Psensation Psimulator" • "The Not-So-Gladiators" / "One Ring Taz" • "Retakes Not Included" / "Pledge Dredge" • "Bushlad's Lament" / "Taz-Mania Comedy Institute" • "Heartbreak Taz" / "Just Be 'Cuz" • "The Taz Story Primer" / "Ask Taz" • "It's a Taz's Life" / "Gee Bull!" • "Taz in Keeweeland" / "Stuck for Bucks" / "A Philosophical Taz Moment" • "The Origin of the Beginning of the Incredible Taz-Man" / "Francis Takes a Stand" • "Yet Another Road to Taz-Mania" • "Bad Luck Bottlecap" / "A Story with a Moral" • "One Saturday in Taz-Mania" / "Platypi on Film"


v - e - d
Media
Duck Dodgers in the 24½th CenturyDuck Dodgers and the Return of the 24½th CenturyTV series (episodes) • Video gameDaffy Duck: The Marvin Missions
Characters
Duck DodgersThe Eager Young Space CadetMartian Commander X-2Commander K-9Queen Tyr'ahneeDr. I.Q. HiCaptain Star JohnsonMartian CenturionLezah the WickedMichigan J. FrogMartian GophersGreen Lantern CorpsK'Chutha Sa'amTasmanian WarriorThe FuddNasty CanastaDrake DarkstarMartian General Z-9Captain LongCaptain Dallas RodmanMaster Sergeant Emily Dickinson JonesBigfootCounselor DishInstant MartiansCatapoidsCount MuerteSinestroDr. WoeArchduke ZagAlien HuntersManinsuitBaby-Faced MoonbeamCommandante HilgalgoCrusherPhantom ShadowAndromeda AnnihilatorBlack EelMagnificent RogueVictor Von BoogiemanDr. ManiacHubie and BertieSkunderbellyWhooshSerpenti Crime FamilyCamomanNew CadetHappy CatGreen Lantern / Hal JordanAgent YoshimiThe President of SpaceRobotoDr. Psy Q. HiSteve BostonChancellor Flippauralius and King Great WhiteRona VipraHungortusFlame ValetCounselor CombustionMaster MolochPrincess IncenseRocky and MugsyDave MustainePorko, Puerco and SowCassiopeiaHella, Ramona and AngelicaPaprika SoloNinaAurora SoleilTheresaWinifred ChaticleerMiss BetsyMalykaEllomoldSamantha de la TorturaMina SupernovaEmiliaGeorgiaHelgaDrake DarkstarLoni Anderson Blonde ReporterComputer User GirlJeon ParkTaffyMaria BlazeEricaPrincess AlexandraCynthia The Beach NursesPandora
Episodes
Season 1: The Trial of Duck DodgersBig Bug MamasThe Fowl FriendThe Fast and the FeatheryDuck DeceptionThe Spy Who Didn't Love MeDuck CodgersWhere's Baby Smartypants?I'm Going to Get You Fat SuckaDetained DuckK-9 KaddyPig of ActionShiver Me DodgersThe Wrath of CanastaThey Stole Dodgers' BrainThe Green LoonternQuarterback QuackTo Love A DuckHooray For Hollywood PlanetThe Queen Is WildBack To The AcademyEnemy YoursDuck Departure

Season 2: Pig PlanetInvictus InterruptusPet PeevedThe Menace of ManinsuitK-9 QuarryTalent Show A Go-GoThe Love of A FatherThe New CadetThe Love DuckThe FuddThe Mark of XeroI See Duck PeopleDeathmatch DuckDeconstructing DodgersM.M.O.R.P.D.Old McDodgersDiva DeliveryCastle HighSurf The StarsSamurai QuackOf Course You Know This Means War And Peace (Part 1 and 2)
Season 3:

Locations
Transports
Objects/Weapons
Songs
Space AngelBlues in the Night
See also
Warner Bros. CartoonsWarner Bros. AnimationLooney TunesMerrie MelodiesTiny Toon Adventures


v - e - d
Media
Characters
Bugs BunnyDaffy DuckPorky PigTina RussoLola BunnyPetunia PigGrannyYosemite SamMarvin the MartianTasmanian DevilElmer FuddThe CrusherPete PumaWitch HazelFoghorn LeghornMac and ToshSpeedy GonzalesGiovanni JonesCecil TurtleGossamerPepe Le PewSylvesterTweetyWile E. Coyote and the Road Runner
Episodes
Locations
Transportations
Songs
See also


v - e - d
Media
Characters
Episodes
Locations
Songs
Objects
Merchandise
See also


v - e - d
Media
Shows: Tiny Toon AdventuresThe Plucky Duck ShowPinky, Elmyra & the BrainTiny Toons Looniversity

Film and Specials: How I Spent My VacationSpring BreakTiny Toons' Night Ghoulery

Video games: 1991 LCD video game1991 NES video gameCartoon WorkshopBabs' Big BreakTrouble in WackylandMontana's Movie MadnessBuster's Hidden TreasureBuster Busts Loose!Cancelled Atari Jaguar video gameWacky Sports ChallengeACME All-StarsBuster and the BeanstalkThe Great BeanstalkToonensteinPlucky's Big AdventureBuster Saves the DayDizzy's Candy QuestWacky StackersBuster's Bad DreamDefenders of the Universe (cancelled)

Characters
Main characters: Buster BunnyBabs BunnyPlucky DuckHamton J. PigDizzy DevilShirley the LoonFurrballSweetie BirdLittle BeeperCalamity CoyoteLi'l SneezerFifi La FumeElmyra DuffMontana MaxTyrone Turtle

Looney Tunes guest stars: Bugs BunnyDaffy DuckTweetySylvesterTasmanian DevilWile E. Coyote and the Road RunnerMichigan J. Frog

Perfecto Prep alumni: Roderick RatRhubella RatDanforth Drake

Other villains: Duck VaderDr. Gene SplicerSilas WonderGotcha GrabmoreMr. HitcherTupelo ToadSandy Witch

Other notable characters: Ralph the GuardCooper DaVilleMelvin the MonsterMitziRoverMarcia the MartianGrovellySteven SpielbergBanjo the PossumJohnny PewOrson Whales

Episodes
Season 1: "The Looney Beginning" • "A Quack in the Quarks" • "The Wheel o' Comedy" • "Test Stressed" • "The Buster Bunny Bunch" • "Her Wacky Highness" • "Hollywood Plucky" • "Journey to the Center of Acme Acres" • "It's Buster Bunny Time" • "Stuff That Goes Bump in the Night" • "Looking Out for the Little Guy" • "Starting from Scratch" • "Citizen Max" • "Hare Raising Night" • "Furrball Follies" • "The Acme Acres Zone" • "Life in the 90's" • "Rock 'n' Roar" • "Prom-ise Her Anything" • "Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow" • "Cinemaniacs!" • "You Asked for It" • "Gang Busters" • "Wake Up Call of the Wild" • "Buster and the Wolverine" • "You Asked for It, Part II" • "Europe in 30 Minutes" • "The Wacko World of Sports" • "Rainy Daze" • "Fields of Honey" • "Sawdust and Toonsil" • "Spring in Acme Acres" • "Psychic Fun-Omenon Day" • "The Wide World of Elmyra" • "A Ditch in Time" • "Animaniacs!" • "Career Oppor-Toon-ities" • "Strange Tales of Weird Science" • "Inside Plucky Duck" • "The Acme Bowl" • "Dating, Acme Acres Style" • "Looniversity Daze" • "Best 'o Plucky Duck Day" • "Hero Hamton" • "Whale's Tales" • "Ask Mr. Popular" • "Son of Looniversity Daze" • "Mr. Popular's Rules of Cool" • "Fairy Tales for the 90's" • "Who Bopped Bugs Bunny?" • "Tiny Toons Music Television" • "The Return to the Acme Acres Zone" • "The Acme Home Shopping Show" • "Weirdest Stories Ever Told" • "Viewer Mail Day" • "Son of the Wacko World of Sports" • "Pollution Solution" • "You Asked for It, Again" • "Brave Tales of Real Rabbits" • "How Sweetie It Is" • "New Character Day" • "Here's Hamton" • "No Toon is an Island" • "K-ACME TV" • "High Toon"

Season 2: "Pledge Week" • "Going Places" • "Elephant Issues" • "Hog-Wild Hamton" • "Playtime Toons" • "Toon Physics" • "Acme Cable TV" • "Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian" • "Henny Youngman Day" • "Love Disconnection" • "Kon Ducki" • "Sepulveda Boulevard" • "Take Elmyra, Please"

Season 3: "Thirteensomething" • "New Class Day" • "Fox Trot" • "What Makes Toons Tick" • "Flea for Your Life" • "The Return of Batduck" • "Toons Take Over" • "Toons from the Crypt" • "Two-Tone Town" • "Buster's Directorial Debut" • "Washingtoon" • "Toon TV" • "Grandma's Dead" • "Music Day" • "The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain" • "Sports Shorts" • "Weekday Afternoon Live" • "A Cat's Eye View" • "Best of Buster Day" • "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toon Christmas Special"

Songs
Theme song
Objects
Locations
Acme AcresAcme LooniversityWackylandMontana Max's mansion
See also
AnimaniacsPinky and the BrainFreakazoid!Histeria!


v - e - d
Media
Looney Tunes: Back in ActionSoundtrackVideo gameVideo
Characters
Live-action: D.J. DrakeKate HoughtonMr. ChairmanDamian DrakeDusty TailsBob Smith

Animated:

Locations
Temple of the Blue Monkey
Vehicles
Objects
Blue Monkey
Songs/Music/Soundtrack
See Also
Looney TunesMerrie MelodiesSpace Jam


v - e - d
Media
Space Jam (video game/soundtrack/video) • Space Jam: A New Legacy (soundtrack/video)
Characters
Space Jam: Bugs BunnyLola BunnyDaffy DuckPorky PigMichael JordanElmer FuddSylvester the CatTweety BirdTasmanian DevilMr. SwackhammerThe NerdlucksYosemite SamGrannyFoghorn LeghornMarvin the MartianStanley PodolakWile E. Coyote and the Road RunnerPepé Le PewSpeedy GonzalesSylvester JuniorPete PumaToro the BullHenery HawkPorky's Drunken FriendsHector the BulldogGruesome GorillaThe CrusherMama BuzzardWitch HazelThree BearsThe Martin BrothersSpike and ChesterSnifflesRocky and MugsyMarc Anthony and PussyfootAla BahmaAngus MacRoryBarnyard DawgBeaky BuzzardBobo the ElephantSlowpoke RodriguezThe WeaselLittle Red Riding HoodMichigan J. FrogCharlie DogCecil TurtleClaude CatGiovanni JonesGossamerOwl JolsonRalph Wolf and Sam SheepdogHippety HopperAngus MacRoryJuanita JordanJeffery JordanMarcus JordanJasmine JordanBill MurrayLarry Bird

Space Jam: A New Legacy: LeBron JamesDom JamesAl-G RhythmBatmanParzivalJokerNolan SorrentoI-R0kPeteScooby-DooShaggy RogersSupermanGandalfHarry PotterThe MaskIron GiantKing KongEmmet BrickowskiWyldstyleMax RockatanskyAustin PowersRick BlaineIlsa LundArya StarkDrogonNeoScorpionSub-ZeroMumbleOsmosis JonesDorothy GaleTotoScarecrowTin WoodmanCowardly LionSloth Fratelli GizmoFred FlintstoneBarney RubbleYogi BearGeorge JetsonLloyd GarmadonUnikittyBennyWilly WonkaFrodo BagginsMetalbeardSamwise GamgeeLegolasGimliHermione GrangerRonald WeasleyWonder WomanThe FlashAquamanCyborgGreen LanternAlfred PennyworthKaiColeJayZaneMaster WuNyaLeah EstrogenTrinityImperator FuriosaShazamRobinBatgirlFinnJakeStarfireRavenBeast BoyBlossomBubblesButtercupRick SanchezMorty SmithMikey WalshBrand WalshChunk CohenMouth DevereauxData WangAndy CarmichaelStef SteinbrennerLord VoldemortLex LuthorSauronAgent SmithItThe Wicked Witch of the WestLord BusinessStripeImmortan JoeDr. EvilDorian TyrellFreddy KruegerJason VoorheesJack TorranceMechagodzillaSarumanGollumTwo-FaceThe PenguinCatwomanThe RiddlerHarley QuinnMaster ChenThraxShang TsungSinestroBaneScarecrowPoison IvyMr. FreezeBlack AdamDeathstrokeShao KahnDarkseidGoon Squad

Music
Theme SongFly Like an Eagle • The Winner • I Believe I Can FlyHit 'Em High (The Monstars' Anthem) • I Found My Smile Again • For You I WillUpside Down ('Round-N-'Round) • Givin' U All That I've Got • Basketball JonesPump Up the JamI Turn to You • All of My Days • That's the Way (I Like It) • Buggin' • JumpEverybody Wants to Rule the WorldTom Sawyer • The Crowd Go Crazy • We're Not Gonna Take It • Space Jam Rap Battle • Man in the Mirror
Locations
Moron MountainLooney Tune LandThe Tune StadiumSchlesinger GymServer-verse • Harry Potter World • DC World • Mad Max World • Austin Powers World • Casablanca World • Game of Thrones World • The Wizard of Oz World • The Matrix World • Wonder Woman World • The LEGO Movie World • The Lord of the Rings World • The Mask World • Ready Player One World • Scooby-Doo World • The Flintstones World • The Jetsons World • Yogi Bear World • Gremlins World • The Goonies World • Beetlejuice World • Ninjago World • Adventure Time World • The Powerpuff Girls World • Teen Titans Go! World
See Also
Looney TunesMerrie MelodiesLooney Tunes: Back in ActionTune SquadList of cameos in Space JamSpace Jam/Gallery Space Jam/TranscriptDom Ball


v - e - d
Media
Characters
Episodes
Locations
Objects
Songs
Transportations
See also


v - e - d
Comics
DC Comics: JokerLex LuthorDeathstroke
Shorts
Warner Bros. Cartoons: The CrowBeaky BuzzardBluebeardRocky and MugsyYosemite SamElmer FuddMarvin the MartianWile E. CoyoteGossamerThe CrusherWitch HazelToro the Bull
Animated Productions
Animated films: RuberMr. SwackhammerKent MansleyThraxLord BusinessHunterKralahomeDrakeDarla DimpleRockyKing SalazarQueen GnorgaKing LlortMouse KingMouse Queen

Animated television: MandarkSnowballDelightful Children From Down The LaneRed GuyMojo JojoHIMFuzzy LumpkinsThe Gangreen GangFatherTerrenceKing SandyJokerLex LuthorAlexander Luthor Jr.DeathstrokeBlackfireMr. FreezeMr. FizzPrincess MorbucksThe Rowdyruff BoysMr. BossCree LincolnChad DicksonQueen Tyr'ahneeHella, Ramona and AngelicaWinifred ChanticleerNew CadetDrake DarkstarArchduke ZagCounselor DishCatapoidsSinestroRona VipraGeorgiaHelgaEmiliaMartian CenturionCaptain LongThe FuddMartian Commander X-2QuackerCrazy Robot

Live-action Productions
Live-action films: Léon RomMr. ChairmanJokerLex LuthorDeathstrokeLord VoldemortQuirinus QuirrellNaginiThe BasiliskThe Mountain TrollThe Hungarian HorntailDolores UmbridgeDraco MalfoyLucius MalfoyShang TsungFulton GreenwayDorian TyrellThomas GriffinThe Grand High WitchJack TorranceOliver PorterPennywisePazuzu
Video games
Mr. Chairman