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@thatdaffyduck That shot at 0:31, I remember when it got recycled into "Fiesta Fiasco" ten years later, and of course I pointed that out in a YTP...
@wesleylj12 Heh, and then "Wabbit"/"New Looney Tunes" was actually more or less Warner Bros. Animation's answer to Paul Rudish's Mickey Mouse cartoons!
Ash Ketchum may not have been a great trainer at times, but it was great we got to follow his adventures with Pikachu for the past 25 years, and he's finally achieved his dream of becoming a Pokémon Master. Good luck in the coming future, Ash and Pikachu!
@ShadowyWulf @NostalgiaCity2 And it was also because too many people complained about it being an insult to the Looney Tunes, and eventually Warner Bros. agreed it was a big mistake. Same with "Shaggy and Scooby-Doo Get a Clue," a similar reboot that made the main characters fight crime with superpowers.
Interestring how the Paul Coker Jr. refined his Frosty the Snowman design; compare the original 1969 design with as he appeared in the 1976 sequel "Frosty's Winter Wonderland". He slimmed down a bit and donned a scarf, and his eye pupils got bigger. #FrostyTheSnowman
@TonyGinorioJr @Comedy4anim Same with this bit from "Rabbit Seasoning" (1952)...
@ScoobyandCam It always blew my mind that the episode's three monsters and the fortuneteller were all the same person. I even commissioned this fanart of the villain, Big Bob Oakley, disguising as Scooby-Doo! (Given his mastery of disguise, it's not too farfetched.)
@scoobyhistory It always blew my mind that the episode's three monsters and the fortuneteller were all the same person. I even commissioned this fanart of the villain, Big Bob Oakley, disguising as Scooby-Doo! (Given his mastery of disguise, it's not too farfetched.)
@STX488 Or maybe Ratigan vs. Owen Decassle from that one episode of "What's New, Scooby-Doo?" Ratigan would REALLY be mad!