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Besides the 98 episodes, two specials aired: "Tiny Toons Spring Break" and "Tiny Toons' Night Ghoulery". [1] A direct-to-video release, the 79-minute Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation, was released on March 17, 1992, serving as the series finale [citation needed] in production order [citation needed].
Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of "Acme Acres", where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live. The characters attend "Acme Looniversity", a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Wile E. Coyote and Elmer Fudd.
The Tiny Toon Adventures animated television series features an extensive cast of characters. The show's central characters are mostly various forms of anthropomorphic animals, based on Looney Tunes characters from earlier films and shows. In the series, the characters attend a high school called Acme Looniversity, set in the cartoon community ...
All 12 Sniffles cartoons were included on that Looney Tunes Mouse Chronicles: The Chuck Jones Collection DVD and Blu-ray set. The 1990 television series Tiny Toon Adventures features a younger counterpart to Sniffles named Li'l Sneezer, a baby mouse with a propensity for having hurricane-force sneezes.
* Cartoon Network has dropped the official trailer for Tiny Toons Looniversity, which will premiere on Saturday, Sept. 9 (9 am) and air weekly in that time slot. Meanwhile, Max subscribers can ...
The theme song is a rendition of the Tiny Toons theme, set to the same music, but with Plucky himself as the subject of the song. Some of the lyrics were reused in the Tiny Toons episode "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special". After the show was canceled, "Batduck" was edited and added in as an episode of Tiny Toons.
Tiny Toons Looniversity is an American animated sitcom developed by Erin Gibson and Nate Cash for Cartoon Network and Max. It serves as a reboot of Tiny Toon Adventures and features older versions of the characters. Two seasons were ordered to be produced by Amblin Television and Warner Bros. Animation.
The film later aired on Fox Kids on September 5, 1993, [16] as four Tiny Toon Adventures episodes, episodes 97 through 100. [14] Warner Home Video began to release the Tiny Toon Adventures series on DVD, in volumes, on July 29, 2008. [17] The company released How I Spent My Vacation for the first time on DVD on August 21, 2012. [18]