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  2. Cartoon Pizza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartoon_Pizza

    Cartoon Pizza was an American animation studio located in Nashville, Tennessee. It was co-founded by Jim Jinkins and David Campbell as the successor to Jinkins' former company, Jumbo Pictures . The studio had partnered with several studios to help produce their shows, including Disney in 2001, Sesame Workshop in 2006, and Cuppa Coffee Studios .

  3. The Pizza Head Show - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pizza_Head_Show

    In the early 1990s, Pizza Hut sought to attract children and pre-teenagers to build its dine-in business. [1] Through comedy writer Walter Williams and San Francisco advertising agency Goodby, Silverstein & Partners, Pizza Hut created The Pizza Head Show, a series of television commercials [1] to convey the message that Pizza Hut meant "weird fun". [2]

  4. Cuppa Coffee Studios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuppa_Coffee_Studios

    The Cartoon Cartoon Show ("Trevor!") (2000) Henry's World (2002–2004) (co-production with Family Channel, Alliance Atlantis and TV-Loonland AG) JoJo's Circus (2003–2007) (co-production with Walt Disney Television Animation and Cartoon Pizza for Playhouse Disney) The Wrong Coast (2004) (26x11 episodes) (co-production with Curious Pictures)

  5. The Noid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Noid

    The Noid is an advertising character for Domino's Pizza created in the 1980s [3] and briefly revived several times. Clad in a red, skin-tight, rabbit-eared body suit with a black N inscribed in a white circle on his chest, the Noid is a physical manifestation of all the challenges in delivering a pizza within 30 minutes. [4]

  6. File:Pizza Hut (2019).svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pizza_Hut_(2019).svg

    English: Longtime logo of Pizza Hut, introduced in 1974.Many older locations started with an earlier 1965 logo but were soon upgraded. In 1999 the logo was redesigned for the new millennium: the "red roof" shape was given a black outline, the dot in the I was changed to a green leaf shape, the wordmark was switched to script, and a yellow comet was added to underline the chain's name.

  7. Pizza Principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pizza_Principle

    A pizza parlor in New York City. The Pizza Principle, or the Pizza-Subway Connection, in New York City, is a humorous but generally historically accurate "economic law" proposed by native New Yorker Eric M. Bram. [1] He noted, as reported by The New York Times in 1980, that from the early 1960s "the price of a slice of pizza has matched, with uncanny precision, the cost of a New York subway ride."

  8. a.k.a. Cartoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A.k.a._Cartoon

    a.k.a. Cartoon created and produced The Brothers Grunt and Cartoon Sushi — both for MTV, as well as Cartoon Network's Ed, Edd n Eddy. [1] Since 2015, the studio has been working on several projects, including an animated pilot titled Snotrocket. The studio's original logo is a man, actually based on Danny himself being impaled by a giant pencil.

  9. A Pizza Tweety-Pie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Pizza_Tweety-Pie

    A Pizza Tweety-Pie is a 1958 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes animated cartoon directed by Friz Freleng. [2] The short was released on February 22, 1958, and stars Tweety, Sylvester and Granny. [3] Mel Blanc provides the voices of Sylvester (speaking in an Italian accent) and Tweety, and June Foray (uncredited) provides Granny's voice. It’s also the ...