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Select a new quote attributed to a different character than any of those currently quoted below. (For quote samples and episode titles, see Wikiquote:Special:Search/Cartoon Network .) Quotes must be from an Cartoon Network original series, and attributed to that episode in the Quote subpage.
Calvin and Hobbes is a daily American comic strip created by cartoonist Bill Watterson that was syndicated from November 18, 1985, to December 31, 1995. Commonly described as "the last great newspaper comic", [2] [3] [4] Calvin and Hobbes has enjoyed enduring popularity, influence, and academic and even a philosophical interest.
Born in Lebanon, Indiana, Saunders enjoyed newspaper comics as a youth, and he practiced drawing them.After graduating from Wabash College in 1920, he taught French there for seven years while working in the summers on his M.A. at the University of Chicago and taking night classes at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
A gag cartoon (a.k.a. panel cartoon or gag panel) is most often a single-panel cartoon, usually including a hand-lettered or typeset caption beneath the drawing. A pantomime cartoon carries no caption. In some cases, dialogue may appear in speech balloons, following the common convention of comic strips.
These Pixar films and shorts contain the following references to Finding Nemo and Finding Dory: Monsters, Inc. On the wall behind the sushi chef at Harryhausen's, there is a clownfish. [6] Before Mike says "And he is....outta here!" as Sulley is throwing Randall through a door to the motor home from A Bug's Life, Nemo can be seen hanging on the ...
Zippy the Pinhead is a fictional character who is the protagonist of Zippy, an American comic strip created by Bill Griffith.Zippy's most famous quotation, "Are we having fun yet?", appears in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations and became a catchphrase.
Thinking outside the box (also thinking out of the box [1] [2] or thinking beyond the box and, especially in Australia, thinking outside the square [3]) is an idiom that means to think differently, unconventionally, or from a new perspective. The phrase also often refers to novel or creative thinking.
Beany and Cecil was created by animator Bob Clampett [3] after he quit Warner Bros., where he had been directing short cartoon movies.Clampett is said to have originated the idea for Cecil when he was a boy after seeing the top half of the dinosaur swimming from the water at the end of the 1925 movie The Lost World.