Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A shaggy dog (played by Lloyd Perryman [3]) is the guard at a farm's chicken coop when a lip-smacking weasel comes along, intending to gain access to the chickens. And, never one to side with a canine, Foghorn Leghorn opts to help the weasel by trying to violently remove the guard dog.
Loyal Heart Dog Care Bears: One of the Care Bear Cousins. He has blue fur with a white heart-shaped patch over one eye, and his tummy symbol is a red heart-shaped medal. Lucky Pound Puppies: Golden Retriever/German Shepherd: Lucky is the leader of the Shelter 17 Pound Puppies unit. He is the main character of the series.
Hollywood Canine Canteen is a 1946 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Robert McKimson. [2] The short was released on April 20, 1946. [3] The cartoon features various caricatures of Hollywood film celebrities and famous jazz musicians of the day, all zoomorphized as dogs.
The Mumbly Cartoon Show: A detective dog famous for his wheezy laugh who dresses up in a trenchcoat and solves crimes using his dog senses, paroding television detective Columbo. Mungo generic Mary, Mungo and Midge (British) Mary's dog; about a girl and her dog and her pet mouse Midge who lived in a tower block in a busy town. Mussel Mutt Sheepdog
Captain Tully (voiced by Yvette Nicole Brown) is a retired search and rescue alaskan husky with two different colored eyes, and mentor to the trio. Long before getting her job, she was a stray pup until she met a dog who took her to a dog school where she received food and shelter. Coop (voiced by Ramone Hamilton) is the tech-savvy chicken.
The video showcases a scene that any dog lover would find irresistible: several dogs, exhausted from an hour of running hard at a local park, struggle to keep their eyes open during the ride back ...
The cartoon was released on July 2, 1949, and features Foghorn Leghorn, Henery Hawk and the Barnyard Dawg. [2] It is the first Foghorn Leghorn cartoon featuring Stephen Foster's "Camptown Races", a song that would be featured in every Foghorn Leghorn cartoon following this with the exceptions of A Fractured Leghorn, Of Rice and Hen and Banty Raids.
Dawg's first appearance was in Walky Talky Hawky (1946), the same Henery Hawk cartoon in which Foghorn himself debuted. [8] Although, in that cartoon, Dawg initiates hostilities with Foghorn by dropping a watermelon on his head (prompting Foghorn to grumble "Every day, it's the same thing!"), Dawg is usually seen sleeping in his doghouse at a cartoon's beginning, with Foghorn provoking him by ...