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Universal Pictures cartoons and characters (11 C, 48 P) UPA series and characters (1 C, 5 P) V. Vampires in animation (3 C) ... Pages in category "Animated characters"
CGI-animated child stars of Super Why! from PBS Kids: 1970s–1990s: Alphabet letters: 1990s–early 2000s: Animated letters who are in cereal Clip: AMC Theatres: 1991–2009: figure made out of discarded movie film who appears in the 'coming attractions' and 'feature presentation' trailers seen at AMC movie theaters. AMC Amazing Icons: 2012 ...
A promotional image of collectible Shizukuishi kyuun kyuun toilet paper, with images from the omorashi comic Iinari!Aibure-shon. Omorashi (Japanese: おもらし / オモラシ / お漏らし, "to wet oneself"), sometimes abbreviated as simply "omo", is a form of fetish subculture first categorized and predominately recognized in Japan, in which a person experiences arousal from the idea or ...
Li'l Sneezer (voiced by Billy West in 1990–1995 of the original series, Tessa Netting in Tiny Toons Looniversity), is based on the classic animated mouse Sniffles from the Looney Tunes shorts. However, his extremely talkative personality is based on Little Blabbermouse. He is a young, gray male mouse who wears a diaper.
This series is a compilation of animated sketches released on YouTube. The series, which aired several episodes a month, was originally sponsored by Burger King, who sponsored the first 10 shorts, with videos appearing on their official channel. The series was then sponsored by Priceline.com, and finally, Nike. There are a total of 50 episodes. [2]
First TV cartoon to be in colour; historic cartoon history landmark Herge's Adventures of Tintin: 104 Belgium 1957–1964 Captain Pugwash: 58 UK 1957–1998 The Adventures of Spunky and Tadpole: 19 US 1958–1961 Bozo: The World's Most Famous Clown: 156 US 1958–1962 The Huckleberry Hound Show: 68: US 1958–1962 Yogi Bear: 35 US 1958–1960
The Max Fleischer animated short "Ace of Spades" in 1931 displayed several characters reduced to bankruptcy wearing barrels. Will Johnstone's editorial-cartoon character "the Tax Payer", first published in the New York World-Telegram in 1933 and regularly thereafter, showed the taxpayer reduced to wearing a barrel for clothing.
Hallmark Cards released the homonymous line of greeting cards with animal characters wearing T-shirts upon which was a message. Those cards were among Hallmark's best sellers at that time, which led the company to team with Hanna-Barbera Productions to adapt the Shirt Tales into a Saturday morning cartoon, which premiered on NBC on September 18, 1982. [2]