Home About Us All Fuctasia_(NSFW) Games Gay+ Health/Food Movies Music Musings Photos_(NSFW) TV Wisps Preferences
Welcome to Errattic! We encourage you to customize the type of information you see here by clicking the Preferences link on the top of this page.
14 Asian and Middle Eastern nations ban 'Lightyear'
14 Asian and Middle Eastern nations ban 'Lightyear'
User wants to know what X-Men comics to read to
WHY ARE MCU SUPERHERO MOVIES SEXLESS?
James Avery Delighted in Fan Reactions to Him Voicing Shredder on ‘TMNT’
Disney gives Jessica Rabbit a politically correct makeover Disney gives Jessica Rabbit a politically correct makeover
PBS Admits That It Published Fake History Of Betty Boop’s Creation
Column: Why do so many Mexican Americans defend Speedy Gonzales? Column: Why do so many Mexican Americans defend Speedy Gonzales?
Pepe Le Pew removed from ‘Space Jam 2’ following ‘rape culture’ accusation Pepe Le Pew removed from ‘Space Jam 2’ following ‘rape culture’ accusation Pepé Le Pew Reportedly Benched From Space Jam: A New Legacy
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving Viewers Troubled by Racist Scene
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving Viewers Troubled by Racist Scene
These Bugs Bunny stamps are the first in US postal history to show drag
New ‘Looney Tunes’ Cartoons Ban Elmer Fudd From Having A Gun – But Other Mayhem Is Okay
10 Outdated Disney Movies Parents Won't Show Their Kids, According to New Poll
Exclusive: Mel Blanc's son shares how Bugs Bunny saved his father's life during coma
His war cry went straight from our televisions and movie screens into our hearts and minds. My family and so many others cheered on his exploits, imagining ourselves as soldiers in his brigade. Polite society told us we shouldn’t worship this bad hombre because he made Mexicans look bad. So they tried everything possible to dim his star — but we Mexicans always fought loudly against any attempts to cancel our compadre.
Of course we’re going to love Speedy — it’s not like we have a buffet of iconic animated heroes to choose from besides Dora the Explorer and Bender Bending Rodriguez from “Futurama.”
As one of the greatest American cartoon characters of all time, the carrot-munching Bugs has influenced generations of kids.
And his zany Looney Tunes cartoons often showed him dressing up as a woman to trick his adversary Elmer Fudd. In a few instances, the two even got married and lived together.
Now the US Postal Service has marked the 80th anniversary of his official screen debut with a series of 10 designs.
And two of them feature Bugs in drag.
In the new versions of the classic cartoons, Fudd will still be hunting, but will use a scythe. That’s a modification in response to US gun violence, according to a report.
In response to US gun violence, the showrunners will not include firearms in Fudd’s arsenal. That is not to say that he has given up hunting Bugs Bunny, though – he just uses a scythe instead.
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, Moana, and Toy Story were all hits—we've got a major Buzz Lightyear fan on our hands—but when it came time to watch 1953's Peter Pan, we were struck by how outdated it was. I certainly didn't remember all of the racism and sexism. Between Peter Pan telling Wendy that "girls talk too much," the guns (!!), Tinker Bell trying to kill Wendy over jealousy, and the treatment of Native Americans (“What makes the red man red?"—seriously?!), I was happy when my son walked away to play with his toys and just wasn't that into it.
We're not talking an episode of Looney Tunes. This isn't fiction. This is the life of iconic voice actor Mel Blanc as told in the upcoming season of the podcast Twenty Thousand Hertz, and EW has an exclusive clip of Blanc's son Noel Blanc recounting his father's nearly fatal experience.
When my children were young, I returned to college and befriended a group of geeks who introduced me to anime and manga. I distinctly remember seeing manga once in high school on Long Island in the ’90s: A Chinese exchange student brought in an oddly thick and small comic book. When I asked him about it, he explained that in Asia comics were books called “manga” and, even though cartoons were mostly for children in America, that wasn’t the case in Asia, where manga and “anime” were created for all age groups. I remember the cover looking a bit racy and he bashfully explained that this particular manga was definitely not for kids.