Super Snooper got his voice [hey what happened to the posting box size, anyhow?] from the crow "Ziggy", who inturn got it from radio's "Duffy Tavern". Got use of Seely-Loose's "Zany Comedy", one of those cues Warners used in a musicians strike [the next to last act, the one with the piano struggle, of "Hook, Line. and Stinker", also used in the first of those musicians strike Warmer short,s, "Weasel while you work", when the "frozen Birdseye Chickeneye chicken" statue 'it's the dog' melts..
Thanks, 'Dragon'. Joe Barbera himself thought up virtually all of the story ideas during Huck's first season, with Charles Shows providing additional gags. Warren Foster, who had written Warner Bros. cartoons for over 20 years, wrote the scripts from the fall of '59 on...
First seen in November 1958...apparently, this is Hanna-Barbera's version of a Warner Bros. Chuck Jones "Wolf & Sheepdog" cartoon, where the protagonists hunt and taunt each other every day, on schedule [here, the "factory whistle" stands in for the "time clock" Sam Sheepdog and Ralph Wolf use to begin and end their "typical" workday].
Close your mouth and open the can, man. Makes me laugh so much!
homerman99 4 months ago in playlist homerman99's favorites
Those crows are funny!
homerman99 4 months ago in playlist homerman99's favorites
Con-sarned crows
5780talon 11 months ago
Hyuck.
stuntactorsagaftra 2 years ago
Super Snooper got his voice [hey what happened to the posting box size, anyhow?] from the crow "Ziggy", who inturn got it from radio's "Duffy Tavern". Got use of Seely-Loose's "Zany Comedy", one of those cues Warners used in a musicians strike [the next to last act, the one with the piano struggle, of "Hook, Line. and Stinker", also used in the first of those musicians strike Warmer short,s, "Weasel while you work", when the "frozen Birdseye Chickeneye chicken" statue 'it's the dog' melts..
SteveCarras 3 years ago
good
JoeofGreenGables 3 years ago
Thanks, 'Dragon'. Joe Barbera himself thought up virtually all of the story ideas during Huck's first season, with Charles Shows providing additional gags. Warren Foster, who had written Warner Bros. cartoons for over 20 years, wrote the scripts from the fall of '59 on...
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
First seen in November 1958...apparently, this is Hanna-Barbera's version of a Warner Bros. Chuck Jones "Wolf & Sheepdog" cartoon, where the protagonists hunt and taunt each other every day, on schedule [here, the "factory whistle" stands in for the "time clock" Sam Sheepdog and Ralph Wolf use to begin and end their "typical" workday].
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
Your certainly... informed. ^^;
DragonEyedThief 3 years ago