 They were Tiny and Toony altogether loony and in their cartoony they invaded our TVs. Those comic dispensers that cracked up all the sensors on Tiny Toon Adventures as we got a dose of comedy. We went on down to Acme Acres and got our Toon Degrees where the teaching staff been getting laughs since 1933. Hey guys, Shannon here with Comic NTV, the only place on YouTube where all geek culture collides. If you're new to the channel, welcome! Make sure you hit the subscribe button and the notification bell so you don't miss out on a single video. Created in 1990 by Steven Spielberg and Terry Simel as the first collaboration between Warner Brothers and Amblin Entertainment. However, the idea for Tiny Toons actually began three years earlier when the Warner Brothers animation studio approached Steven Spielberg to collaborate with Simel and Warner Brothers head of licensing, Dan Rominelli. The original idea was to do a younger version of the original Looney Toons or use the children of the original Looney Toons. It was later decided to use brand new characters for the new series. During this early process, plans were made for this idea to make a theatrical release as a full-length movie. In 1988, the concept was transformed from a full-length feature film to a television series with a working title of Acme Acres. After production was complete, Steven Spielberg presents Tiny Toon Adventures would air in syndication during its first two seasons and then get picked up in its entirety by Fox Kids for its third season. The show aired its pilot episode on CBS's Primetime lineup on September 14th, 1990 and it ran in syndication through December 6th, 1992 with two specials which were produced in 1994. Tiny Toon Adventures was set in the fictional town of Acme Acres. It revolved around a group of students at Acme Looniversity whose faculty consisted of the old Looney Toon and Mary Melody characters such as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. Usually each episode was hosted by Babs and Buster Bunny, no relation. Buster was voiced by Charlie Adler and John Kasser. With Babs being voiced by Tressman Neal, they were often joined by Plucky Duck voiced by Joe Alasky who would eventually receive his own short-lived spin-off series. Other characters of the show included Dizzy Devil voiced by Marysla Mark, Montana Max voiced by Danny Cookey, Shirley the Loon voiced by Gail Matthias, Hampton J. Pig who is voiced by Don Messick, Sweetie voiced by Candy Milo, Elmira Duff who is voiced by Cree Summer as well as Gogo Dodo, Furball, Byron Bassett, Calamity Coyote and Little Beeper who were all voiced by Frank Welker. Tiny Toon Adventures was made with a higher production value than standard television animation. It had a sale count that was more than double that of most animated television shows then. Tiny Toon Adventures would go on to air a total of 100 episodes which includes the specials. My personal favorite were the Justice League episode, the music countdown episode and the wacky world of sports episode. In 1992, the Plucky Duck show was produced as a spin-off for Fox Kids. Based on the character Plucky Duck, except for the premiere episode which was the return of Bat Duck, the show was composed entirely of recycled plucky centric episodes from Tiny Toon Adventures. In 1998, a second spin-off which was actually a triple spin-off entitled Pinky Elmira in the Brain debuted on Kids WV. I say triple spin-off because Elmira came from Tiny Toon Adventures while Pinky in the Brain came from both Animaniacs and their own spin-off Pinky in the Brain. Pinky Elmira in the Brain picks up after Pinky in the Brain leaves off where Pinky in the Brain become Elmira's pets after Brain accidentally destroys their original home, Acme Labs, during an experiment. Pinky Elmira in the Brain lasted for 13 episodes. A Quarterly Children's Magazine based on the series entitled Tiny Toon Adventures Magazine debuted in October 1990. Issues number one through four were published by DC Comics. Issues five through seven were released through by Welsh Publishing Group and the final issue was covered in 1992. The characters of the show would go on to make appearances in Animaniacs, Freakazoid, as well as Pinky in the Brain. Tiny Toon Adventures, along with Animaniacs, continued to rerun in syndication through the 1990s into the mid-2000s after production of new episodes ceased. It rerun on Nickelodeon from 1995 to 1999 and again from 2002 to 2004. It also aired on Kids WB from 1997 to 2000, Cartoon Network from 1999 to 2001, and finally on Nicktoons from 2002 to 2005. On October 27th, 2012, the series aired on broadcast television, once again on Vortex with the special Tiny Toon's Night Ghoulry and again on November 24th, 2012. The series began airing reruns on the Hub Network on July 1st, 2013. On January 4th, 2018, Hulu acquired the streaming rights to Tiny Toon Adventures, along with Pinky in the Brain, Animaniacs, and Pinky Elmira in the Brain. If you enjoyed that video, make sure you hit the subscribe button right there so you stay up to date on all Thanksgiving culture. Also, go ahead and check out one of these two playlists on the side for more videos just like the one you just watched. I'm Shannon from Come Again TV, the only place on YouTube where all geek culture collides. Take care, Geeks.