Monday, March 3, 2025

I Love to Singa (Gogo Dancer)

Director: Fred “Tex” Avery

Summary: Another early Tex Avery cartoon that doesn’t feel in-character for him, but, unlike “Page Miss Glory,” Tex probably didn’t hate this one as much. This one is the story of an owl family that prides itself in classical music and opera, but are left reeling when one of their children is a jazz singer (back then, jazz was seen with the same disdain as rap and hiphop in the 1980s and 1990s: if you were white and into that, you were a disgrace to your family or a race traitor/poseur). When forcing the jazz singing son (named Owl Jolson) to sing opera doesn’t work, Owl gets thrown out and decides to make it on his own as a jazz singer. His first gig: a radio amateur hour, where anyone who doesn’t win over Jack Bunny (a very common pun name on comedian Jack Benny) gets rejected and ejected from the studio.

And if this short still isn’t familiar to you, the sound clip of Owl Jolson singing the title song was used on the very first episode of Comedy Central’s South Park ("Cartman Gets an Anal Probe") when Cartman is controlled by the anal probe and the cows use alien tech to make Officer Barbrady sing.

The Channel: TNT (on The Rudy and Gogo World Famous Cartoon Show)

Part(s) Edited: Two scenes were cut for time (as there wasn’t anything offensive about the two scenes cut):

1) After Owl Jolson is hatched and shocks his parents with his rendition of “I Love to Singa,” Fritz Owl decides that the best way to “cure” Owl’s jazz singing is to force him to sing “To Cilia,” which doesn’t work, as Owl keeps interjecting, “I Love to Singa” in between verses.

2) When Owl Jolson runs away from home, he happens upon Jack Bunny’s Amateur (spelled “Amatuer”) Radio Show, where contestants keep getting gonged and put through the trap door for bad performances.

How It Plays Edited/Video Comparison: The way I edited it on the video is probably not how it played out on The Rudy and Gogo World Famous Cartoon Show, but it’s one of those edits that Nickelodeon used to be able to do when it aired Looney Tunes cartoons: tried to salvage the cartoon and had a sense of humor about editing the shorts. If you remember Rudy and Gogo and how “I Love to Singa” was cut, then, by all means, describe it in the comments or email me. For now, enjoy the video:

Availability Uncut: This one is popular enough to be released on home media. I'm not going to list them all (a full list can be found here), but I am going to list the DVD and Blu-ray titles that have this short uncut, uncensored, and with original titles restored (if you've ever seen it on television, it was probably the Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodie version):

  • Looney Tunes Golden Collection, volume 2 (on disc 2)
  • Looney Tunes Spotlight Collection, volume 2 (also disc 2, which would be the last disc on that collection, since Spotlight Collections were the scaled-back version of the Golden Collection).
  • The 2005 DVD release of the 1927 movie The Jazz Singer (which I don't recommend, not because of the blackface on the cover being potentially offensive, but because the version shown is the 1995 Turner dub that might not have the original titles to it). The 2013 Blu-ray release of the same movie does have the original titles to "I Love to Singa," so I do recommend that for the completionist Looney Tunes fan.
  • Looney Tunes Collection All-Stars volume 3 (this is only available in Australia)
  • The DVD, HD-DVD, and Blu-ray versions of the 2006 animated movie, Happy Feet. (I know I shouldn't have included HD-DVD, since it pretty much lived and died in the mid-2000s because Blu-ray kicked its ass, but there are probably people out there who still have HD-DVD players for some reason).
  • The DVD and Blu-ray versions of the Looney Tunes Platinum Collection (volume 1, disc 2)
  • The Best of Warner Bros. 50 Cartoon Collection DVD
  • The Looney Tunes Parodies Collection DVD (most recent as of 2025; it was released five years ago).

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Page Miss Glory (Matron Makes Most of Wardrobe Malfunction)


Director: Tex Avery (uncredited); Leadora Congdon (credited, though she was credited for layout and background work, as well as being the “moderne art” designer and conceptualist). It’s confusing, yes, but Tex Avery did direct this cartoon, even though he didn’t care much for it, as it was out of his humor wheelhouse (even though a thorough viewing shows that there are some Tex Avery-ish gags in this. They were most likely scaled back because the cartoon is more eye candy than a laugh fest).

Summary: The staff of a hicktown hotel await the arrival of a female guest known as “Miss Glory.” A bellhop, who has dreams of bellhopping for the more refined, upscale city hotels, falls asleep and gets his wish, leading to a big musical number and string of gags involving drinks, the excesses of the wealthy, the appearance of one “Miss Glory”, and how everyone there wants to see her.

The Channel: Syndication/local affiliate (WNEW in New York, circa the 1980s)

Part(s) Edited: Once again, I’m amazed at just what American TV censorship (whether from a major network or a minor affiliate station) finds objectionable in something that doesn’t seem it. This time around, we have this: Somewhere in the 1980s, WNEW in New York City cut the part where the bellhop thinks a snooty, Margaret DuMont-style society matron is the fabled “Miss Glory,” but isn’t, as she takes one look at him and walks away, not knowing the bellhop is stepping on the train of her yellow dress. When her dress strategically comes apart behind a potted plant (even though she is wearing a slip, it’s treated like nudity because of Hays Code restrictions and the fact that most slips are sheer/see-through), the matron decides to treat the audience to a fan dance, until we see that her slip has a patch on it. The consensus (at least on the Looney Tunes Fandom Wiki) is that the scene was considered too risqué for children/family audiences. I would have said because the scene ran long, but who says it can’t be both?

How It Plays Edited/Video Comparison: I did this approximation/compare and contrast video as the Looney Tunes Fandom Wiki worded the edit, which is as follows,

“When this short aired on New York's WNEW channel in the 1980s, the sequence where the snooty society matron's dress rips off (because the bellhop had been standing on it) and she does a fan dance with fern leaves to cover up was cut due to being too sexually suggestive for a family/child audience.”

To me, that means that, after the three butlers and the rural bellhop drunkenly sing the end of the title song, the edited version goes straight to the rural bellhop applauding something off-screen and the fat man at a table yelling for service. I feel that WNEW’s version did include the bellhop asking the snooty matron if she’s Miss Glory, but cut off before she walks away. Either way, the cut is very obvious for a scene that doesn’t make or break the cartoon’s already meager plot:


Availability Uncut: You’re in luck. This is available uncut (sadly, not in public domain, despite that the title song is, and currently not on streaming, even though this doesn’t have any problematic content. Maybe art deco is too pretty for today’s audiences) on the Golden Age of Looney Tunes laserdisc and VHS (volume 1, “1930s Musicals”), as a special feature on the DVD version of the Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers movie, Top Hat; on disc four (the most-requested one-shots) of the sixth and final volume of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection DVD set (and disc 2 of the shorter, more family-friendly Spotlight Collection DVD set); on the DVD and Blu-ray version of the Looney Tunes Platinum Collection, volume 2 (the Blu-ray version of which has become very hard to find); a DVD called Looney Tunes Musical Masterpieces, and a repackaged version of Looney Tunes Musical Masterpieces that comes sandwiched with Tom and Jerry’s Musical Mayhem and the Scooby Doo movie, Music of the Vampire.

Monday, February 17, 2025

The Cat Came Back (Plunger, Mousetrap, Poke 'Er Eye)

Quick note before I start: I know I said I was going to change up the blog and take it to a new direction, but I have five entries on the back burner formatted in the old style. For ease of transition (and because I'm still thinking of new ways [or a new way] to approach my entries), the entries to this short, Milk and Money/Porky's Prize Pony, I Love to Singa, and The Village Smithy will be in this style. After another full post covering a group of similarly censored cartoons (it will either be the Banned Bugs Bunny 12 or The Hunter's Trilogy), I will transition over to my as-yet new style (I am considering a podcast-style transcription with accompanying video and picture stills, but nothing is set in stone yet). So, enjoy these last five entries as they are.

Director: Friz Freleng

Summary: In this platonic version of Romeo and Juliet, a kitten and a mouse, despite being taught by their respective mothers that they and their kind are sworn enemies of the other, run off and become friends. When the two end up getting trapped in a sewer, will the two warring families put aside their differences and save their children?

The Channel: Unnamed syndication

Part(s) Edited: Going by the old Censored Cartoons Page and the Looney Tunes wiki, there are four parts edited for seemingly no reason (though at least one part has a justified reason for being edited).

  • The momma mouse training her kids on how to run through a mousetrap without getting caught
  • The momma cat getting poked in the eyes (and the momma cat poking the momma mouse in the eyes after thinking back to why they're enemies in the first place) [this counts as two cuts, and is probably the only justified edit, as eye-poking is often considered dangerous, imitable slapstick violence, especially if you've ever seen a Three Stooges short with the classic trio of Moe, Larry, and Curly]
  • The momma mouse using a plunger to get the kitten and mouse out of the sewer.
Please Note: the accompany video refers to the momma mouse as a "momma rat." That's my bad for doing these on lack of adequate sleep.

How It Plays Edited/Video Comparison: Not too bad, though the eye-poking part being edited is obvious. Without it, there's no reason why the momma cat and mouse hate each other (besides the fact that cats and mice don't get along anyway). Here's the compare/contrast clip:


Please Note #2: I switched over to Filmora for this video because it works better. There's a watermark on it because I have the free version. Somewhere on this journey, I will get a paid version, but that's probably not going to happen. DaVinci Resolve is good and I will come back to it, but Filmora has better features and I will stick with it unless otherwise noted.

Availability Uncut: It is available for streaming (uncut, naturally. It's not problematic by modern standards, outside of some violence, drowning peril, and species discrimination, but it's cute and charming enough to get away with it) on HBO Max (now called "Max"). If you're looking for a physical release of it, there's only two choices: The Golden Age of Looney Tunes laserdisc set (volume 5, side 5, "Pesky Pets") or the Blu-ray version of the movie The Walking Dead (no relation to the graphic novel or the AMC series) starring Boris Karloff and Ricardo Cortez.

Monday, February 10, 2025

Your FAQ on Where I’ve Been, Where I’m Going, and The Censored Eleven (and Goin' to Heaven on a Mule)

Q: Hey, where have you been? I haven't seen you since last year.

A: I have a life outside of this blog. I go to work, I deal with family problems, I have to put up with the crap accumulating from the outside world, and I have creative blocks just like every other writer and content creator on and off the Internet. Now, I’m back and ready to do things differently for my blog. Some of these are changes for changes’ sake, but most are just, “I was bored with how things were going, and I need to use the tools I acquired in order to make this a more creative and engaging blog.”

 

Q: What tools? Are you going to use A.I.?

A: Yes and no. While I do have a handle on fixing and revising my writing myself (since it’s one of the few things I’ve learned from the American public school system that’s actually useful in my daily adult life), there will be times I have to use A.I. for research, feedback, and brainstorming. It’s not like I’m novel or screenplay writing with A.I. (which, in the name of full disclosure, I will do, but, as with here, it’s mostly for research, brainstorming, and feedback since four years of majoring in writing for film and television has stated that my fiction writing is good, but not good enough for major mainstream publication without some outside help and practice. I just want to be the best I can in fiction writing and keep up with the times). I’m not going to use A.I. video and images on The Censored Cartoons Blog, mostly because I can easily find and create screenshots and video clips for my work.

 

Q: So, what’s up with the Censored Cartoons Blog? Is it still going?

A: Yes. Probably not as frequently as promised, but it’s not going to be shut down or abandoned like so many promising blogs and websites (or the last time I did a cartoon blog. It was a Wordpress blog called "Saturday Morning Hangover"). I am aiming to make this a Saturday morning thing, since I grew up when Saturday morning cartoons were still around and often included the Warner Bros. Cartoons (though I also grew up when Cartoon Network became a basic cable channel and Warner Bros. cartoons, as well as Hanna-Barbera and MGM [now owned by Warner-Discovery], were on regardless of day or time), but don’t be surprised if you see a post on Sunday or between Monday and Friday. My advice is to subscribe to the blog, so you don’t miss out.

 

Q: That’s good to hear. Are you going to start today?

A: I am.


Q: What’s today’s cartoon?

A: I’m not going into the individual entry today. I’m going to do a batch of cartoons. Today, I’m going to look into The Censored Eleven, plus “Goin’ to Heaven on a Mule.”

 

Q: What is The Censored Eleven?

A: The Censored Eleven are eleven Warner Bros. shorts pulled from distribution in 1968 by United Artists (former owner of the A.A.P library) due to pervasive caricatures of Africans and African-Americans that are considered offensive, both by the standards of 1968 and now (especially now).


Q: There are a lot of Warner Bros. shorts that have outdated caricatures of Africans and African-Americans. What makes these eleven shorts so special?

A: I’m sure there are animation historians out there who know the answer to that question, because I don’t. I’m guessing these are the ones that are so packed with outdated stereotypes of Africans and African-Americans that merely editing them isn't an option. If you don't believe that, then it was probably a random decision.


Q: Are you seriously going to cover cartoons with stereotypically black characters on Black History Month? What the hell is wrong with you?

A: Nothing. If anything, covering how Africans and African-Americans were/are depicted in media is a good thing to cover on Black History Month. It shows what we as a people have/had to put up with just to fight for equality and better representation. I'd like to see high school and college classes pull this off.


Q: Okay, I apologize. So, which shorts are part of the Censored Eleven?

A: Ah, you’ve come to my favorite part of the FAQ. The following shorts that are officially a part of the Censored Eleven (complete with date, director, and brief summary) are:

  • Hittin’ the Trail for Hallelujah Land”: One of Harmon and Ising’s early, near-plotless musical cartoons from 1931 featuring Piggy (a short-lived possible prototype of Porky Pig, but really a clone of Bosko and Mickey Mouse, given when this short was released) as a river boat captain whose boat is the stage for a band of black musicians and dancers. Piggy's girlfriend is assisted by her reliable servant, Uncle Tom, who gets lost in a graveyard filled with dancing skeletons. This is the only Censored Eleven short shown in black and white.
  • Sunday Go to Meetin’ Time”: The first color Censored Eleven short. A Friz Freleng one-shot musical, showing black people in a poor, Southern town getting ready for Sunday church service, except for a man named Nicodemus, who would rather spent Sundays shooting craps. It’s getting so that his wife (who has no time for shiftless, lazy men like himself) has to drag him to church, but this time, Nicodemus bails so he can steal chickens. He almost succeeds, but ends up getting hit on the head and goes to Hell where The Devil goes over his worldly misdeeds.
  • Clean Pastures”: Another Friz Freleng one-shot musical featuring African-American caricatures, themes of vice and virtue, and how Freleng uses the Christian notions of Heaven and Hell in his cartoons. This one (which I can only assume is part of a short-lived animated series about black people and Heaven, or, as it’s called here and in “Goin’ to Heaven on a Mule,” “Pair-O-Dice”) from 1937, features St. Peter worrying about black people’s souls in Harlem (which, according to this short, is its own country rather than a city in New York) and doing what he can to recruit new souls. When sending a Stepin Fetchit-esque Gabriel angel as a recruiting officer  fails, the other angels (caricatures of jazz musicians Cab Calloway, Fats Waller, Louis Armstrong, and Jimmie Lunceford) decide that a hot jazz number called “Swing for Sale” works better in making Heaven a happenin’ place to be.
  • Uncle Tom’s Bungalow”: We take a break from musical numbers and Friz Freleng with this spoof of the Harriet Beecher Stowe novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, directed by Tex Avery and released the same year as (and right after) “Clean Pastures.” As with most Tex Avery spoofs of the time, expect a lot of fourth-wall breaking, some (now-considered) hokey gags, and a dig/plug at the parent studio (“My body might belong to you, but my soul belongs to Warner Bros.”). Tex Avery also did “Uncle Tom’s Cabana,” but that’s an MGM cartoon where the title character tells his many children the story of how he created a nightclub with his white showgirl girlfriend, Little Eva (played by the same sexy nightclub singer from “Red Hot Riding Hood,” “Swing Shift Cinderella,” and other shorts cut from “Red Hot Riding Hood”’s cloth) to pay off his debts to Simon Legree. If you want my opinion, “Uncle Tom’s Cabana” is funnier, but “Uncle Tom’s Bungalow” serves as a rough copy of Tex’s later brilliance when it comes to parodying serious works (or works that people take seriously).
  • Jungle Jitters”: We’re back to Friz Freleng and his black stereotype cartoon, and what a cartoon to return to. This one (and another I’ll get to later) is not considered the best of what’s already a very problematic lot. This one, released in 1938, centers on a dopey salesman who tries to peddle his wares in a African cannibal colony where the natives want to literally have him for dinner (read: eat him) and the colony’s white queen wants to marry him. It’s not as good as it sounds (and it definitely could have been with better writing), but, apparently, the Latin American Spanish-speaking world likes it, because it has aired in that region.
  • The Isle of Pingo Pongo”: Continuing with the Africans as primitive natives stereotype, we have this Tex Avery cartoon -- his first travelogue spoof (but not many would know it since it doesn’t air on television nor is it available on official release) where an ocean liner explores the splendor of the title island location. Fun fact: this was submitted for an Academy Award nomination in 1938, but wasn’t picked. I can’t imagine what would happen if this was nominated and won. Would it have changed the course of animated cinema history or not? Discuss.
  • All This and Rabbit Stew”: Another Tex Avery Censored Eleven short (released three years after “The Isle of Pingo Pongo” [1941]), and this one is packed with a lot of things that would shock casual Looney Tunes fans. This is one of Tex Avery’s last cartoons after he got fired from Warner Bros. Studios (then called Leon Schlesinger Studios or, more informally, Termite Terrace) because of creative differences over the ending to “The Heckling Hare”; it plays out like “A Wild Hare” (Tex Avery’s seminal cartoon that first pairs Bugs Bunny with Elmer Fudd) with Elmer as a slow-witted black man and ends with Bugs beating him in craps and stealing all his clothes; and, despite being banned, is actually in the public domain (joining “Hittin’ the Trail to Hallelujah Land” and “Jungle Jitters,” meaning that the rest are still under copyright, despite Warner Bros. not wanting anything to do with these cartoons), and has been shown in clips in other media: the Spike Lee joint Bamboozled (which is about offensive African-American stereotypes, so it would make sense to have it there as part of the film’s theme), a music video on the PBS kids’ show Shining Time Station, and the made-for-DVD/Blu-ray documentary King Size Comedy: Tex Avery and the Looney Tunes Revolution. This is also the only Censored Eleven short starring an established Warner Bros character (Bugs Bunny) and the only one a part of another list of WB shorts that have been banned because of racially insensitive content: The Banned Bugs Bunny 12 (which I will touch on later).
  • Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarves”: One of only two Bob Clampett cartoons that are a part of the Censored Eleven (and both released in 1943), and the only one that most fans would consider the best of the lot, despite its outdated content (there’s also WWII-era Japanese bashing, some fleeting bashing of little people, and references to wartime rationing and military service). This is basically Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (the Disney version that was insanely popular at the time and still is, judging by the many rip-offs, parodies, homages, and a much-despised live-action remake coming soon) if Snow White was a doe-eyed, pig-tailed, mini-skirted Jezebel, her Evil Queen stepmother hoarded rationed products like coffee, rubber, and sugar and called a hitman service to take out her stepdaughter after seeing her dance with the Prince, whom the Queen requested from the Magic Mirror; the Prince was a zoot-suited coward who had dice and gold teeth as part of his grille; the Seven (or Sebben) Dwarves were in the Army instead of gem miners; and it ended with Dopey getting Snow White to wake up instead of the Prince, which is odd, because, in the actual Disney movie, Grumpy was beginning to like Snow White near the end and, according to Walt Disney himself in this behind-the-scenes documentary I found at the library years ago, Bashful was the one who was secretly in love with Snow White. Though Dopey did come back for seconds and thirds when Snow White was seeing the dwarves off to work, so maybe Bob Clampett was onto something...
  • Tin Pan Alley Cats”: Part two of Bob Clampett’s hot black jazz duo of shorts. This one doesn’t get as much love as “Coal Black…”, but it is a fascinating watch, if not for the fact that this is a better remake of “Porky in Wackyland” than the 1949 short, “Dough for the Do-Do.” In this short, a Fats Waller-esque cat is off to a night filled with wine, women, and song at the Kit Kat Club (where a group of conservative religious protesters are gathered outside, trying to guide anyone going in on the path of righetousness. Some things never change…), where a trumpet player sends the Waller cat out of this world and into Wackyland.
  • Angel Puss”: The only Censored Eleven cartoon directed by none other than Chuck Jones, and probably his most hated pre-1948 short (there are others, but this is somewhere in the top 10 or 20), but not because it’s slow, boring, and trying too hard to be like Disney. This one is hated because of outdated racial stereotypes, cat murder, and gaslighting, three things that will trigger anyone and everyone in this day and age (but so does a stiff breeze and a differing opinion). In this 1944 short, a young black boy is paid to drown a cat, but gets cold feet because he doesn’t want to hurt animals, but there aren’t a lot of job opportunities for him because of his age and race, so it’s this or nothing. Fortunately, the cat about to die breaks free from the sack and loads it with rocks to make it look like he’s in there, then spends the rest of the short dressed as a ghost and scares the poor black boy for kicks.
  • Goldilocks and the Jivin’ Bears”: The final Censored Eleven short (and the first Warner Bros cartoon to be produced by Eddie Selzer, Leon Schlesinger’s replacement following Schlesinger’s retirement), a Friz Freleng one-shot short combining Goldilocks and the Three Bears with Little Red Riding Hood, both with a hot jazz sensibility. You can tell this was Friz Freleng’s attempt at being Bob Clampett, but Freleng’s and Clampett’s directing styles are too different. Freleng doesn’t do wild and raunchy like Bob Clampett does wild and raunchy. If any other director could have done “Goldilocks and the Jivin’ Bears,” I’d have gone with Frank Tashlin. Tashlin's wild and raunchy is a bit more restrained (unless it's "I Got Plenty of Mutton," but even that didn't go to Bob Clampett levels of raunchiness. The ram's horns going erect is as close as it's going to get), but can easily be mistaken for Clampett at first glance.


Q: Where does “Goin’ to Heaven on a Mule” fit in to all of this?

A: It fits in to all of this because, if you’ve ever seen the cartoon (willingly or otherwise), you’ll know that it has everything a Censored Eleven cartoon is notorious for, but, sadly, it wasn’t included into the syndication package that had the Censored Eleven on it. Personally, I’d gladly trade out “Hittin’ the Trail to Hallelujah Land” for “Goin’ to Heaven on a Mule,” since the former cartoon isn’t as heavily stereotypical as the others. "Hittin' the Trail to Hallelujah Land" feels like one of those shorts that could have aired on television with little to no cuts in the past (think from the 1960s to around the early 1990s) before getting phased out due to changing times and stricter censorship measures in children's/family entertainment.

 

Q: Which Censored Eleven cartoons should I watch? Should I even watch them?

A: No one’s forcing you to. I think that's the one thing people forget about these shorts: you don't have to watch them if you don't want to. If you feel that the racial caricatures are too much for you (whether or not you know the historical context behind them), then you can skip them over (including “Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarves”). If you know these were made during a different time, are curious about old school animation, are a fan of old school animation, would rather watch something from the past because the present stuff is severely lacking in political incorrectness, or are doing media research (either for school or for fun), then, by all means, indulge. 

Here’s a quick list I made as part of the original idea for this post called, “White People’s Guide to Watching the Censored Eleven” (a lot of points are repeated from earlier, so consider this a quick summary):

1) Watch "Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarves," maybe "Tin Pan Alley Cats" and "Hittin' the Trail to Hallelujah Land" (since the latter isn't that offensive).

2) Unless you're morbidly curious, avoid "Jungle Jitters" and "Angel Puss," as they are considered the worst/most offensive of the lot.

3) You have to see "All This and Rabbit Stew" at least once, since it's a Bugs Bunny cartoon that has never seen airtime or official home media release.

4) The rest really depend on personal preference, how deep your curiosity is, or how badly you want to punish yourself:

a) "Clean Pastures" is worth watching because of the "I Got Swing for Sale" sequence (or if you want to learn about the jazz musician caricatures in the short, like Cab Calloway, Jimmie Lunceford, and even Louis Armstrong). The Stepin Fetchit caricature will put you off, but he's there for story reasons (St. Peter being so out of touch that he would assign the Stepin Fetchit angel the task to try and save the souls of late 1930s Black America, which, according to the opening montage, is filled with such vices as dancing girls, booze, hot jazz, and gambling).

b) "Uncle Tom's Bungalow" has its moments, but you have to be familiar with the actual story, "Uncle Tom's Cabin", to get it. That being said, the "My body might belong to you, but my soul belongs to Warner Bros." line is funny and it's nice to see something from back then have a positive portrayal of an interracial friendship (Eva and Topsy). Tex Avery would later direct "Uncle Tom's Cabana" during his MGM years, and that's funnier than this.

c) "Goldilocks and the Jivin' Bears" is pretty average (though it has good music and the black caricatures aren't that offensive, since they're mostly animals), so you won't be hurting anyone's feelings if you decide to pass on it.

d) Besides the title song and "You Got to Give the Devil His Due", "Sunday Go to Meetin' Time" is best enjoyed as research for a college essay about the correlation between African-American and religion and how this is depicted in American media. "The Isle of Pingo Pongo" is also good for a college essay about travelogues and their effects on how America view other countries, specifically those considered "exotic tropical paradises."

5) "Goin' to Heaven on a Mule" is not a Censored Eleven cartoon, but due to content and unavailability on American television (Nickelodeon, back when it held the rights to air Warner Bros. cartoons, had the rights to air this, but Standards and Practices vetoed against it) does qualify, in my opinion.

6) None of the other cartoons banned for outdated racial caricatures ("Africa Squeaks,"  "Kristopher Kolumbus, Jr.," the World War II shorts filled with Japanese caricatures and references to Hitler and Nazis, any cartoon that has Native American caricatures, etc) are part of the Censored Eleven. Some bush-league Internet critics will try to refute this claim, but don't listen to them.

7) The most important rule: Watching these cartoons is entirely optional. If they don't appeal to you for whatever reason, don't watch them.


Q: Are there any other studies or reviews about The Censored Eleven (and "Goin' to Heaven on a Mule")?

A: Anthony's Animation Talk and The Hick Critic at least try to study, analyze, and review the shorts, despite being white and feeling very uncomfortable about the subject matter. If book-reading is your thing, the essay "Darker Shades of Animation: African-American Images in the Warner Bros. Cartoons" by Terry Lindvall and Ben Fraser from the essay anthology Reading the Rabbit: Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation is a good read.


Q: Are any of these cartoons available on official home media? Where can I watch them?

A: As of this writing, The Censored Eleven aren’t available on any official home media. It came close to being available between 2010 and 2011, but, like all, major studios these days, they backed out due to backlash. As mentioned before, “Hittin’ the Trail to Hallelujah Land,” “Jungle Jitters,” and “All This and Rabbit Stew” have fallen in the public domain in the United States and are easily available on public domain videos, while the rest will have to wait until later in the 21st century to approach public domain status. However, all is not lost. There are video sites and bootlegged physical media distribution centers that have most, if not all, of the shorts.


Q: So how are you going to end this blog post?

A: Same way I always do: with links to the uncut and uncensored versions of the cartoons I was just talking about. Here is a playlist of The Censored Eleven from Archive.org, and here's the video for "Goin' to Heaven on a Mule" (it's part of a playlist for every Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies short ever made between 1929 and 1969. The video and audio quality isn't as good, but some day, someone will have the guts to remaster it, whether or not it gets an official release).

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Brief Break II: Breaking Worse

Because of work, family obligations, the Christmas holiday, and plans on how to improve the blog (including a possible concurrent video series for YouTube or Dailymotion), there won't be any new posts until early 2025. 

Enjoy your holiday as best as you can and I'll see you in the new year.

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Billboard Frolics (Shokus All Night Long)

 

Director: Isadore "Friz" Freleng (credited as "I. Freleng")

Summary: It is a "things come to life and put on a show" cartoon, but instead of a grocery store or a bookstore, it's an alley filled with billboards on or around buildings. There is a story of a baby chick from one of the ads getting chased by an alley cat after getting owned by a worm in an apple, but that's buried beneath all the other gags. Probably the only noteworthy thing about this short is that this is the first appearance of "Merrily We Roll Along," which is one of two theme songs associated with the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. While it doesn't really matter now since both are used interchangably, I'd like to remind casual fans of classic cartoons that the Merrie Melodies' theme is "Merrily, We Roll Along" while Looney Tunes' theme is "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down," which was heard on the 1937 short "Sweet Sioux," but wasn't used as the Looney Tunes theme until "Rover's Rival".

The Channel: Home media release (Shokus Video's Cartoon Collection, third volume)

Part(s) Edited: Curiously, the scene of the baby chick getting inflated with a tire pump while chasing the worm from the apple was cut. A scene of mild slapstick like this normally wouldn't be cut on television, much less home media release, so I'm as lost as you are when it comes to explaining why it would be edited. I'm just going to assume that this is either a time/pacing cut brought on by either the cartoon going on for too long or, since Shokus Video is one of those gray-market public domain video companies that probably took some cartoon shorts that were still under copyright, some parts had to be trimmed for legal reasons (though if that were the case, why was the beginning with Eddie Camphor and Rub-Em-Off singing "Merrily, We Roll Along" not cut? Seems like the easy target).

Looney Tunes Wiki also claims that there may be a cut between the woman's underclothes dancing and the scene of the chick in the billboard ad chasing after the worm, but I'm going to cover that on my blog page about cartoon shorts that may have been edited, but there currently is little to no evidence of the deleted scenes existing.

What Wasn't Cut, But Should Have Been: The cigarette-smoking penguins doing the same dance as the wooden ducks on "Beauty and the Beast," only now the snow is abrasive, powdered cleanser for sinks and bathroom fixtures rather than soda crackers being put through an electric fan. I could see some unnamed syndicated versions doing it, but mostly, I see Cartoon Network and Boomerang temporarily editing this because one of their taboos is showing characters smoking cigarettes. I say "temporarily" because I can see this being shown edited initially, then shown uncut before getting phased out.

How It Plays Edited/Video Comparison: Going by how I edited it (based on what Looney Tunes wiki states), it looks obvious that something's missing. This is evident in the audio side of things rather than the visual, but I will let you, the viewer, judge for yourself.



Availability Uncut: Besides the Shokus Video's Cartoon Collection print, there are versions of this short that are available uncut and uncensored. The version I used for the compare/contrast video is from MeTV (an over-the-air channel that airs classic cartoon shorts, as well as older live-action TV shows) and that version is uncut (barring the alleged edit I mentioned above). The Golden Age of Looney Tunes laserdisc (volume 4, side 10) had this uncut, as well as the 2005 DVD release of the film Captain Blood, starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland. It used to be on Max (formerly known as "HBO Max") when the streaming service was first released in 2020, but it has since been pulled. Why? I don't know. There's nothing problematic about it (unless you count the Rub-Em-Off, the Russian violin [or "wioleen"] player, but most don't. I feel this might have been dropped because no one was streaming it, which is a shame, because it does look good restored). As of this writing, it hasn't been released anywhere else besides those places, but things could change.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Lost Episode: You're Too Careless With Your Kisses! (I'm Too Careless in Keeping Track)

Sometimes, when it comes to keeping a blog or researching, there will be omissions, mistakes, and new additions that weren't caught the first time around. The following is a "lost episode" of Drawn and Quartered showing the rundown of edits done to the 1932 Merrie Melodie, "You're Too Careless With Your Kisses!". In the Warner Bros. cartoon filmography, this short was released after "Bosko the Lumberjack" (which was covered as an installment of Drawn and Quartered) and "Ride Him, Bosko!" (which wasn't edited for anything in syndication or on any known television channel, domestic or international).



Director: Rudolf Ising

Summary: The drunken antics of her husband drives a female honeybee to go out and collect honey for herself...until a spider traps her in his home.

The Channel: WKBD in Detroit, Michigan (now CW Detroit 50)

Part(s) Edited: Back in the 1980s, WKBD cut the beginning of the cartoon where the female honeybee's husband drunkenly stumbles home from a night out and tries to slip in without her knowing, but fails (some things never change). While the Looney Tunes wiki says the cut was done for time (which I partially believe, since the scene did eat more clock than it should have, but the early cartoons weren't shining paragons of pacing), I personally think this was done to de-emphasize the fact that the male honeybee is a drunk.

How It Plays Edited: It's pretty obvious that something's edited from a story perspective. That drunken stumble home establishes the character and his flaw. They're lucky they didn't cut how the flaw affects his love interest.

Video Comparison:



Availability Uncut: The good news: this is a public domain cartoon, so you can watch it on YouTube (or any other video site) without worrying over copyright claims. The bad news is that it was available on two media releases (the Golden Age of Looney Tunes laserdisc [volume 5, side 1: "Black and White Classics"] and streaming on WarnerMedia RIDE), but the Golden Age of Looney Tunes laserdisc has long been out of print and WarnerMedia RIDE (which became Warner Bros. Discovery RIDE) shut down in October of 2023.