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1[[quoteright:160:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thumbnailCAP9JBM2_7996.jpg]]
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3''Toon Heads'' was a classic anthology series that aired from October 1992 to November 2003 on Creator/CartoonNetwork, though the episodes that most viewers would be familiar with are the Leslie Fram-narrated episodes that aired from 1998 to 2003.
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5In its' original format, ''Toonheads'' aired Monday through Friday at 11pm and only ran for fifteen minutes, usually allotting one or two cartoons with narration by Don Kennedy. In 1995, the show was upgraded to full half hour format with three segments, at the new timeslot of midnight. Several of these new episodes were repackages of the original week-long segments. ''Toonheads'' went off the air in 1996 until it returned two years later, with Leslie Fram now narrating and the format most people recognize in place.
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7From then on, it was always aired during primetime (and, in the last years of the show, going even later at night after Adult Swim finished), this program showed a large variety of common and rare [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation classic cartoons]] from many studios, from the Creator/WarnerBros. and Creator/{{MGM}} cartoon catalogs to more well-known or obscure studios like Creator/FleischerStudios. In the beginning, it featured a wider range of subjects compared to the later seasons, where it was rare to see something not from WB or MGM.
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9Each episode had a theme: some episodes focused on the creation and evolution of a certain character (like how Daffy went from a wacky duck to a greedy, egotistical jerk or how the early version of Elmer Fudd had him as a fat man), some showed highlights of a director's work, and some episodes touched on more esoteric themes, like cartoons that made fun of Hollywood movies and actors, musical cartoons, cartoons that took place in space, cartoons that had one-shot characters in them, and even cartoons that centered on [[HilarityEnsues the hilarity that ensued]] when a character tries to get some sleep. One episode even focused on the plagiarism allegations between Warner Bros. "Rhapsody Rabbit" and MGM's "The Cat Concerto".
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11The cartoons were mostly shown uncut and uncensored (though not as much as, say, what you'd find on ''The Bob Clampett Show'' or even ''The Popeye Show''), which allowed this program to show many cartoons that were taboo for daytime television, like such wholesome fare as ''WesternAnimation/TheDucktators'' and ''WesternAnimation/BlitzWolf'', supplemented by classic cartoon trivia and rare interviews with Golden Age veterans. The program was a hit, running for 82 episodes, with two hour-long specials (''The Lost Cartoons'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/WorldWarII The Wartime Cartoons]]''). There were two extra specials that never aired -- ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihTFjBD8_KQ The Best Of The Worst Cartoons Ever]]'', and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHNTv3oQoE8 one half-hour special]] that would have had all -- or at least, three of -- the Bugs Bunny cartoons that were banned from the 2001 ''June Bugs'' marathon due to having ethnic and racial stereotyping.
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13The program as we remember it no longer exists, ending in November 2003 (the last episode was called "The Boys from Kansas City", about the works from the Kansas City animators who went on to become HouseholdNames for Warner Bros. and MGM), with a Christmas Special aired in 2005. "The Lost Cartoons" is, at the least, on DVD; it was included on ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Golden Collection'' Vol. 1 and disc 3 of the Blu-Ray version of ''Looney Tunes Platinum Collection''.
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15A partial list of episodes can be found [[https://lostmediawiki.com/ToonHeads_(partially_lost_animation_anthology_series;_1996-2003) here]].
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17!!Tropes Related to This Show:
18* AnimatedAnthology: It's a show full of cartoon shorts, with fun facts and trivia questions sprinkled in.
19* BaseballEpisode: One episode was made up entirely of baseball shorts: ''WesternAnimation/GoneBatty'', ''[[WesternAnimation/TexAveryMGMCartoons Batty Baseball]]'', and ''WesternAnimation/BaseballBugs''.
20* DeepSouth: The theme of an episode that showed ''Southern Fried Rabbit'', ''Backwoods Bunny'', and ''The Dixie Fryer''.
21* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
22** The original format itself before it became the half hour three shorts so is this for people familiar to the later version.
23** In its original seasons Toonheads had a bit wider scope in what it showed including works from Fleischer, Hanna Barbera and Jay Ward being included as well as more obscure stunts like Nudnik and the Night of Independent Animation. Once the Kellner-Cohen feud began and the network had itself segmented more Toonheads pretty much only showed WB and MGM shorts with an occasional Fleischer (which is the version most viewers remember).
24* LongRunner: The series lasted from 1992-2003.
25* PunBasedTitle: On the term "Eggheads", hence the recurring egg/chicken farm motif in the bridging segments and focus on obscure cartoon trivia.

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