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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/private_snafu_6.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Situation Normal. All Fouled Up.]]
3
4A WartimeCartoon series made during the [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1940s]], starring the eponymous Private Snafu[[note]]An acronym for "'''S'''ituation '''N'''ormal, '''A'''ll '''F'''ucked '''U'''p" -- though the "Fucked" part would be {{Bowdlerise}}d as "Fouled"[[/note]] set during the struggle of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. Produced by Creator/WarnerBros for the Army-Navy Screen Magazine, these cartoons showed Snafu's adventures in the Army. They usually ended with various lessons concerning proper military behavior, via the confoundingly insipid acts of the brash but ignorant Snafu.
5
6It could be considered a SpinOff of the WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes and [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Merrie Melodies]] series of cartoons, supported by a few cameos of WesternAnimation/BugsBunny and usage of Creator/MelBlanc as the voice of the bumbling Snafu, though, unlike the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons, the Private Snafu shorts were more adult, allowing a lot of scenes and gags that wouldn't have been approved by UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode (mostly showing [[{{Fanservice}} women in various states of undress]] and other sexual references[[note]]like the malaria mosquito who looks and acts like a worn-out, alcoholic prostitute forced out of her profession due to a crackdown on vice as seen on "It's Murder She Says"[[/note]], but there was also some crude humor[[note]]Private Snafu usually ends up naked due to an explosion or gets poked in the butt or pokes someone else in the butt, but "Fighting Tools" had Snafu fire a gun that shoots up mud with the kind of gross, squelchy noise one would associate with diarrhea[[/note]] and swearing[[note]]mostly "hell" and "damn"[[/note]]).
7
8The ''Private Snafu'' shorts were largely sealed away after the end of the war, never to be seen again... until Creator/CartoonNetwork aired some as part of two ''Series/ToonHeads'' specials: one about Warner Bros.' lost and rare works and another about UsefulNotes/WorldWarII cartoons. A few shorts appeared as extras in the ''Looney Tunes: Golden Collection'' [=DVDs=] (and there's even a documentary on how the shorts were made and what impact they had on the history of animation). Because the films were created by the US federal government, they have been in the PublicDomain since day one, and some of them are available for viewing on [[http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=collection%3Amore_animation%20AND%20subject%3A%22SNAFU%22 the Internet Archive]].
9
10A complete chronological DVD release of the whole set of Private Snafu cartoons, newly remastered from the best extant film elements, was released by Thunderbean in December 2010. A high-definition [=BluRay=] version was released in 2015.
11
12Oh, and Thedore Geisel (better known as Creator/DrSeuss) wrote many of the early shorts in his characteristic rhyme. Think about ''that'' next time you read any of his children's books (''The Cat in the Hat'', ''How the Grinch Stole Christmas'', ''One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish'', ''Green Eggs and Ham'', etc) to your son/daughter/younger sibling/younger relative/children at school.
13----
14
15[[folder:FILMOGRAPHY]]
16!''Private Snafu'' series by Warner Bros.
17* Coming Snafu (Creator/ChuckJones): June 1943
18* Gripes (Creator/FrizFreleng): July 1943
19* Spies (Chuck Jones): August 1943
20* The Goldbrick (Frank Tashlin): September 1943
21* The Infantry Blues (Chuck Jones): September 1943
22* Fighting Tools (Creator/BobClampett): October 1943
23* The Home Front (Frank Tashlin): November 1943
24* Rumors (Friz Freleng): December 1943
25* Booby Traps (Creator/BobClampett): January 1944
26* Snafuperman (Friz Freleng): March 1944
27* Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike (Chuck Jones): March 1944
28* A Lecture on Camouflage (Chuck Jones): April 1944
29* Gas (Chuck Jones): May 1944
30* The Chow Hound (Frank Tashlin): June 1944
31* Censored (Frank Tashlin): July 1944
32* Outpost (Chuck Jones): August 1944
33* Pay Day (Friz Freleng): September 1944
34* Target Snafu (Friz Freleng): October 1944
35* Three Brothers (Friz Freleng): December 1944
36* In the Aleutians - Isles of Enchantment (Chuck Jones): February 1945
37* It's Murder She Says (Chuck Jones): February 1945
38* Hot Spot (Friz Freleng): July 1945
39* No Buddy Atoll (Chuck Jones): October 1945
40* Operation Snafu (Friz Freleng): December 1945
41
42!Unreleased shorts
43* Going Home (Chuck Jones): Planned for 1945, supposedly shelved as the bomb mentioned was too much like the atom bombs under development. Found in modern collections
44* Secrets of the Caribbean (Chuck Jones): Completed in 1945, masters were sent to the army, but was never released as the war wound down. No extant copies have been found, and it is believed to be a [[MissingEpisode lost film]]
45[[/folder]]
46
47In addition to the ''Private Snafu'' series proper made by the Warner Bros. studio, since the character was owned by the Army and was pretty popular with the troops, Snafu makes appearances in cartoons made by other studios, part of the Army's educational ''Few Quick Facts'' series. These are mostly quick cameos.
48[[folder:Appearances in the ''Few Quick Facts'' series by other studios]]
49!Creator/{{Disney}}:
50* Few Quick Facts: Voting for Servicemen Overseas (1944)
51* Few Quick Facts: Venereal Disease (1944) (lost cartoon)
52* Few Quick Facts: GI Bill of Rights (1946)
53
54![[Creator/ColumbiaCartoons UPA]]:
55* Few Quick Facts about Fear (1945)
56* Few Quick Facts about Inflation (1945)
57* Few Quick Facts: Japan (1945)
58* Few Quick Facts: Lend/Lease (1945)
59* Few Quick Facts on Weapons of War (1945) (lost cartoon)
60
61!Creator/{{MGM}}:
62* Few Quick Facts: Safety (1944)
63* Few Quick Facts: Diarrhea and Dysentery (1944)
64* Few Quick Facts: Shoes (1944)
65* Few Quick Facts: Accidents (1944)
66
67!Planned series
68* Seaman Tarfu in the Navy (Harmon & Ising): Released in 1945, only one short was made. Contains a cameo by Snafu.
69
70[[/folder]]
71
72----
73!!Contains examples of:
74
75* AdultsDressedAsChildren: In "Spies", one of the Japanese spies is disguised as a baby in a pram. Snafu, to nobody's surprise, fails to notice.
76* AllJustADream: Several of the cartoons end with Snafu about to face the consequences of his actions (usually his imminent demise) only to wake up. He is then shown mending his ways.
77* ArmedFarces: Notable as an officially sanctioned example, using a humorous AntiRoleModel to drive home potentially life-saving lessons for soldiers in [=WWII=]
78* AsianBuckTeeth: The Japanese soldiers are depicted with prominent front teeth.
79* TheBadGuyWins: Some episodes end with the enemy forces successfully killing off Snafu as a result of his incompetence.
80* BadSamaritan: Goldie the Goldbrick, who is really [[spoiler:a Japanese spy hoping to convince enough soldiers to slack off and enable Japan to win the war]].
81* BankruptcyBarrel: In "Payday", Snafu winds up wearing nothing but a cardboard box after he loses all of his money playing craps.
82* BedlahBabe: Snafu stumbles on to a harem full of these in "Booby Traps". Of course, the whole thing turns out to be one giant booby trap.
83* BehindAStick: In "A Few Quick Facts about Fear", Snafu and his warhorse manage to hide behind a tree trunk that is far narrower than the horse is wide.
84* BigEater: Snafu in "Chow Hound".
85* BizarreSeasons: The extreme changeability of the weather is one of the main sources of humour in "In the Aleutians - Isles of Enchantment". A RunningGag is Snafu marching along and passing from broiling sunshine to blizzards to torrential rains in a matter of steps, with him constantly changing clothes to fit the weather.
86* BlackComedy: Multiple shorts end with the enemy forces succeeding and killing off Snafu. Still using ''Looney Tunes'' slapstick of course.
87* BlowingSmokeRings: In "A Lecture on Camouflage", Snafu blows smoke rings while resting. The camouflaged Nazi stalking him blows smoke swastikas.
88* BoobBasedGag: A set of exploding FakeBoobs are used in one cartoon.
89* BoobyTrap: Has an entire cartoon on the subject, including one [[ActionBomb literal]] example.
90* {{Bowdlerise}}: Two shorts have aired on Creator/CartoonNetwork edited:
91** "Spies": When the short aired on the ''[=ToonHeads=]'' special about lost and rare WB shorts, the scenes of the Japanese spies were edited (the scene of the Japanese spy posing as a baby was cut and the Japanese spy in the phone was digitally covered up with a black square) and the scene of Snafu drinking booze and the booze rotting his brain lock was sped up so that way no time was spent on the alcohol in his body (and, for reasons unknown, the use of Raymond Scott's "Powerhouse" was replaced with generic jazz music). When "Spies" was on the ''[=ToonHeads=]'' episode about Private Snafu shorts, it was uncut.
92** "Censored": When this short aired once on a late-night showing of ''[=ToonHeads=]'', the scene of Snafu's girlfriend decoding his letter home was edited, as Snafu's girlfriend was topless (it was [[ToplessnessFromTheBack implied]], but still, it sent the censors on edge and had to be removed). It should be noted that only two of the scenes where she's topless (answering the door to get the mail and leaning over the vanity to decode the letter) were cut; the scene of her on the phone with her mom about what the letter said wasn't censored, nor were the pin-up photos around Snafu's sleeping quarters that also depicted topless women (albeit more stylized).
93* ButtBiter: In "Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike", Malaria Mike bites Snafu on the ass using a steel proboscis shaped like a harpoon.
94* TheCameo: WesternAnimation/BugsBunny cameos in the shorts "Gas" and "Three Brothers". WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck cameos in "Fighting Tools". And Snafu's design was recycled from a soldier briefly seen in the 1942 Chuck Jones short "The Draft Horse", making it a pre-debut cameo. Plus, Snafu himself makes an appearance in the ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' short "Boot Camping".
95* CigarChomper: The Technical Fairy First Class is never seen without a cigar clenched in his teeth.
96* CivilizedAnimal:
97** The bull and his cow girlfriend/wife in "Chow Hound"
98** Also, the mosquitoes in "Target Snafu," and "Private Snafu vs Malaria Mike" are this.
99* ClipItsWings: In "Coming Snafu", Snafu is towing a plane and, as usual, not paying attention when he drives between two pylons and rips the wings off it.
100* CoconutMeetsCranium: In a rare moment of competence, Snafu performs a VineSwing and drops a pile of coconuts on the head of a Japanese sailor in "No Buddy Atoll".
101* CouldntFindALighter: In "Hot Spot", the Devil lights his cigar off the hellfire of his FireAndBrimstoneHell.
102* CueTheFlyingPigs: In "Going Home", Snafu hears from the radio that his old regiment was attacked because someone leaked information. Snafu wishes that the one responsible (not knowing that it was him) would get run over by a streetcar. And at that moment, a streetcar goes through his living room and runs him over for the IrisOut.
103* CustomUniform: In "Gripes", Snafu is given command of the army and does away with all regulation. One of the soldiers starts wearing a uniform patterned after a zoot suit.
104* CutASliceTakeTheRest: In "Spies", Snafu pours a single shot of liquor from a bottle, then throws away the shot glass and guzzles down the bottle.
105* DeadlyGas: In "Gas", Snafu is stalked by a sentient cloud of poison gas: hampered by his extremely poor gas mask protocol.
106* DerangedAnimation: The climax of "Rumors", which features the bologna ([[VisualPun meant to represent the gossip growing out of control]]) becoming sentient creatures and reaching the point where the rumor from earlier turns into "We've lost the war". These nightmarish creatures in question look like something ripped out of a Dr. Seuss book--no surprise, since he worked on these shorts.
107* DigitalDestruction: The print of "The Goldbrick" on the fourth ''Looney Tunes Golden Collection'' DVD set has the video and audio ''very'' slow and warped.
108* DirtyOldMan: Snafu assumes his grandpa is attending burlesque shows in "Home Front".
109* DistractedByTheSexy: At least one short warned of the dangers of accidentally revealing sensitive information to beautiful women who might turn out to be spies. Also parodied in "Booby Traps", where it makes it ''seem'' like he's distracted by a harem of girls--only to reveal that it was a ''piano'' that caught his attention!
110* DownerEnding: It's of the PlayedForLaughs sort, but often Snafu bought the farm. Sometimes subverted and he wises up and survives, such as the gas-mask episode.
111* EarlyBirdCameo: Prior to these shorts, Snafu first appeared in the 1942 Creator/ChuckJones short "The Draft Horse".
112* EvilCounterpart: Goldie the Goldbrick is this to Snafu's Technical Fairy, First Class.
113* {{Fanservice}}:
114** Being made specifically for the enlisted men, these were more risqué than the regular Looney Tunes series. In particular, "Censored", which features Sally Lou in just 1940s-era panties, garters, and stockings. There's no actual nudity, but pretty close.
115** The mermaids in "A Lecture on Camouflage" ''are'' fully nude.
116** Likewise nude is Snafus pin-up pic from his grab-bag in "No Buddy Island".
117* FamilyThemeNaming: In "Three Brothers", it's revealed that Snafu has two brothers serving in the army too: Fubar [[note]]Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition or Repair or Reason[[/note]] and Tarfu [[note]]Totally And Royally Fucked Up or Things Are Really Fucked Up[[/note]].
118* FarSideIsland: Snafu and a Japanese sailor find themselves stranded on one in "No Buddy Atoll".
119%%* FauxToGuide
120* FelonyMisdemeanor: The cartoons were commissioned by the military during wartime, so they were highly classified, to the point that artists who worked on them had to paint individual frames out of order so they would not know the secret contents. The irony of course is that if they ''had'' fallen into the wrong hands, the enemy would have learned completely innocuous facts such as not to spread rumors and always use mosquito netting.
121* FireAndBrimstoneHell: Snafu went there at the end of "Spies". Incidentally, the Devil wore a lapel pin with a swastika on it. Also, we get a glimpse of Hell again in "Hot Spot".
122* FriendOrFoe: In ''Snafuperman'', Snafu accidentally air-raids ''the White House'' because he thought it was Berlin, and attack an American tank (and piss off General Patton) because he thought it was a Japanese tank. The moral is "study the field manual and maps."
123* AFoolAndHisNewMoneyAreSoonParted: The episode "Payday" follows this plot with Snafu. While Private Snafu's pay won't make him rich, it's enough that after the war he could afford to support a wife, a child, and to live in a suburban house and drive a new car. Or it would have been if he didn't waste it all during the war.
124* GardenGarment: In "A Lecture on Camouflage", Snafu appears wearing only a fig leaf as a demonstration of 'the first man to ever use camouflage'.
125* GeniusBruiser: The Nazi soldier in ''Fighting Tools'', who's not only five times bigger than Snafu, but far better at taking care of his weapons.
126* GilliganCut: In ''Coming Snafu'', after getting in trouble for his usual carelessness, Snafu back sasses military officials, boasting that he knows his rights as a soldier. Cut to Snafu fuming in jail.
127-->'''Snafu:''' I want a lawyer! GET ME A LAWYER!!!
128* GoodAngelBadAngel: Technical Fairy First Class plays the Good Angel in "Pay Day", but this being Snafu, he has [[{{Pun}} no chance in hell]] against his evil counterpart.
129* GooGooGetUp: In "Spies", one of the Japanese spies is disguised as a baby. Snafu, naturally, fails to notice.
130* GossipEvolution: Military style! "Rumors" begins with Snafu being informed that it looks like a good day for a bombing, taking this to mean that they're about to get bombed, and spreading to others who in turn spread it until it becomes a rumor that they're about to lose the war. (In a nice touch of visual metaphor, the passage of the rumors is represented by baloney flying out of people's mouths.)
131* GossipyHens: This is what Snafu imagines his mother and her bridge partners to be (literally seeing them transform into hens) in "The Home Front".
132* GrassIsGreener:
133** "The Infantry Blues" has Snafu griping about how difficult being in the infantry is and wishes he was in the Tank Corps, Navy, or Air Force where they have it easier. Technical Fairy First Class shows up to show Snafu that things are just as difficult in the other branches and everyone needs to work hard to achieve victory.
134** In "The Home Front," Snafu envies his family and girlfriend back stateside, and how they have their usual, comfortable lives while he has to suffer in deployment. He soon sees that every one of them (including the grandfather) are also very hard at work to support the war effort, through construction, keeping a war garden, and joining the WAC.
135* {{Hammerspace}}: Loads, e.g. Tarfus sailor wardrobe in "Seaman Tarfu in the Navy".
136* HornySailors: A RunningGag in "Seaman Tarfu in the Navy" is a sailor lecherously pursuing a beautiful woman for the entire cartoon, even across the bottom of the ocean, [[spoiler:only to lose her to Snafu]].
137* HospitalHottie: A sexy nurse is seen tending to Snafu while he is faking being sick while his squad is drilling in the rain in "The Goldbrick".
138* HotterAndSexier: Compared with the general release WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes cartoons (which do get a little risque at times, but are pretty much bound by UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode not to go too far), these cartoons featured a lot more female nudity, swearing (mostly "hell" and "damn," which back then, were considered taboo), and more "adult" jokes, since their audience were young, male, semi-educated soldiers who needed the morale boost when fighting overseas and enjoyed lowbrow humor and the scantily-clad women. If WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes was ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' of the 1930s and '40s, Private Snafu was the ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark''.
139* HumanHeadOnTheWall: At the end of "Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike", Malaria Mike has Snafu's head mounted on his wall above his fireplace.
140* HumanoidFemaleAnimal: The female mosquitoes in "It's Murder She Says."
141* IncrediblyConspicuousDrag: Snafu in "Operation Snafu" is not particularly convincing as a woman, but still apparently manages to fool a guard. In defense of the poor short-sighted Japanese gentleman it must be said that Snafu passed the [[EekAMouse Eek, a (Mechanical) Mouse!!]] test. [[spoiler: Also, the Japanese officer ''knew'' it was Snafu, and soon after getting close to him, reaches down his dress in search of the intelligence he had stolen. [[HilarityEnsues Snafu slaps him, of course.]]]]
142* InsectGenderBender: Averted with the bloodsucking mosquitoes in "It's Murder She Says" as they are female as in real life, but played straight with the titular male bloodsucking mosquito in "Target Snafu," and "Private Snafu vs Malaria Mike" as male mosquitoes only feed on fruit and nectar off plants.
143* InstantGravestone: Snafu gets one after he is flattened by a Japanese tank in "The Goldbrick".
144* InstantIllness: In both "Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike" and "It's Murder She Says", anyone bitten by a mosquito immediately develops all of the symptoms of malaria (and in the case of one unfortunate tree, immediately expires).
145* InteractiveNarrator: In "Booby Traps", Snafu gets in an argument with the narrator after the narrator describes him as 'a boob'.
146* IWasQuiteALooker: In "It's Murder She Says", Anopheles Annie says this to other female mosquitos in the bar, and in flashback she does look very attractive--for an anthropomorphic mosquito--before the US Army's malaria eradication program turned her into the broken down wreck she is now.
147* {{Jerkass}}: It's understandable since it's a military instructional cartoon, but Snafu is an arrogant, selfish, stupid, and rather nasty, singleminded solider who brings his own fates on himself due to his incompetence.
148* JokeOfTheButt: "Censored" has a gag where Snafu fails to sneak past the electric eye because of his rump coming into contact with the beam.
149* KavorkaMan: Despite Snafu being homely, short, dumb, witless and rude, he seems to have no problem getting the affections of extremely beautiful and curvy young women.
150* LastSecondWordSwap: The narration of the very first cartoon explains the derivation of the name Snafu. As the letters '''SNAFU''' are displayed on screen, the narrator says: "Snafu. Situation Normal, All ..." (the narrator pauses as the letter "F" on screen vibrates) "... All Fouled Up."
151* LaterInstallmentWeirdness: The last two shorts drop the instructional aspect in favor of typical cartoon shenanigans, and Snafu is [[TookALevelInBadass far more competent]] than the dimwitted bumbler he was up to this point.
152* LaughablyEvil: The key reason Snafu getting outsmarted or even killed by the enemy front doesn't come off as a sudden dark swerve. This is essentially the goofy bungling wartime caricatures in ''Looney Tunes'' cartoons scoring a TeamRocketWins.
153* {{Leitmotif}}: Snafu's "Theme" consists of a classic five note snippet called "You're A Horse's Ass", which fits the bumbling soldier's inept personality.
154* LetsMeetTheMeat: "The Chow Hound." Not only does the steer ''want'' people to eat him, but after seeing all the brave men volunteering to serve, he leaves his blushing bride on the wedding night in order to volunteer as food for allied soldiers. Since the episode is a warning to soldiers not to waste food, the end of the episode features the ghost of the steer eagerly watching as Snafu eats a plate of him, and actually becoming dismayed and angry when Snafu leaves half his meal unfinished.
155* LooseLips:
156** The essential Aesop to the short, ''Spies'', in which Snafu inadvertently blabs bit by bit all the spies around him need to know about his ship's departure time. It results in the Axis literally blowing him to hell.
157** Also the point of "Going Home". After his discharge, Snafu continues to discuss military matters out in public, leading to his platoon being wiped out.
158* MaleGaze: A lot of the featured nubile women have the camera emphasize on their boobs, butts and legs. Not surprising when you remember these were shorts created with soldiers in mind.
159* MildlyMilitary: Deconstructed in "Gripes". Snafu is frustrated at the military's rigorous discipline standards, so when the Technical Fairy First Class makes him his base's commander, he greatly relaxes them... which means the troops under his command are woefully unprepared when the Germans attack.
160* MimeAndMusicOnlyCartoon:
161** "Pay Day", by Creator/FrizFreleng, is pretty much dialog free, relying on music and timing to accentuate the visual gags. The only dialog is at the very end.
162** Similarly "Operation Snafu" (also by Freleng) is a mostly silent cartoon besides [[AsLongAsItSoundsForeign some gibberish by the Japanese caricatures]].
163* MobileShrubbery: In "A Lecture on Camouflage", after his jeep is shot by a Nazi shell, Snafu takes cover in the nearby woods, but the Technical Fairy First Class reminds him to cover his tracks. After doing so, it is time for Snafu to relax. He smokes under the shade of a tree. He is not alarmed when the tree asks for a light, speaking in a German accent. The Fairy has to remind him that the enemy can use camouflage too. Snafu sneaks away, but he is being followed by enemy soldiers posing as a tree, a tree stump, and a boulder.
164* MosquitoMiscreants: In "Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike", "Target Snafu" and "It's Murder She Says".
165* MouseTrap: In "Booby Traps", one of the booby traps that almost does for Snafu is a giant mousetrap.
166* MsFanservice: When the story calls for it, the female characters could be sexy in a way that UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode would never allow.
167** In "The Home Front," Snafu complains that his grandfather is doing no work for the war, but spends his time watching the girly shows, which are shown relatively explicitly for the era.
168* MusicalEpisode: "Fighting Tools", where almost all the dialogue is sung to the tune of "The Gay Caballero"
169* NakedPeopleAreFunny: The ending of "Fighting Tools" has Snafu being stark naked in a POWCamp after being [[RightOutOfMyClothes blown out of his clothes]] by a Nazi grenade.
170* NapoleonDelusion: After Snafu is locked up in a padded cell at the end of "Rumors", he is joined by a crazed baloney wearing a Napoleon hat. (ItMakesSenseInContext.)
171* NegativeContinuity: Hence how Snafu is able to come back after being killed 6 times.
172* NeverBareheaded: The Technical Fairy First Class is never seen without his garrison cap.
173* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: "That's the conditions that prevail!" (Jimmy Durante as walrus in "In the Aleutians - Isles of Enchantment")
174* NoDialogueEpisode: "Pay Day" and "Operation Snafu" contain very little dialogue, in the former the only spoken dialogue is provided by a mouse and in the later we only have the gibberish spoken by the Japanese officers.
175* NonMammalMammaries: In "Outpost", lonesome Snafu dreams of a woman...and so does his trusty avian sidekick.
176** And the female mosquitoes in "It's Murder She Says", of course. See below.
177* NotDistractedByTheSexy: Played for laughs in "Booby Traps."
178* NotSoHarmlessVillain: Though the Nazi forces tend to be given the same silly front as standard ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' examples (right down to Mel Blanc's goofiest German accent), they are treated as much more lethal and resilient, and sometimes even [[TheBadGuyWins successfully bump off Snafu in the end]]. Justified as these shorts were for the purpose of military viewing and showing soldiers to take their jobs and enemies seriously.
179* OffTheChart: In "It's Murder She Says", the graph showing the malaria rates goes off the top of the chart, with several extra charts stuck on above the original to capture the rise, before going off the edge of the screen.
180* OpenShirtTaunt: In "Fighting Tools", a German soldier opens his shirt to taunt Snafu when he sees that his rifle is leaking mud.
181-->''Hmm, that rifle looks just a bit gooey''
182-->''If you t'ink I am scared, you're plum screwy''
183-->''Go on, fire away, buck, you're damn gun's full of muck''
184-->''Und nothing comes out but just hooey''
185* OutOfFocus: "Hot Spot" and "The Chow Hound" focus considerably less on Snafu himself.
186* PaintedTunnelRealTrain: Extremely rare non-chase-related example in "Hot Spot".
187* ParasolOfPain: In "No Buddy Atoll", Snafu accidentally knocks out his Japanese foe when he mistakenly triggers the umbrella function on his SwissArmyWeapon.
188* PatheticDroopingWeapon: [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in ''"Fighting Tools"'', that details the importance of weapon maintenance. Snafu is shown employing a Vicker's Machine Gun against a German soldier, but since Snafu didn't hook up the cooling jacket's water supply, the barrel goes floppy as the weapon ''[[OverHeating liquifies into a puddle]],'' not unlike melting ice cream.
189* PeelingPotatoes: Snafu is stuck on KP in "Gripes"; peeling potatoes with his feet while scrubbing pots with his hands and sweeping the floor with his butt.
190* PistolWhipping: Snafu smacks a Nazi in the face with his rifle butt in "Fighting Tools": the rifle having jammed because of Snafu's lack of maintenance. This does not help him.
191* PlayingSick: In "The Goldbrick", Snafu fakes being sick so he can get of drill in the rain, and spends the day cosied up in bed being tended to by a HospitalHottie. However, avoiding training leaves him unprepared when his unit goes into action in the South Pacific.
192* PolkaDotDisease: In "The Goldbrick", Goldie the Goldbrick paints Snafu's face with [[PolkaDotPaint 'measles paint']] to cover him in spots so he can [[PlayingSick feign illness]] and get out of drill.
193* PolkaDotPaint: In "The Goldbrick", Goldie the Goldbrick applies a coat of spotted 'measles paint' to Snafu's face to allow him to fake being sick.
194* PottyEmergency: Unsurprisingly, given the subject matter, Snafu suffers one in "Few Quick Facts: Diarrhea and Dysentery".
195* PublicDomainAnimation: As the films were made for army training and sanctioned by the government, all Private Snafu cartoons are in the public domain.
196* ReassignedToAntarctica: "The Outpost" is intended to explain why being assigned to remote and/or unpleasant stations [[DefiedTrope is important work in its own way]].
197* ReadTheFreakingManual: The Aesop to the short, "Snafuperman" about the consequences of not reading your field manuals.
198* RhymesOnADime: Geisel's trademark rhyming shows up mainly in "Gripes", "Spies", and "Rumors" (the latter, only in the narration).
199* RightOutOfMyClothes: Happens to Snafu in "Fighting Tools" when his jeep is blown up by a Nazi grenade, and he ends the cartoon [[NakedPeopleAreFunny stark naked]] in a POWCamp.
200* RightWayWrongWayPair: Snafu plays both roles in the pair -- he does it wrong, and then goes back and does it right (most of the time. You have shorts like "Spies" where he doesn't know what he did wrong until it was too late).
201* RunningGag: The sailor following the hot babe in "Seaman Tarfu in the Navy". Completely with TheStinger after the end credits:
202-->''Snafu'' (taking the girl away from the sailor): "What do you expect, the ''army'' made this picture!"
203* TheRuntAtTheEnd: In "Three Brothers", Snafu's brother Fubar is working in the K-9 Corps. As a target dummy. He gets pursued by a pack of attack dogs. The last one, lagging behind the others, is a tiny and extremely yappy Chihuahua.
204* SafeDrivingAesop: This trope was PlayedForLaughs in one episode that had Snafu driving a jeep, but getting distracted by a poster of a [[DistractedByTheSexy woman in lingerie]] and crashing. Explosions ensued, but being a cartoon, Snafu was [[AshFace perfectly okay]]. Since the shorts were entertaining, soldiers paid attention and they still got the message across.
205* {{Satan}}: Appears in "Spies" and "Hot Spot".
206* SceneryCensor: Sally Lou's breasts are (barely) covered by Snafu's letter in "Censored".
207* SchmuckBait: The various booby traps in the short of that name.
208* SelfDuplication: In "Gas", the sentient cloud of DeadlyGas splits itself into three in order to surround Snafu.
209* ShootTheShaggyDog: "The Chow Hound", where a bull sacrifices his body to become meat which would be served as food to Snafu--only for Snafu to eat so much beforehand that he throws out said meat made from the bull, much to his ghost's chagrin.
210* ShoutOut:
211** Carl Stalling makes one to his early Disney work by reusing a musical score he composed for the WesternAnimation/SillySymphonies short "Hell's Bells" in the opening of "Hot Spot".
212** "Snafuperman" is a pretty obvious one to Franchise/{{Superman}}. It even uses the iconic [[WesternAnimation/SupermanTheatricalCartoons Max Fleischer Superman]] theme.
213* SpinOff: Of the WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes shorts.
214* StealthPun: The short ''Hot Spot'' has the Devil watching the army travel through a desert. Throughout the short, we see him breaking down in the heat as he strips out of his business suit and uses any liquids to keep himself cool. The joke, of course, is that [[spoiler: it's hotter than Hell out there]]!
215* StockingFiller: Snafu's girlfriend Sally Lou spends all of "Censored" in stockings, suspenders and panties and [[{{Fanservice}} nothing else]].
216* SuperWindowJump: In "Rumors", Snafu enters the barracks to hide by jumping in through a closed window. He then exits by jumping out a different closed window.
217* SwallowTheKey: The Japanese soldier in "Operation Snafu". (And the war secret too, later on. In a [[OutOfCharacterMoment strange lapse of competence]], Snafu kidnaps the soldier along with the secret and rows back to America.)
218* SwissArmyWeapon: Snafu wields a pretty useless one in "No Buddy Atoll". (Until he accidentally pulls out an umbrella which promptly knocks out the foe.)
219* TaeKwonDoor: In "Operation Snafu", Snafu tricks the three Japs chasing him into bowing, then slams a door on their heads.
220* TakeThat: "Snafuperman" is huge one towards the WesternAnimation/SupermanTheatricalCartoons created by Max Fleischer, showing that even if you have Superman's powers, you [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome will be more of a detriment than an asset to the army if you don't pay attention to your formal military training]].
221* ThatPoorPlant:
222** In "Gas", the flowers in the meadow where Snafu is lazing wither and die as the sentient cloud of DeadlyGas touches down.
223** In "Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike", Mike misses Snafu and bites a tree, which then [[InstantIllness develops all the symptoms of malaria]] and keels over.
224* TheyKilledKennyAgain: Private Snafu is killed in 6 shorts.
225* ThoseWackyNazis: UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler and the Nazis that show up.
226** {{Defied|Trope}} in a way, as many Nazis --and even the Japanese-- though somewhat comical, are shown as far more competent than their bumbling counterparts seen in civilian propaganda. Several of Snafu's screwups result in Nazi victories (''Weapons of War'', where a Nazi captures Snafu since the latter had taken poor care of his equipment and ''Spies'', where Nazi spies send information straight to Hitler, who sends his U-boat fleet after the Ship Snafu is on). The reason for this is that civilian propaganda's aim was to allay fears at home by depicting the Axis powers as a joke, while the goal of military propaganda was to demonstrate the opposite, telling soldiers that their enemies were a real, very dangerous threat and had to be taken seriously.
227* ThrowTheDogABone: On some occasions, Snafu's failures would turn out to be AllJustADream with Snafu living to learn from his earlier errors. In the last handful of shorts he outright ''succeeds'' in a few missions with minimal trial and error.
228* TokyoRose: When Tokyo Rose begins spewing her anti-American propaganda over the airwaves in "Tokyo Woes", Seaman Hook is inspired to fight back, using War Bonds as literal weapons against her.
229* TooDumbToLive: Private Snafu. Of course, since it's a primarily an instructional series, the entire point is to show [[AntiRoleModel how]] ''[[AntiRoleModel not]]'' [[AntiRoleModel to act]]. That said, it's a wonder he wasn't rejected 4F due to mental incompetence.
230* TookALevelInBadass: Snafu becomes...'''shockingly''' competent in the last two shorts, which drop the instructional aspect in favor of basic cartoon shenanigans. ''Hot Spot'' has him showing near-inhuman determination in helping transport supplies in the blazing Iran desert up to Russia (with his only major 'screwup' happening because CartoonPhysics decided out of the blue ''not'' to work for him), and ''Operation Snafu'' has him play Bugs Bunny and steal top-secret war plans from the Japanese. Guess the Army won't let you be a screw up forever...
231* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Snafu's girlfriend Sally Lou in "Censored".
232* VillainSong: The Goldbrick.
233* VineSwing: In "No Buddy Atoll'', Snafu performs one in order to [[CoconutMeetsCranium drop a pile of coconuts on the head of a Japanese sailor]].
234* VisualPun: "Booby Traps" has a female dummy whose breasts turn out to be disguised bombs; i.e. literal 'booby traps'.
235* VocalEvolution: In the pilot short "Coming Snafu", Mel Blanc's voice for Snafu is pitch shifted higher and lacks as thick an accent, leading him to sound more like his Daffy Duck voice. In later shorts he gave Snafu a deeper more nasally voice, essentially a dopier version of Bugs Bunny.
236* VomitDiscretionShot: In "It's Murder She Says", Anopheles Annie runs off and sticks her head over a rock to throw up after being splashed with a drop of G.I. Repellent.
237* WartimeCartoon: Not just wartime, but actual military issue.
238* WeaponsUnderstudies: One cartoon went unreleased, supposedly owing to serious similarities to the Manhattan Project, which at the time was a top-secret undertaking.
239* WheresMyGun: Happens several times to Snafu as a result of his general ineptitude. In "Fighting Tools", he has trouble finding his rifle, and the machine gun and howitzer are located a stupidly long way from his tent (although given everything else he has done to his weapons, not knowing their whereabouts is the least of his problems). In "Gas", it is his gas mask that he can't locate.
240* WhiteGloveTest: The battleship in "Seaman Tarfu in the Navy" has an automatic deck swabbing machine, which is then followed by an automated white glove checking the cleanliness of the deck.
241* WhoNeedsEnemies: The first short has Snafu act like such a blundering nuisance that he is imprisoned by ''his own side''.
242* WorfHadTheFlu: In ''Fighting Tools'', it's stated outright that Snafu would have beaten the Nazi brute had he ''maintained his weapons properly''.
243* WorstNewsJudgmentEver: In the 1943 short "Fighting Tools", the first shot of is of a newspaper. The main headline is about the capabilities of the Garand rifle, while a small headline that reads "Adolph Hitler Commits Suicide" is buried in the bottom right-hand corner.
244* XylophoneGag: [[TropeMakers Originated]] in the cartoon ''Booby Traps'', though unlike other instances of the gag in ''Looney Tunes'', other than Snafu having trouble hitting the correct key at the beginning, the trap actually succeeds in taking the life of the intended victim.
245* YellowPeril: The Japanese caricatures.

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