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Happened in many ''Looney Tunes'' shorts with surprising frequency. Why? Because the animators and writers didn't have to worry (much) about standards and practices boards (besides UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode), the cartoons were meant for an audience of adult theatergoers (although, in contrast to modern-day "adult" cartoons, they didn't latch on to gross comedy or raunchy sex to get laughs), and even if they did have to worry about indecent content, UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode officers went after vaguely sexual or subversive content in both live-action and animated movies rather than the stuff that would today be considered plainly obvious.
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* In one scene "Porky's Badtime Story", a dripping ceiling wakes up Gabby Goat. He sees a damp spot on the bed and shoots a glare at Porky, implying Gabby thought for a moment [[ToiletHumour Porky had wet the bed]]. Repeated with Daffy Duck in the remake "Tick Tock Tuckered."
* Throwaway gag in a WesternAnimation/SpeedyGonzales short: A mouse says that "Speedy knows my sister," and another one replies "[[TheCasanova Speedy Gonzales]] knows ''everybody's'' sister!"
** This joke was actually used ''twice''. The second time, the line was "a friend of my sister Carmella."
** Speedy Gonzales is always singing "La Cucaracha." A BilingualBonus in that the cockroach of the title is looking for "marijuana por fumar." To smoke.
* The WesternAnimation/PepeLePew cartoons would qualify (after all, the whole series is a StealthPun on men going after pussy[[spoiler:...cats]]), though one Pepe cartoon will make viewers wonder why the Hays Office didn't intervene: 1953's "WesternAnimation/WildOverYou," in which Pepe's latest feline victim is an escaped wildcat who fights off Pepe by beating him up. The crap that got past the radar is Pepe [[MasochismTango stating that he liked it]].
** Another example was not so much as getting past the radar as the radar was about ten moves behind: During one pursuit, Pepe calls out to Penelope: "You are too tightly wound up! You should try engaging in some recreational activity, [[YouNeedToGetLaid like making love!]]" [[HaveAGayOldTime It wasn't quite so risque a term back then]] as it is now, but it still qualifies given UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode and its rules on sex in cinema (including verbal implications of it).
* In "WesternAnimation/WhatsCookinDoc", one of the films is a "stag reel" (the old name for a porno movie, particularly one that plays as part of the entertainment at a bachelor party or a guys' night out). Since the films are ones Bugs starred in, the implication is that ''[[FridgeHorror Bugs was a porn star]]''.
** This might've been {{Lampshaded}} in an episode of WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow, in which Bugs Bunny stated that he would rather not explain his past as he stated that he never went to high school. ''[[{{Squick}} Yeah...]]''
* At the beginning of the "Tales from the Vienna Woods" sequence in "WesternAnimation/ACornyConcerto", Porky [[TalkingWithSigns holds up a sign]] to the [[BreakingTheFourthWall audience]] saying: "I'M HUNTING THAT [[SymbolSwearing @%#&]] RABBIT!!"
* "WesternAnimation/HareConditioned" has Bugs in drag as a female customer in the shoe department trying to fool the store manager (who wants Bugs mounted and stuffed, having served his purpose as a store window prop). What the manager does following this dialogue would be tantamount to sexual harassment today:
-->'''Bugs:''' I'd like to see something nice in a pair of bedroom slippers.
-->'''Manager:''' Confidentially, so would I!
* "WesternAnimation/HollywoodDaffy" has Daffy impersonating a studio director fooling the o-fay Joe Besser-like gate cop into thinking he'll make him a star. Daffy examines him and asks "What's Creator/ErrolFlynn got that you haven't got?" before interjecting, [[RhetoricalQuestionBlunder "Don't answer that!"]] So what ''does'' Errol Flynn have that the studio cop doesn't? Apparently, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Errol_Flynn#Personal_life a statutory rape charge]]. Flynn was notorious as a ladies' man and was accused of seducing two teenaged girls a couple of years prior to the cartoon's premiere. Flynn was acquitted of all charges.
* "WesternAnimation/AGruesomeTwosome" features a pair of alley cats, one a Jimmy Durante-like guy, the other a mostly silent deadpan, both after Tweety. At one point they're disguised in [[PantomimeAnimal a two-man horse costume]]. The Durante cat pulls off his headpiece and tells us "I'm the horse's head!", which of course [[StealthPun makes the other guy the horse's ass]].
* In "WesternAnimation/BookRevue", one of the books is ''Cherokee Strip'' (a then-popular Marquis James memoir about his boyhood in turn-of-the-century Oklahoma), but the cover has a picture of an Indian girl in revealing clothing accompanied by cheers and wolf whistles.
* In "WesternAnimation/TheDraftHorse", they sneaked in the old marching song "You're in the army now" on an eyesight test, which featured the verse "you'll never get rich/you ''son of a bitch''" (written so small it's almost illegible without pausing).
* In one Road Runner short, Wile E. Coyote's CanisLatinicus scientific name was given as "Hardheadipus oedipus", i.e. hard-headed motherfucker. Meanwhile, the Road Runner's CanisLatinicus scientific name was given as "Batoutahelius".
* A surprising example in a much later Looney Tunes cartoon is in "WesternAnimation/BunnyAndClaude", where at one point as the Film/BonnieAndClyde-esque [[OutlawCouple gangster rabbit duo]] that only steals carrots is trying to evade the sheriff, Bunny says to Claude "I just want to tell you that there's a..." and whispers inaudibly. Claude then turns to her and says "Is that all you ever think about? ...Carrots?"
* Another later-entry short, 1969's "WesternAnimation/{{Injun Trouble|1969}}" (which was also the final short in the original Warner Bros. cartoon series), has Cool Cat arrive in a Western town and find a place labeled "Topless Saloon." He enters doing a sexy growl, but it's not what he expected: the only topless person in the saloon is the burly male barkeep.
* A prop used in several cartoons was the tall cylindrical trash can on wheels, with the initials "D.S.C." on the side. In real life, these were used (before automobiles were common) by the Department of Street Cleaners, whose job was to patrol the streets and clean up horse manure. Used as a LiteralMetaphor in "WesternAnimation/DripAlongDaffy", where Daffy claims, "I told you I'd clean up this one-horse town!"
-->'''Porky:''' Lucky for him, this ''is'' a one-horse town.
* Here's one that's ''still'' rarely edited out. In "WesternAnimation/PeopleAreBunny", Bugs gets a call from a call-in quiz show where he has to answer a question to win a prize. The question is a ''very'' complicated multiplication problem, which he successfully answers in about a second. (In his head.) When the host asks him how he answered so quickly, his response?
-->'''Bugs:''' Well, if it's one thing us rabbits can do, it's multiply.
* In "WesternAnimation/ATaleOfTwoKitties", cats Babbit and Catstello (cartoon versions of Creator/AbbottAndCostello) are trying to catch Tweety Bird in his nest. Babbit's plan: send Catstello up a giant ladder to raid the nest. Catstello, unfortunately, is afraid of heights, but Babbit forces him up anyway. Once Catstello is at the top, Babbit hollers up at him from the bottom of the ladder.
-->'''Babbit:''' Give me the bird! GIVE ME THE BIRD!
-->'''Catstello:''' ([[BreakingTheFourthWall to audience]]) If da Hays Office would only let me, I'd [[FlippingTheBird give 'im the boid]], all right!
* A similar example is ''[[HiddenInPlainSight right in the title]]'' of "WesternAnimation/BugsBunnyGetsTheBoid", released the same year as the above cartoon (1942). Was Leon Schlesinger sending gift baskets to the Hays Office around that time?
* In "WesternAnimation/BirdsOfAFather", Sylvester tries to shoot a bird, but ends up shooting a prop bird off an old woman's hat, which prompts the woman to smack him with her purse. When Junior laments that his father would go to such a low as "shooting a defenseless old lady," Sylvester quips in response "Aw, son...she's about as defenseless as a porcupine in a nudist colony."
* At one point in "WesternAnimation/RabbitSeasoning", Bugs does his traditional [[DisguisedInDrag drag gag]] towards Elmer Fudd (of course), who falls in love with him. When Bugs comes closer to him, [[SomethingElseAlsoRises Elmer's hat stretches with a "boing" sound.]] Erm...
** Just after the kiss, Elmer staggers away in PostKissCatatonia and his rifle goes off in Daffy's face.
* "WesternAnimation/AnItchInTime" has one surprisingly blatant example that somehow waltzed right past the censors: a dog is dragging his itchy butt across a carpet, and pauses to cheerfully comment to the audience "Hey, I'd better cut this out, I may get to like it!"
* The May 2001 issue of the DC comic has Lola (here an employee for Machu Pizza) commenting on one client's...[[http://general-radix.tumblr.com/post/79614610237/yep-the-dc-looney-tunes-comic-made-a-dick-joke interesting]] castle.
* In "WebAnimation/PlanetOfTheTaz", Dr. Zarius tells about his giant anvil to Daffy and Porky.
-->'''Dr. Zarius:''' We have found this ancient weapon, so powerful, so sophisticated, it'll clean out your bagpipes! (Cue bagpipe music)
* "Museum Scream' features a scene where Sylvester goes through a digestive tract display. After he's crapped out (which is off-screen), Tweety says this:
-->'''Tweety:''' Are you okay, puddy tat? You wook pooped!
* "Cock-a-Doodle-Duel" has a RunningGag in the form of [[SomethingElseAlsoRises chickens laying eggs when they're turned on, an obvious metaphor for having an erection]]. At one point, even ''Foghorn'' lays an egg after seeing a rival rooster dancing.
* "Freudy Cat": The psychiatrist in the short mumbles something that sounds an ''awful'' lot like "smartasses".
* In the [=WW2=] cartoon "Daffy the Commando," a pinup of a nude girl is seen on the wall of the Kommandant's bunker.
* The short ''WesternAnimation/HoneymoonHotel1934'' has two newly-wed bugs. At the end when the fire is extinguished, the two come out of the murphy bed. The male puts a "Do Not Disturb" sign on their hotel room door and crawls back into bed. Both of them give the audience a wink and the murphy bed goes back into the wall with them inside. The murphy bed has a calendar with a baby on it, which ''also'' gives the audience a wink.
* "Little Orphan Airedale" has Porky about to kick Charlie out, but Charlie tells Porky that he can't throw him out in his "condition". Porky gets curious and Charlie whispers something inaudibly in his ear. Porky goes "You mean-?" and Charlie has a feminine look on his face and nods. Porky then softens up and puts Charlie in bed with soup and crackers. When Porky asks for Charlie's name, he gives it to him and Porky shouts "CHARLIE!?" and kicks Charlie out. Back then, you couldn't say you're pregnant in pictures.
* The start of the short "Conrad the Sailor" has the titular character mopping up the ship's [[StealthPun (poop)]] deck before reacting to [[ToiletHumor something offscreen]]. This results in him [[DeathGlare glaring up]] at Daffy who smugly waves at him. Afterwards, the camera pans out to reveal Daffy actually left messy foot prints on the deck that Conrad mops up.
* Elmer's butt is very briefly exposed in "To Duck...Or Not To Duck." Similarly, Red Hot Ryder's is as well in "Buckaroo Bugs."
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