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Useful notes are not tropes
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"Porky in Wackyland" is a [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1938]] WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes short, directed by Creator/BobClampett and written by an uncredited Warren Foster. The short has WesternAnimation/PorkyPig going off on a quest to DarkestAfrica to find the legendary Do-Do bird, for a cash reward of $4,000,000,000,000[[note]]P.S.: 000,000,000[[/note]]. Upon arriving, he discovers the Do-Do's homeland: [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} Wackyland]], an unbelievably insane place where nothing makes sense and ''anything'' can happen. All in all, the short winds up being one really, [[DerangedAnimation really strange ride]].
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"Porky in Wackyland" is a [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1938]] 1938 WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes short, directed by Creator/BobClampett and written by an uncredited Warren Foster. The short has WesternAnimation/PorkyPig going off on a quest to DarkestAfrica to find the legendary Do-Do bird, for a cash reward of $4,000,000,000,000[[note]]P.S.: 000,000,000[[/note]]. Upon arriving, he discovers the Do-Do's homeland: [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} Wackyland]], an unbelievably insane place where nothing makes sense and ''anything'' can happen. All in all, the short winds up being one really, [[DerangedAnimation really strange ride]].
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* UsefulNotes/LooneyTunesInTheThirties: Considered to be the very best from the 1930s.
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trope was cut/disambiguated due to cleanup
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* JustForPun: "Dough for the Do-Do" adds a gag where a literal [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Rubber (Marching) Band]] marches across the ground.
** This was actually a carry-over from ''Tin Pan Alley Cats'', one of the infamous WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
** This was actually a carry-over from ''Tin Pan Alley Cats'', one of the infamous WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
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* VisualPun: "Dough for the Do-Do" adds a gag where a literal [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Rubber (Marching) Band]] marches across the ground.
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TRS
Changed line(s) 6,7 (click to see context) from:
"Porky in Wackyland" is a [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1938]] WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes short, directed by Creator/BobClampett and written by an uncredited Warren Foster. The short has WesternAnimation/PorkyPig going off on a quest to DarkestAfrica to find the legendary Do-Do bird, for a cash reward of $4,000,000,000,000[[note]]P.S.: 000,000,000[[/note]]. Upon arriving, he discovers the Do-Do's homeland: [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} Wackyland]], an unbelievably insane place where nothing makes sense and ''anything'' can happen. All in all, the short winds up being [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs one really]], [[DerangedAnimation really strange ride]].
to:
"Porky in Wackyland" is a [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1938]] WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes short, directed by Creator/BobClampett and written by an uncredited Warren Foster. The short has WesternAnimation/PorkyPig going off on a quest to DarkestAfrica to find the legendary Do-Do bird, for a cash reward of $4,000,000,000,000[[note]]P.S.: 000,000,000[[/note]]. Upon arriving, he discovers the Do-Do's homeland: [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} Wackyland]], an unbelievably insane place where nothing makes sense and ''anything'' can happen. All in all, the short winds up being [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs one really]], really, [[DerangedAnimation really strange ride]].
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None
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* NotRareOverThere: See above.
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* NotRareOverThere: See above. (And right below.)
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This cartoon was not in the aap package. That package was explicitly color cartoons, save for the Harmon & Ising Merrie Melodies which were included there for long-lost reasons.
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The color remake, "Dough for the Do-Do", which was directed by an uncredited Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s (alongside being in the post-1948 package of cartoons that often aired on ''WesternAnimation/TheBugsBunnyShow'', as opposed to the original, which was in the pre-1948 AAP package and aired less often on television). However, there's also a computer colorized version of "Porky in Wackyland" that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
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The color remake, "Dough for the Do-Do", which was directed by an uncredited Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s (alongside being in the post-1948 package of cartoons that often aired on ''WesternAnimation/TheBugsBunnyShow'', as opposed to the original, which was in the pre-1948 AAP package of pre-1943 black & white and aired less often on television). However, there's also a computer colorized version of "Porky in Wackyland" that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
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None
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* AntiClimax: In the beginning when it seems like the first monster that Porky encounters is about to attack him it turns out to be a ''very'' [[CampGay prissy]] monster and promptly walks off.
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* AntiClimax: In the beginning when it seems like the first monster that Porky encounters is about to attack him him, it turns out to be instead delivers [[FlatScare a ''very'' playful "Boo!"]] and [[CampGay prissy]] monster and promptly walks off.prances off campily]].
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* HeWentThatWay: When Porky asks a goggily eyed resident with a candle on his head where the Dodo is he says this and his many arms point in different directions.
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* HeWentThatWay: When Porky asks a goggily eyed resident with a candle on his head where the Dodo is is, he says this and his many arms point in different directions.
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* ArtImitatesLife: One of the Do-Do's tricks used to evade Porky is to draw a house that he can easily enter, but Porky struggles to gain access to.
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* ArtImitatesLife: ArtInitiatesLife: One of the Do-Do's tricks used to evade Porky is to draw a house that he can easily enter, but Porky struggles to gain access to.
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The color remake, "Dough for the Do-Do", which was directed by Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. However, there's also a computer colorized version of "Porky in Wackyland" that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
to:
The color remake, "Dough for the Do-Do", which was directed by an uncredited Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s.'80s (alongside being in the post-1948 package of cartoons that often aired on ''WesternAnimation/TheBugsBunnyShow'', as opposed to the original, which was in the pre-1948 AAP package and aired less often on television). However, there's also a computer colorized version of "Porky in Wackyland" that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
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None
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** Versions of this cartoon distributed by Guild Films in the 1950s cut the part where the Do-Do pops into frame onto the Warner Brothers shield and hits Porky with a rock from a slingshot. This cut was made because Warner Bros. did not want to be associated with television back in 1955. A similar cut was made when ABC aired the 1949 shot-for-shot remake of "Porky in Wackyland" called "Dough for the Do-Do" (though this cut was made because of comic violence[[note]]the Do-Do slingshotting Porky's head into the ground[[/note]] and because ABC at the time was controlled by the theater chain spun off from Warner Bros.' rival studio, Paramount[[note]]this was before ABC was bought out by Disney[[/note]]).
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** Versions of this cartoon distributed by Guild Films in the 1950s cut the part where the Do-Do pops into frame onto the Warner Brothers Bros. shield and hits Porky with a rock from a slingshot. This cut was made because Warner Bros. did not want to be associated with television back in 1955. A similar cut was made when ABC aired the 1949 shot-for-shot remake of "Porky in Wackyland" called "Dough for the Do-Do" (though this cut was made because of comic violence[[note]]the Do-Do slingshotting Porky's head into the ground[[/note]] and because ABC at the time was controlled by the theater chain spun off from Warner Bros.' rival studio, Paramount[[note]]this was before ABC was bought out by Disney[[/note]]).
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None
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** Versions of this cartoon distributed by Guild Films in the 1950s cut the part where the Do-Do pops into frame onto the Warner Brothers shield and hits Porky with a rock from a slingshot. This cut was made because Warner Bros. did not want to be associated with television back in 1955. A similar cut was made when ABC aired the 1949 shot-for-shot remake of "Porky in Wackyland" called "Dough for the Do-Do" (though this cut was made because of comic violence[[note]]the Do-Do slingshotting Porky's head into the ground[[/note]] and because ABC at the time was controlled by Warner Bros. rival studio, Paramount[[note]]this was before ABC was bought out by Disney[[/note]]).
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** Versions of this cartoon distributed by Guild Films in the 1950s cut the part where the Do-Do pops into frame onto the Warner Brothers shield and hits Porky with a rock from a slingshot. This cut was made because Warner Bros. did not want to be associated with television back in 1955. A similar cut was made when ABC aired the 1949 shot-for-shot remake of "Porky in Wackyland" called "Dough for the Do-Do" (though this cut was made because of comic violence[[note]]the Do-Do slingshotting Porky's head into the ground[[/note]] and because ABC at the time was controlled by the theater chain spun off from Warner Bros. Bros.' rival studio, Paramount[[note]]this was before ABC was bought out by Disney[[/note]]).
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The film has a spot on both The50GreatestCartoons and Literature/The100GreatestLooneyTunes lists, and it has also been inducted into the UsefulNotes/NationalFilmRegistry.
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The film has a spot on both The50GreatestCartoons and Literature/The100GreatestLooneyTunes lists, and it has also been inducted into the UsefulNotes/NationalFilmRegistry.
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* UsefulNotes/LooneyTunesInTheThirties
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* UsefulNotes/LooneyTunesInTheThirtiesUsefulNotes/LooneyTunesInTheThirties: Considered to be the very best from the 1930s.
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* FeatheredFiend: The Do-Do, although he's less than truly malicious, just mischievous and wacky. Nevertheless, he antagonizes Porky when the pig finally meets him in person.
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trope renamed to Doofy Dodo, example no longer fits definition
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* DumbDodoBird: The Do-Do, although it doesn't look much like the original dodo and is far from dumb.
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-->''Vo-do-diddy-oh-doh-vo-do-diddy-oh-doh-vo-doh-diddy-oh-doh-VOH-DO-DE-OH-DO-VO-DO-DIDDY-OH-DOH-DO-DE-OH-VO-DOH-EE-OH!!!! [=WoooooOOOOOOOOOOOooooooooooooooh!=]''
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----
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--Signpost on the border of Wackyland.
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** This was actually a carry-over from ''Tin Pan Alley Cats'', one of the infamous WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
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Changed line(s) 6,9 (click to see context) from:
''Porky In Wackyland'' is a [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1938]] WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes short, directed by Creator/BobClampett and written by an uncredited Warren Foster. The short has WesternAnimation/PorkyPig going off on a quest to DarkestAfrica to find the legendary Do-Do bird, for a cash reward of $4,000,000,000,000[[note]]P.S.: 000,000,000[[/note]]. Upon arriving, he discovers the Do-Do's homeland: [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} Wackyland]], an unbelievably insane place where nothing makes sense and ''anything'' can happen. All in all, the short winds up being [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs one really]], [[DerangedAnimation really strange ride]].
The color remake, ''Dough for the Do-Do'', which was directed by Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. However, there's also a computer colorized version of ''Porky in Wackyland'' that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
The color remake, ''Dough for the Do-Do'', which was directed by Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. However, there's also a computer colorized version of ''Porky in Wackyland'' that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
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The color remake,
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!!'''Contains examples of:'''
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* NotSoExtinct: The Do-Do, along with dozens more of his kind at the end. Apparently, Wackyland is where they all went.
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* SpeciesLostAndFound: The Do-Do, along with dozens more of his kind at the end. Apparently, Wackyland is where they all went.
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guild did the distributing
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** Versions of this cartoon distributed by Guild Films and Sunset Productions in the 1950s cut the part where the Do-Do pops into frame onto the Warner Brothers shield and hits Porky with a rock from a slingshot. This cut was made because Warner Bros. did not want to be associated with television back in 1955. A similar cut was made when ABC aired the 1949 shot-for-shot remake of "Porky in Wackyland" called "Dough for the Do-Do" (though this cut was made because of comic violence[[note]]the Do-Do slingshotting Porky's head into the ground[[/note]] and because ABC at the time was controlled by Warner Bros. rival studio, Paramount[[note]]this was before ABC was bought out by Disney[[/note]]).
to:
** Versions of this cartoon distributed by Guild Films and Sunset Productions in the 1950s cut the part where the Do-Do pops into frame onto the Warner Brothers shield and hits Porky with a rock from a slingshot. This cut was made because Warner Bros. did not want to be associated with television back in 1955. A similar cut was made when ABC aired the 1949 shot-for-shot remake of "Porky in Wackyland" called "Dough for the Do-Do" (though this cut was made because of comic violence[[note]]the Do-Do slingshotting Porky's head into the ground[[/note]] and because ABC at the time was controlled by Warner Bros. rival studio, Paramount[[note]]this was before ABC was bought out by Disney[[/note]]).
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The color remake, ''Dough for the Do-Do'', which was directed by Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on colored television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. However, there's also a computer colorized version of "Porky in Wackyland" that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
to:
The color remake, ''Dough for the Do-Do'', which was directed by Creator/FrizFreleng and released in 1949, is the version most viewers are familiar with simply because it was a more attractive version to air on colored color television during the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. However, there's also a computer colorized version of "Porky ''Porky in Wackyland" Wackyland'' that aired on Nickelodeon and later Cartoon Network in the 1990s and the early 2000s.