(LT) Pilot Bosko the Talk-Ink Kid
Episode: 1929-05-01 | Airdate: May 1, 1929 (7 min)
A cartoonist draws Bosko, who promptly comes to life.
Episode: 1929-05-01 | Airdate: May 1, 1929 (7 min)
A cartoonist draws Bosko, who promptly comes to life.
Episode: 1930-04-19 | Airdate: Apr 19, 1930
The music-happy Bosko and Honey take a car ride, but bad luck briefly interrupts their fun.
Episode: 1930-09-01 | Airdate: Sep 1, 1930
Bosko hunts in the jungle, but ends up playing music with the animals.
Episode: 1930-10-01 | Airdate: Oct 1, 1930
Bosko is a construction worker who impresses Honey by making music from everything in sight, including a decapitated mouse, a typewriter and a goat filled with hot air.
Episode: 1930-11-01 | Airdate: Nov 1, 1930
Bosko has a grand time on the farm, dancing with a cow, playing a horse's tail like a violin and getting drunk with three pigs.
Episode: 1930 Special | Airdate: Dec 1, 1930 (5 min)
Episode: 1930-12-01 | Airdate: Dec 1, 1930
Bosko and his porcine friend are hobos in a runaway boxcar.
Episode: 1931-01-01 | Airdate: Jan 1, 1931
Bosko is a Mountie; his sergeant demands he get his man.
Episode: 1931-02-01 | Airdate: Feb 1, 1931
Bosko fishes, and sings and dances with frogs. But two ladybugs use a wasp as an airplane, and a beehive and tree branch as a machine gun to drive him away.
Episode: 1931-03-01 | Airdate: Mar 1, 1931
Bosko runs a hot dog stand at an amusement park; but he sneaks away to the racetrack to ride his mechanical horse.
Episode: 1931-04-01 | Airdate: Apr 1, 1931
During the Great War, Bosko and a fearsome beast are in a dogfight. Bosko loses, but that's only the first battle.
Episode: 1931-05-01 | Airdate: May 1, 1931
Bosko and Honey yodel happily in the Alps, but then disaster strikes. Bosko slides down a tree to meet Honey, but loses control and falls onto a pair of wooden planks that double as skis. Bosko knocks down Honey, who falls downhill in a snowball until she smashes into a rock and topples over a cliff. Bosko, on his runaway skis, hits the same rock and comes to sudden stop. Now Honey is rushing downriver on an ice floe. As she cries for help, Bosko finds a St. Bernard and together they race to save Honey. Meanwhile, a mouse in Honey's home plays golf, using macaroni as a golf club, a pea as a ball and a slice of Swiss cheese as his golf course.
Episode: 1931-06-01 | Airdate: Jun 1, 1931
Bosko and Honey go on a picnic that ends badly.
Episode: 1931-07-01 | Airdate: Jul 1, 1931
Bosko the woodsman spurns cutting down trees and plays music instead. The trees and animals dance and make their own music.
Episode: 1931-08-01 | Airdate: Aug 1, 1931
Things are hopping at a certain Mexican café. And then Foxy walks in and the customers go really wild.
Episode: 1931-09-05 | Airdate: Sep 5, 1931
A streetcar conductor has adventures with a would-be passenger hippo, a cow blocking the tracks, and a runaway train while he, his passengers, and some hobos sing the title song.
Episode: 1931-09-19 | Airdate: Sep 19, 1931
Bosko is shipwrecked on an island where he is chased by a lion and pursued by simian cannibals.
Episode: 1931-10-03 | Airdate: Oct 3, 1931
Cop Foxy is trying to enforce the law in town, but dangerous drivers and gangsters who also kidnap his sweetheart are making this difficult.
Episode: 1931-10-17 | Airdate: Oct 17, 1931
Bosko is a doughboy in the Great War.
Episode: 1931-10-31 | Airdate: Oct 31, 1931
This cartoon marks the debut of Piggy and Fluffy, Warner Bros.' newest Mickey-and-Minnie derivations. Our hero and heroine head to a vaudeville show, where Piggy gets into an argument with the "all funny animal" orchestra. Somehow or other, Piggy himself ends up on stage, where he is heckled by a trio of drunks singing the title song. This in turn leads to a chaotic drunken joyride through the streets of Merrie Melodie-land, complete with a talking car (voice provided by then-famous musician Orlando Slim Martin).
Episode: 1931-11-14 | Airdate: Nov 14, 1931
Bosko is a soda jerk, who gives poor service to a mouse and to his former schoolteacher. Later, he must contend with Honey's bratty kitten pupil.
Episode: 1931-11-28 | Airdate: Nov 28, 1931
Piggy and Fluffy have adventures on a riverboat. And Uncle Tom is chased by skeletons promising to take him to Hallelujah Land.
Episode: 1931-12-12 | Airdate: Dec 12, 1931
Bosko joins a wacky fox hunt. But if the hunt worries anyone, it isn't the fox.
Episode: 1931-12-26 | Airdate: Dec 26, 1931
In a toy shop, a villainous spider threatens the happiness of a red-headed baby doll and her sweetheart, a toy soldier named Napoleon.
Episode: 1932-01-09 | Airdate: Jan 9, 1932
Bosko and Honey go to the zoo. Honey is frightened by the lion, but Bosko is the one who ends up in danger.
Episode: 1932-01-23 | Airdate: Jan 23, 1932
On a tropical island, a native boy sings "Pagan Moon" to his sweetheart. Later, he plays music underwater with an octopus-pianist and other jazz-loving sea life.
Episode: 1932-02-06 | Airdate: Feb 6, 1932
Bosko is a brave little boxer who battles the champion, Gas House Harry. The enormous brute proves a bit much, even for a plucky underdog.
Episode: 1932-02-20 | Airdate: Feb 20, 1932
Freddy comes to a party and is a hit; he then goes on to be the star quarterback at the football game.
Episode: 1932-03-05 | Airdate: Mar 5, 1932
While ice-skating on a frozen pond, Bosko and his dog discover a baby abandoned in the snow.
Episode: 1932-03-19 | Airdate: Mar 19, 1932
An American Indian boy and girl sing and dance in the forest along with the animals. Trouble begins when a fire threatens baby birds in their nest.
Episode: 1932-04-02 | Airdate: Apr 2, 1932
Bosko and friends give Honey a surprise birthday party.
Episode: 1932-04-16 | Airdate: Apr 16, 1932
Goopy, a dog of no particular personality, but a crackerjack piano player, plays several songs on the stage of a nightclub. We spend a fair amount of time watching the patrons and staff of the nightclub.
Episode: 1932-04-30 | Airdate: Apr 30, 1932
Bosko and Bruno escape from a speeding train via a handcar; make a failed attempt to steal a chicken; and end up on a runaway boxcar.
Episode: 1932-05-14 | Airdate: May 14, 1932
Late at night, the mice come out and sing and play to the title tune, among others. That is, until the cat arrives, but he's quickly sent packing.
Episode: 1932 Special | Airdate: May 30, 1932
Honey tries to teach the violin to an unwilling kitten. Later, she and Bosko go off on a bicycle ride.
Episode: 1932-06-11 | Airdate: Jun 11, 1932
Two courting hillbilly dogs go to the big barn dance.
Episode: 1932-06-25 | Airdate: Jun 25, 1932
Bosko enters his dog, Bruno, in a dog race.
Episode: 1932-07-09 | Airdate: Jul 9, 1932
When the king returns to the castle, he is surprised to find that the queen is in the parlor and won't see anyone.
Episode: 1932-07-23 | Airdate: Jul 23, 1932
Bosko, Honey, and Bruno spend a day at the beach.
Episode: 1932-08-06 | Airdate: Aug 6, 1932
A circus parade, to the title tune. Next, a series of sideshow acts: the wild boy, the rubber man, siamese twin pigs, a tattooed man, a hula-dancing hippo, an Indian snake (or goat) charmer. Into the ring, we have a hippo riding a horse (much to the horse's dismay), a high-wire act (again, to the title song), and finally a lion tamer.
Episode: 1932-08-13 | Airdate: Aug 13, 1932
Bosko spends the day working away in his store.
Episode: 1932-09-03 | Airdate: Sep 3, 1932
Autumn leaves aflutter, lumberjacks ply their trade in a forest: a two-man saw is found to require the strength of only one man, as his compatriot, a mouse, hangs off his handle, swinging about, his legs too short to touch the earth; another pair of loggers make more typical use of their gear, except that, as each pulls the other in order to make the necessary movement of the saw, the other's trousers drop revealingly.
Episode: 1932-09-10 | Airdate: Sep 10, 1932
A bee returns home late after a night out having too much honey. His wife leaves him, but quickly ends up in the clutches of an evil ladybug. The whole hive turns out to fight the ladybug and get her back.
Episode: 1932-09-17 | Airdate: Sep 17, 1932
Bosco in the wild west, tries to have fun with any situation that come in his way.
Episode: 1932-10-15 | Airdate: Oct 15, 1932
Morning on the farm. A rooster rousts the chickens and geese. The chicks run out from under a huge hen, leaving her much smaller. She digs for a worm by turning her bill into a brace and bit, then divides the worm among the kids by running it through a meat grinder.
Episode: 1932-10-22 | Airdate: Oct 22, 1932
Bosko is the star player in a wacky game of professional football.
Episode: 1932-11-12 | Airdate: Nov 12, 1932
A mannequin in the city dump improvises a piano from the junk to play and sing the title song The various animals and pieces of junk all join in.
Episode: 1932-11-19 | Airdate: Nov 19, 1932
Honey tries to teach the violin to an unwilling kitten. Later, she and Bosko go off on a bicycle ride.
Episode: 1932-12-10 | Airdate: Dec 10, 1932
An old man is reading a book by the fire. The clock strikes 8, and he heads off to bed. From his book, Alice in Wonderland, out crawls Alice, who turns the radio to the title tune. This wakes up Rip Van Winkle; Alice then rouses the Three Musketeers, who sing a bit. Next tune: Nero fiddles, Rome burns, and Cleopatra sizzles in a slinky dance. Uncle Tom sings a spiritual as Mr. Hyde sneaks up and abducts Alice. Tarzan to the rescue, along with several other characters who mount a spirited attack using such office supplies as pen points, matches, and a fountain pen. They box him up and carry him off.
Episode: 1932-12-17 | Airdate: Dec 17, 1932
Bosko and his dog Bruno play hide and seek in the woods.
Episode: 1933-01-07 | Airdate: Jan 7, 1933
Christmas Eve. A poor orphan boy trudges through the snow, pathetically. He finally arrives at his miserable cabin. While he is crying, Santa arrives and, singing the title song, offers to take the boy to his workshop. They arrive, and the toys go wild (in the full version, they sing the title song, but this has been censored in some versions due to outdated stereotypes). He plays with a few toys. A candle falls off the tree and starts a fire. The toys try in vain to fight the fire; the boy hooks up a hose to a set of bagpipes and takes care of it.
Episode: 1933-01-14 | Airdate: Jan 14, 1933
The last appearance of Goopy Geer (seen here in a cameo). The first cartoon directed by Isador "Friz" Freleng (who was uncredited). The song "Ach du lieber Augustine," better known to school kids as "Hail to the Bus Driver Man," is on the soundtrack.
Episode: 1933-02-04 | Airdate: Feb 4, 1933
In happy China, a Mandarin livens up some local music by playing some Pee Wee-style clarinet the American way, and then teams up with a little girl and boy to combat a ferocious dragon.
Episode: 1933-02-11 | Airdate: Feb 11, 1933
Bosko and his girl friend are doing a standard vaudeville slapstick act.
Episode: 1933-03-04 | Airdate: Mar 4, 1933
A jolly old king, bored with all the foolish people in his court, goes off to find a group of children playing who are really young and healthy.
Episode: 1933-03-11 | Airdate: Mar 11, 1933
There are lots of races with old cars. Bosko (in Car #13) is out to beat them all.
Episode: 1933-04-08 | Airdate: Apr 8, 1933
The lost art of the organ grinder and his monkey is celebrated in this grand Depression-era cartoon! A beloved Italian organ grinder plays his music and sings his song through a immigrant- filled ghetto neighborhood, where hard-scrabble kids and well-proportioned matrons get hep to the beat that flows from the organ grinder's calliope. Lots of spoofs of life on the Lower East Side and lots of monkeyshines as the organ grinder's pet performs "42nd Street" and imitates some Hollywood greats. The monkey takes wing and gets behind the wheel of a car, driving all over the area and wrecking everything.
Episode: 1933-04-29 | Airdate: Apr 29, 1933
Bosko and Bruno are relaxing by the fire one evening. Bosko is reading a book about King Arthur's knights, when he falls asleep. He dreams of himself as a knight who sings and dances with the knights of the round table. An evil villainous knight abducts the fair maiden (Honey) and takes her to his castle. Bosko pursues, and while fighting the evil knight, Bosko wakes up to Bruno licking his face.
Episode: 1933-05-13 | Airdate: May 13, 1933
A camp of Russian gypsies, dancing and playing music. After an opening dance, a quartet of beer-drinkers gargles the Volga Boatman song, then another group hauling on a rope sings it (we finally see that the other end of the rope is anchored by a very small dog). A trench-coated bomber sneaks into the palace, where we see Rice-Puddin', the mad monk, cheating at a jigsaw puzzle. He spies the activity in the gypsy camp and orders a henchman to fetch the gypsy girl. The villagers revolt as a result, sending The Mad Monk scrambling on his horse; they stuff a bomb into his pants just as he turns his horse into a helicopter, and it explodes.
Episode: 1933-06-03 | Airdate: Jun 3, 1933
While Bosko is minding a flock of sheep, he finds himself tempted to use them as musical instruments. Bosko also frolics along, then converts a beehive into bagpipes. Then a wolf decides to dress as a sheep, stealing a lamb, with Bosko and Bruno in pursuit!
Episode: 1933-06-13 | Airdate: Jun 13, 1933
The magazines and books in a drugstore come to life and sing the title song, among others. Some celebrities shown: 'Will Rogers' , Sonja Henie, Kay Kyser; like most of this genre, there's an extended crime sequence, with bad guys breaking into the cash register and Sherlock Holmes on the case.
Episode: 1933-07-01 | Airdate: Jul 1, 1933
Bosko is in the Foreign Legion, and is sent out on a dangerous mission to capture the notorious Ali Oop. Highlights include a uniform shaking a sleeping Bosko, a backpack containing a working sink, and a caring and sensitive camel.
Episode: 1933-07-08 | Airdate: Jul 8, 1933
Baby central. A flock of storks is leaving with babies. An old man at a ledger book is dealing with phone calls and letters; a request for twins from Nanook of the North sends him to the refrigerator; the stork carries them in slings marked "upper birth" and "lower birth." Another request, written in Hebrew; this baby comes back as a rough Jewish stereotype, and gets stamped kosher. He then joins the head man singing the title song, and shuffling us off to see the baby assembly line, manned by dwarves. The babies are washed in a washing machine, dried, powdered, diapered in paper towels, loaded up with milk, and sent off in a crib. They clamor for "Cantor" and one of the dwarves reveals that he was _Eddie Cantor_ in disguise, followed by another round of the title song.
Episode: 1933-07-29 | Airdate: Jul 29, 1933
Bosko helps Honey wash dishes and breaks a lot of them. He makes a robot out of junk to help, and it doesn't turn out the way he had wanted.
Episode: 1933-08-05 | Airdate: Aug 5, 1933
Dishes and utensils wash, dry, and stack themselves. A duster plays a silverware box like a piano while a salt-pepper-and-sugar set sings. The spoon proposes to the dish (interrupted by a cry from a baby spoon), then plays percussion on some pans and jam jars. Some teacups do a can-can, then a centipede-like conga line. The Swiss cheese yodels. The blueing sings "Am I Blue?," joined by a potato crying from all its eyes. An egg dances, slips on some lard, hatches, and sings "Young and Healthy." A lump of dough rises like a ghost and dances over to a packet of yeast, which it mixes into water and drinks, then grows, a la Jekyll and Hyde. It threatens the dish; some utensils fight back, lobbing canned goods from a spatula catapult. More attacks with cheese graters, popcorn, a rolling pin, and an electric fan, turn the dough into muffins, a bundt cake, a pie, and waffles.
Episode: 1933-08-12 | Airdate: Aug 12, 1933
Bosko and Bruno go to Honey's house where she shows him a picture of the Three Musketeers. Bosko tells her a story of himself as a Musketeer and Honey as a dancing girl. He fights a villain with swords over Honey and wins. The real Honey finds the story hard to believe.
Episode: 1933-08-26 | Airdate: Aug 26, 1933
After the last human has left the department store, the toys walk over to the music department where they start performing the Warren/Dubin song "We're in the money". The money soon joins for a chorus, as well as display dolls in the wardrobe department.
Episode: 1933-08-26 | Airdate: Aug 26, 1933
Bosko hosts a theatre stage show. First, he plays the organ and sings "We're In The Money" with the audience singing along. Then Bosko shows newsreel clips followed by the main picture show.
Episode: 1933-09-09 | Airdate: Sep 9, 1933
This cartoon marks the first appearance of Buddy, Warner Bros.' replacement for their departed star Bosko. After we're introduced to Buddy, his girlfriend Cookie, his dog Happy and a baby named Elmer, everybody goes on a picnic. Amorous Buddy would like to "wugee, wugee, wugee" with Cookie, but Elmer keeps getting in the way.
Episode: 1933-09-23 | Airdate: Sep 23, 1933
The first of the post-Ising Merrie Melodies. The only Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Tom Palmer. The title tune originated in the movie musical "Gold Diggers of 1933." Hollywood figures caricatured include Tallulah Bankhead, Joan Blondell, James Cagney, Bing Crosby, Guy Kibbee, Zasu Pitts, Mae West, Bert Wheeler and Bob Woolsey, Ed Wynn, George Bernard Shaw, Mussolini, Ben Bernie, The Boswell Sisters and Greta Garbo (who does the "Dat's all, folks!" signoff!).
Episode: 1933-11-18 | Airdate: Nov 18, 1933
To celebrate the repeal of Prohibition, Buddy opens up a German beer garden--and adopts a thick German accent for the occasion. Buddy's girlfriend Cookie doubles as the establishment's cigarette girl and the lead dancer in the lavish floor show. Also appearing is a Mae West lookalike, singing "My Good Time Slow Time Baseball Man"--and wait til you find out the true identity of the curvaceous cutie. Yes, there's a nominal tough-guy villain, but he's soon washed away in a sea of good cheer.
Episode: 1933-12-09 | Airdate: Dec 9, 1933
Captain Buddy and Mlle. Cookie cause quite a stir with their musical showboat showcase. They parade into town and delight the audience with their acts, but it falls to a helpful walrus to save the show, and Cookie, from disaster.
Episode: 1933-12-16 | Airdate: Dec 16, 1933
It's the middle of the night, and everyone's asleep except for the house cat (a girl) and alley cats (boys) on the fence competing for her attentions. A bull and three cows from ad posters on the fence sing "Sittin' On A Backyard Fence" and a cat band, using junk instruments play. Two boy cats, one drunk on catnip, fight each other over the girl, and get chased and knocked out by a dog. The girl cat leaves with another male cat, followed by kittens that are obviously theirs. The two fighting cats then shake hands.
Episode: 1934-01-13 | Airdate: Jan 13, 1934
Buddy is a "gob", a sailor in the navy, who visits China and witnesses a local celebration of the 150th birthday anniversary of the Sacred Dragon, wherein a young girl will be sacrificed. Buddy decides to rescue the young girl and ends up being chased by a dragon and the incensed village. Of course, by the end of the cartoon, Buddy and the girl escape safely.
Episode: 1934-01-27 | Airdate: Jan 27, 1934
Various bird couples are petting in the park and singing the title song. A policeman is also getting amorous with a nanny, until a penguin pecks at a butterfly on her bottom and she thinks the policeman pinched her. She storms off but quickly hops in another suitor's car. Then the birds all enter the park's diving and swimming contest.
Episode: 1934-02-17 | Airdate: Feb 17, 1934
After introducing the small town Bugtown, inhabitated by bugs, this short shows what happens to two honeymooning lovebugs at the Honeymoon Hotel in town, due to the fact, that their love is a little bit to hot.
Episode: 1934-02-24 | Airdate: Feb 24, 1934
Buddy gives his dog the task of guarding his chickens, but a fox interrupts his chances.
Episode: 1934-04-14 | Airdate: Apr 14, 1934
Buddy is working at a garage, when Cookie comes over and brings him lunch. A big man comes in looking for gas. While Buddy is filling up his car, he abducts Cookie. Buddy chases him in a tow truck and is able to rescue Cookie with a tow hook. He then hooks up the crook and brings him back to give him his punishment.
Episode: 1934-04-14 | Airdate: Apr 14, 1934
A little girl falls asleep and dreams she is in Toyland, where she and a toy soldier contend with the Beast from "Beauty and the Beast."
Episode: 1934-04-26 | Airdate: Apr 26, 1934
In a nostalgic look at America at the turn of the 20th century, men with handlebar mustaches play old-fashioned music on their found objects.
Episode: 1934-05-05 | Airdate: May 5, 1934
Buddy runs his own trolley. Most of it seems to be a musical number. However, there is a criminal living in the ditches as he breaks loose and hijacks Buddy's trolley.
Episode: 1934-05-19 | Airdate: May 19, 1934
An extremely lazy man working on a plantation must choose between good and bad when it comes to alcohol. He has a nightmare where he goes to heaven on a mule but, while up there, he is kicked down to the underworld with Hades after drinking alcohol from the "forbidden tree" (an allusion to the Hebrew myth of Adam and Eve).
Episode: 1934-05-26 | Airdate: May 26, 1934
Buddy encounters African natives. He gets help from animals and together they fight half-naked natives.
Episode: 1934-06-09 | Airdate: Jun 9, 1934
Merchandises in a general store come to life in order to sing a song.
Episode: 1934-06-23 | Airdate: Jun 23, 1934
Buddy has a baseball team named the Bearcats. They take on the Battling Bruisers in a stadium. A crowd shows up buying tickets and Hot dogs before settling down to watch the game. During the game, high jinks happen.
Episode: 1934-06-30 | Airdate: Jun 30, 1934
A fantasy version of Rip Van Winkle involving beer-guzzling leprechauns and other strange creatures.
Episode: 1934-08-25 | Airdate: Aug 25, 1934
Buddy is the combination manager and ringmaster of a travelling circus, where the main attractions include an "elephant xylophones" and a pair of high-flying acrobats.
Episode: 1934-09-08 | Airdate: Sep 8, 1934
After the household cat breaks a ceramic figure, the other ceramic figures start to come to life.
Episode: 1934-09-15 | Airdate: Sep 15, 1934
On a dark and stormy night, an insane musician seeks inspiration to compose music. He mesmerizes a frog to play the piano, then enchants a painting to play the violin. He picks out Cookie from the phonebook and hypnotizes her through the phone. She goes to his house, but her dog notices and he runs to Buddy's house, and the two set out to find the mad musician's house. They encounter several scary things, such as skeletons. Eventually they find Cookie, and Buddy is able to handle the villain. Cookie also torments him by playing extremely danceable music on the piano.
Episode: 1934-09-15 | Airdate: Sep 15, 1934
Mysteriously, late at night, the laundry comes to life.
Episode: 1934-09-29 | Airdate: Sep 29, 1934
Buddy goes to Mexico and visits a cantina. He wakes up the patrons from their siesta and there is music and dancing.
Episode: 1934-09-29 | Airdate: Sep 29, 1934
A vast array of cartoon characters attend a festival. The main act involves three female rabbits performing a vaudeville act about catching a boyfriend.
Episode: 1934-10-20 | Airdate: Oct 20, 1934
A musical number with Buddy in the role of a woodsman. Goes through a lumberjack's days chopping down trees. A bear raids the lumberjacks while having pasta as Buddy and Cookie have to dispose of him.
Episode: 1934-10-20 | Airdate: Oct 20, 1934
A Hobo pretends to drive a train. Beneath the train, another hobo is using the wheels to sharpen his knife. Another man lowers a bucket into the water as they pass over a bridge. He uses a tiny dab of water to "wash" his face. He then pulls out a violin, starting to play it.
Episode: 1934-11-10 | Airdate: Nov 10, 1934
Toys in a shop window come to life and visit a poverty-stricken little girl as she sleeps. She awakens to find that her shack has been refurbished and that the toys are about to throw her a party.
Episode: 1934-11-17 | Airdate: Nov 17, 1934
Buddy & Cookie's hot air balloon gets thrashed by a violent thunder storm and they ended up landing on foreign grounds. The town Buddy & Cookie are in is called "Sourtown". The residents are always in a bad mood due to them drinking and eating sour products and due to the strict laws which outlaws laughter, dancing, singing, and jazz. Buddy doesn't take the laws seriously as he tries to play some jazz to lighten everyones mood. Unfortunately the king of Sourtown doesn't take law breakers likely.
Episode: 1934-12-08 | Airdate: Dec 8, 1934
A robin sings, and the vegetation turns spring-like, followed by some more action by birds and bees. A grasshopper teaches his sons to chew and spit tobacco. Two spiders play the title tune on their web; some worms animate some apples to the tune; a chorus of frogs sings. Beavers play tennis, using spider webs as a net and their tails as racquets. A bear on the prowl is rebuffed by a turtle, then traps several beavers in a tree. They drop a beehive on him; he rolls down a hay-covered hillside, landing amid a farmer's mounds of hay; the farmer tosses the bear-stack into his "bailer", and the bear turns into a walking hay bale.
Episode: 1934-12-15 | Airdate: Dec 15, 1934
Buddy's dog gets hooked on sugar, and ends up with a toothache. Buddy tries to wiggle the tooth, but it makes the dog feel very uncomfortable. So Buddy tries gas, but it backfires and Buddy's own tooth ends up falling out.
Episode: 1935-01-12 | Airdate: Jan 12, 1935
Buddy works at a bookstore, but he spends most of his time day-dreaming about the foreign legion and fighting Amazons.
Episode: 1935-01-19 | Airdate: Jan 19, 1935
Buddy (as a Merman) is playing tag with a girl (Mermaid) on the sea floor. They discover an old sunken ship with treasure and an old piano in the hold.
Episode: 1935-02-09 | Airdate: Feb 9, 1935
Instead of going to school, Peter Cottontail, a very mischievous little rabbit, ignores his siblings' warning and raids a farmer's garden for vegetables... and lives to regret it.
Episode: 1935-02-16 | Airdate: Feb 16, 1935
Buddy is working as a projectionist in a movie theater. The newsreel features a caricature of Benito Mussolini and a gag on the Swiss Navy. Coming attractions include James Bagknee (Cagney) in Here Comes the Gravy and the double feature 8 Girls in a Boat with The Thin Man. Tonight's feature stars Cookie in The Chinchilla from Warmer Bros. Buddy sighs from the projection booth as she plays piano and sings. When a gorilla climbs in her window and attacks her, Buddy jumps into the picture, literally.
Episode: 1935-03-09 | Airdate: Mar 9, 1935
It's recital day at the schoolhouse. First up: Porky, who recites The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere. A nervous kitten recites Mary Had a Little Lamb. The puppies Ham and Ex sing the title song. Oliver Owl plays the piano; Beans the cat puts a cat and dog inside, and they play a tune as well.
Episode: 1935-03-09 | Airdate: Mar 9, 1935
A town is being attacked by outlaws. The undertaker of the town helps the people who have been wounded because of the battle. Outside, a little dog and a big cat are shooting at each other while standing on poles.
Episode: 1935-04-06 | Airdate: Apr 6, 1935
Human-like chicken students dance on the night before the big college football game, with couples dancing to a funny animal band and then listening to a glee club duck quartet harmonizing on the title number. The camera pans across the campus to show us a romantic fowl couple spooning on a park bench. Comes the big egg-laying game, it's Plymouth Rock College vs. Rhode Island Red University.
Episode: 1935-04-06 | Airdate: Apr 6, 1935
A rabbit is told by his mother to watch out for his baby brother Elmer while she's out of the house, but a weasel has other plans for Elmer after he hears the older brother sing "My Green Fedora."
Episode: 1935-04-20 | Airdate: Apr 20, 1935
Buddy is a traveling salesman who visits Africa. He refuses to give a ride to an ape. When he arrives at the villages he finds that monkeys are stealing all of his stuff. He gets the bottle back and gives the monkey a punishment. The monkey goes to a bigger ape, who comes over to destroy Buddy, until they are laughed at by the monkey. The two decide to become friends.
Episode: 1935-05-18 | Airdate: May 18, 1935
Buddy and his dog Bozo are sailing to The Lost World. While there they encounter dinosaurs and cave people. Bozo trips a cavewoman jumping rope then trades sniffs with a caveman who acts like a dog and digs up a bone. As they investigate the island, one of the dinosaurs takes a liking to Buddy. One of the cavemen captures them and throws them in a kettle to be cooked. Buddy cries for help and his dinosaur friend saves them.
Episode: 1935-06-08 | Airdate: Jun 8, 1935
The showboat comes to town, piloted by Captain Benny. The William Tell Overture plays; we see a big steamship with "Show Boat" written on the side of it. A blackface quartet sings the title song. They introduce the conductor, who is a pig caricature of orchestra leader Paul Whiteman. The audience pelts him with tomatoes. One of the musicians plugs the pig's tail into a light socket so he conducts at super speed. Then Captain Benny announces the start of the amateur hour, with an operatic cow and a tough guy reciting poetry with sound effects. Then comes a stuttering moron doing "g-g-g-go into your d-d-d-ance," who steals the gong and stuffs it down his pants so they can't get rid of him. The jerk is chased down the street by Captain Benny, who smacks him repeatedly on the gong in his pants.
Episode: 1935-06-22 | Airdate: Jun 22, 1935
Buddy is a bug collector, and he discovers a spider in his club house. He attempts to subdue the spider, but the spider sets all of his pets free. They shrink Buddy down to their size and take him to a trial where he's tried for abusing bugs. He is found guilty and is going to be fried. He suddenly awakens and decides to free all of his bugs, and destroys his club house.
Episode: 1935-07-13 | Airdate: Jul 13, 1935
A strong mouse says that he will become the heavyweight champion of the world. But his grandma (who is just as strong) doesn't want him to fight. So that night he sneaks off to the fight, which Granny hears on the radio. Granny is so concerned she goes to the arena to stop him from fighting...but fate plays a hand.
Episode: 1935-07-20 | Airdate: Jul 20, 1935
When Cookie leaves to go out with the real Buddy, the photo of Buddy comes to life as the figure steps out. Various other objects in the house come to life when she is away, including women on soup cans and a man with a globe. It's basically a musical number.
Episode: 1935-08-17 | Airdate: Aug 17, 1935
This cartoon combines two nursery rhymes to illustrate the ill-advised marriage of Old King Cole to the Woman in the Shoe and the King's unfortunate attempts to keep her "many children" under control. In the end, these all precipitate a nervous breakdown in Old King Cole.
Episode: 1935-08-24 | Airdate: Aug 24, 1935
Buddy, the Federal Agent, is asked to secretly investigate prisoner treatment at Sing Song Prison. He judges the warden to be too harsh in his report. The warden is replaced by Buddy, whose new policies turn the prison into a place where the prisoners are so coddled that people clamor to get in.
Episode: 1935-09-07 | Airdate: Sep 7, 1935
At a Spanish restaurant, the owner is at the bullfights and the restaurant is closed. The roaches come out to eat, drink and be merry. At a roach nightclub, a comely little female roach, dressed in red, flamenco dances for an appreciative crowd. A pet parrot escapes his cage and finds the night club and chases the little dancer. He catches her, and as he is about to eat her, a male roach sets fire to him. The parrot flies off with his tailfeathers burning and the roaches embrace.
Episode: 1935-09-21 | Airdate: Sep 21, 1935
A cartoonist falls victim to the very villains he has drawn. It's up to Beans the Cat to save the day.
Episode: 1935-10-19 | Airdate: Oct 19, 1935
Beans sneaks in to a Hollywood movie studio lot, where he gets into a heap of trouble.
Episode: 1935-10-19 | Airdate: Oct 19, 1935
A cheery tune in a Dutch kitchen; the girl on the plate and the salt shaker boy are in love. They dance. The girls on the blue plates join in. An evil-looking vinegar bottle comes after them with the mortgage for their windmill. The boy has just 30 minutes to get the money. The piggy bank only yields one cent. Paw's dentures on a shelf have gold teeth; the boy uses a firecracker to set them free, and makes his way back. But in the meantime, his girl's been strapped to a board inside a grandfather clock that's getting the sawmill treatment. He sets her free and pummels the vinegar bottle, knocking his head right off. The vinegar bottle finds a much more handsome head and gets the girl.
Episode: 1935-11-02 | Airdate: Nov 2, 1935
The gold rush. Beans finds gold in the mountains and rushes into town with the news. Soon, everyone (except Porky's daughter Little Kitty, who Beans fancies) has rushed out to the mountains, but because Porky takes Beans in his car, they get there first. Porky finds a gold nugget, then keeps taking it from his pocket.
Episode: 1935-11-09 | Airdate: Nov 9, 1935
At night, characters from advertising billboards come to life to sing and dance. There's also a story of a little chick being stalked by a villainous cat. The billboard characters find themselves in the middle of this action. Lots of advertising jokes include parodies of the RCA "Nipper" dog, Wrigley's gum and Arm & Hammer baking soda.
Episode: 1935-11-30 | Airdate: Nov 30, 1935
A tour of the garden, where every flower dances or plays a tune, especially today, since it's the flower pageant (which looks a lot like the Rose Parade). A series of floats, including the Scottish Heather in kilts and two firefly brake lights. Fire strikes as a badly placed magnifying glass ignites a match. The flowers do what they can to fight it, but the fire manages to get through the sprinkler. Finally, some watermelons put out most of the fire, with a grasshopper spitting tobacco juice at the last bit.
Episode: 1935-12-23 | Airdate: Dec 23, 1935
Beans wants to be the best fireman that he can, but those irrepressible twins Ham and Ex have "other ideas." Sent to be watched for the day by their uncle at his fire station, Ham and Ex focus their energies on getting into everything whenever they are not being watched. They send the firemen out on a false alarm, liberate a ladder truck and more. In the end (pun intended), Ham and Ex get a well-deserved but politically incorrect (nowadays) spanking.
Episode: 1936-01-04 | Airdate: Jan 4, 1936
Porky Pig joins the Army Air Corps. After overcoming the problems caused by his small stature and surviving the rigors of basic training, Porky gets his first assignment, as a janitor for the experimental "robot plane." When a boy standing in front of the command microphone for the robot plane starts to show off the tricks his dog can do, Porky's wild ride begins...
Episode: 1936-01-11 | Airdate: Jan 11, 1936
Two bear cubs, one brown and one black, sneak away from Papa Bear to enjoy a game of hide-and-seek. The black cub goes into a Gypsy trailer and gets drunk on cider. The little bears' harmless hijinks soon turn into danger on the runaway wagon. In the end, the brown bear and black bear land next to the father. The Papa Bear spanks the brown bear again, but then he throws a rock at the black bear.
Episode: 1936-01-18 | Airdate: Jan 18, 1936
Beans sees a notice of a ski race, and decides to enter. But so does a bad guy (who looks more than a little like Disney's Pete). The bad guy sabotages the other contestants in various ways, takes short cuts, etc. But Beans manages to tie up the bad guy in his own trip line. A duck riding a dachshund knocks the bad guy out for a while; he and Beans trade places a few more times before Beans wins the race, just barely.
Episode: 1936-02-01 | Airdate: Feb 1, 1936
Uncle Beans and the kids are off to visit a haunted ship ('The Phantom') trapped in the ice, hoping to find pirate treasure. They encounter all manner of ghosts and goblins, but eventually find what they've been looking for. When Beans tries to warm up by throwing some chairs in a stove and lighting it, he thaws out a pair of pirates that chase the trio around. They treasure-seekers are eventually forced back into their plane and they decide to fly away.
Episode: 1936-02-08 | Airdate: Feb 8, 1936
A curious kitten leaves her family to play with an equally curious little mouse from across the hall, despite both being told by their mothers how bad the other's family is. Mama Mouse warns her kids to stay away from cats, while Mama Cat tells her kids to attack all mice. The kitten and mouse sneak out of their lessons and listen to some records together as an excuse to get in some hot 1930s tunes and dance around. While dancing, they accidentally fall down a drain into the sewer. The little kitten is saved by the little mouse. The two mothers get together to rejoice, but old feuds are not so easily forgotten, and the cat and mice families start to fight again.
Episode: 1936-02-29 | Airdate: Feb 29, 1936
The opening consists of a series of World War I gags, such as a soldier throwing a pin that is destroyed by a grenade, and is caught in a net by an ambulance; a soldier interactions with bullets; and a machiner who is terrified. Porky Pig attempts to lead a charge, but has support from his men. He goes back to Bean's cabinet and drives under his bunk. The two sing, "You're in the Army Now" and receive news that General Hardtack has been captured and is being held prisoner. The two run off into their motorcycle, but find that a bullet is chasing them. They successfully arrive just in time to save the general. The two then proceed to take off in a plane, but it gets shot, and Porky and Beans find themselves in the hospital.
Episode: 1936-03-07 | Airdate: Mar 7, 1936
A bellhop in the No 1. hotel of a smalltown awaiting the arrival of Miss Glory dreams he has to page Miss Glory at a first class hotel in New York, and this turns out to be a nightmare. Finally he is awakened by the manager, because Miss Glory's car has arrived, but instead of a beautiful lady, a child star a la Shirley Temple steps out ...
Episode: 1936-04-04 | Airdate: Apr 4, 1936
A crazed bomber is terrorizing the city. Meanwhile, a young Porky is a few cents shy of buying an ice cream soda; he starts earning it by picking up items people drop and handing them to him. But the bomber is not pleased to be on the receiving end of Porky's good deed...
Episode: 1936-04-11 | Airdate: Apr 11, 1936
A gangster bird, who sings the title song, likes to prove his toughness by beating up on cops without provocation. The hoodlum spots the Birdville Bank across the street from the saloon where he hangs out, and calls his gang together to rob the bank and make a quick getaway. In the ensuing chase, the avian police capture him by shooting the floor out from the birdhouse which he uses as his hideout, leaving him to sing "I'm Just a Jailbird Now" from his jail cell.
Episode: 1936-04-25 | Airdate: Apr 25, 1936
Porky Pig and his friends Beans, Little Kitty and Ham and Ex, travel as pioneers toward the western frontier. As their wagon travels across the prairie, Ham and Ex cause trouble by pretending to be Indians. Then the real Indians show up!
Episode: 1936-05-09 | Airdate: May 9, 1936
Rooester Bingo, a popular radio crooner, takes a girl, to whom her boy-friend was just about to propose, for a ride to the city. But Bingo soon gets bored of her and when she makes a scene at a night club, he has her thrown out. Pennyless she's now struggling to survive in the big city. But her boyfriend hasn't forgotten her, after interrupting and beating up Bingo on one of his radio broadcasts he accidently bumps into her and takes her home. But after the marriage they notice the strange behaviour of one of their children.
Episode: 1936-05-16 | Airdate: May 16, 1936
Quitting time for a scarecrow. He gets home, and his little boy scares him. To the title song, he teaches his son the basics of scare-crowing. Bedtime for junior; he prays to be a big scarecrow, just like his daddy. The next morning he sneaks out before anyone else is up and practices scaring a rooster, a squirrel, and a rabbit. He takes up his father's place, but the crows are not impressed; in fact, the crow goes on the attack. Junior finally thinks he's found a pose that works, but in fact Dad's come up behind him. Of course, in the telling, he's much more heroic...
Episode: 1936-05-23 | Airdate: May 23, 1936
Porky's going fishing, but his boat careens out of control. He finally settles in and quickly catches several fish, then falls asleep with his line in the water. While he sleeps, a fish catches a dream version of Porky and takes him home to the fish's family. Porky narrowly escapes, but has run-ins with other marine life, only to awaken and throw his catch back.
Episode: 1936-05-30 | Airdate: May 30, 1936
Various insects have taken over a kitchen. After some playing with the food, one bug croons like Bing Crosby, then does some very showy flying which gets him all the girls. A spider drops down, and he runs in fear, leaving his girlfriend vulnerable. The other bugs manage to get the spider, eventually trapping it on flypaper.
Episode: 1936-06-20 | Airdate: Jun 20, 1936
Porky and some of his fellow sailors are on shore leave in a bar. A pirate captain discovers that his own crew has jumped ship and forces everyone in the bar to become his crew. The captain treats the crew badly, particularly denying them food (eating the meat off bones, then passing them only the bones). The crew mutinies after a week; the captain tries to fend them off with a cannon, but ends up sending himself into the explosives stores. They explode, and the captain ends up towing the crew on a raft.
Episode: 1936-06-27 | Airdate: Jun 27, 1936
In the feuding hillbilly domain of Hickory Holler (population 42 Weavers, 41 Mathews), the sheriff prescribes a rooster fight to determine the winner. The roosters get drunk on whiskey, and when both are declared the loser, the feud continues, but this time with the sheriff as the target.
Episode: 1936-07-11 | Airdate: Jul 11, 1936
Porky and his pet ostrich, Lulu, get invited to perform on Broadway for $75/week. But first they have to get there, and the train conductor won't let the ostrich board. Porky sneaks her on. She gets loose and eats a sleeping woman's wig, a boy's toy airplane, and a concertina. Porky hides her in a guitar case, but she gets out as the conductor comes by, and they are both thrown off. They enlist a hand cart and a cow to outrun the train.
Episode: 1936-07-18 | Airdate: Jul 18, 1936
A spoof of Al Jolson's "The Jazz Singer," a strict piano teaching owl is cursed with a son who "loves to singa," but only jazz.
Episode: 1936-08-01 | Airdate: Aug 1, 1936
The farm is suffering through a terrible drought. Porky's father sends him to the store to buy some feed with their last dollar. Outside the store, a huckster is selling pills to create all kinds of weather, and they really work. Porky buys them instead of the feed, but when he gets home, his angry father throws them on the ground. The animals eat the pills, and are afflicted with lightning, earthquakes, fog, etc. Finally, Porky explains, and he and his father go looking for the rain pill, but before they can get it, a duck (still afflicted by a wind pill) eats it. Fortunately, the wind causes the duck to eject the rain pill into a cloud and the farm is saved.
Episode: 1936-08-08 | Airdate: Aug 8, 1936
A man sneaks out of church and tries to steal a chicken, but gets a taste of hell when he's accidentally knocked unconscious.
Episode: 1936-08-22 | Airdate: Aug 22, 1936
Porky is raising chickens, ducks, and geese. Many birds have fallen victim to the hawk, Porky's going to do everything he can to fight back. He takes to the air, but the buzzard calls in reinforcements; first they pull Porky's tail, then they bombard him with eggs, and finally they steal his machine gun. The birds toss the chick back and forth football style, but drop it; Porky recovers, and manages to take out the flock of buzzards.
Episode: 1936-08-29 | Airdate: Aug 29, 1936
Mrs. Hamhock finds herself the object of unwanted attention following an article in the paper about her inheritance; her piglets do what they can to thwart the attentions of the con man who's a little too interested in the safe. They ultimately hook him up to a vibrating belt which shakes the money out of his pockets.
Episode: 1936-09-12 | Airdate: Sep 12, 1936
A woman's house, on the side of the cliff, is about to fall into the sea, due to waves washing away the cliff. In a panic, she call's Porky's moving company. Porky's assistant, a former boxer, starts swinging when he hears a bell until hit on the head, when he stops and says, "Okay, boss." Porky's van is pulled by an ostrich. They get to the house and have various adventures while moving the furniture, mostly because the entire house keeps tilting back and forth on the shaky ground. Finally, a big wave washes most of the house's contents into the van.
Episode: 1936-09-19 | Airdate: Sep 19, 1936
A child would rather listen to the radio than go to bed, but mother insists. He sleeps, but at midnight, his toys come alive and put on a show for him (much of it recycled, though often with different backgrounds, from earlier cartoons).
Episode: 1936-10-03 | Airdate: Oct 3, 1936
Porky's father is going to lose his farm. Porky goes to town with his horse and works a milk route, with a warning that if he breaks a bottle he's fired. As he's delivering, cats follow along behind draining the bottles. Meanwhile, Hank Horsefly follows them into town. He stings Dobbin, who crashes and breaks many bottles. They happen upon a horse race and accidentally enter; the horse is merely plodding along until it gets stung again. Porky wins the $10,000 race and drives home in a limo just in time.
Episode: 1936-10-10 | Airdate: Oct 10, 1936
A standard cartoon featuring animals playing baseball and Emily the Chicken falling for the star pitcher, Dizzy Dan.
Episode: 1936-11-07 | Airdate: Nov 7, 1936
On Valentine's Day in the world of forest animals, Cupid and Satan battle over getting couples together or breaking them apart.
Episode: 1936-11-14 | Airdate: Nov 14, 1936
Porky's in the foreign legion. But he's not allowed to fight; all he can do is scrub camels, and he's not particularly good at that. The other soldiers ride off to find the evil Ali Mode, leaving Porky behind. Ali Mode notices, and tries to gain entrance to the fort, first by tricking Porky, then by tunnelling, then by military assaults, but Porky rebuffs all attempts, ultimately landing Ali Mode in a big vat of "Cairo Syrup" and collecting a chestful of medals.
Episode: 1936-11-28 | Airdate: Nov 28, 1936
A visit to a Hollywood nightclub, featuring caricatures of, among others, Walter Winchell, Hugh Herbert, W.C. Fields, Katharine Hepburn, Johnny Weissmuller, Harpo Marx, Mae West, Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Clark Gable, Groucho Marx, and Edward G. Robinson.
Episode: 1936-12-05 | Airdate: Dec 5, 1936
Based on the poem of the same name, the short film follows the blacksmith (Also voiced by Avery). As his assistant Porky gives him a rubber horseshoe, then a hot horseshoe on the back of the horse by accident.
Episode: 1936-12-19 | Airdate: Dec 19, 1936
Porky runs a game refuge. Despite the abundant signs to the contrary, Jean-Baptiste the trapper sets numerous traps. Porky rescues the animals from the traps. Jean-Baptiste tracks him down and beats him up. The animals come to Porky's rescue.
Episode: 1937-01-02 | Airdate: Jan 2, 1937
A mistreated wife comes home to her husband who treats her poorly, only to find that he's left her for another woman. When she sees him with his new flame she attempts to win him back with torch song in a cheap shanty, which leads to a shootout. In the end, the wife wins and the husband sells apples outside only to get hit by the wife in the end.
Episode: 1937-01-09 | Airdate: Jan 9, 1937
Porky, along with everyone else, is hitchhiking to the big wrestling match. He gets a ride from the challenger, but at the arena, Porky is mistaken for the challenger and gets thrown into the ring. The champ is making mincemeat of Porky when Porky crawls out and has the champ tying himself in knots, then swallowing a spectator's pipe and doing a steam locomotive impression.
Episode: 1937-01-30 | Airdate: Jan 30, 1937
A hungry little pig eats a couple of pies off the windowsill. When it's time for dinner, he ties together the spaghetti of all the other little pigs and eats it all. That night, he has a nightmare where he is force-fed by a mad scientist.
Episode: 1937-02-06 | Airdate: Feb 6, 1937
It's race day, and first prize is $2 million (less $1,999,998.37 in taxes). Porky's little car is matched against cars driven by stars of yesteryear, including Laurel and Hardy and Charlie Chaplin. When the black #13 driven by "Borax Karoff" makes a bid for the finish line, can Porky fend him off?
Episode: 1937-02-27 | Airdate: Feb 27, 1937
Porky and two pals stumble onto a Mexican town on the day of the town's annual bullfight. When they learn the contest winner gets $1,000, Porky and the pals get costumes - Porky a bullfighter, the pals a bull costume. When Porky steps into the ring, he fights not the pals dressed as the bull, but an actual one.
Episode: 1937-03-06 | Airdate: Mar 6, 1937
The iceman is in love with a pretty girl, and an old spinster is pining and cooking for him. But his dreamgirl prefers crooners like Bing Crosby, Rudy Vallee, or Eddie Cantor. After leaving her, he spots the sign of an imitator, and thinks he could ask him to do the crooning for him while he is trying to date his girl. The imitator accepts, and at first the trick is working, until the imitator gets too cold amid the ice in the back of the van and the girl gets suspicious.
Episode: 1937-03-27 | Airdate: Mar 27, 1937
A mouse fakes blindness and plays his fiddle; he returns home, where it becomes apparent he's rich. The tax collector arrives, and he pulls various levers and presses buttons to make his home look like a shack. The tax collector can't catch him. A cat sees this and tries baiting a trap with a gold coin; that fails, but a gold crown on his tooth lures the mouse in. Or does it? The mouse telling this story to his grandchildren looks oddly familiar...
Episode: 1937-04-03 | Airdate: Apr 3, 1937
Petunia Pig introduces herself nervously before the credits. Porky woos her, but she's only interested in his candy, not his hand in marriage. Dejected, Porky tries to hang himself. He fails, but he has a dream sequence (or a nightmare) of what marriage to a candy-eating Petunia would be like, with her lying on the couch while he cares for a dozen piglets. He comes to, and rejects Petunia, even kicking her dog.
Episode: 1937-04-10 | Airdate: Apr 10, 1937
An evening at the local movie theater, including a sing-along led by Maestro Stickoutski at he Mighty "Fertilizer" organ, a "Goofy-Tone" newsreel, and the feature, "Petrified Florist," a spoof of 'The Petrified Forest (1936)' featuring caricatures of Bette Davis and 'Leslie Howard'.
Episode: 1937-04-17 | Airdate: Apr 17, 1937
New duck hunter Porky is constantly taunted by a very early version of Daffy, and all the other ducks.
Episode: 1937-05-01 | Airdate: May 1, 1937
The cat's asleep, so the mice are on the loose, for a while at least, in the pantry. When he wakes up, they pile the food on him and get him thrown out, and then they *really* have the run of the house.
Episode: 1937-05-15 | Airdate: May 15, 1937
Porky and Gabby are driving off to a camping vacation. But between a road rage incident and some trouble negotiating hills, it's off to a bad start. On arrival, they face mishaps with a fly, the tent, and a runaway outboard motor.
Episode: 1937-05-22 | Airdate: May 22, 1937
The Lord sees that the stock value of "Pair-o-dice" is dropping on the exchange so he dispatches a slow-witted and slow-talking angel to sinful Harlem to recruit new customers. When this fails, God finds success sending a group of musical angels with a little more swing in their style, so much so that even the Devil wants to join up!
Episode: 1937-06-05 | Airdate: Jun 5, 1937
In this parody of Uncle Tom's Cabin, Little Eva and Topsy try to rescue old Uncle Tom from the clutches of the evil slave-dealer Simon Simon [sic] Legree.
Episode: 1937-06-19 | Airdate: Jun 19, 1937
Porky and another contractor are competing to submit the lower bid for a new city hall. When they submit identical bids, the city has them compete, whichever finishes first gets the job.
Episode: 1937-06-19 | Airdate: Jun 19, 1937
In the world of this cartoon, cars act like humans. Junior wants to grow up to be a taxi, but mom wants him to be a nice, respectable touring car (taxi dancers are literally taxis). What mom doesn't know is that junior has been sneaking into town to play in traffic, drink hi-test gas, and race trains. He runs out of gas at a particularly bad time and gets towed to the garage.
Episode: 1937-07-03 | Airdate: Jul 3, 1937
A satirical look at Hollywood's versions of the American West that features an Indian maiden who is is a dead-ringer for Martha Raye, while the Warner Bros. orchestra plays "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down," while the attacking Indians are circling the lone covered wagon.
Episode: 1937-07-03 | Airdate: Jul 3, 1937
Porky owns a full-service gas station; he deals with a wide variety of problems, like a bump that migrates to different parts of the car. But his real nemesis is a supposedly sleeping baby in a car whose tire needs changing; in fact, the baby is wide awake and a real brat. Both Porky and the brat end up covered in grease; the irate mother drives off, but the child has tied a pump to a tire, which ends up pulling the whole station into the ground.
Episode: 1937-07-17 | Airdate: Jul 17, 1937
City dweller Egghead dreams of being a cowboy, but his bouncing around gets him kicked out of his boarding house. He sees an ad for a ranch looking for a cowboy and applies. His tryout includes tests of marksmanship and use of a branding iron, but most of it consist of chasing down and roping a troublesome little calf. He passes the test, but the job isn't exactly what he dreamed of.
Episode: 1937-07-24 | Airdate: Jul 24, 1937
After Porky and Gabby oversleep yet again, their boss warns them that they will be fired if they're late again. Determined to make it to work on time the next day, the two roommates go to bed at 8pm. But will they get any rest, or will one thing after another keep them awake all night?
Episode: 1937-07-31 | Airdate: Jul 31, 1937
All of a hen's eggs hatch, but one of them turns out to be an ostrich. She however keeps it as one of her own. The ostrich has a knack for getting into trouble. He gets stuck after eating a goldfish, then falls into an basement where he swallows a car jack whole, then has a run-in involving a worm and a lawn sprinkler, and last but not least is captured by a weasel. The weasel is singing while he prepares to cook the ostrich. The ostrich in the meantime swallows a hanging light bulb and a box of fireworks, and those are lit after he's put in the oven. The weasel, irritated at this point, decides to let the ostrich go. The ostrich unintentionally puts on a fireworks show.
Episode: 1937-08-07 | Airdate: Aug 7, 1937
Porky is the engineer on the most pathetic train in the fleet. After some routine episodes (using pepper to get the engine to sneeze itself up a hill, chasing a cow off the tracks, only to discover too late that it's been replaced by a very angry bull), Porky gets word that he's going to be replaced by the new streamlined Silver Fish. He insults it under his breath, but the Silver Fish engineer hears and challenges him to a race. The angry bull catapults Porky to victory.
Episode: 1937-08-21 | Airdate: Aug 21, 1937
Two mice in love are joking and playing at a fashionable hat shop. But a rat tries to play the old fashiomed villain who kidnaps the girl. So all the other mice there are helping her lover to find her. Hiding under all the hats they finally get her back...
Episode: 1937-08-28 | Airdate: Aug 28, 1937
Porky gets talked into investing his savings into a phony oil field by a slick con man.
Episode: 1937-09-04 | Airdate: Sep 4, 1937
It's midnight at the bookstore and all the book and magazine characters are coming to life. When a bulldog from an adventure book uses an Andrews Sisters-like performance by girls in a travel magazine as a distraction to rob a bank, he is chased, caught, and sentenced to, of course "Life" (the magazine). But there's also a conveniently placed "Escape" magazine....
Episode: 1937-09-11 | Airdate: Sep 11, 1937
A small town agricultural fair is giving a prize for the largest home grown product. Porky sets to work planting a garden; his neighbor tries a feed mix for his chickens.
Episode: 1937-09-18 | Airdate: Sep 18, 1937
A series of gags at a dog show, including a stage revue. A dog gets into a trunk of roller skates and crashes through the stage show.
Episode: 1937-09-25 | Airdate: Sep 25, 1937
A young parrot, against his mother's wishes, wants to become a mariner like his no-account father, runs away from home, and heads for the ocean with a young duck who wants to join him.
Episode: 1937-10-09 | Airdate: Oct 9, 1937
Porky tries to teach his old, arthritic dog new tricks, but a younger, wise-guy upstart new dog shows him up on everything.
Episode: 1937-10-16 | Airdate: Oct 16, 1937
A mouse is trying to free himself from a trap when a cat arrives. The mouse, desperate, asks if the cat has heard the story of the lion and the mouse.
Episode: 1937-10-30 | Airdate: Oct 30, 1937
A dark and stormy night; a knock on the door of the pig family. It's lawyer Goodwill, with Uncle Solomon's will which leaves everything to the pigs, but if something happens to them, it goes to the lawyer who then immediately adjourns to the basement and a convenient bottle of Jekyll and Hyde potion. Soon, he's got everyone except Porky and Petunia but watch out for that guy in the third row...
Episode: 1937-11-06 | Airdate: Nov 6, 1937
Red walks past a pool hall; the wolf sees her and pursues. But Red is oblivious to his come-ons. The wolf short-cuts to granny's house; when Red arrives, granny lets the wolf dress as up and attack. The action pauses for a phone call (granny places her grocery order), some late arrivals, and egghead meandering along.
Episode: 1937-11-13 | Airdate: Nov 13, 1937
Public Enemy #1 wants to wreak havoc again, but he is on the most wanted list in the newspaper. He then notices that there's somebody who looks similar to him: Porky Pig. He kidnaps Porky and disguises himself as the bank teller that Porky is and uses his position to steal. When the police find where Porky has been, and his love captured, Porky's love decides to go out with the criminal instead of him!
Episode: 1937-12-04 | Airdate: Dec 4, 1937
A program for radio KUKU set in the woods, mostly starring birds as caricatures of celebrities of the day.
Episode: 1937-12-04 | Airdate: Dec 4, 1937
Porky is reading the story of the gorgon, a Greek myth about a woman who turned everyone she looked at into stone. His mother tells him it's time to go to bed. While he's asleep he dreams of being a Greek hero known as Porkykarkus. In this version the Gorgon runs a photo studio, and Porky is able to save by sneaking in and grabbing her life-restoring needle just before he wakes up.
Episode: 1937-12-18 | Airdate: Dec 18, 1937
The rain is outdoors; the action is indoors, in a grocery store, where the characters on product labels come to life (along with one real worm).
Episode: 1938-01-01 | Airdate: Jan 1, 1938
A very early appearance of a barely recognisable Daffy Duck, seen here tormenting Egghead, a prototype Elmer Fudd who is just as unsuccessful with ducks as he was later to be with a certain wascally wabbit.
Episode: 1938-01-15 | Airdate: Jan 15, 1938
We take a tour of Porky's Poppa's farm, to the tune of Old MacDonald. After meeting several animals, "on this farm, he has a mortgage" which he frets over, particularly since Bessie has stopped producing milk. Poppa orders an Acme milk producing robot, and the beast vs. machine battle is on.
Episode: 1938-01-29 | Airdate: Jan 29, 1938
In the border town of Boiled Beef, Texas, in 1872, a bandit who is wanted by authorities terrorizes the town - but a pig-headed deputy thinks he has a way to capture him.
Episode: 1938-02-05 | Airdate: Feb 5, 1938
While at the Crocadero night club, Porky dreams of becoming a bandleader, but he finds out that he has no money. Instead he gets a job at the club working on the dishes. His boss gets the wrong idea of Porky involving a fly and fires him. The boss's bandleaders don't show up, so he brings Porky back and has him impersonate several famous bandleaders.
Episode: 1938-02-19 | Airdate: Feb 19, 1938
One of the "Censored Eleven", a group of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons that have been withheld from syndication due to offensive racial themes.
Episode: 1938-02-26 | Airdate: Feb 26, 1938
Porky tries to feed his chickens, but some ducks steal the corn he puts out, then declare war. The battle rages, with the ducks against the chickens, sometimes in wing-to-wing combat, but also aerial attacks, and Porky finally turning the tide with his machine gun improvised from a wringer washer and a bag of corn. But the ducks still get the last laugh.
Episode: 1938-03-12 | Airdate: Mar 12, 1938
While their mother hen is away, a group of young chicks must defend themselves from a weasel that is planning to have them for dinner. They fight back using military techniques. The weasel leaves but laughs and gets knocked out by one of the chicks.
Episode: 1938-03-19 | Airdate: Mar 19, 1938
A pony express office. Porky's only allowed to clean up and lick envelopes. When a rider comes back, unable to get past the Indians, Porky has his chance.
Episode: 1938-04-02 | Airdate: Apr 2, 1938
Emily the chicken, lives in Hickville but dreams of Hollywood. Her chance comes when director J. Megga-Phone happens to drive past and gives her his card. She makes her way to Hollywood, and Megga-Phone's office, where she discovers a whole flock of hens with the same card and a completely uncaring Megga-Phone. She returns home to faithful Clem, and a chick with foolish notions.
Episode: 1938-04-16 | Airdate: Apr 16, 1938
Porky is setting sail for the Boola-Boola islands, with hopes of opening 5 & 10 cent store. Sadly, a swordfish cuts a hole in the ship and all of Porky's goods fall out. The fishes make use of them, and instead Porky opens up a Hollywood nightclub, which consists of fish-impersonated celebrities. Porky is ultimately saved when a water-spout restocks his ship.
Episode: 1938-04-23 | Airdate: Apr 23, 1938
Penguins from all over gather at the grand opening of their new nightclub, The Club Iceberg. A penguin version of Bing Crosby appears, and the cartoon ends with an 1930s jazz band.
Episode: 1938-04-30 | Airdate: Apr 30, 1938
Porky goes after a rogue rabbit who manages to frustrate him at each turn. He is unsuccessful and the rabbit comes to visit him just to make recovery tougher for him.
Episode: 1938-05-14 | Airdate: May 14, 1938
All of the squirrels are busy gathering nuts for the winter, except for one young squirrel who prefers to win his nut through gambling.
Episode: 1938-05-21 | Airdate: May 21, 1938
Porky is leading a wagon that is going into Injun Joe territory. He finds himself at odds with the super-chief. Sloppy Moe has a secret about the Injun Joe attack, but he won't tell Porky.
Episode: 1938-05-28 | Airdate: May 28, 1938
One of the "Censored Eleven", a group of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons that have been withheld from syndication due to offensive racial themes.
Episode: 1938-06-04 | Airdate: Jun 4, 1938
Porky and his friends try to save a theatrical boarding house.
Episode: 1938-06-11 | Airdate: Jun 11, 1938
At the Katnip Kollege, we see a roomful of cats taking a course in Swingology. Everyone swings except Johnny, who can't cut it and has to sit in the dunce chair. Miss Kitty Bright tells him to look her up when he learns how to swing. Finally, listening to the pendulum clock at night, Johnny gets the beat. He rushes out to where everyone is playing and sings "Easy As Rollin' Off a Log" to Kitty Bright. She joins in; he grabs a trumpet for an instrumental break, with the complete band. They both fall off a log; she covers him with kisses.
Episode: 1938-06-25 | Airdate: Jun 25, 1938
Porky's birthday. His uncle sends him a silkworm that churns out articles of clothing when it hears the word "sew." After a sock and a bra, Porky stuffs it in a pocket to prepare for his party. He uses some hair tonic, then his dog Black Fury has some for himself it's 99% alcohol. The guests arrive: a penguin and a goose. The penguin, shoveling in the food, accidentally swallows the worm, which starts churning out top hats, which pop open inside the penguin's head. The goose tries increasingly violent ways of remedying this. Meanwhile, Porky's dog, lathered with shaving cream, runs in and is branded a mad dog.
Episode: 1938-06-25 | Airdate: Jun 25, 1938
Another entry in the "books come alive" subgenre, with possibly more books coming alive than any other. We begin with some musical numbers, notably the various pages of Green Pastures all joining in on a song, The Thin Man entering The White House Cookbook and exiting much fatter, and The House of Seven (Clark) Gables singing backup to Old King Cole. The Three Musketeers break loose, become Three Men on a Horse, grab the Seven Keys to Baldpate, and set the Prisoner of Zenda free. They are soon chased by horsemen from The Charge of the Light Brigade and Under Two Flags and beset by the cannons of All Quiet on the Western Front. All this disturbs the sleep of Rip Van Winkle, who opens Hurricane so that everyone is (all together now) Gone with the Wind.
Episode: 1938-07-09 | Airdate: Jul 9, 1938
An aging hero is looking through the photo album and remembering the Gay 90's, and in particular a picnic interrupted by villainous Roger St. Clair, who tries to tempt Emily to the big city and away from Harold.
Episode: 1938-07-16 | Airdate: Jul 16, 1938
Porky and his dog, Streamline, plant a large garden in creative ways. The neighbor chickens see the garden as one big buffet/cafeteria.
Episode: 1938-07-23 | Airdate: Jul 23, 1938
A looney take on the classic Cinderella story with Egghead as Prince Charming.
Episode: 1938-08-06 | Airdate: Aug 6, 1938
Porky Pig, the manager to boxer Daffy Duck, gets him a match with famed fighter, "The Champ", who looks like he's seen better days. Come the night of the boxing match, it seems The Champ isn't as pathetic as they hoped so and Daffy is in for one crazy fight.
Episode: 1938-08-13 | Airdate: Aug 13, 1938
A retired English major tells a young boy tales of his safari through Africa.
Episode: 1938-08-27 | Airdate: Aug 27, 1938
A neighborhood bully convinces Porky to take a puff from his cigar, causing Porky to hallucinate a smoke-man named Nick O. Teen, along with a musical number done by cigars, cigarettes and pipes in the likeness of the 3 Stooges, etc.
Episode: 1938-08-27 | Airdate: Aug 27, 1938
Hayseed Egghead arrives in the big city of Bagdad and quickly wins a magic lamp in a carnival coin-operated crane game.
Episode: 1938-09-10 | Airdate: Sep 10, 1938
A group of animals go out to frolic and skate on the ice. When a W. C. Fields type pig sees how a Saint Bernard revives a frozen skater with gin, he decides to try and get some for himself.
Episode: 1938-09-24 | Airdate: Sep 24, 1938
The McCoys and the Weavers are two feuding hillbilly clans. Elmer Fudd, Peacemaker, attempts to end the fighting; but violence and zaniness win out.
Episode: 1938-09-24 | Airdate: Sep 24, 1938
Porky Pig goes on a hunt to catch the surreally elusive last Do-Do bird.
Episode: 1938-10-08 | Airdate: Oct 8, 1938
Little Pancho Villa dreams of being a great bull fighter. He's thrown out of the amateurs line for being too small, but gets the chance to prove himself when an accident throws him back into the ring.
Episode: 1938-10-15 | Airdate: Oct 15, 1938
Porky goes to the beach with Pinky. Porky attempts to take a nap, but Pinky whacks him with a shovel. Then, he attempts to fake his own drowning in a pool. Finally, Porky enters a swimming contest, and Pinky tries to scare him by sending a fake shark after him.
Episode: 1938-10-22 | Airdate: Oct 22, 1938
Egghead as Johny Smith, a caricature of the colonist Captain John Smith, arrives on the Mayflower to be met by some sarcastic Native Americans as he makes his escape with Poker-Huntas, a caricature of Pocahontas, and makes off to England with her to raise a family.
Episode: 1938-11-05 | Airdate: Nov 5, 1938
Porky is a tourist in Egypt. When his tour group takes off without him, he ventures into the desert alone, but both him and his camel are soon taken by the heat.
Episode: 1938-11-05 | Airdate: Nov 5, 1938
Numerous travel brochure characters come alive to sing and dance, until the notorious Thief of Bagdad turns up! A wild and crazy chase then ensues, which ends with our villain escaping with his new friend, the Lone Stranger.
Episode: 1938-11-19 | Airdate: Nov 19, 1938
A little cat must take his sick father's place as nightwatchman, but is bullied by a tough mouse and his gang, leaving the rest of the mice free to eat all the food and stage a musical floor show.
Episode: 1938-11-26 | Airdate: Nov 26, 1938
Doctor Quack is doing an operation, and Daffy is his assistant. Things start out sedately enough, with Daffy asking for quiet in various ways. Then the operation starts, and after handing over instruments at a ever-increasing pace, Daffy loses it and is ejected.
Episode: 1938-12-12 | Airdate: Dec 12, 1938
Daffy Duck wreaks havoc on a movie set at Wonder Pictures ("if it's good, it's a Wonder"). Daffy's creative editing impresses producer I. M. Stupendous.
Episode: 1938-12-17 | Airdate: Dec 17, 1938
A battleship mostly run by dogs sets sail. The crew threatens to get the mess hall before the captain will, the captain tells them to stop. The people in the ship are informed of a radio message about a reward for capturing a pirate submarine. The crew sets off in planes, leaving Porky behind. When the ship is attacked by the submarine, it's up to Porky to defend the ship.
Episode: 1938-12-17 | Airdate: Dec 17, 1938
Egghead decides that the only way he is going to be successful is through a Boxing Course. He graduates and has to take on champion Biff Stew. Biff destroys him, but by accident he knocks out him out, and then it's revealed that Egghead isn't even fighting Biff but instead got knocked out by practice equipment.
Episode: 1938-12-31 | Airdate: Dec 31, 1938
The mice are on the loose after hours in a doctor's office, playing with the various pieces of medical apparatus. Susie Mouse is caged for research until her lover Johnnie frees her. A mouse orchestra plays a swinging wedding song. But throughout, a cat is stalking...
Episode: 1939-01-07 | Airdate: Jan 7, 1939
Episode: 1939-01-14 | Airdate: Jan 14, 1939
Episode: 1939-01-28 | Airdate: Jan 28, 1939
Episode: 1939-01-28 | Airdate: Jan 28, 1939
Episode: 1939-02-11 | Airdate: Feb 11, 1939
Episode: 1939-02-18 | Airdate: Feb 18, 1939
Episode: 1939-02-25 | Airdate: Feb 25, 1939
Episode: 1939-03-11 | Airdate: Mar 11, 1939
Episode: 1939-03-11 | Airdate: Mar 11, 1939
Episode: 1939-03-25 | Airdate: Mar 25, 1939
Episode: 1939-04-01 | Airdate: Apr 1, 1939
Episode: 1939-04-08 | Airdate: Apr 8, 1939
Episode: 1939-04-22 | Airdate: Apr 22, 1939
Episode: 1939-04-22 | Airdate: Apr 22, 1939
Episode: 1939-05-06 | Airdate: May 6, 1939
Episode: 1939-05-13 | Airdate: May 13, 1939
Episode: 1939-05-20 | Airdate: May 20, 1939
Episode: 1939-05-27 | Airdate: May 27, 1939
Episode: 1939-06-03 | Airdate: Jun 3, 1939
Episode: 1939-06-03 | Airdate: Jun 3, 1939
Episode: 1939-06-24 | Airdate: Jun 24, 1939
Episode: 1939-07-01 | Airdate: Jul 1, 1939
Episode: 1939-07-15 | Airdate: Jul 15, 1939
Episode: 1939-07-15 | Airdate: Jul 15, 1939
Episode: 1939-07-29 | Airdate: Jul 29, 1939
Episode: 1939-08-05 | Airdate: Aug 5, 1939
Episode: 1939-08-12 | Airdate: Aug 12, 1939
Episode: 1939-08-26 | Airdate: Aug 26, 1939
Episode: 1939-09-02 | Airdate: Sep 2, 1939
Episode: 1939-09-02 | Airdate: Sep 2, 1939
Episode: 1939-09-09 | Airdate: Sep 9, 1939
Episode: 1939-09-23 | Airdate: Sep 23, 1939
Episode: 1939-09-23 | Airdate: Sep 23, 1939
Episode: 1939-10-07 | Airdate: Oct 7, 1939
Episode: 1939-10-07 | Airdate: Oct 7, 1939
Episode: 1939-10-21 | Airdate: Oct 21, 1939
Episode: 1939-11-04 | Airdate: Nov 4, 1939
Episode: 1939-11-04 | Airdate: Nov 4, 1939
Episode: 1939-11-18 | Airdate: Nov 18, 1939
Episode: 1939-11-18 | Airdate: Nov 18, 1939
Episode: 1939-12-02 | Airdate: Dec 2, 1939
Episode: 1939-12-16 | Airdate: Dec 16, 1939
Episode: 1939-12-16 | Airdate: Dec 16, 1939
Episode: 1939-12-30 | Airdate: Dec 30, 1939
Episode: 1940-01-06 | Airdate: Jan 6, 1940
Episode: 1940-01-13 | Airdate: Jan 13, 1940
Episode: 1940-01-27 | Airdate: Jan 27, 1940
Episode: 1940-01-27 | Airdate: Jan 27, 1940
Episode: 1940-02-10 | Airdate: Feb 10, 1940
Episode: 1940-02-10 | Airdate: Feb 10, 1940
Episode: 1940-03-02 | Airdate: Mar 2, 1940
Episode: 1940-03-16 | Airdate: Mar 16, 1940
Episode: 1940-03-16 | Airdate: Mar 16, 1940
Episode: 1940-03-30 | Airdate: Mar 30, 1940
Episode: 1940-04-13 | Airdate: Apr 13, 1940
Episode: 1940-04-13 | Airdate: Apr 13, 1940
Episode: 1940-04-27 | Airdate: Apr 27, 1940
Episode: 1940-04-27 | Airdate: Apr 27, 1940
Episode: 1940-05-11 | Airdate: May 11, 1940
Episode: 1940-05-18 | Airdate: May 18, 1940
Episode: 1940-05-25 | Airdate: May 25, 1940
Episode: 1940-06-08 | Airdate: Jun 8, 1940
Episode: 1940-06-08 | Airdate: Jun 8, 1940
Episode: 1940-06-22 | Airdate: Jun 22, 1940
Episode: 1940-07-06 | Airdate: Jul 6, 1940
Episode: 1940-07-06 | Airdate: Jul 6, 1940
Episode: 1940-07-20 | Airdate: Jul 20, 1940
Episode: 1940-07-27 | Airdate: Jul 27, 1940
Episode: 1940-08-10 | Airdate: Aug 10, 1940
Episode: 1940-08-24 | Airdate: Aug 24, 1940
Episode: 1940-09-14 | Airdate: Sep 14, 1940
Episode: 1940-09-14 | Airdate: Sep 14, 1940
Episode: 1940-09-21 | Airdate: Sep 21, 1940
Episode: 1940-09-28 | Airdate: Sep 28, 1940
Episode: 1940-10-12 | Airdate: Oct 12, 1940
Episode: 1940-10-12 | Airdate: Oct 12, 1940
Episode: 1940-10-26 | Airdate: Oct 26, 1940
Episode: 1940-11-02 | Airdate: Nov 2, 1940
Episode: 1940-11-09 | Airdate: Nov 9, 1940
Episode: 1940-11-23 | Airdate: Nov 23, 1940
Episode: 1940-11-30 | Airdate: Nov 30, 1940
Episode: 1940-12-07 | Airdate: Dec 7, 1940
Episode: 1940-12-21 | Airdate: Dec 21, 1940
Episode: 1940-12-21 | Airdate: Dec 21, 1940
Episode: 1941-01-04 | Airdate: Jan 4, 1941
Episode: 1941-01-11 | Airdate: Jan 11, 1941
Episode: 1941-01-18 | Airdate: Jan 18, 1941
Episode: 1941-02-01 | Airdate: Feb 1, 1941
Episode: 1941-02-15 | Airdate: Feb 15, 1941
Episode: 1941-02-15 | Airdate: Feb 15, 1941
Episode: 1941-03-01 | Airdate: Mar 1, 1941
Episode: 1941-03-08 | Airdate: Mar 8, 1941
Episode: 1941-03-15 | Airdate: Mar 15, 1941
Episode: 1941-03-29 | Airdate: Mar 29, 1941
Episode: 1941-03-29 | Airdate: Mar 29, 1941
Episode: 1941-04-12 | Airdate: Apr 12, 1941
Episode: 1941-04-19 | Airdate: Apr 19, 1941
Episode: 1941-04-26 | Airdate: Apr 26, 1941
Episode: 1941-05-10 | Airdate: May 10, 1941
Episode: 1941-05-10 | Airdate: May 10, 1941
Episode: 1941-05-24 | Airdate: May 24, 1941
Episode: 1941-06-07 | Airdate: Jun 7, 1941
Episode: 1941-06-07 | Airdate: Jun 7, 1941
Episode: 1941-06-21 | Airdate: Jun 21, 1941
Episode: 1941-06-21 | Airdate: Jun 21, 1941
Episode: 1941-07-05 | Airdate: Jul 5, 1941
Episode: 1941-07-05 | Airdate: Jul 5, 1941
Episode: 1941-07-19 | Airdate: Jul 19, 1941
Episode: 1941-08-02 | Airdate: Aug 2, 1941
Episode: 1941-08-09 | Airdate: Aug 9, 1941
Episode: 1941-08-16 | Airdate: Aug 16, 1941
Episode: 1941-08-30 | Airdate: Aug 30, 1941
Episode: 1941-08-30 | Airdate: Aug 30, 1941
Episode: 1941-08-30 | Airdate: Aug 30, 1941
Episode: 1941-09-20 | Airdate: Sep 20, 1941
Episode: 1941-09-27 | Airdate: Sep 27, 1941
Episode: 1941-10-11 | Airdate: Oct 11, 1941
Episode: 1941-10-25 | Airdate: Oct 25, 1941
Episode: 1941-10-25 | Airdate: Oct 25, 1941
Episode: 1941-11-08 | Airdate: Nov 8, 1941
Episode: 1941-11-22 | Airdate: Nov 22, 1941
Episode: 1941-11-22 | Airdate: Nov 22, 1941
Episode: 1941-12-06 | Airdate: Dec 6, 1941
Episode: 1941-12-20 | Airdate: Dec 20, 1941
Episode: 1941-12-27 | Airdate: Dec 27, 1941
Episode: 1942-01-13 | Airdate: Jan 13, 1942
Episode: 1942-01-17 | Airdate: Jan 17, 1942
Episode: 1942-01-17 | Airdate: Jan 17, 1942
Episode: 1942-01-31 | Airdate: Jan 31, 1942
Episode: 1942-02-14 | Airdate: Feb 14, 1942
Episode: 1942-02-21 | Airdate: Feb 21, 1942
Episode: 1942-02-28 | Airdate: Feb 28, 1942
Episode: 1942-03-14 | Airdate: Mar 14, 1942
Episode: 1942-03-14 | Airdate: Mar 14, 1942
Episode: 1942 Special | Airdate: Apr 2, 1942 (3 min)
Episode: 1942-04-11 | Airdate: Apr 11, 1942
Episode: 1942-04-11 | Airdate: Apr 11, 1942
Episode: 1942-04-25 | Airdate: Apr 25, 1942
Episode: 1942-05-02 | Airdate: May 2, 1942
Episode: 1942-05-02 | Airdate: May 2, 1942
Episode: 1942-05-09 | Airdate: May 9, 1942
Episode: 1942-05-23 | Airdate: May 23, 1942
Episode: 1942-05-23 | Airdate: May 23, 1942
Episode: 1942-06-06 | Airdate: Jun 6, 1942
Episode: 1942-06-06 | Airdate: Jun 6, 1942
Episode: 1942-06-20 | Airdate: Jun 20, 1942
Episode: 1942-06-27 | Airdate: Jun 27, 1942
Episode: 1942-07-11 | Airdate: Jul 11, 1942
Episode: 1942-07-11 | Airdate: Jul 11, 1942
Episode: 1942-08-01 | Airdate: Aug 1, 1942
Episode: 1942-08-01 | Airdate: Aug 1, 1942
Episode: 1942-08-08 | Airdate: Aug 8, 1942
Episode: 1942-08-22 | Airdate: Aug 22, 1942
Episode: 1942-08-22 | Airdate: Aug 22, 1942
Episode: 1942-08-29 | Airdate: Aug 29, 1942
Episode: 1942-09-05 | Airdate: Sep 5, 1942
Episode: 1942-09-19 | Airdate: Sep 19, 1942
Episode: 1942-10-03 | Airdate: Oct 3, 1942
Episode: 1942-10-17 | Airdate: Oct 17, 1942
Episode: 1942-10-24 | Airdate: Oct 24, 1942
Episode: 1942-10-31 | Airdate: Oct 31, 1942
Episode: 1942-11-21 | Airdate: Nov 21, 1942
Episode: 1942-12-05 | Airdate: Dec 5, 1942
Episode: 1942-12-05 | Airdate: Dec 5, 1942
Episode: 1942-12-12 | Airdate: Dec 12, 1942
Episode: 1943-01-16 | Airdate: Jan 16, 1943
Episode: 1943-01-23 | Airdate: Jan 23, 1943
Episode: 1943-02-02 | Airdate: Feb 2, 1943
Episode: 1943-02-20 | Airdate: Feb 20, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Feb 25, 1943 (3 min)
Episode: 1943-03-06 | Airdate: Mar 6, 1943
Episode: 1943-03-06 | Airdate: Mar 6, 1943
Episode: 1943-03-20 | Airdate: Mar 20, 1943
Episode: 1943-03-27 | Airdate: Mar 27, 1943
Episode: 1943-04-03 | Airdate: Apr 3, 1943
Episode: 1943-04-17 | Airdate: Apr 17, 1943
Episode: 1943-05-01 | Airdate: May 1, 1943
Episode: 1943-05-15 | Airdate: May 15, 1943
Episode: 1943-05-15 | Airdate: May 15, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Jun 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-06-05 | Airdate: Jun 5, 1943
Episode: 1943-06-12 | Airdate: Jun 12, 1943
Episode: 1943-06-19 | Airdate: Jun 19, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Jul 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-07-03 | Airdate: Jul 3, 1943
Episode: 1943-07-17 | Airdate: Jul 17, 1943
Episode: 1943-07-17 | Airdate: Jul 17, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Aug 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-08-21 | Airdate: Aug 21, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Sep 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Sep 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-09-11 | Airdate: Sep 11, 1943
Episode: 1943-09-18 | Airdate: Sep 18, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Oct 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-10-23 | Airdate: Oct 23, 1943
Episode: 1943-10-30 | Airdate: Oct 30, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Nov 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-11-13 | Airdate: Nov 13, 1943
Episode: 1943-11-20 | Airdate: Nov 20, 1943
Episode: 1943 Special | Airdate: Dec 1, 1943 (5 min)
Episode: 1943-12-04 | Airdate: Dec 4, 1943
Episode: 1943-12-11 | Airdate: Dec 11, 1943
The episode list was truncated because of the large number of episodes. Visit the seasons page to see individual seasons' episode guides.