- 1 Home Tweet Home
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Air Date: 1950-01-14
- 2 Hurdy-Gurdy Hare
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Bugs tries to make money by first renting a hurdy-gurdy monkey music stand and having the monkey go into people's windows and recieve the paid coins.
Air Date: 1950-01-21
- 3 Boobs in the Woods
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After establishing Daffy's 'daffy' nature (by having him wander through a countryside singing a nonsense song and doing silly things), he dives into a lake. Later, Porky pulls up and sets up camp, intending to enjoy the countryside. He first tries making a painting, but is stopped when Daffy poses, 'ruining' the scenery. Daffy bicycles out on an invisible bike (a noticeable goof is when he says "So long, Rembrandt", Daffy's mouth doesn't move). Daffy then comes back in and tells Porky that he doesn't want 'his' lake painted, but he doesn't 'own' the mountains in the background. As he walks off, Daffy comes back in again, dressed as 'The old man in the mountains' - trying to get the mountains out of Porky's painting.
Air Date: 1950-01-28
- 4 Mutiny on the Bunny
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Air Date: 1950-02-11
- 5 The Lion's Busy
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Air Date: 1950-02-18
- 6 The Scarlet Pumpernickel
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Daffy Duck is fed up with comedy and wants to try some more serious roles, so offers a script to the WB executives, the Scarlet Pumpernickel. In this script, the Scarlet Pumpernickel (Daffy) must save the Princess Melissa, from being married to a man she does not love (Sylvester), under her father's (Porky Pig) orders. Toward the end, he and the Scarlet Pumpernickel engage in an intense duel, but no conclusive ending is given as the script devolves into random natural disasters at the end.
Air Date: 1950-03-04
- 7 Homeless Hare
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A construction worker destroys Bugs' home with a steam shovel and refuses to repair the damage.
Air Date: 1950-03-11
- 8 Strife with Father
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Air Date: 1950-04-01
- 9 The Hypo-Chondri-Cat
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Those crazy mice Hubie & Bertie are at it again with Claude. This time the mice see that Claude is seriously ill, so they give him an operation.
Air Date: 1950-04-15
- 10 Big House Bunny
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Needing to get away from hunters, Bugs digs a tunnel and accidentally winds up in Sing Song Prison (a clear reference to Sing Sing Prison). As he tries walking away, prison guard Yosemite Sam beats Bugs with a billy club, telling him, "Trying to pull an escape, 777174, huh?" To which Bugs replies, "I'm not 77174 - I'm only 3 1/2." Sam finds this fine, and soon Bugs is in a prison uniform, breaking rocks, with the prison number "3 1/2" (as Bugs says, "Eh, my mother told me there'd be days like this.")
Air Date: 1950-04-22
- 11 The Leghorn Blows at Midnight
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Foghorn Leghorn tricks a naive young chicken hawk into believing the barnyard dog is a pheasant.
Air Date: 1950-05-06
- 12 His Bitter Half
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Daffy reads the classified ads to find himself a suitable- that is rich- wife.
Air Date: 1950-05-20
- 13 An Egg Scramble
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On Porky Pig's farm, Miss Prissy, a slow-witted hen, has never laid an egg. So, one of her fellow hens paints Prissy's name on an egg and places it in Prissy's nest. Prissy believes she laid the egg and proudly refuses to let Porky have it to give to a market's truck. Porky takes the egg from her and gives it to the driver of the truck. Prissy follows the truck to a nearby city, determined to regain her egg. She grabs it from a woman in a house and flees. Convinced she's being chased by police, Prissy takes refuge in a run-down building where Pretty Boy Bagel, an escaped criminal, is also hiding out.
Air Date: 1950-05-27
- 14 8 Ball Bunny
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Bugs helps a penguin go home via New Orleans, Martinique, the Panama Canal and finally the South Pole. But the penguin's home is in New Jersey.
Air Date: 1950-06-08
- 15 What's Up Doc?
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What's Up Doc? is a 1949 Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Robert McKimson and released by Warner Bros. Pictures in 1950, in which Hollywood star Bugs Bunny recounts his life story to a reporter from "Disassociated Press". Bugs Bunny talks about his birth, his rise to fame, and the slow years, when famous Vaudeville performer Elmer Fudd chooses Bugs Bunny to be part of his act. Eventually the duo comes upon their classic formula of hunter vs hare.
Air Date: 1950-06-17
- 16 All A Bir-r-r-d
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Sylvester Cat, Tweety Bird, and a bulldog are passengers on a train. Sylvester's attempts to catch Tweety are thwarted by the bulldog and a conscientious conductor.
Air Date: 1950-06-24
- 17 It's Hummer Time
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This is the first of 2 episodes featuring a nameless cat and a nameless dog. The basis of this cartoon is punishment for the cat. Each time the cat does something to the dog, you see the cat being dragged away saying things like ""oh no, not the thinker, anything but that"" or ""oh no, not happy birthday!"" or ""not the fence"" in reference to the punishment he knows he will soon receive.
Air Date: 1950-07-22
- 18 Golden Yeggs
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When Daffy takes credit for the golden egg Porky finds in his henhouse, Rocky and his gang hustle him back to their den and demand more output. Daffy tries to stall for time, at one point asking for surroundings that would make him more comfortable. Rocky and his henchmen oblige, but then demand the egg.
Air Date: 1950-08-05
- 19 Hillbilly Hare
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Two sworn enemies mistake Bugs for the enemy.
Air Date: 1950-08-12
- 20 Dog Gone South
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Ever in search of a master, no matter how unwilling, Charlie winds up on a plantation down South and tries to force himself on the owner, a Confederate Colonel. Unfortunately, the Colonel already has a pet bulldog, "Belvedere."
Air Date: 1950-08-26
- 21 The Ducksters
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Porky Pig is on a radio game show called "Truth or AAAAHHH!!", hosted by Daffy Duck and sponsored by Eagle Hand Laundry, in which the object is to perform several impossible tasks or "pay the penalty". These penalties include Porky being crushed by the Rock of Gibraltar, rained upon by Niagara Falls, tied up and blown up with dynamite, severe pounding with a mallet, thrashing by a gorilla, threatened by a buzz saw, crushing by safes, and other forms of abuse. In the end, however, Porky wins 26 million dollars and 3 cents which he uses to buy the radio show (costing exactly $26,000,000.03!) and then submits Daffy to the same penalties that he had received earlier. Daffy is then tied to a special sawing machine. There's an iris out as Daffy screams, "Have you got a doctor in the balcony, lady?!"
Air Date: 1950-09-02
- 22 A Fractured Leghorn
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Air Date: 1950-09-16
- 23 Bunker Hill Bunny
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Yosemite Sam, as Sam von Schpamm the Hessian, attacks Bugs Bunny's fort during the Battle of Bagel Heights in the American War of Independence. In typical fashion for anyone daring to go up agains Bugs, everything backfires until Sam, ultimately, declares himself "...a Hessian without no aggression"
Air Date: 1950-09-23
- 24 Canary Row
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Sylvester Cat spots Tweety Bird in a San Fransisco apartment and tries to gain access but cannot make it past Granny or the cat-hating desk clerk.
Air Date: 1950-10-07
- 25 Stooge for a Mouse
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Air Date: 1950-10-21
- 26 Pop 'im Pop!
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Air Date: 1950-10-28
- 27 Bushy Hare
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Air Date: 1950-11-18
- 28 Caveman Inki
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Air Date: 1950-11-25
- 29 Dog Collared
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Air Date: 1950-12-02
- 30 Rabbit of Seville
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Behind the Hollywood Bowl stage which is playing the opera, The Barber of Seville, Bugs Bunny flees into the backstage area with Elmer Fudd in close pursuit. Seeing his opportunity to fight on his terms, Bugs raises the curtain on Elmer, trapping him on stage. As the orchestra begins playing, Bugs comes into play as the barber who is going to make sure that Elmer is going to get a grooming he will never forget.
Air Date: 1950-12-16
- 31 Two's a Crowd
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Air Date: 1950-12-30