I identify myself with the "fiesty"Daisy Duck
My mom has always been a teeny bit bossy and particular as Miss Piggy.
My cousin, Stephen can be as relentless and adorable as Plucky Duck
My eldest brother, Gary is always as cool and calm as the Pink Panther.
My baby brother, Shaun is as mischievous and cute as Buster Bunny
My sister, Terri seems to have as many personalities and hair colours as Babs Bunny
My step sister, Shona is an annoying animal lover asElmyra is, only she has a PhD in it!
My cousin, Luke - aka- Willy-Lue is little whirl wind of energy as Dizzy Devil, he gives me head spins.
My Uncle Billy, obviously Luke's dad is without question as tempermental as Tazmanian Devil.
My step brother, Damion is a wise-ass nosey body as Bugs Bunny.
My Uncle Frank is a little on crazy side - thus Daffy Duck!
My Uncle Robert has always been a Porky Pi g - warmhearted and easily pleased.
My Aunt Janet is shopper-holic homemaker like Minnie Mouse.
My step dad, reminds me of Wile E Coyote in his creativity to build and buy unnecessary contraptions.
My step brother, Andrew is clumsy as Goofy.
My step brother, Junior who is married to Aunt Janet, has the personality of Mickey Mouse.
My step sister, Juliet is the adult version of Angelica, manipulative.
The Classic Warner B rothers cast
Another Classic Warner Brother c ast. Also listed below
The brash rabbit became one of the world's favorite characters. The first "true" Bugs appeared in A Wild Hare in 1940. In 1960, he became the host of his own prime-time TV show. Bugs' trademark was the wisecrack delivered while chomping on a carrot. The Utah Celery Company and the Broccoli Institute of America both tried to get Bugs to switch vegetables, but Bugs remained true to the carrot even though his voice, Mel Blanc,would've been happy to switch. He claimed that carrots made his throat tighten so that he didn't sound like the character anymore. He taped the carrot-crunching parts last, and had them spliced into the right places. When the animators were thinking up lines for Bugs in 1940, cartoonist Tex A very remembered "Hey, what's doin', doc?" from a kid at high school in Taylor, Texas and revised the phrase a little. Bug's greeting is famous around the world --"What's up, Doc?" is & quot;Do shi ta no da ro?" ("What's happening?") in Japanese, "Che sucede, amico?" ("What happens, friend?") in Italian, and "Quoi de neuf, docteur?" ("What's new, doctor?") in French.
He first appeared (with Porky Pig) in a cartoon released in 1937. He often played against arch-rival Bugs, who always outwitted him, leaving Daffy muttering, "You're dethpicable!" By the way, the character and speech of Daffy Duck were modeled after the cartoonists' much-despised boss. The cartoonists came to the first screening with resignation letters in their pockets, but they needn't have worried--like many obnoxious people, the boss didn't recognize himself. Instead he jumped up at the end and shouted, "That voith! Where'd you get that funny voith!"
Shy, good-natured and simpleminded, Porky had his own cartoons, but he was most famous for the "Th-Th-Th-That's All Folks!" closing line. He first appeared in 1935 in I Haven't Got a Hat, and later married Petunia. Mel Blanc's Porky Pig characterization, just one of series of speech-impeded characters, provoked protests from a stutterers' rights organization.
The baby-talking but absolutely ruthless Tweety made his debut in A Tale of Two Kitties in 1942, uttering his famous line "I tawt I taw a puddy-tat!" The forever-hungry cat, Sylvester, first appeared, without Tweety, in Life With Feathers in 1945. Sufferin' succotash! The fateful collision of Tweety and Sylvester was in Tweetie Pie in 1947, when Tweety became a yellow canary. (He had been pink, but censors had objected that he looked naked.) Tweetie Pie was the first Warner Bros. cartoon character to win an Oscar, in 1940. Sufferin' Succotash!
These two speeding adversaries were introduced to the world in the 1949 cartoon Fast and Furry-ous. Animator Chuck Jones developed fifteen years of those backfiring schemes concocted by the Coyote to catch the beeping bird. This in spite of (actually, because of) the unlimited gadgetry of the ACME company, items like Rocket Powered Roller Skates and Do-It-Yourself Tornadoes. "When I was a kid," Jones says, "we called everything the ACME Corporation. I adored the idea that there was a factory someplace that supplied nothing but things for coyotes."
Some other Warner Bros. favorites include Elmer Fudd, Pepe Le Pew, Foghorn Leghorn, Speedy Gonzales, and Yosemite Sam.