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The Looney Tunes Proposal: Depression Ends

DimeUhDozen

She/Her
6,203
4,778
A while ago, there was a much needed decompositing thread on the Looney Tunes verse. The main argument to this is from my understanding is that every short is it's own canon and nothing really matters. But there is something that ties the Looney Tunes canon altogether. And this is something I would like to introduce as Actors Canonicity.




Actors Canonicity:




Actors Canonicity refers to the consistent idea that the Looney Tunes are all actors in their respective cartoons. For example, when Daffy Duck plays the role of Robin Hood, he is taking on the mantle of Robin Hood for the sake of the short, and when other characters who have met him act as if they have not, this too is all a part of the show. This also plays into the meta-nature of the show. You may remember Looney Tunes as being exceedingly meta, addressing or sometimes even threatening the audience. There is a reason for this. They are actors. The series, even up to the main plot twist at the end of the film Back In Action, are hard-pressed to this theory, and it spans all the way back to the Merrie Melodies shorts. In canon, multiple characters refer to their classic shorts as one would their own filmography. But I hear you say, Maid, you sly girl, wouldn't this mean that all physicals, skills, and abilities are non-valid? And the answer to that is: No.

While the Tunes are actors, they do their own stunts, feel pain, can even go against the script if they want, very frequently, even against the whims of the Animator themselves, and some characters aren't even aware that they're in a short, while others do. There is a case in the before-mentioned Back In Action in which Daffy Duck was tricked into playing out the entire movie, believing that it was real, only for it to be fake through some impossible toon logic. But that's just the kind of logic we're working with. It's Looney Tunes, after all. But we can make this much sense out of it.

It's important to note that there are two forms of fourth wall-breaking in the Looney Tunes verse. The first is just talking to the audience or attacking the cameraman or things of that nature, which aren't enough to grant stuff like Tier 1. Animaniacs for example, just has the toons run around the Warner Movie Lot and torment their staff regularly. But stuff like destroying the cartoon they're in, becoming the animator, and attacking those have a clear R>F difference between them would count, as discussed in the cosmology thread. The Warner Bros in the "real world" and the Warner Bros in the cartoon world are different entities.

Now for the evidence. In the Merrie Melodies shorts, Elmer Fudd is shown to rip up his contract with Warner and quit his job as Bugs's adversary. The entire premise of one Daffy short his him pitching his script to Warner. The entire short, "That (blooper) Bunny", is fundamentally based on this concept. In shows like Tiny Toon Adventures, Bugs Bunny is frequently shown with references to his past filmography as a cartoon star and multiple references are made to past material. In Animaniacs, the entire show is set on the Warners Movie Lot where cartoon stars like Porky Pig show up to work, and a main character, Slappy Squirrel, used to be a Looney Tunes star herself. They even show some history in which some of the Looney Tunes are shown to be out of a job. Consistently, the Looney Tunes gang in general are portrayed as actors, and provide commentary on how the Warner Siblings got their start and cartoons like What's Opera Doc, Duck Amuck and Porky in Wackyland are revealed to be canon in-verse. We can apply this logic to work in the Looney Tunes canon where they are considered cartoon stars, connecting the larger verse at whole. The works affected by this would be:

Things that wouldn't work:

  • The Looney Tunes Show (TLTS takes place in a grounded sitcom environment and doesn't connect to the canon whatsoever)
  • Baby Looney Tunes (Same as above, minus the sitcom)
  • Video Games (Video Games are set within their own individual canons, as per most verses, with the exception of perhaps the game Acme Arsenal, which leans into the actors canon and references past work and the before-mentioned World of Mayhem)
Agree: Mad_Dog_Of_Fujiwara, DarkDragonMedeus, Greatsage13th, Pyschomaster35, Tonygameman, Propellus, Anomalous_N_I_W_D_E, Eseseso (8)
Disagree:
Neutral:
Flashlight237 (1)
 
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Oh boy, this is it folks!
giphy.gif
 
This should be fine.

By the way, with what you’re saying about what series would work and what wouldn’t work, would that mean the each character is composited to account for every feat and ability from their series that works (and not the ones that don’t work) in a similar manner to how we treat Mario canonically being an acting set among every game?
 
This should be fine.

By the way, with what you’re saying about what series would work and what wouldn’t work, would that mean the each character is composited to account for every feat and ability from their series that works (and not the ones that don’t work) in a similar manner to how we treat Mario canonically being an acting set among every game?
Yes, exactly that.
 
Definitely agreed, as part of the wacky, loony team!
There was a mention of Bugs Bunny rejecting a cameo for the show in an episode but since I cannot find this episode, until I do, it would go in the wouldn't work section.
You don't need to worry. I've found where that came from (6:46/406 seconds by timestamp linking - K9 Quarry which is Season 2, Episode 3b for reference).
 
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Thanks, and counted.
If I haven't already, I agree.

It saddens me though that The Looney Tunes Show (aside it being underrated) isn't Mainline as that's where the Extraordinary Genius feat came from of which Bugs did such in seconds, same with SJ:ANL would have boosted Bugs's Regen to an OP level (nevermind the RE that comes from it) but sadly inconsistencies hinder it apparently. Video games would have expanded much further too but that is also not Mainline accordingly :/

Still, Bugs's status should still be godlike, and Bugs has challenged Marvin as running gags alone plus understood Marvin's tech that he takes advantage of such as well, who is already a Supergenius.
 
If I haven't already, I agree.
Counted.
It saddens me though that The Looney Tunes Show (aside it being underrated) isn't Mainline as that's where the Extraordinary Genius feat came from of which Bugs did such in seconds, same with SJ:ANL would have boosted Bugs's Regen to an OP level (nevermind the RE that comes from it) but sadly inconsistencies hinder it apparently. Video games would have expanded much further too but that is also not Mainline accordingly :/
Yeah, no High-Godly regen sucks.
Still, Bugs's status should still be godlike, and Bugs has challenged Marvin as running gags alone plus understood Marvin's tech that he takes advantage of such as well, who is already a Supergenius.
I'd say he's only Extraordinary Genius at best.
 
I have thought of the same idea of "Actors Canonicity" too, so of course I agree with the revision overall.

I propose a slight change. The canonicity of Space Jam: A New Legacy doesn't seem dubious at all to me, unlike what the original post currently has written. The movie has references to the first Space Jam in ways that suggest that the second movie is connected to the first movie. During Space Jam: A New Legacy...
As for the idea that the Serververse contradicts the origins of the characters; I don't like to think of it like that, because it's more like a representation of fiction. Different canonical content has "reality" and fiction relationships too, so I don't see how the way Space Jam: A New Legacy does it makes it too inconsistent just because it's in a specific fashion we haven't exactly seen before. Bugs Bunny casually went outside of the Serververse in the ending scene and said that he'd bring his friends too, so the characters aren't even limited to the Serververse anyway, which is consistent with how characters aren't bound to their fictional works in many other canonical cases in different stories.
 
I have thought of the same idea of "Actors Canonicity" too, so of course I agree with the revision overall.

I propose a slight change. The canonicity of Space Jam: A New Legacy doesn't seem dubious at all to me, unlike what the original post currently has written. The movie has references to the first Space Jam in ways that suggest that the second movie is connected to the first movie. During Space Jam: A New Legacy...
As for the idea that the Serververse contradicts the origins of the characters; I don't like to think of it like that, because it's more like a representation of fiction. Different canonical content has "reality" and fiction relationships too, so I don't see how the way Space Jam: A New Legacy does it makes it too inconsistent just because it's in a specific fashion we haven't exactly seen before. Bugs Bunny casually went outside of the Serververse in the ending scene and said that he'd bring his friends too, so the characters aren't even limited to the Serververse anyway, which is consistent with how characters aren't bound to their fictional works in many other canonical cases in different stories.
This is true, although personally, I'm a bit iffy on this. Space Jam is only part of the canon because like Back In Action, it is referred to in other pieces of media as an in-universe film. Otherwise, Space Jam highly contradicts the status quo with the Toons originating from a hole in the ground called Looney Tune Land instead of already living amongst humans and celebrities, working at the Warner Movie Lot to make films, which is the way it's consistently been in across even the earlier Merrie Melodies cartoons (Ex: You Ought To Be In Pictures (1940), The Scarlet Pumpernickel (1950)) and Back In Action as well as the entire Spielberg Era (Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Freakazoid). Even if New Legacy wanted to establish itself as a sequel to the original, it would have more going against it than something like Duck Dodgers, the reason being that there are specific rules that have always been followed in these shorts. Toons are brought to life through animators on paper who come to life and live alongside them in a 3D reality. Of course, like in One Carroter in Search of an Artist and Yakko Amakko, we see that to update with the times, the higher Creation World uses digital software to achieve the same effect, but there has always been a relationship in this way. It's very hard to believe that this has always been the Serververse the entire time as there's never been any mention of it, especially since the Warner Siblings themselves show up in New Legacy without any reason at all. They should be with Warner making the cartoons, not below in one singular world representing Looney Tunes cartoons. Although you could make the argument as evidenced by a Dot statue in an office and the Warners' appearances in themselves that Lebron's world sees Animaniacs itself as fiction. I'm willing to hear out an argument for that if you have one.
 
This is true, although personally, I'm a bit iffy on this. Space Jam is only part of the canon because like Back In Action, it is referred to in other pieces of media as an in-universe film.
Yeah, that kind of evidence would be better for Space Jam: A New Legacy to have. I think the reason for it lacking this is because it's more recent than those other movies, so there probably just haven't been a lot of fitting opportunities for other stories to reference it.
Otherwise, Space Jam highly contradicts the status quo with the Toons originating from a hole in the ground called Looney Tune Land instead of already living amongst humans and celebrities, working at the Warner Movie Lot to make films, which is the way it's consistently been in across even the earlier Merrie Melodies cartoons (Ex: You Ought To Be In Pictures (1940), The Scarlet Pumpernickel (1950)) and Back In Action as well as the entire Spielberg Era (Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Freakazoid). Even if New Legacy wanted to establish itself as a sequel to the original, it would have more going against it than something like Duck Dodgers, the reason being that there are specific rules that have always been followed in these shorts. Toons are brought to life through animators on paper who come to life and live alongside them in a 3D reality. Of course, like in One Carroter in Search of an Artist and Yakko Amakko, we see that to update with the times, the higher Creation World uses digital software to achieve the same effect, but there has always been a relationship in this way.
I think it's still possible to come up with an explanation. The characters are brought to life by animators in other stories, but during the first Space Jam that's canon, we see that the characters come from a different world from a hole in the ground, which is contradictory on the surface, similarly to the Serververse. Perhaps, both of them aren't the true origins of the characters, and are only treated like that for the sake of those specific movies. The character are known for having inconsistent roles, after all.

In my previous message, I showed that Space Jam: A New Legacy shows that the characters can live alongside the "real" characters in a 3D world outside of the Serververse. Although the Serververse is different than what we've seen before, it still provides the relationship between "reality" and fiction that you're looking for.
It's very hard to believe that this has always been the Serververse the entire time as there's never been any mention of it, especially since the Warner Siblings themselves show up in New Legacy without any reason at all. They should be with Warner making the cartoons, not below in one singular world representing Looney Tunes cartoons. Although you could make the argument as evidenced by a Dot statue in an office and the Warners' appearances in themselves that Lebron's world sees Animaniacs itself as fiction. I'm willing to hear out an argument for that if you have one.
Has the entire Warner Bros. database even ever been relevant in a story before Space Jam: A New Legacy for there to have been a reason for other stories to previously mention it?

The main characters of Animaniacs do appear during the basketball game in the Serververse, so I suppose the world that Lebron James comes from sees it as fiction, considering how the Serververse is supposed to be the movie's representation of fiction. In fact, the first Space Jam movie is also considered as a movie during Space Jam: A New Legacy. That's interesting.
 
Yeah, that kind of evidence would be better for Space Jam: A New Legacy to have. I think the reason for it lacking this is because it's more recent than those other movies, so there probably just haven't been a lot of fitting opportunities for other stories to reference it.
That's the main road block that's keeping me from making anything substantial.
I think it's still possible to come up with an explanation. The characters are brought to life by animators in other stories, but during the first Space Jam that's canon, we see that the characters come from a different world from a hole in the ground, which is contradictory on the surface, similarly to the Serververse. Perhaps, both of them aren't the true origins of the characters, and are only treated like that for the sake of those specific movies. The character are known for having inconsistent roles, after all.
Yes, considering that it's treated this way for Space Jam, and that it's canonically as fictitious as Knighty-Knight Bugs for the characters, a short which Bugs is shown to have won an Oscar for in Tiny Toon Adventures. Thus, it works when connecting it to the larger canon because it's not actually where they came from. They were just given the script and made to act alongside their version of Michael Jordan.
In my previous message, I showed that Space Jam: A New Legacy shows that the characters can live alongside the "real" characters in a 3D world outside of the Serververse. Although the Serververse is different than what we've seen before, it still provides the relationship between "reality" and fiction that you're looking for.

Has the entire Warner Bros. database even ever been relevant in a story before Space Jam: A New Legacy for there to have been a reason for other stories to previously mention it?
This is true, although A New Legacy sets this up as something surreal and not the status quo. In media like You Should Be In Pictures, The Scarlet Pumpernickel, Looney Tunes: Back In Action, Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Pinky & The Brain, Freakazoid and countless other products, toons living amongst people is considered normal and they are just as much celebrities as Michael Jordan or Lebron James. This is consistent enough to be considered the status quo, and if this is the case, Lebron should not be surprised by this. Warner Bros does mention several IPs in Back In Action, like with Scooby and Shaggy harassing Matthew Lillard about his performance in Scooby Doo, and Dot assembling all sorts of Hanna-Barbara and other cartoons under the Warner Bros flagship, but they're all treated as just that, people who just happen to live alongside humans as the status quo. There's been no mention of the Warner database whatsoever.
The main characters of Animaniacs do appear during the basketball game in the Serververse, so I suppose the world that Lebron James comes from sees it as fiction, considering how the Serververse is supposed to be the movie's representation of fiction. In fact, the first Space Jam movie is also considered as a movie during Space Jam: A New Legacy. That's interesting.
That helps, but in order for A New Legacy to be considered canon at this point, we need a new piece of media to establish A New Legacy as an in-universe film, otherwise, I think it just contradicts way too much and it's only evidence rests upon it's own shoulders.
 
That's the main road block that's keeping me from making anything substantial.

Yes, considering that it's treated this way for Space Jam, and that it's canonically as fictitious as Knighty-Knight Bugs for the characters, a short which Bugs is shown to have won an Oscar for in Tiny Toon Adventures. Thus, it works when connecting it to the larger canon because it's not actually where they came from. They were just given the script and made to act alongside their version of Michael Jordan.

This is true, although A New Legacy sets this up as something surreal and not the status quo. In media like You Should Be In Pictures, The Scarlet Pumpernickel, Looney Tunes: Back In Action, Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Pinky & The Brain, Freakazoid and countless other products, toons living amongst people is considered normal and they are just as much celebrities as Michael Jordan or Lebron James. This is consistent enough to be considered the status quo, and if this is the case, Lebron should not be surprised by this. Warner Bros does mention several IPs in Back In Action, like with Scooby and Shaggy harassing Matthew Lillard about his performance in Scooby Doo, and Dot assembling all sorts of Hanna-Barbara and other cartoons under the Warner Bros flagship, but they're all treated as just that, people who just happen to live alongside humans as the status quo. There's been no mention of the Warner database whatsoever.

That helps, but in order for A New Legacy to be considered canon at this point, we need a new piece of media to establish A New Legacy as an in-universe film, otherwise, I think it just contradicts way too much and it's only evidence rests upon it's own shoulders.
It seems that you're correct. 🌟 I yield my proposal of slight change.
 
It seems that you're correct. 🌟 I yield my proposal of slight change.
I've been thinking over your proposal and surprisingly, I think it does fit to a degree if you consider the possibility that Lebron's world is the same as the 5-D world shown in Looney Tunes shorts. It makes sense when you consider how this creation world functions. The animators can control the cartoon world as if it were a piece of paper. But when they're done with that, they can move onto the next one where the universe and it's continuity will still exist. We see that they have made updates to this to computers, mirroring how cartoons are made now in real life, digitally instead of on paper. Despite this, it's history still carries over despite the medium difference. The Warners return to a world where time has passed even though the mediums have updated from hand drawn to digital, and we see this in the episodes where Yakko meets the Animator, who controls the cartoon world through a computer. A computer that belongs to the Warner Bros company.

Why does this matter so much? Because the Serververse is a setting inside the Warner Bros computers containing, as you said, every piece of fiction inside the Warner Bros database. This even factors into Animaniacs because the series is acknowledged not only by having a statue of Dot in the 5-D world, but the Warners themselves showing up to watch the basketball game. Also as you said, Bugs is consistently able to bring himself in and out of the 3-D and 5-D worlds. So really, it doesn't seem to contradict much of... anything.

But there's still a problem. There's nothing that validates A New Legacy being in the same continuity as the mainline canon. That is... except... World of Mayhem.

The same World of Mayhem that frequently references past work and even created a special event based on the earliest Looney Tunes cartoons, most notably, Porky In Wackyland which we have already established is canon and is a frequent setting in Tiny Toons.

But we're not stopping there. This wabbit hole goes MUCH deeper, doc.

According to the Devs themselves, they clearly have set a precedent for "what is canon" to both the game and the Looney Tunes as a whole, stating that while promotional images are not always canon to the game, classical appearances in-game are, and the game is approved by Warner Bros officially and is canon to the world of the theatrical shorts. Now, you might be saying, Maid, you absolute dumb-dumb. Warner Bros doesn't care about what's canon. It's Looney Tunes. Looney Tunes is Looney Tunes. Even if these devs say it's canon, brave individuals that they are for trying to stitch together a canon spanning decades, these are just Discord messages. But there are yet more evidence. Pez Hoffman, a creative consultant on the game, has stated in an interview, that he was brought in to keep these characters in line with the brand. Policing their art-styles and even their attitudes to make sure everything was in line with Looney Tunes canon. The community manager states directly that this is the "canon" that they are using in the game, and they are tied to it.

This was a lot, but, now we can officially say, Space Jam: A New Legacy... is canon.
 
I've been thinking over your proposal and surprisingly, I think it does fit to a degree if you consider the possibility that Lebron's world is the same as the 5-D world shown in Looney Tunes shorts. It makes sense when you consider how this creation world functions. The animators can control the cartoon world as if it were a piece of paper. But when they're done with that, they can move onto the next one where the universe and it's continuity will still exist. We see that they have made updates to this to computers, mirroring how cartoons are made now in real life, digitally instead of on paper. Despite this, it's history still carries over despite the medium difference. The Warners return to a world where time has passed even though the mediums have updated from hand drawn to digital, and we see this in the episodes where Yakko meets the Animator, who controls the cartoon world through a computer. A computer that belongs to the Warner Bros company.

Why does this matter so much? Because the Serververse is a setting inside the Warner Bros computers containing, as you said, every piece of fiction inside the Warner Bros database. This even factors into Animaniacs because the series is acknowledged not only by having a statue of Dot in the 5-D world, but the Warners themselves showing up to watch the basketball game. Also as you said, Bugs is consistently able to bring himself in and out of the 3-D and 5-D worlds. So really, it doesn't seem to contradict much of... anything.

But there's still a problem. There's nothing that validates A New Legacy being in the same continuity as the mainline canon. That is... except... World of Mayhem.

The same World of Mayhem that frequently references past work and even created a special event based on the earliest Looney Tunes cartoons, most notably, Porky In Wackyland which we have already established is canon and is a frequent setting in Tiny Toons.

But we're not stopping there. This wabbit hole goes MUCH deeper, doc.

According to the Devs themselves, they clearly have set a precedent for "what is canon" to both the game and the Looney Tunes as a whole, stating that while promotional images are not always canon to the game, classical appearances in-game are, and the game is approved by Warner Bros officially and is canon to the world of the theatrical shorts. Now, you might be saying, Maid, you absolute dumb-dumb. Warner Bros doesn't care about what's canon. It's Looney Tunes. Looney Tunes is Looney Tunes. Even if these devs say it's canon, brave individuals that they are for trying to stitch together a canon spanning decades, these are just Discord messages. But there are yet more evidence. Pez Hoffman, a creative consultant on the game, has stated in an interview, that he was brought in to keep these characters in line with the brand. Policing their art-styles and even their attitudes to make sure everything was in line with Looney Tunes canon. The community manager states directly that this is the "canon" that they are using in the game, and they are tied to it.

This was a lot, but, now we can officially say, Space Jam: A New Legacy... is canon.
Thanks for taking my idea into more consideration. What you described here is the kind of idea I had in mind, and you described it far better than I did because you know more about Looney Tunes than I do. I didn't realize that LeBron James was added to Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem, so I made an oversight and you helped make my point better by mentioning it and providing even more evidence to prove its validity. With that being established, I'll leave this up to you to decide. 👍
 
Thanks for taking my idea into more consideration. What you described here is the kind of idea I had in mind, and you described it far better than I did because you know more about Looney Tunes than I do. I didn't realize that LeBron James was added to Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem, so I made an oversight and you helped make my point better by mentioning it and providing even more evidence to prove its validity. With that being established, I'll leave this up to you to decide. 👍
Ultimately, I have decided to add it to the canon given the evidence. The main thing keeping me from doing so is how it contradicted canon, but now that I've figured it out, it can stay.
 
I am all for the revival of Looney Tunes; heck, I had a fun time with the characters; but at the same time, I think this errs towards compositing, which we've long since disallowed. Consider me neutral for now.
I don't really mind this. The compositing removal was always a baffling thing regardless of the reason given.

But nevertheless, Maid seemingly made it worked.
 
I am all for the revival of Looney Tunes; heck, I had a fun time with the characters; but at the same time, I think this errs towards compositing, which we've long since disallowed. Consider me neutral for now.
I get the compositing fear. But I’ve also taken time to ensure that everything would make sense within the canon. Having characters acknowledge the past and having multiple links to different parts of the canon. I wouldn’t slap things inside if I knew it didn’t work.
 
I get the compositing fear. But I’ve also taken time to ensure that everything would make sense within the canon. Having characters acknowledge the past and having multiple links to different parts of the canon. I wouldn’t slap things inside if I knew it didn’t work.
Well you still did a good job putting things together though
 
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