KissCartoon, you can watch Woody Woodpecker Episode 091 - Tomcat Combat Cartoon online free and more Cartoon online Free in high quality, without downloading.
Woody Woodpecker is an iconic cartoon star, the mascot and of the and studios, from his in the short ' note Although, released the following year, was the debut of his own series., in, to the end of his theatrical run in, lasting for 198 shorts, supplemented by appearances in comics, merchandise, a long-running TV anthology show, a short-lived contemporary TV revival, and a and a late 2018 revival, thus establishing him as an animation.He is famous for being a prominent example of the type cartoon character, up there with masters like and, of course, himself. He has starred in many remarkable cartoons, most notably, which made it onto the list of, along with his first solo short, which made it as a runner-up. In the late 1930s, Walter Lantz's then-prime series,. Besides the gradual decline of the series, he was facing competition from, which was on the rise with stars like (and eventually, ), and the already widely popular was finding phenomenal success as well as.
And on top of that, Lantz had just split his studio from directly working with Universal in order to remain independent from them save for distribution, leaving Lantz to have to front his own cash to make his cartoons. In order to keep his studio afloat, quickly attempted to make successors to Oswald, among them being the character Andy Panda. While Andy was mildly popular, he wasn't the mega hit star Lantz needed badly. 1940. (Alex Lovy - no onscreen credit / cartoon): Woody's debut, where he acts as the villain of the picture, harassing Poppa and Andy Panda. While technically an Andy Panda short, the amount of screentime Woody gets in contrast to Andy Panda makes this a for his series. The ending is ripped almost wholesale from '—no surprise, since the storyman for this short, Ben Hardaway, was a former writer/director.1941.: Woody's first solo entry.
One reissued print renamed it 'The Cracked Nut', which is what this short is usually called nowadays to avoid confusion. Runner-up on list. The Screwdriver: Woody's second solo outing, and a prime example of his early screwball days. The short is notable for Woody getting away with harassing a police officer and winding up getting the guy thrown in a mental home—especially strange for the time period, when, not to mention disrespect of authority figures, were strictly taboo in the film industry due to.
Pantry Panic: Only Woody Woodpecker cartoon in the. A particularly violent short, with a starving Woody trying to cook a vagrant cat alive (although to be fair, ) The short also establishes Woody's role as a, something that would expanded upon in later shorts.1942 (All cartoons directed by Alex Lovy.). The Hollywood Matador (co-directed by Lantz - no onscreen credit): Woody's first short where he is portrayed sympathetically.
Kent Rogers voices Woody here. Ace in the Hole: A, being set on a military airbase. The Loan Stranger1943. The Screwball (Lovy).
(Lovy/Lantz/Hardaway - no onscreen credit): First Woody Woodpecker short to be nominated for the. Ration Bored (Schaffer/Hawkins): First short where Woody dons his. Last short to use the original Woody Woodpecker design. The animation slowly starts improving around this time, being a tad less mushy than the earlier shorts. Woody is presented as more rationalized (no pun intended) here than before, with him actually having a motive to go about his deeds (stealing gas in a time when it was heavily rationed), a step up from the mindless heckler he was in previous outings.1944 (All cartoons directed by James Culhane.).: 's first Woody Woodpecker short. Also the last Woody with green eyes until 1947. Woody's jerk tendencies were played up considerably from here on out, with sheer determination replacing his previously nutty, haphazard nature.
He also recieved a major design overhaul in this short, doing away with his original ghoulish look in favor of a more streamlined, slicker design. The Beach Nut: Wally Walrus' debut. Ben Hardaway becomes Woody Woodpecker's voice actor from here on out.
Ski for Two: Co-starring Wally Walrus.1945 (All cartoons directed by James Culhane). Chew-Chew Baby: The first of Woody's recurring cross-dressing escapades.
Culhane expands on Woody's character by showing a more cunning, selfish side of him. Co-starring Wally Walrus. Woody Dines Out. The Dippy Diplomat: Co-starring Wally Walrus. The Loose Nut1946. Who's Cookin' Who? (Culhane): Semi-Remake of Pantry Panic.
Like that short, this is a particularly violent cartoon, with some very painful gags used throughout. One of two shorts that feature Wolfie Wolf. Bathing Buddies (Dick Lundy): Dick Lundy's directorial debut on the series. Co-starring Wally Walrus.
The Reckless Driver (Culhane): Similar plot to 'The Screwdriver'. Co-starring Wally Walrus. Fair Weather Fiends (Culhane): Last Woody cartoon directed by Shamus Culhane. Second of two shorts with Wolfie Wolf.1947 (All cartoons directed by Dick Lundy.).: A Musical Miniature Cartune, starring both Woody Woodpecker and Andy Panda. Woody was redesigned again in this cartoon by Disney veteran, looking even softer than he did in the past.
Second Woody cartoon to be nominated for the. Smoked Hams: Co-starring Wally Walrus. The Coo Coo Bird: A rare solo Woody cartoon.
This short is suspiciously similar in story to the 1941 short 'Early to Bed'. Well Oiled: Co-starring Wally Walrus. Solid Ivory: Solo Woody short, featuring him going up against an overprotective hen. Woody the Giant Killer1948 (All cartoons directed by Dick Lundy.). The Mad Hatter: Solo Woody short with a brief appearance from Wally Walrus. Banquet Busters: Co-stars Andy Panda and Wally Walrus. Wacky-Bye Baby: Co-starring Wally Walrus.
Wet Blanket Policy: Debut of Buzz Buzzard. Nominee for Best Song, 'The Woody Woodpecker Song'. Wild and Woody!: Co-starring Buzz Buzzard1949. Drooler's Delight (Lundy): Last Lantz cartoon made before brief shutdown. Last short fully directed by Dick Lundy. Notable for being animated entirely by Ed Love.
Co-starring Buzz Buzzard.1950.: Makes an appearance in a brief animated segment, explaining rocket propulsion. Tropes Related to the Original Theatrical Cartoons:.: Woody once found one and decided to see if there was any gold left.
An outlaw named Joe claimed the mine as his by writing his name on the Abandoned Mine sign. Woody got the gold but it was fool's gold and the assays officer threatened to shoot the next one to bring it. At least Woody had a good laugh by luring Joe into being the next one.: Gorgeous Gal in A Fine Feathered Frenzy, a female bird who fell in love with the Woodpecker instantly. Woody on the other hand was turned off by her weight and age despite her riches and va va vavoom voice. Gorgeous Gal flirted, kissed him many times, chased after him and tried to seduce him wearing different outfits. Finally Gorgeous Gal trapped Woody and arranged for a priest to marry them.: In Wild and Woody, Woody's gun appears to be powered by gasoline, of all things.
Also, a can opener on a slingshot in Slingshot 6 7/8.: Depends on the short Woody is in.: Take a wild guess.: Frequently spouted by some villains whenever one of their plots to outsmart/get rid of Woody falls flat. A frequent offender is Dirty McNasty, the rustler from some of the late 1960s shorts.: The original Woody Woodpecker Show followed this format.: Woody has had two of them.: The early shorts by Lantz and Lovy had very sloppy, off-model prone animation.
The animation improved to a degree when joined the studio, but his efforts were still undermined by bad inkers and sloppy in-between work. The animation finally got up to par when Dick Lundy took over as the director, but then started to deteriorate again after the studio's temporary shutdown in 1949. The animation quality remained quite good under Lundy's replacement, Don Patterson, but grew steadily worse and worse when Patterson left and was replaced by Paul J. Smith and the returning Alex Lovy. Surprisingly enough the animation did improve near the end of the studio's life, when Smith recruited some better animators in 1971—72, but it was really too little, too late.: His trademark happens to be one, actually. Although it's not the only laugh he's ever used.: However, it is by far his most used and recognizable one.: Woody started off looking like a ◊ to looking like a ◊.: Woody varies between this and a.: In an episode of The New Woody Woodpecker Show, Woody is trying to get a police officer to come arrest Buzz Buzzard. At first, this trope is inverted, with Woody listing Buzz's crimes starting from the least severe like cussing and littering, and going up to the most severe with bank robbery.
When the officer still refuses to think of Buzz as worth arresting at that point, Woody says that Buzz is parked in a red zone, the officer lets out a and rushes to arrest Buzz on the spot.: Woody went through several redesigns as the series ran its course. He started off looking like a ghoulish, needle-nosed ragdoll in his first batch of shorts, but his original design became a little softer starting with Ace in the Hole. His buck teeth began to disappear, as Lantz realized this feature was extraneous. In addition, the beak and feet colors became slightly brighter and more vibrant.
He also does not have a big chin anymore. 'Ration Bored' also tweaked his design a little by making his hands colored white, so they would read better. His first (and most famous) redesign came around in the short ' ◊ was much more streamlined (just look at the The Coo Coo Bird title card!) and cuter looking than the previous one, and Woody even got Come the late 40s, Fred Moore from Disney briefly worked at Lantz and supplied Woody with a ◊ on his design. ◊ came around by the 1950s, this time streamlining Woody's design down to it's bare essence, and making him incredibly tiny as well.
![Woody Woodpecker Tomcat Combat Woody Woodpecker Tomcat Combat](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125487012/810048517.jpg)
The rest of the theatrical cartoons would stick with variations on the 'Tiny' design, while contemporary appearances of Woody tend to settle for his mid-40s design.: In both 'Pantry Panic' and 'Who's Cooking Who', a starving winter-locked Woody gets into fights with hungry predators out to eat him by trying to eat them instead. In the former, Woody and the cat team up to eat a wandering moose together before going back to fighting at knife-point over who gets to eat who.
In the latter, it turns out to be all just a dream. So Woody goes and captures the wolf he was fighting with in order to have him ready to eat when winter comes.: The short Woody the Giant Killer.: Woody did this, when opponents used balloons.: The Screwball and Kiddie League.: Done in the intro of the short Under the Counter Spy.
Woody: You're not going to pull that old gag on me, are you, son? (puffs up as he speaks) Do you know what I DID TO THE LAST GUY THAT TRIED THAT?!.: Woody's desire to get a quick meal (usually on the cheap) is the source for many of the plots.: In an issue of an old Woody Woodpecker comic, Woody goes with his niece and nephew over to Asia to film the abominable snowman. His camera is taken by a band of thieves using the legend of the snowman to scare people into giving them gift to appease them.
Woody: 'No coaching from the audience, please!' . The Cracked Nut ended with Woody sitting in the theater in which his own cartoon is being watched, commenting on the action and annoying the people next to him ( 'I like cartoons! Do you like cartoons?' ).: The opening song from his first solo cartoon, 'Woody Woodpecker' AKA 'The Cracked Nut'.
It appeared again in The Screwdriver and Hot Rod Huckster, in both instances with the lyrics adapted to car-driving.: Woody actually got his start as the antagonist of the Andy Panda short 'Knock Knock'. Needless to say, he had so much more personality and charisma than the actual protagonists of the short that he quickly rose in popularity and inevitably got his own series soon after, and the rest is history.: In the short The Hollywood Matador, the bull flies off the handle when he sees Woody's (then) red hide.
Wrestling Wrecks plays with this, when Woody gets on the ring near the end of the short to fight Bulldozer. YOU CAN'T HARDLY GET THEM THIS SIZE NO MORE.: In the end of the short Ace in the Hole after Woody ejects himself and the Sergeant who is chasing him from a plane, all but completely crippling the Sarge of the military airport that employed Woody at the time, he is forced to tediously shave all of the hair off a very, very long line of horses, one by one, under the threat of a shotgun aimed at him by his sarge.: Walter Lantz's wife, Grace Stafford Lantz, succeeded and Ben Hardaway as Woody's voice actor. She claimed that she slipped in a recording of her own impression of Woody's voice around the time Walter Lantz was looking for Woody's new voice.: Used by Evil Woody ◊ to get gang members under his control.: When some of the older shorts were aired on TV in the 60's via the Woody Woodpecker show, extra dialogue was dubbed over by Grace Lantz to the shorts which read clearly visible, readable signs.
In the TV cut of the short The Loan Stranger, when we first see the Sympathy Loan Company the new Woody Woodpecker dialogue reads out the large, plainly visible words on the buildings signs.) Apparently this was so younger viewers watching the cartoons back then (and possibly not literate ones) would be able to understand the signs. Fortunately, the DVD collections use the unaltered prints.: Some bits of it sneaked into Culhane's shorts. Main officer: Now, before we proceed: is there anyone here without a barrel?.: Woody is supposed to be an acorn woodpecker, but more closely resembles a pileated woodpecker. He resembles the Roadrunner, The Aracuan bird, and Panchito Pistoles from.
Wally Walrus is intended to be. Well, a walrus. He looks more like a bald human with tusks.: Done in the short 'The Hollywood Matador', by Woody simply.: In one short, Buzz Buzzard coerces Woody into signing a life insurance that will grant Buzz a sum of ten thousand dollars in case of Woody's accidental death.: Done between Woody and a rather shapely senorita in Hot Noon.: A Walter Lantz short from the Woody Woodpecker family ended with a shrinking iris decapitating the character.
But it was Played For Laughs.: Pre- Woody, especially in the Culhane-directed shorts. Meany.: Every single title of each short used this trope.: Woody would more often than not get away with a lot of the trouble he causes without getting his proper comeuppance, especially in the case of The Screwdriver.
Averted on occasion, however, in early shorts like Ace in the Hole and Ski For Two, and when Lundy takes over, the world finally begins to get the better of him—especially in Smoked Hams, when Wally Walrus delivered a to Woody via his 'Tit-fer-Tat' machine. By the late 1960s this trope became more and more averted. His last cartoon ever, Bye Bye Blackboard, ended with Woody being spanked.: Happens at one point in The Dizzy Acrobat, while Woody is spending the day at a circus.
Per, he walks by the target unaware, and goes unscathed.: Woody loves the scenery's taste obviously.: Parts of Woody's theme tune pop up throughout the cartoons. It even survived all the way up to The New Woody Woodpecker Show.: The cartoons from late in the series' life.: Woody encounters this in the short The Loan Stranger, where his car crashes and goes kaput, so Woody manages to get a loan of one dollar from the nearby Sympathy Loan Company—but it later escalates to $365 in interest, not including the dollar he had yet to pay back. (justified, as Woody simply forgot to pay the loan back after 30 days.) The Loan Shark in question (who is a wolf note his species is an old visual shorthand for the phrase 'wolf at your door') tries everything in his power to get Woody to pay back the loan. Woody tricks him into calling off the loan when he thinks he smashed Woody's head—only for Woody to pop up and ask for a loan on his cuckoo clock, much to his chagrin.: In the short Ski For Two, Woody attempts to enter a lodge owned by Wally Walrus, only to be rejected due to the lodge only allowing those with reservations to stay there. So Woody promptly gives him lots of reservations.or rather, reservations Woody has made to other resorts and lodges. Wally is immediately on to Woody's sham and tosses him out right away.: In 'The Cracked Nut', Woody, told he's crazy by his fellow, goes to seek help.from a psychologist who's even more nuts than he is. (and much ).
![Woodpecker Woodpecker](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125487012/968540985.jpg)
Woody: CHEESECAKE! (throws the cake into the loan shark's face).
See above for an early example of Woody doing this.:. Dr. Buggy ('Horse 'N Buggy') from Woody's first solo short. Early in 'The Loan Stranger', the front door to the Sympathy Loan Company shows the company presidents name is Hudson C. Dann (the joke being that its a play off of the Hudson Sedan car, and Woody is seeking a loan on his unstable car). Also, the ambassador Woody disguises himself as in 'The Dippy Diplomat,' is called Ivan Awfulitch ('I've an Awful Itch'), which is also a on 's The Death of Ivan Ilyich.: In the opening of 'Ration Bored', Woody dons this kind of look when informs the audience he is a 'necessary evil'.: Pantry Panic must have been a favorite of the studio, since it got remade twiceas Who's Cookin Who?
And The Redwood Sap.: Done in some of the live action segments of The Woody Woodpecker Show. There are only a handful of times where and Woody are in the same shot however, and they never directly interact.: Two early 1960s Chilly Willy shorts had Wally Walrus showing up.: Pulled in Niagara Fools, in which the officer trying to stop Woody from going over keeps going over the falls himself by accident. Crowd:.: One of Woody's biggest enemies is Buzz Buzzard, a sleazy with a and.: In Woody Dines Out, Woody is lured into a taxidermist's shop under the impression that it's a place that serves food. (He saw the sign outside which read We Specialize in Stuffing Birds - he just didn't realize what kind of 'stuffing' was done there.).: One of the earliest popular characters to employ this trope, actually.: Woody, of course.: This and are combined in in the moment Woody turns evil:. 'But there's no reason a brainy man can't make a success out of it crime!
After all, it's a simple formula.: With Andy Panda and other Lantz characters. Andy even co-stars with Woody in one short, 'Musical Moments from Chopin'.
Interestingly enough, and copyright issues aside, the Woody comics written and drawn by Freddy Milton are revealed to take place in not only the same universe, but the same city as Milton's own Gnuff comics (which were ran as a backup feature in the Scandinavian Woody Woodpecker magazine). Though Woody and the Gnuffs never met, and their shared universe was never mentioned in so many words, on occasion the Gnuffs' car was seen driving past in the Woody stories, and certain supporting characters — most notably the J. Phrogg — appeared in both comics.:. In 'The Screwball', the worm that resides in an apple Woody throws screams in a manner very similar to Joe E.
'Big Mouth' Brown, a famous star of the time period. In 'Who's Cooking Who', Woody has a short encounter with a grasshopper who is toiling to gather food alongside some ants, who asserts he has 'learned his lesson' about not preparing for the winter. Combined with his verbal tic of spitting chewing tobacco, it's obvious to animation fans that this is a reference to the 1934 Disney Silly Symphonies short ', based on the titular story from.
Furthermore, before he slams the book of that story closed, the picture of the winter-logged grasshopper is taken from that self-same short. In 'The Dippy Diplomat', Woody disguises himself as a Russian ambassador named, a reference to 's story.: The Mexican girl from the opening of Hot Noon.: Woody gets one at the end of Hot Noon and Socko in Morocco.: Lot of kids' cartoons do this to benefit those that can't read yet. In fact, when the cartoons started airing on TV they often dubbed in Woody reading signs because of this. Even in cartoons he wasn't in.: The trope is in full effect with names like Woody Woodpecker, Winnie Woodpecker, Wally Walrus, and Buzz Buzzard.: Done in the end of Wild and Woody Buzz Buzzard has just been crushed, and he arrives at a lobby with elevators to both heaven and hell with Woody as the doorman: one opens and the angelic operator says 'Going up?'
And Woody forces it closed, the other opens and the demonic operator says 'GOING DOWN?!' And Woody gives Buzz Buzzard a kick in the rear, forcing him into This also happened earlier, at the end of the short Ration Bored.: Footage from the short Wild and Woody was later recycled for the later short Puny Express, as well as three more future shorts.: Wally Walrus, Woody's later established rival.: From Square Shootin' Square (in fact this is also seen in two later shorts, Box Car Bandit and Dopey Dick, the Pink Whale featuring the same characters). Woody: I like you! (smooch).: Woody had some qualities of one in his cartoons, but he wasn't evil per se.
The Woody Woodpecker comic has Woody unwittingly becoming an evil genius by drinking an odd formula, which is probably the only time he's explicitly presented as a bad guy instead of a prankster.: The early cartoons superficially tried to copy them, but the animators lacked the knowledge and skills to do so, resulting in very sloppy animation. Upped the ante somewhat during his tenure, and Dick Lundy brought the real deal to the shorts during his tenure.: Some of the later cartoons were done entirely in pantomime.: Woody had a good seat during a baseball match. Until a guy wearing a huge hat takes the seat in front of him. Woody then asks the man to take the hat off, only to learn his hair is long enough for it.
Woody then used a lawnmower to get rid of it and watch the game.: They Killed Buzz Again in 'Wild and Woody' and 'Buccaneer Woodpecker'.: 'Hypnotic Hick' was originally released in theaters as a 3-D cartoon, right at the height of the 3-D movie craze. Woody: It works! Get me out of here!
Let me out of here! Get me out of here, help! Help!.: Woody constantly veers and being an, depending on the short. Many shorts portrayed him as causing trouble for others around him, be it knowingly (stealing gas, heckling poppa panda by tearing holes in his roof, breaking into a hotel owned by Wally Walrus, etc.) or just out of carelessness or ignorance.
However, it would be a stretch to call him evil—he is rarely portrayed as malicious, and more mischievous and playful to his foes, and he rarely instigated the conflicts in the first place.: Occasionally, Woody's voice would inexplicably revert back to a non-sped up version of his voice. Knock Knock: His very first line, in fact, is 's normal speaking voice!. Pantry Panic: The ending, when he says 'Yeah, well, so am I.' .
The Loan Stranger: When he fakes being killed by the Loan Shark. This also happens with the earlier Lantz shorts that had Grace Lantz, Woody's third voice, add new dialogue to read signs.: Many of the 40s cartoons have references to home front conditions or the wartime rationing of that time period. Ration Bored also parodies wartime rationing that was going on with the U.S. At the time period the short was made. The title is even a pun on the Ration Board. The end of the short also asks the audience to buy war bonds. A running gag in some of these shorts is the slogan 'Is this trip really necessary?'
Woody: Sure it's necessary! I'm a.: How Woody is defeated in Knock Knock; Andy Panda catches him cackling after smashing Poppa Panda through the roof, which gives him time to pour a lump of salt onto his tail, thus literally trapping him in place. The eponymous insects from 'Termites From Mars' can eat almost anything, with the sole exception of adhesive tape.: 'Born To Peck' sticks out like a sore thumb compared to the rest of the series due to its surprisingly depressing content. Just to develop, Woody starts as an old Woodpecker who can't peck anymore and he starts remembering everything.
When he arrived as an egg, his mom left him and his father. Then, he was born and was a total dick to his dad. Then, he starts aging until he tries suicide. Doesn't even starts to describe it.: Woody decides to check his driver's license and finds out it'll expire at noon.: Yellow in some of the 1940s shorts.: The Woody Woodpecker Polka. But that was not the first time he did it ( Chew-Chew Baby) and wouldn't be the last ( Stage Hoax, Real Gone Woody, Tumble Weed Greed).: 'The Woody Woodpecker Polka' is the classic theme 'The Philadelphia Polka' with altered lyrics added. Became a minor breakout hit.: Woody Woodpecker's height throughout the cartoons has never been very consistent.Tropes Related to The New Woody Woodpecker Show:.: The tradition continues for Woody in 'Date With Destiny'.
This time it's even worse, because it's a male badger with a raspy voice that was struck with a cupid's arrow. Woody fares a little better when a speckle headed spring footed woodpecker falls for him in the short 'Woody Watcher', but he was not attracted to her.
She still grabs him and kisses him on the cheek several times.: The episode Surviving Woody had Woody competing in a -type game on a volcanic island.: The Japanese version had a different, sung by Woody's Japanese voice actress, Kumiko Watanabe. It also had a different ending theme as heard.: The episode Automatic Woody runs on this, depicting the utter misery Woody goes through just to get a bar of from a vending machine (the below included).: The opening to the show, animated by the great Mark Kausler, has splendid, fluid hand-drawn animation, and is a far cry from the used throughout the show.: At the end of 'Pinheads', when Woody finds Buzz's wanted poster, he calls the police for the reward. But with the bowling alley where they are being 500 miles away from the nearest civilization, the officer on the other end despite the wanted poster. Then Woody mentions that Buzz's car, the car that Woody just bet and lost against him, is parked in a Red Zone.
One and two seconds later, the police have Buzz surrounded.: Season 3 saw the show switch to digital ink and paint.: Woody Woodpecker's girlfriend Winnie Woodpecker was only shown in one classic Woody Woodpecker cartoon called Real Gone Woody (and in a very one-dimensional role), but became a recurring character in the comics. It wasn't until this show that she became an active member of the series, with a personality similar in silliness to Woody, though showing a more developed sense of dignity.: The badger who is a recurring character. He's very aggressive and vicious with an intimidating appearance. 'Hiya buddy.' .: The episode Two Woodys, No Waiting.: The central plot point of 'Mirage Barrage', where Woody frees Wally the Walrus Genie from the lamp and antics ensue.: Due to Fox Kids policies, Woody was not allowed to peck people on the head. However, they did manage to sneak in Woody pecking someone's head once in a blue moon.: In 'Baby Buzzard', Buzz reads an ad in the newspaper saying that Woody is starting a babysitting service for rich and famous couples.
Buzz dresses himself in a bonnet and booties and acts like a baby as part of his plan to get Woody to babysit him so he can rob his house when he's not looking.: From 'Party Animal'. Miss Meany: (barges in) WOODPECKER, I HEARD THAT! Your lease specifically says 'no parties!' .: In 'Baby Buzzard', when Buzz acts like a baby so he can rob Woody's house behind his back, Woody at one point has to. Since Woody forgot to buy clean diapers before he started his babysitting service, he resorts to using a piece of wallpaper as a diaper, then the living room curtains when the former doesn't work.: Another Lantz creation, Inspector Willoughby, popped up in one episode.: There was a foreign Cartoon Network trailer for The New Woody Woodpecker Show which consisted entirely of classic Woody Woodpecker cartoon clips, and thought that CN was going to put more classic toons on, a reverse of the trend which had seen classics dwindled to just. Instead, it turned out to be a modern revival of Woody.: A recurring doctor was named Doug Knutts; he looks and sounds like Don Knotts.: Parodied (along with other tropes) in 'Winnie, P.I.' .: Woody shows in several episodes that he loves Scottish culture, playing bagpipes, wearing kilts, and sometimes adopting a Scottish accent.: In the episode Automatic Woody, the ATM from which Woody is trying to get money suddenly dons the persona and quotations of.: Aside from wearing a skirt and having her hair (feathers) bent forward, Winnie is almost indistinguishable from Woody.: Buzz Buzzard in 'Woody's Roommate' begs and blackmails Woody to let him stay in his house after his former landlady Miss Meany kicks him out.
And even by the end of the episode, Woody ends up unable to make him leave the house, so he leaves instead and sells the house to Miss Meany, much to Buzz's horror.: One episode featured Woody trying to delay a pizza delivery so he could get the pizza for free. Despite Woody's tricks, Dooley managed to deliver it on time. The pizza was ruined, but it was Woody's fault and Dooley replied that he guaranteed delivery, not satisfaction. Not having money to pay for the pizza, Woody had to work as a delivery boy to pay for the debt.: He Wouldn't Woody.: In 'Queen of De-Nile' after Winnie finds the lost tomb of King Tut's court jester, Izzy Whatsupwithat, she gets into this with archaeologist Wally. Wally: EXACTLY! Izzy Vhatsupwithat!
Yeepers.: The Swedish Wally Walrus is one of Woody's stuffy archnemeses who constantly tries to put an end to Woody's fun, but unlike Miss Meany, Wally is usually minding his own business before Woody starts a conflict.: Woody had to take the worst seat in a baseball stadium because all others had already been sold before he had a chance to buy one.