
Season 2 Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 1 (Sept. 12, 1987) Bugs and Daffy find a giant Elmer Fudd residing in a castle at the top of a towering beanstalk, Bugs is jailed- but not for long- by Sing Song Prison guard (Yosemite) Sam Schultz, and Sylvester fights in a warehouse what he believes to be a giant mouse and resolutely follows Granny through a city after Tweety perches atop Granny's new hat. "Beanstalk Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd "Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Hoppy Daze" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper "A Bird in a Bonnet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 2 (Sept. 19, 1987) Due to signage produced by Bugs, Elmer is confused as to what animal it is the designated season to hunt, the result being repeated blasts of bullets and gunpowder in the direction of Daffy, who is comparing himself to certain beasts in his frustration at not being able to dupe Elmer into shooting his rifle at Bugs. Additionally, Bugs plays a fiddle and sings square dance lyrics that pit one of his two hillbilly pursuers against the other, Daffy stops at nothing to outpace Bugs in a race to a television studio to claim a Million Box prize, and Sylvester devises a robot dog, a storm cloud, and an explosive machine in his woebegone effort to nullify the bulldog impeding his progress toward Tweety's bird house. "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd "Hillbilly Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Martin Brothers "The Million-Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck "Tweet and Lovely" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 3 (Sept. 26, 1987) Yosemite Sam is the cook for a foul-tempered, absolute monarch desiring hasenpfeffer, the primary ingredient being a rabbit; Foghorn Leghorn believes himself to be the mother of an easily embarrassed, baby ostrich; Tweety is the window exhibit of a department store into which Sylvester is thus lured for a canary chase through women's fashions, a doll house, and the sporting goods section; and Ralph Wolf's failed ploys to steal some of Sam Sheepdog's lamb flock include a wildcat released from a box, a Greek god Pan disguise, and a Tarzan-style swoop toward the sheep by means of a rope attached to a tree branch. "Shiskabugs" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Mother Was a Rooster" with Foghorn Leghorn "A Bird in a Guilty Cage" with Tweety and Sylvester "Don't Give Up the Sheep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 4 (Oct. 3, 1987) A retrospective show, as Bugs is the honored guest on television programs and tells stories in an Arabian palace. Plus, Tweety and Granny tour the world, with Sylvester in their pursuit. "This is a Life?" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, and Granny "Hare-Abian Nights" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Person to Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd "Trip For Tat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 5 (Oct. 10, 1987) Bugs rescues wealthy widow Granny from the avaricious matrimonial overtures of Yosemite Sam and beholds filmed footage of his prehistoric forebear, who has no difficulty in outwitting Elmer Fuddstone. Also, Sylvester is prodded by a fellow feline into a futile fisticuffs in a warehouse with a "giant mouse" and tries without success to grab Tweety from the canary's assumed position on Granny's new headdress. "Hare Trimmed" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and Granny "Hoppy Daze" with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper "Pre-Hysterical Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "A Bird in a Bonnet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 6 (Oct. 17, 1987) The sanctity of Bugs' frontier home is threatened by a freeway builder and by jealously possessive of property Yosemite Sam, Sylvester chases Tweety from one American locale to another, and Foghorn Leghorn frolics in winter ice and snow while engaging in a war of pranks with the barnyard dog and avoiding the "greedy, little choppers" of a foraging-for-food, hyperactive weasel. "The Fair-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Weasel While You Work" with Foghorn Leghorn and the Weasel "No Parking Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Construction Worker "Tree Cornered Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 7 (Oct. 24, 1987) Bugs emerges victorious in a Middle Ages confrontation with Yosemite Sam, who is an English-castle-ransacking Viking; Sylvester and a dimwit friend, while seeking to capture a mouse, enter a pier warehouse in which they find a shipment crate from Australia and its occupant- an apparent giant rodent; and Bugs and Daffy journey by mistake to the Himalayas Mountains, the habitat of the Abominable Snowman. "Prince Varmint" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Hoppy Go Lucky" with Sylvester, Benny Cat, and Hippety Hopper "The Abominable Snow Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and the Abominable Snowman "A Pizza Tweety Pie" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 8 (Oct. 31, 1987) A Halloween show with Yosemite Sam and Sylvester meeting Mephistopheles, Daffy and Porky as constables hunting a criminal disguised as Granny and the real Granny assuming that the two law enforcers who continually mistake her for the criminal, are overzealous, overaged, and overindulgent trick-or- treaters. "Devil's Feud Cake" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Corn On the Cop" with Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, and Granny Clip from "Bad Ol' Putty Tat" with Tweety and Sylvester "Satan's Waitin'" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 9 (Nov. 7, 1987) Bugs reduces Elmer Fudd's rabbit-exterminator robot to scrap metal and aggravates Sing Song Prison guard (Yosemite) Sam Schultz's tempestuous relationship with the hot-tempered Sing Song warden; Foghorn Leghorn and a cat wage a barnyard battle over possession of a worm; and Sylvester cannot live with the guilt that he feels after he believes that he has devoured Tweety. "Robot Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "A Fractured Leghorn" with Foghorn Leghorn "Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "The Last Hungry Cat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 10 (Nov. 14, 1987) Bugs flees Elmer through a television studio, Pepe Le Pew pursues a cat whose back has been striped white with perfume shop hair dye, and Sylvester requires psychiatric therapy after one too many humiliating defeats in his tussles with "giant mouse" Hippety Hopper and breaks an arm and a leg while trying to neutralize the bulldog defending Tweety from his hungry clutches. "Wideo Wabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "For Scent-imental Reasons" with Pepe Le Pew "Freudy Cat" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper "A Street Cat Named Sylvester" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 11 (Nov. 21, 1987) Two cartoons in this show concern water, in a hinterland where Bugs grows carrots and Blacque Jacque Shellacque covets a monopoly of H20 ownership, and in a high diving act which Yosemite Sam with gunpoint orders Bugs to perform. Ralph Wolf in the guise of Little Bo Peep, succeeds at convincing Sam Sheepdog into allowing him to claim possession of one of Sam's lambs, but Ralph has an unpleasant surprise when his planned mutton dinner removes its carcass to reveal a certain irate canine. Finally, Sylvester is delighted to discover acres and acres of Tweety Bird in a castle at the top of a beanstalk. "Wet Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque "High Diving Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Double or Mutton" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog "Tweety and the Beanstalk" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 12 (Nov. 28, 1987) Sylvester and Yosemite Sam are in knight armor, Sylvester by accident after chasing a mouse in an antiquity-cluttered museum, Sam by his own option as an accursed medieval plunderer of prized royal possessions, Tweety also places himself inside of metal- that of a flying bird cage, and a pair of mice construct a feline-sanity-destroyer upside down room. "Knighty Knight Bugs" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and the Dragon "Mouse Wreckers" with Claude Cat, Hubie, and Bertie "Mouse-Taken Identity" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper "The Jet Cage" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 13 (Dec. 5, 1987) A drunken stork loses the baby ape that he is assigned to deliver to Mr. and Mrs. Elvis Gorilla and selects and incapacitates (with a mallet) Bugs as a replacement for the infant monkey. Elmer Fudd goes hunting with his dog, who fears that Elmer plans to mortally dispose of him on this particular excursion into the wilderness. Ralph Wolf appears to have succeeded in lulling Sam Sheepdog into dreamland with a vinyl record of "Go to Sleep", only until Ralph grabs the leg of one of the sheep in Sam's care and Sam springs faster than a bullet into ballistic action. Lastly, Sylvester's efforts in a city park to capture and consume Tweety bring him into conflict with a nanny and a bulldog. "Apes of Wrath" with Bugs Bunny and the Drunken Stork "A Mutt in a Rut" with Elmer Fudd and Rover the Dog "A Sheep in the Deep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog "Home Tweet Home" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 14 (Dec. 12, 1987) Bugs encounters a gargantuan Elmer at the top of an enormously sprouted beanstalk and betters a French-Canadian Klondike outlaw at a card game by holding a 21 of hearts, and Sylvester fights a "giant mouse" in an abandoned house and tries and fails to build a wood plank bridge to link his city high rise dwelling with that of Tweety. "Beanstalk Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd "The Slap-Hoppy Mouse" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper "Bonanza Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque "Tree Cornered Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 15 (Dec. 19, 1987) Pepe Le Pew and Sylvester are troubled by a shark while in pursuit of their usual quarry, Bugs, on France's behalf, flies into aerial battle in World War I against Germany's Baron (Yosemite) Sam Von Schamm, and Daffy will allow nothing and no bunny to stop him from being first to arrive at a television studio to thereby win a prize of a Million Box. "Dumb Patrol" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Touche and Go" with Pepe Le Pew "The Million-Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck "Hawaiian Aye Aye" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 16 (Dec. 26, 1987) A Christmas show with Yosemite Sam as Ebenezer Scrooge, Porky Pig as Bob Cratchit, Tweety as Tiny Tim, and Bugs as the spectre who imparts to Scrooge the true meaning of the holiday. Also, Christmas in Granny and Sylvester's home is anything but peaceful when two presents under the tree are Tweety and a bulldog. Finally, Bugs recounts his first encounter with Elmer Fudd. "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, Porky Pig, Tweety, Sylvester, Pepe Le Pew, Elmer Fudd, and Foghorn Leghorn "Gift Wrapped" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 17 (Jan. 2, 1988) Bugs is airdropped inside of a crate of carrots into the Tasmanian jungle, where he is carnivorously craved by Tasmania's fiercest animal, Bugs and Elmer are the unwitting subjects of a scientific study on the behavioral effects of alternating head attire, Sylvester is in the employ of a museum as a mouse-catcher but fails to rid the establishment of zoo escapee and "giant mouse" Hippety Hopper, and Tweety and Granny begin occupancy of an intercity brownstone- with street cat Sylvester repeatedly visiting his new neighbors for a reason other than good fellowship. "Bedevilled Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil "Mouse-Taken Identity" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper "Bugs Bonnets" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "Muzzle Tough" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 18 (Jan. 9, 1988) The Abominable Snowman in his Himalayan habitat, a Tweety monster emerging from a bottle of Hyde formula, and Elmer's boss' canine that believes itself to be a man and obliges Elmer to provide for its every "people" need and desire are some of the elements of this show. "The Abominable Snow Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and the Abominable Snowman "Dog Gone People" with Elmer Fudd and Rupert Dog "Hare-Less Wolf" with Bugs Bunny and Charles M. Wolf Clip from "The Last Hungry Cat" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny "Hyde and Go Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 19 (Jan. 16, 1988) In this show for Bugs are shipboard travails and remembrances of youth, and Tweety is purchased from a pet shop by Granny, who also owns a bounty of bulldogs that thwart Sylvester's many efforts to snatch Tweety from the window sill of Granny's house. "Mutiny On the Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd Clip from "Too Hop to Handle" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper "Ain't She Tweet" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 20 (Jan. 23, 1988) Bugs escapes both the hasenpfeffer stew pot of medieval cook Yosemite Sam and Wild West outlaw Sam's directive with gunpoint that Bugs perform a death-defying high dive, Wile E. Coyote's failed Road Runner-procurement ploys include a hand grenade in a toy airplane, a cannon positioned on the edge of a cliff, and axle grease rubbed onto his feet, and million-dollar- bird Tweety is held for a ransom of that monetary amount by mobster Rocky. "Shiskabugs" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "High Diving Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Zip N' Snort" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "Catty Cornered" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Rocky Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 21 (Jan. 30, 1988) Opera music, fugitives from an Animal Control truck, explosive darts released from a balloon, and seasickness are elements of this installment. "Long-Haired Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Giovanni Jones "D' Fightin' Ones" with Sylvester and Bulldog "Lickety-Splat!" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "Tweety's S.O.S." with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 22 (Feb. 6, 1988) Bugs is on Mars, Sylvester and Tweety are in trolley town, and Wile E. Coyote enacts his desert-based dynamite, elastic band, and heavy weight schemes to capture and eat the Road Runner, in an episode characterized also by Ralph Wolf, tied to balloons, flying above Sam Sheepdog's lambs with intention of grabbing one of the woolly foodstuffs- and Sam bursting each of the balloons with projectiles from his pea-shooter. "Mad as a Mars Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Marvin Martian "A Sheep in the Deep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog "Ready, Set, Zoom!" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "Canary Row" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 23 (Feb. 13, 1988) A violently trembling Wile E. Coyote, Bugs winning a high-stakes game of poker against a mercurial Southerner on a Mississippi river boat, Sylvester's farm animal disguises, Tweety among the chicks in a hen's nest, and Pepe Le Pew in a perfume shop with a female cat of white dyed striped back are images of this show. "Mississippi Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Colonel Shuffle "For Scent-imental Reasons" with Pepe Le Pew "Hopalong Casualty" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "Fowl Weather" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 24 (Feb. 20, 1988) Yosemite Sam has competition by Bugs in climbing Mount Schmatterhorn for a prize of 50,000 cronkites, a freeway builder meets an immovable object in a particular rabbit whose hole home is directly in the path of the planned freeway route, Wile E. Coyote "goes for a spin" in the twister generated by his bottle of ACME Tornado Seeds, and Tweety, nesting in a tree in the midst of a dog pound, is digestively sought by Sylvester. "Piker's Peak" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "No Parking Hare" with Bugs Bunny and the Construction Worker "Whoa Be-Gone!" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "Dog Pounded" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 25 (Feb. 27, 1988) Bugs reminisces about becoming a Hollywood celebrity, and his presence at Sing Song Prison endangers the employment of jailer (Yosemite) Sam Schultz; by accident, Wile E. Coyote freezes himself with his icicle-making machine and glues his own hand to a boomerang which he throws at the Road Runner; and Tweety pilots a flying bird cage. "What's Up, Doc?" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Zoom at the Top" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "The Jet Cage" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 26 (Mar. 5, 1988) What is the Abominable Snowman doing on Mars, and why has Marvin Martian brought Bugs thereto? Why, so that Marvin can study Earth's largest, two- legged creature and Mr. Abominable can have a bunny rabbit to pet and name George, of course! Bugs also journeys to Dawson City during the time of "gold fever", Tweety is with Granny in Hawaii, and Wile E. Coyote continues his culinary quest for succulent Road Runner, this time with such schemes as a painted road at the edge of a cliff, a stick of TNT fastened to an arrow, quick-drying cement, a boulder, and an anvil released from a street-cleaner wagon underneath a balloon. "Spaced-Out Bunny" with Bugs Bunny, Marvin Martian, and the Abominable Snowman "Bonanza Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque "Going! Going! Gosh!" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "Hawaiian Aye Aye" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 27 (Mar. 12, 1988) It is hunting season, but of which animal- a rabbit, a duck, a mongoose, a dirty skunk, or a pigeon? Wile E. Coyote's invisible paint does not prevent him from being hit by a beep-beeping truck, and a misfired rocket sends Wile E. through the Earth to the Far East. Sylvester tries to conceal unexpected houseguest and prospective meal Tweety from Granny, who is pet-owner of Sylvester and a bulldog with a broken leg. "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!" with Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Elmer Fudd "A Scent of the Matterhorn" with Pepe Le Pew "War and Pieces" with Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote "A Street Cat Named Sylvester" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and Hector Bulldog Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 28 (Mar. 19, 1988) The Tasmanian Devil receives an explosive nitroglycerin prescription from Dr. Bugs. Sylvester Jr. is adopted as an adored pet house cat by a fat and coarse suburban woman who refuses to extend the same accommodating affection to Sylvester Sr.. Father and son next venture to a museum, where Sylvester's job as a mouse-catcher brings them into confrontation with baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper, an escapee from a nearby zoo and whom Sylvester and Sylvester mistake for an oversized mouse. Sylvester next hatches Tweety out of an egg in the midst of a National Forest and tries and fails to eat the fledgling fowl. "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil "Claws in the Lease" with Sylvester and Sylvester Jr. "Mouse-Taken Identity" with Sylvester, Sylvester Jr., and Hippety Hopper "Tweet, Tweet, Tweety" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 29 (Mar. 26, 1988) Sylvester goes fishing with Sylvester Jr. in an aquarium, where he is victimized by piranhas, a hammerhead shark, an electric eel, a crab, and a "dogfish". Another crab poses a problem for Sylvester on a dock where Sylvester tries to steal a fisherman's catch, prior to Sylvester seeing Tweety in the cockpit of Granny's passing tugboat and then trying to board the boat to acquire the canary. Also, Bugs delivers a scuttled Australian fright ship's cargo, the Tasmanian Devil, to a zoo, and Foghorn Leghorn nurtures his "maternal" instinct after an ostrich hatches from an egg that the barnyard dog has covertly placed beside Foghorn. "Bill of Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil "Fish and Slips" with Sylvester and Sylvester Jr. "Mother Was a Rooster" with Foghorn Leghorn "Tugboat Granny" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 30 (Apr. 2, 1988) Airdropped inside of a crate of carrots into the Tasmanian jungle, Bugs becomes prey to an all-consuming, spinning juggernaut native to the island, Daffy hunts bear in a mountainous forest area of the United States, and Sylvester contends with a fellow alley cat who like him wishes to grab Tweety from a nest atop a pole in the middle of a junkyard. "Bedevilled Rabbit" with Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil "Suppressed Duck" with Daffy Duck "Double or Mutton" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog "Trick or Tweet" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 31 (Apr. 9, 1988) Sam, medieval England Duke of Yosemite, tries in vain to qualify for a million pounds remuneration for being a paragon of mild-temperament with Bugs as his houseguest, Daffy wishes to be boon companion to a millionaire but is impeded from entering the wealthy one's mansion by the man's pet bulldog, Bugs and Elmer undergo many behavioral changes due to the falling onto their heads of a variety of hats, and Tweety is Little Red Riding Hood's gift to Granny. "From Hare to Heir" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "Fast Buck Duck" with Daffy Duck "Bugs Bonnets" with Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "Red Rising Hoodwinked" with Tweety, Sylvester, Granny, and the Big Bad Wolf Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 32 (Apr. 16, 1988) A sneezing, fire-breathing dragon infuriates Black Knight Yosemite Sam, who is intent upon maintaining possession of the Singing Sword which he stole from King Arthur and therefore must keep out of the virtuous hands of King's champion Bugs, Daffy is tormented by a prankish, uncooperative animator, and Sylvester requires psychiatric help. "Knighty Knight Bugs" with Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, and the Dragon "Duck Amuck" with Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny "For Scent-imental Reasons" with Pepe Le Pew "Tweet Dreams" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 33 (Apr. 23, 1988) Crime does not pay for Bugs' nemesis, Blacque Jacque Shellacque, whose obsession with having the perfect dam with which to restrict for himself mountain river water ownership causes him, at Bugs' taunting, to cannon- blast all other dams, including the Grand Hoover! Daffy is content to allow the world to think that he is the bird that has laid a golden egg, that is until Rocky the gangster abducts him from Porky's farm and orders him by gunpoint to lay more such eggs. Ralph Wolf awakens in his gadget-filled home for another day of aiming to steal sheep from the flock of Sam Sheepdog, only to be frustrated by the sheepdog's balloon-bursting and cannon-ball-repelling tenacity and wolf-pounding brute strength. Finally, Sylvester struggles to control his desire to eat Tweety. "Wet Hare" with Bugs Bunny and Blacque Jacque Shellacque "Golden Yeggs" with Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, and Rocky "A Sheep in the Deep" with Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog "Birds Anonymous" with Tweety and Sylvester Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show # 34 (Apr. 30, 1988) "Freight-hopping" Bugs finds unpleasant company in his selected boxcar on the Chattanooga Choo-Choo: ravenously hungry Ralph Kramden and Ed Norton of The Honeymooners. Bugs is also incarcerated by the volatile and easily deceived Sing Song Prison jailer (Yosemite) Sam Schultz. Further, Tweety and Daffy soar through the skies, Tweety at the controls of his flying bird cage and Daffy in his "Stupor Duck" costume. "Half Fare Hare" with Bugs Bunny, Ralph Kramden, and Ed Norton "Stupor Duck" with Daffy Duck "Big House Bunny" with Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam "The Jet Cage" with Tweety, Sylvester, and Granny
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